scholarly journals Comparative Value Relevance Among German, U.S. and International Accounting Standards: A German Stock Market Perspective

Author(s):  
Eli Bartov ◽  
Stephen R. Goldberg ◽  
Myung-Sun Kim
2005 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 95-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eli Bartov ◽  
Stephen R. Goldberg ◽  
Myungsun Kim

In recent years, German companies have reported consolidated financial statements under German GAAP, U.S. GAAP, or International Accounting Standards (IAS). Market observers, researchers, and regulators have argued that financial statements prepared under the shareholder (or investor) model, such as U.S. GAAP or IAS, provide better information than financial statements prepared under the stakeholder model (German GAAP). They further have argued that U.S. GAAP is more rigorously defined and, therefore, provides information superior to that under IAS. We investigate comparative value relevance, measured as the slope coefficient of the returns/earnings regression. Within our sample of German companies traded on German stock exchanges, the value relevance of U.S. GAAP- and IAS-based earnings is higher than that of German GAAP-based earnings. Our result holds only for profit observations, suggesting that reporting regime does not have an influence on the quality of earnings in the case of loss firms. However, we do not find a significant difference in value relevance between U.S. GAAP and IAS after controlling for self- selection. A major contribution of this research is that, unlike prior research, we measure stock returns for all sample firms in the German stock market only, and therefore are not reliant on the perhaps strong assumption underlying prior studies of similarity of pricing across markets domiciled in different countries.


2012 ◽  
Vol 15 (02) ◽  
pp. 1150008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunhui Liu ◽  
Lee J. Yao ◽  
Michelle Y. M. Yao

In face of broad adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is considering its quality and acceptability. This paper reports a study that examines changes in value relevance with a sample of Peru firms mandated to use international accounting standards between 1999 and 2007. The period under study is broken into a period of International Accounting Standards (IAS) between 1999 and 2001, a period of early IFRS between 2002 and 2004, and a more recent period of IFRS between 2005 and 2007 by major changes to accounting standards. The empirical results generally indicate that value relevance improved from the IAS period to the early IFRS period when the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) took over the International Accounting Standards Committee (IASC), but worsened from the early IFRS period to the recent IFRS period when more accounting standards started to reflect IASB's preference for fair value measurement of assets and liabilities. Quality weakens to a greater extent for firms with more discretion for fair value estimates. Further analysis shows that such changes are less likely to result from changes in economic conditions, but from the changes of the standards. The findings are particularly alarming in face of rising IFRS adoptions and call for quality improvement to IFRS.


1999 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 259-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grace Pownall ◽  
Katherine Schipper

This paper discusses certain implications of capital-markets-based academic accounting research for the assessment of International Accounting Standards (IAS) by the U.S. Securities Exchange Commission (SEC). The SEC's assessment criteria are comprehensiveness, high quality (comparability, transparency and full disclosure) and rigorous interpretation and application. Existing academic research has few implications for comprehensiveness, transparency and full disclosure, in part because no agreed-upon metrics for measuring these constructs have been developed. Indirect implications for interpretation and application might be drawn from cross-jurisdictional comparisons of income and cash flow volatility and value relevance, provided certain strong assumptions are met. Using Form 20-F reconciliation data, research has documented extensive evidence of noncomparabilities between U.S. GAAP financial statements and statements prepared for the same firms under both various non-U.S. GAAPs and IAS, and some evidence that the differences are value-relevant.


Author(s):  
Manoj Kumar

This study belongs in the specific line of research into value relevance that aims to assess the consequences on companies' market values of the introduction of the International Accounting Standards. The specific research area concerns the role of the International Accounting Standards (IAS)/International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), investigating whether the adoption of the IAS/IFRS has led to a greater correlation between important financial statement values (earning, comprehensive income and equity) and stock market capitalization than in the pre-IAS/IFRS period. The study focuses on the Indian situation, analyzing a sample of 114 companies listed on the Delhi Stock Exchange. We analyze a period of eight years (2008-2015). In relation to the critique of value relevance studies by Holthausen and Watts (2001) and subsequent reactions of Barth et al. (2001), this chapter offers insights about the usefulness of value relevance especially in periods of financial crisis.


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