scholarly journals Empirical Study regarding the Influence of the Quality of Financial Information on the Value of Listed Companies

2016 ◽  
Vol 14 (133) ◽  
pp. 78
Author(s):  
Mihai CARP ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 4882-4886

An excellent relationship between corporate governance attributes and audit quality is another monitoring mechanism that enhances the reliability of financial information. Though, one of the strategies of achieving the qualitative audit is that auditors must be independent of mind and appearance. As such, an active board and audit committee may support in monitoring the reliability of an entity’s audit quality. The objective of this study is to investigate the effect of corporate governance attributes on audit quality for the Nigerian listed companies. The population of the study includes all the companies in the eleven sectors of the economy, excluding the financial sector from 2012-2017. The study used only sixty-three companies as a sample after filtration and screening. The data was obtained from the annual reports and accounts of the selected companies. Multiple regression was carried out in testing the relationships between the dependent and independent variables. The result of the regression highlighted an insignificant negative relationship for board independence and positive significant and negative significant for meetings and gender of the audit committee, respectively. Agency is the main theory employed, which is supported by earnings management theory. Thus, the findings support and contradict the theories. For the implication, this study provides clarification on the contributions of the board independence and audit committee meetings and gender towards the audit quality of the Nigerian listed companies, and this will help the users of the financial information and relevant scholars in literature development.


2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 156-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jian (Jerry) Liang ◽  
Zhi Dong

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to investigate how the 2007 global financial crisis (GFC) changed financial disclosure behavior using a sample of US equity real estate investment trusts (REITs) from 2000 to 2015.Design/methodology/approachThe authors use panel data spanning from 2000 to 2015 to examine the impact of the GFC on REITs’ earnings management (EM) after controlling for other factors (including the market shock in 2007 and 2008). The measurements of EM are estimated by using the models developed from literature such as modified Jones models. The static panel data regression models are used to estimate the impact of GFC on the REITs’ EM.FindingsThe authors find that REITs are more likely to engage in income-increasing EM to embellish their financial reports during the GFC. However, the magnitude of the use of EM to manipulate disclosed financial information decreased following the GFC, indicating an improvement in the quality of financial disclosure as a consequence of the enhancement of the regulatory environment. REITs also changed the manner in which their EM behavior responded to the main factors in the market following the outbreak of GFC.Research limitations/implicationsThis study contributes to the finance and accounting literature by providing the first empirical test results concerning how the financial disclosure behavior and quality of listed portfolios and companies such as REITs have changed corresponding to the enhancement of the regulatory environment and adverse market conditions brought by GFC.Practical implicationsThis study provides references for investors, auditors, and regulators to help them make adjustments for and improve the interpretation of the disclosed financial information.Originality/valueThis is one of the first empirical study testing the impact of the GFC on EM. It is also the first empirical study investigating the impact of GFC on the financial disclosure behavior of REITs.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 (99 (155)) ◽  
pp. 7-8
Author(s):  
Halina Waniak-Michalak

