THE IMPACT OF ADJUSTED EARNINGS PRACTICES ON FIRM PERFORMANCE

THE IMPACT OF ADJUSTED EARNINGS PRACTICES ON FIRM PERFORMANCE
Author: John McKenna
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2022
Genre:
ISBN:

"Show me the incentive and I will show you the outcome". Charlie Munger The use of adjusted earnings as a presentation alternative to GAAP earnings is intended to help financial statement users understand the underlying performance of a company. The approach is highly prevalent and growing in frequency and adjustment magnitude, as "by 2017, for example the average adjustment per firm was 26 cents per share or about 15% of average GAAP earnings per share" (Rouen, So, and Wang, 2020, p. 3). While some adjustments are standard adjustments for non-recuring items like accounting rule changes, or part of a set of consistently communicated recurring items, there is another group of adjustments that are infrequent, subject to considerable management latitude and often inconsistently categorized. Across the range of academic research on this phenomenon, there are questions regarding management motivation, communication clarity and persistence of these non-GAAP adjustments. There is a broader question regarding business decision rigor, and quality of earnings versus peers for those firms with a large adjusted to reported earnings difference. In Chapter 3, I assess the consequences of the use of Adjusted Earnings, by testing whether the size of the difference between reported and adjusted earnings is associated with a difference in performance against a set of key firm performance measures. The underlying hypothesis is that firms with a large adjusted-earnings differential have weaker underlying operational performance, compared to their peers and that ultimately the decisions and adjustment actions being taken (e.g., more acquisitions, business reorganizations or "one-offs") that drive up the earnings adjustment subsequently erode performance. The study of a set of large New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) listed companies over a ten-year period (2011 through 2020) showed that firms with large adjusted-earnings differentials had statistically significant performance gaps versus peers that had smaller earnings adjustments on return on assets (ROA) and return on equity (ROE), both contemporaneously and prospectively. There were also performance differences in current year total shareholder return (TSR), although that was mostly a short-term phenomenon and did not hold for future TSR. The study results were particularly significant for the operational measure return on assets (ROA). The tests controlled for firm sector, size and leverage ratio. In Chapter 4, I examine whether CEO incentive compensation (total current year variable pay, variable pay as a percentage/fraction of total compensation, and unvested equity) is a possible cause of the expanded use of Adjusted Earnings practices, and associated with the size of the difference between adjusted and reported earnings. The hypothesis for this follow-on study was that CEO incentives are enhanced by a higher adjusted earnings number, given the typical structure of incentive plans and thus they could influence higher adjusted-earnings differentials. The literature is mixed on this topic as some studies like Black, Black, Christensen and Gee (2021) show no significant relationship between CEO pay and aggressive non-GAAP earnings reporting, while others show that large positive non-GAAP earnings adjustments predict abnormally high CEO Pay (Guest, Kothari and Pozen, 2017). Cohen, Dey and Lys (2008) found that unexercised options were positively associated with income-increasing accrual-based earnings management activities, but that activity is not necessarily impacting reported performance measures (p. i). This second study, found only partial statistical support for the hypothesis that current year variable compensation was associated with the Adjusted Earnings differential, but it was inconclusive. There was statistical significance for the tests of the variable compensation ratio and total unvested equity being related to future adjusted earnings differentials, but those findings were at a relatively low significance level.

The Use of Adjusted Earnings in Performance Evaluation

The Use of Adjusted Earnings in Performance Evaluation
Author: Asher Curtis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 49
Release: 2020
Genre:
ISBN:

We document widespread adoption of adjustments to earnings for performance evaluation; 84% of our sample of S&P 1500 firms use adjusted earnings for bonus compensation. We find that the transactions removed from adjusted earnings vary widely and include both transitory and non-transitory items. We examine the determinants of using adjusted earnings and find some evidence that boards are more likely to contract using adjusted earnings when firms have high levels of intangible assets, more volatile earnings, CEOs with shorter tenures, CEOs who also act as board chairperson, or larger compensation committees, or are reporting losses. We find that firms with an independent chairperson or lead director are less likely to contract using adjusted earnings. We examine the compensation consequences of the use of adjusted earnings and find that CEOs compensated on adjusted earnings are less likely to miss minimum bonus thresholds, are less likely to meet maximum bonus thresholds, and have higher overall bonus compensation, controlling for firm performance. Taken together, our analyses suggest that both managerial power and efficient contracting concerns explain the use of adjusted earnings in CEO compensation contracts.

