Earnings management by classification shifting and IPO survival
Earnings management by classification shifting and IPO survival
The study examines the effect of earnings management by classification shifting on firm success, focusing on the survival of newly listed firms. We argue that shifting income-decreasing expenses from core to special items should negatively associate with future operating performance because of improper signaling of actual repeatable core profitability. We find that classification shifting strongly and negatively affects future Initial Public Offering (IPO) success and survival. We further identify the economic mechanisms that drive this finding and observe that our results are mitigated when the quality of external corporate governance alleviating agency concerns is stronger, also for IPO firms operating within stronger business contexts. Therefore, in an environment that facilitates firm survivability, the existence of weaker than reported sustainable performance may not end up materializing in the form of lower firm survivability as these factors aid firms' continuing operations from a business perspective. Our findings provide evidence of the longer-term implications of a method of earnings management that has long been considered “soft” and without any longer-term reversing consequences.
Anagnostopoulou, Seraina C.
c08cfbaa-3b62-4c9b-ae90-afcc0f5d41a6
Gounopoulos, Dimitrios
804d4ac1-e8e3-4489-9508-f200dd77c755
Malikov, Kamran
c06bf7c0-0e21-4eda-9be3-4d85e9965d34
Pham, Hang
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10 December 2020
Anagnostopoulou, Seraina C.
c08cfbaa-3b62-4c9b-ae90-afcc0f5d41a6
Gounopoulos, Dimitrios
804d4ac1-e8e3-4489-9508-f200dd77c755
Malikov, Kamran
c06bf7c0-0e21-4eda-9be3-4d85e9965d34
Pham, Hang
21ba19c7-f7b2-4970-981d-8f94ba9dc5d3
Anagnostopoulou, Seraina C., Gounopoulos, Dimitrios, Malikov, Kamran and Pham, Hang
(2020)
Earnings management by classification shifting and IPO survival.
Journal of Corporate Finance, 66, [101796].
(doi:10.1016/j.jcorpfin.2020.101796).
Abstract
The study examines the effect of earnings management by classification shifting on firm success, focusing on the survival of newly listed firms. We argue that shifting income-decreasing expenses from core to special items should negatively associate with future operating performance because of improper signaling of actual repeatable core profitability. We find that classification shifting strongly and negatively affects future Initial Public Offering (IPO) success and survival. We further identify the economic mechanisms that drive this finding and observe that our results are mitigated when the quality of external corporate governance alleviating agency concerns is stronger, also for IPO firms operating within stronger business contexts. Therefore, in an environment that facilitates firm survivability, the existence of weaker than reported sustainable performance may not end up materializing in the form of lower firm survivability as these factors aid firms' continuing operations from a business perspective. Our findings provide evidence of the longer-term implications of a method of earnings management that has long been considered “soft” and without any longer-term reversing consequences.
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JCF -accepted version 18 Nov 2020
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Accepted/In Press date: 18 November 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 November 2020
Published date: 10 December 2020
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 485743
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485743
ISSN: 0929-1199
PURE UUID: 84be1d6f-49fc-46db-b65b-e47f1f5f03b9
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Date deposited: 18 Dec 2023 20:29
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:28
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Author:
Seraina C. Anagnostopoulou
Author:
Dimitrios Gounopoulos
Author:
Kamran Malikov
Author:
Hang Pham
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