Editorial Issue 99 (155) of „Zeszyty Teoretyczne Rachunkowości” (ZTR) is entitled Account- ing in developing countries. It is the seventh fully-English issue of this journal which the editorial team decided to publish. The aim of this issue of ZTR in English is to present the evolution and changes in accounting theory and practice in transitional (post-communist) and less developed countries, on the example of Poland, Ukraine, Estonia and Hungary. The articles relate to historical factors determining the current financial accounting and auditing regulations and their applications, and to manage- ment accounting practices in a particular country/-ies. We believe that this issue of ZTR will contribute to a better understanding of the backgrounds and the current status of accounting in developing countries. We believe that this volume will contribute to the presentation of the results of the scientific work of researchers from different countries and a better understanding of the backgrounds of accounting in developing countries. We accepted nine papers whose authors come from five countries: Poland, Den- mark, Estonia, Ukraine and Hungary. All of them went positively through two inde- pendent and blind reviews, one of which was conducted by a foreign reviewer. The accepted papers of the volume present the results of research conducted by scientists in the area of accounting research and practice in developing European countries. Different research methods were used, such as content analysis, statistical analysis, literature analysis and interviews. The first paper from Z. Fedak and A. Karmańska presents comments on selected aspects of accounting law applicable in Poland in the communist period. It will fill the gap in the knowledge on specific characteristics of the accountancy in Poland in the period of the non-market economy. The problem of government financial accountability in post-communist countries is presented in the article by V. Fedosov and T. Paientko. The authors underline that governments in countries such as Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia, instead of providing users with the most qualitative and useful information, disclose only inadequate or unimportant information. The authors from Estonia and Denmark (J. Thomsen, E. Sundgaard, L. Alver, and J. Alver) examined what kind of integration modes Danish Headquarters (HQ) use to integrate one particular business function, i.e., the accounting function, of their Esto- nian subsidiaries. It turned out that the coordination of the accounting function is not an emphasis of the Danish HQ’s; the most important thing is the people. The Hungarian authors (G. Tóth, Z. Széles) decided to examine the difference in accounting quality between publicly listed and private companies in Hungary. The research on 63 financial statements of Hungarian companies proved that publicly listed companies had higher accounting quality compared to private companies. W.A. Nowak from Poland underlines the scientific and social role of conceptual frameworks for financial reporting. Polish authors (A. Szadziewska, E. Spigarska and E. Majerowska) answer in their paper what the state is of the non-financial disclosures made by stock-exchange-listed companies in Poland, what the differences are in reporting non-financial information by companies from various industries and what factors affect the disclosure of non-financial information. They could not, however, find an association between the eco-nomic performance of a company and the non-financial disclosure. P. Staszkiewicz and R. Górska investigated whether the auditee’s financial situation affects the auditor’s non-audit fee and independence on the example of Poland (a de-veloping country) and New Zealand (a developed country). They found substantial similarities between auditor and auditee behaviors across these countries, but they could not confirm a link between auditee failure risk and the quality of the audit report. A. Szychta presents in her article the results of a survey done in 2016 among 102 companies that completed questionnaires. She identified a change in the types of management accounting (MA) practices used in business since 1999 in Poland by comparing the results of the 2016 survey with surveys done in 1999 and 2005. E. Zarzycka, J. Krasodomska and M. Biernacki present the results of their research on the quality of academic education in the context of ACCA accreditation from the perspective of a critical stakeholder group – students. They used interviews as the research method. An analysis of 384 questionnaires allowed them to conclude that accreditation is a factor that moderately influences the quality of accounting educa-tion. The editorial team takes the opportunity to thank all the supporters of the English issue of ZTR. We very much appreciate the involvement of the reviewers, the com-mitment of the authors of the papers as well as the help of other academics and friends engaged in the preparation of the issue. We also encourage you to visit our website www.ztr.skwp.pl which presents the latest information on our projects as well as all the procedures needed to submit a paper to the journal. Please submit articles for the thematic volume in English titled Accounting and Behavioral Sciences - a successful marriage or an extravagant cru-sade? It will be published in the second half of 2019. The call for papers is included at the end of this issue and on the website https://files.publisherspanel.com/ztr/CALL%20FOR%20PAPER_2019_WITH%20GUEST%20EDITOR.pdf


2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (9/10) ◽  
pp. 945-962
Author(s):  
Roya Izi ◽  
Mansour Garkaz ◽  
Parviz Sayeedi ◽  
Alireza Matoufi

PurposeThe purpose of this research paper is to provide a model for reporting quality of financial information based on behavior of listed companies in Tehran Stock Exchange which is based on structural equation modeling approaches.Design/methodology/approachThis study uses applied research and postsemi experimental method of data collection in the field of proofing accounting research with deductive–inductive approach. The statistical population of this study includes the sample of 128 listed companies in the Tehran Stock Exchange between 2007 and 2017. The behavioral characteristics of managers (hidden variables) are measured by observable variables of myopia, opportunistic behavior and overconfidence of managers. Reporting quality of financial information is also investigated based on the scores accrued to each company and the announcement published by the Tehran Stock Exchange based on the companies' rating in terms of the quality of reporting and proper notification.FindingsAfter insuring the acceptable fitness of the measurement pattern and the structure of research in both approaches, structural equations modeling and regression, the results indicate that there is a significant negative relationship between the behavioral characteristics of managers and the reporting quality of financial information.Originality/valueAccountants have a critical and difficult responsibility of dealing with transactions and presenting them in the form of financial reports that can be used by interest groups to assess the performance of companies. This critical responsibility becomes meaningful when professional and ethical behaviors are the basis for disclosure of financial reporting. Based on the behavioral characteristics of disclosing financial reporting in emerging capital markets such as Iran, this study can be successful in developing new and theoretical literature in this field.


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