Does Earnings Management Affect Firms’ Investment Decisions?

2008 ◽  
Vol 83 (6) ◽  
pp. 1571-1603 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maureen F. McNichols ◽  
Stephen R. Stubben

ABSTRACT: This paper examines whether firms manipulating their reported financial results make suboptimal investment decisions. We examine fixed asset investments for a large sample of public companies during the 1978–2002 period and document that firms that manipulate their earnings—firms investigated by the SEC for accounting irregularities, firms sued by their shareholders for improper accounting, and firms that restated financial statements—over-invest substantially during the misreporting period. Furthermore, following the misreporting period, these firms no longer over-invest, consistent with corrected information leading to more efficient investment levels. We find similar patterns for firms with high discretionary revenues or accruals. Our findings suggest that earnings management, which is largely viewed as targeting parties external to the firm, can also influence internal decisions.

Author(s):  
Kelly Noe ◽  
Dana A. Forgione ◽  
Pamela C. Smith ◽  
Hanni Liu

We examine earnings management in non-publicly listed companies, with a focus on for-profit (FP) hospice organizations, and extend the accounting earnings management literature to the hospice industry. FP hospice organizations file Medicare cost reports that include complete financial statements not otherwise publicly available. Managers of FP hospice organizations have incentives to manage earnings to increase performancebased bonuses, meet or beat bond covenant requirements, or avoid public scrutiny. We find total accruals are significantly positively associated with profitability, debt, and size factors. However, discretionary accruals are significantly negatively associated with debt and size, but not profitability. Thus, monitoring and political cost factors appear to effectively mitigate earnings management in this industry sector.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 49
Author(s):  
Alwan Sri Kustono

This study examines the antecedents and consequence variables of earnings management. This study is expected to explain the motive of earnings management practices by public property and real estate companies in Indonesia: opportunistic or efficient. The theory which is the basis for developing the hypotheses ise agency, positive accounting, and signaling theories simultaneously. This study is explanatory research which aims to explain the causal relationship between variables through hypothesis testing. Data of this research are financial statements of public companies in the property and real estate sector in Indonesia (2014-2018) with some criteria. There are 60 firm-years data used in the analysis. Hypothesis testing uses multiple linear regression two-stage. The first stage analysis is used to examine the effect of the antecedent earnings management variable. Regression second stage test the consequences of earnings management practices. The results show debt and independent commissioners affect earnings management. Management performs more dominant earnings management because of opportunistic interests than to maintain market value and the interests of its     shareholders. The implication of this research is to provide a comprehensive discourse on the motives for earnings management behavior in Indonesia. 


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 143
Author(s):  
Aaron Crabtree ◽  
Bo Ouyang ◽  
Huishan Wan

Using a large sample of firms issuing new debts, this paper investigates how a firm’s financial statements comparability affects its cost of new debt issues.  We predict and find that higher comparability is associated with (1) higher bond ratings and (2) lower bond yield spreads when companies issue new debts.  Our results are consistent with the view that bond rating analysts and bond investor favor greater comparability when they evaluate new bonds and make investment decisions. 


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rini Martini ◽  
Kurniawati Kurniawati

<p><em>Since the emergence of the revaluation model as another option in the measurement of fixed assets, the participation of public companies in Indonesia in the implementation of fair value began to increase.   The aim of this study is to investigate factors that affecting the decisions made by the company to perform revaluation model of fixed asset and the effect of revaluation model on earnings management.</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em><span style="font-size: small;">The sample used in this research were non financial companies listed at Indonesia Stock Exchange   2013-2015. Samples are collected by purposive sampling and resulted in 180 firms as the final sample. The statistic method used was binary logistic regression method, with hypotheses testing of statistic t using a significance level (α) = 5%. The statistical tool used is SPSS 23.  </span></em></p><p><em>The result of this research indicates that company value has negative significant influence and  fixed asset intensity has positive significant influence on revaluation model implementation. Meanwhile leverage and liquidity do not have significant influence on revaluation model implementation. Revaluation model implementation does not have significant influence on earnings management. This research also showed that asset revaluation implementation can be used to reduce information asymmetry and give positive signal to financial statement users. But apparently asset revaluation implementation does not have significant influence with earnings management because fair value implementation has not been optimal in Indonesia's public company.</em></p><em><strong>Keywords : </strong>Fixed asset, revaluation model, leverage, liquidity, company value, fixed asset intensity, earnings management.</em>


Profit ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (01) ◽  
pp. 57-63
Author(s):  
Rachma Bhakti Utami ◽  
Dinar Ary Kartikasari

Earnings are the critical indicators of a company's financial performance. Investors' investment decisions can be taken, predicting the company's future growth, and even earnings can determine the unsteady in an institution's stock price. Earning quality in a company's financial reporting is a must because quality earnings are real earnings without earnings management. In 2019, the financial statements of Garuda Indonesia (GI) were quite crowded and caused polemics. The airline with the GIAA issuer code managed to record a net profit of US $809 thousand in 2018, inversely proportional to the financial statements of 2017, which lost US$ 216.58 million. This performance is quite surprising because, in the third quarter of 2018, the company still lost US$ 114.08 million. Otoritas Jasa Keuangan (OJK) also investigated this case until finally, in mid-June 2019, OJK imposed sanctions on the Office of Public Accountants that audited financial statements and imposed fines on Directors of Garuda Indonesia. This case is reminiscent of the importance of applying earnings quality to reporting a company's financial statement.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 371-380
Author(s):  
LCA Robin Jonathan ◽  
Theresia Militina

