Are CEOs and CFOs Rewarded for Disclosure Quality?

2014 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 1013-1047 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Wai Hui ◽  
Steven R. Matsunaga

ABSTRACT This study provides evidence regarding the importance that boards of directors place on effective communication with the investor community by examining whether CEO and CFO compensation are related to the quality of the firm's financial disclosures. Using an index derived from analyst forecast characteristics and management forecast accuracy to measure disclosure quality, we find changes in the annual bonus for both the CEO and CFO to be positively associated with changes in disclosure quality. We also find that the relation is stronger for high-growth firms, firms that have stronger governance structures, and for executives with lower equity incentives. Overall, our findings provide insight into the importance that boards place on effective communication with investors as a responsibility of the CEO and CFO and, therefore, provide them with contractual incentives to address the moral hazard problem associated with voluntary disclosures. JEL Classifications: M41.

Author(s):  
Mondher Kouki ◽  
Bilel Ben Attia

This research paper examines how corporate governance is related to the quality of financial disclosures for a sample of French listed firms during the period 2003-2009. We find that the level of financial reporting is positively influenced by corporate governance score. Managers and blockholders are more likely to disclose less information. These results are consistent with the belief that effective corporate governance is associated with higher financial disclosure quality while entrenched insiders do not improve this effect.    


2012 ◽  
Vol 87 (6) ◽  
pp. 2095-2122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sam (Sunghan) Lee ◽  
Steven R. Matsunaga ◽  
Chul W. Park

ABSTRACT We investigate whether management forecast accuracy provides a signal regarding CEOs' ability to anticipate and respond to future events by examining the relation between management forecast errors and CEO turnover. We find that the probability of CEO turnover is positively related to the magnitude of absolute forecast errors when firm performance is poor and that this positive relation holds for both positive and negative forecast errors. In addition, we find that the positive relation between CEO turnover and the absolute forecast errors is concentrated in the sample of less entrenched CEOs. Our findings indicate that boards of directors use management forecast accuracy as a signal of CEOs' managerial ability and that managers bear a cost for issuing inaccurate forecasts.


Author(s):  
Mark Myring ◽  
Rebecca Toppe Shortridge

Congress has recently enacted measures designed to improve corporate governance standards.  Regulators have asserted that strong corporate governance enhances the transparency and validity of financial statements.  Previous studies addressing the relationship between corporate governance and financial reporting quality yield mixed results.  This study employs analyst earnings forecasts to determine whether corporate governance procedures impact the quality of accounting information.  Following the work of Barron et al. (1998), we examined the impact of various measures of the strength of corporate governance on forecast accuracy and dispersion.  Our results provide mixed evidence to support the notion that the strength of corporate governance impacts the quality of financial statement information. 


Author(s):  
Erik Stam ◽  
Andrew van de Ven

Abstract There is a growing interest in ecosystems as an approach for understanding the context of entrepreneurship at the macro level of an organizational community. It consists of all the interdependent actors and factors that enable and constrain entrepreneurship within a particular territory. Although growing in popularity, the entrepreneurial ecosystem concept remains loosely defined and measured. This paper shows the value of taking a systems view of the context of entrepreneurship: understanding entrepreneurial economies from a systems perspective. We use a systems framework for studying entrepreneurial ecosystems, develop a measurement instrument of its elements, and use this to compose an entrepreneurial ecosystem index to examine the quality of entrepreneurial ecosystems in the Netherlands. We find that the prevalence of high-growth firms in a region is strongly related to the quality of its entrepreneurial ecosystem. Strong interrelationships among the ecosystem elements reveal their interdependence and need for a systems perspective.


2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (06) ◽  
pp. 1450038 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark J. Ahn

This study explores how new ventures access advice to achieve high growth and sustainable performance. A relational model of three important themes — compliance (regulatory and legal governance), contacts (networks of suppliers, customers, investors), and content (strategic insights) — emerged as critical to any sustainable high-growth effort. Our findings suggest that advisory boards and boards of directors have a significant role in managing and creating value for emerging high-growth firms due to inherently high failure rates, technological complexity, and market risk — all of which requires access to external resources.


Author(s):  
Nooraisah Katmon Et.al

Our study empirically examines the relationship between corporate governance and disclosure quality from the context of the United Kingdom. While studies on corporate governance and disclosure quality are extensive, we argue that only limited studies have utilised analyst forecast accuracy as a proxy for disclosure quality. We concentrateon the analyst forecast accuracy since we value the credibility of financial analysts in forecasting the firm’s earnings. Analyst are the expert users of the firm’s information and they rely on their analysis to predict firm’s earnings as well as to make a recommendation. We derived our sample from the analyst perception on the firms with high quality of disclosure that is the Investor Relation (IR) Magazine Award. Specifically we used 127 match-paired sample (i.e., winners and non-winners) of IR Magazine Award during the year 2005-2008. We measure corporate governance using board characteristics, audit committee characteristics, chairman and audit committee multiple directorships, chairman tenure and institutional ownership. Our findings report that multiple directorship by audit committee consistently increases disclosure quality. This suggest that the multiple directorships held by audit committee in other firms potentially improve their knowledge and experience in improving the quality of disclosure.Moreover, the result also shows a negative association between audit committee financial expertiseand board independent on the extent of quality of disclosure. These findings imply that the appointment of audit committee with financial expertise as well as an independent directors are merely a ticking the box activities, thus it appears in the letter form, but not in spirit. Our results are robust across various estimation, alternative measurement as well as endogeneity test that we have conducted.


2018 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 49-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feiqi Huang ◽  
He Li ◽  
Tawei Wang

SYNOPSISPrior literature has firmly established the relationship between IT capability and firm performance. In this paper, we extend the research in this field and investigate (1) whether IT capability contributes to management forecast accuracy, and (2) whether IT capability improves the informativeness of management forecasts and enhances the extent to which analysts incorporate management forecasts in their revisions. Using firms listed on InformationWeek 500 as our high IT capability group, we empirically demonstrate that firms with high IT capability are able to increase management forecast accuracy, and that analysts incorporate more information from management forecasts in their revisions if the firm has high IT capability.


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