Country-specific drivers of the value relevance of goodwill impairment losses
Country-specific drivers of the value relevance of goodwill impairment losses
This study is the first to analyze the value relevance of goodwill impairment losses (GIL) in an international context; therefore, it builds a link between institutional, cultural, and religious factors and cross-country variations in the relevance of GIL. Using a sample of 18,143 firm-year observations drawn from 21 countries during the period 2005–2018, we find that firms, on average, reported GIL that are value relevant to their investors. However, consistent with the litigation perspective, the value relevance of GIL is found to be substantially higher for firms domiciled in countries with high-level institutional quality (IQ) than for firms in countries where IQ is relatively low. Our findings remain robust after controlling for macroeconomic effects or excluding observations from the biggest countries, which constitute a substantial proportion of the data set we analyzed. Additional tests show that institutional effects, although absorbing religion, did not supersede or restrain cultural effects, suggesting that social norms also influence the relevance of impairment information. Our evidence introduces a new explanation for heterogeneity in value relevance of goodwill impairments, and adds to research on the effects of legal and social norms on value relevance
Alshehabi, Ahmad
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Georgiou, George
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Ala, Alessandro
6d76aceb-97a9-4581-bc09-7a50a4854aba
1 April 2021
Alshehabi, Ahmad
df429384-77a3-4c65-b0a2-b98c83c885d7
Georgiou, George
4333f6f7-f1ba-401c-8521-a697adf1fdca
Ala, Alessandro
6d76aceb-97a9-4581-bc09-7a50a4854aba
Alshehabi, Ahmad, Georgiou, George and Ala, Alessandro
(2021)
Country-specific drivers of the value relevance of goodwill impairment losses.
Journal of International Accounting, Auditing and Taxation, 43, [100384].
(doi:10.1016/j.intaccaudtax.2021.100384).
Abstract
This study is the first to analyze the value relevance of goodwill impairment losses (GIL) in an international context; therefore, it builds a link between institutional, cultural, and religious factors and cross-country variations in the relevance of GIL. Using a sample of 18,143 firm-year observations drawn from 21 countries during the period 2005–2018, we find that firms, on average, reported GIL that are value relevant to their investors. However, consistent with the litigation perspective, the value relevance of GIL is found to be substantially higher for firms domiciled in countries with high-level institutional quality (IQ) than for firms in countries where IQ is relatively low. Our findings remain robust after controlling for macroeconomic effects or excluding observations from the biggest countries, which constitute a substantial proportion of the data set we analyzed. Additional tests show that institutional effects, although absorbing religion, did not supersede or restrain cultural effects, suggesting that social norms also influence the relevance of impairment information. Our evidence introduces a new explanation for heterogeneity in value relevance of goodwill impairments, and adds to research on the effects of legal and social norms on value relevance
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Country-specific drivers of the value relevance of goodwill impairment losses
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e-pub ahead of print date: 15 March 2021
Published date: 1 April 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 477883
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477883
ISSN: 1061-9518
PURE UUID: 88c3d05f-6cc9-450a-9e4c-62ee1e6590ac
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Date deposited: 15 Jun 2023 17:02
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:13
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Author:
Ahmad Alshehabi
Author:
George Georgiou
Author:
Alessandro Ala
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