This study aims to analyze the effect of company activities which projected in the Total Asset Turn Over (TATO), Inventory Turn Over (ITO), and Fixed Asset Turn Over (FATO) variables on Debt Composition (DAR) and Net Profit Margin (NPM) on Indonesian Public companies in food and beverages sector during 2013-2019. The research data is sourced from 21 issuers, 7 issuers do not include financial statements and losses, therefore the sample size is 14 issuers. Data were analyzed using multiple linear regression analysis and path analysis. The results showed that simultaneous company activities: TATO, ITO and FATO have significant effect on DAR and NPM. DAR has no significant effect in mediating the influence of TATO, ITO and FATO on NPM. Overall, DAR played a role in weakening TATO's influence on NPM. As for ITO and FATO, DAR played a role in strengthening ITO's influence and FATO's influence on NPM.


Author(s):  
Suhesti Ningsih

The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of real earning management on corporate performance on companies indexed in JII period 2013-2015. The research method used is explanatory which is designed to analyze earnings management practice for 3 years. The populations in this study are companies listed on the BEI in the Jakarta Islamic Index (JII) in 2013-2015. The technique of determining the sample in this study is purposive sampling. The data source used in this study is the annual financial statements published by publicly listed indexed companies in JII and published during the year 2013 to 2015. The results of the research with F test shows that together proxies real earning management that is cash flow operational, production cost and discretionary expense affect the performance of the company proxies with ROA. From the result of t test is known proxy production cost and discretionary expense have an effect on to company performance, while proxy Cash flow operational does not have an effect on to company performance. Keywords: Real Earning Management; CFO; PROD; DISCR; ROA


2021 ◽  
pp. 097226292110109
Author(s):  
Karan Gandhi

Prior research exhibits contradictory evidence on earnings management practices, both accrual and real, undertaken by the firms in state of financial distress. This study uniquely examines the issue in the presence of earnings-increasing earnings management motivation- meeting earnings benchmark of avoiding losses. For examining the issue, this study analyzes large panel data of Indian public companies for the period 2000–2016. The findings indicate prevalence of earnings-decreasing real earnings management practices, that is, decrease in overproduction and increase in spending on discretionary expenses, in financially distressed firms despite there being motivation to increase earnings to avoid losses. No evidence of accrual earnings management practices has been observed in such firms.


2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. 1323-1328
Author(s):  
Marija Milojičić ◽  
Snežana Knežević ◽  
Aleksandar Grgur

The financial statements, as the end product of the accounting information system, are a structural account of the financial position and financial success of an entity's business over a period. Earnings or net profit indicates an important position in the financial statements and is considered as a measure of a company’s success. Earnings management comes from the accounting skills that executives and business owners use when making business decisions. The Generally Accepted Accounting Principles set out in International Accounting Standards (hereinafter IAS) and International Financial Reporting Standards (hereinafter referred to as IFRS) generally give the owner or manager the choice between several accounting methods within the various stages of the accounting process. One of these methods is creative accounting, which is often correlated with the manipulation of financial statements. Creativity in accounting is known to be legal and to stay within the legal framework, but it is often the case that, with its creativity, it is beyond its boundaries. The way managers exercise this discretion is very important to the quality and objectivity of financial reporting.The tendency of the owners, and then the managers, to show the performance of the company better than they really are, is certainly not new. The reason that in the world from the beginning of the 2000s to the present day, both by the scientific and professional public and by the regulatory bodies in charge of financial reporting, particular attention is paid to this problem are the major political and economic scandals caused by the inaccurate presentation of financial statements. It is considered that manipulative accounting practices are applied in the preparation of financial statements when the application of accounting principles is made with the intention of achieving the desired objective, such as, for example, generating greater profit regardless of whether the procedures selected are in accordance with international and local prescribed rules.The prevalence of manipulation of financial statements depends on the situation in the environment, the quality of the normative basis of financial reporting, the quality of management and the ability of accountants to comply with professional and ethical standards. The environment implies the general economic situation, the existence or absence of appropriate legislation, including its implementation, as well as the relation to tax liabilities.The result of the original empirical research is presented in this paper. The research was conducted in the form of a case study of a domestic business entity (the Republic of Serbia), whose main activity is trade in sports and fashion products. The financial analysis was performed using the Beneish model, which was derived from the official financial statements of the companies, collected from publicly available databases (Balance Sheet and Income Statement 2016-2018) as the basic information base in order to discover the degree of possible manipulation of their own earning capacity. This model has become particularly popular since the Beneish M-scoring model revealed the manipulation of the financial results of the US company Enron, which went bankrupt in 2001.


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