Earnings Management

Earnings Management
Author: Joshua Ronen
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 587
Release: 2008-08-06
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0387257713

This book is a study of earnings management, aimed at scholars and professionals in accounting, finance, economics, and law. The authors address research questions including: Why are earnings so important that firms feel compelled to manipulate them? What set of circumstances will induce earnings management? How will the interaction among management, boards of directors, investors, employees, suppliers, customers and regulators affect earnings management? How to design empirical research addressing earnings management? What are the limitations and strengths of current empirical models?

The Effect of Firm Performance on Modeling Earnings Management Behaviour

The Effect of Firm Performance on Modeling Earnings Management Behaviour
Author: Lan Sun
Publisher:
Total Pages: 7
Release: 2017
Genre:
ISBN:

Since the middle 1980s, discretionary accruals have become the primarily focus in modelling earnings management. While the Jones and Modified Jones models attempt to control for contemporaneous performance, empirical assessments of these models suggest that estimated discretionary accruals are significantly influenced by a firm's contemporaneous and past performance (Kothari, 2005). In this paper, we formally derived the relation between firm performance and accruals. We show that the evolvement of different models and demonstrate why firm performance should be controlled when estimating discretionary accruals. Using a sample of ASX listed firms with 5,947 firm-year observations from the period of 1999 to 2006, we estimate discretionary accruals based on Jones Model, Modified Jones Model, Cash Flow Modified Jones Model and Performance Adjusted Technique. The results show that Performance Adjusted technique tends to adjust the effect of performance on estimated discretionary accruals by removing the measurement in discretionary accruals that correlated with earnings performance and therefore improve the reliability of further detection of earnings management.

Creative Cash Flow Reporting

Creative Cash Flow Reporting
Author: Charles W. Mulford
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 432
Release: 2005-05-13
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0471714410

Successful methodology for identifying earnings-related reporting indiscretions Creative Cash Flow Reporting and Analysis capitalizes on current concerns with misleading financial reporting on misleading financial reporting. It identifies the common steps used to yield misleading cash flow amounts, demonstrates how to adjust the cash flow statement for more effective analysis, and how to use adjusted operating cash flow to uncover earnings that have been misreported using aggressive or fraudulent accounting practices. Charles W. Mulford, PhD, CPA (Atlanta, GA), is the coauthor of three books, including the bestselling The Financial Numbers Game: Identifying Creative Accounting Practices. Eugene E. Comiskey, PhD, CPA, CMA (Atlanta, GA), is the coauthor of the bestselling The Financial Numbers Game: Identifying Creative Accounting Practices.

The Routledge Companion to Auditing

The Routledge Companion to Auditing
Author: David Hay
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 387
Release: 2014-09-15
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1136210350

Auditing has been a subject of some controversy, and there have been repeated attempts at reforming its practice globally. This comprehensive companion surveys the state of the discipline, including emerging and cutting-edge trends. It covers the most important and controversial issues, including auditing ethics, auditor independence, social and environmental accounting as well as the future of the field. This handbook is vital reading for legislators, regulators, professionals, commentators, students and researchers involved with auditing and accounting. The collection will also prove an ideal starting place for researchers from other fields looking to break into this vital subject.

Earnings Management, Corporate Governance, and True Financial Performance

Earnings Management, Corporate Governance, and True Financial Performance
Author: Hassan Tehranian
Publisher:
Total Pages: 30
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

This paper addresses two questions. First, do corporate governance mechanisms that have been shown to affect firm behavior in other contexts also affect the degree to which firms advantageously manage their reported financial performance? Second, does past research investigating the impact of governance structure and option-based compensation on firm performance stand up when measured performance is adjusted for the impact of earnings management? We demonstrate that corporate governance mechanisms effectively constrain discretion in earnings management and that the estimated impact of governance variables on corporate performance is far stronger when discretionary accruals are removed from reported earnings. Institutional ownership of shares, institutional investor representation on the board of directors, and the presence of independent outside directors on the board all reduce the use of discretionary accruals in earnings management. These factors largely offset the impact of options compensation, which we find strongly encourages earnings management. Earnings management strongly affects patterns of reported corporate performance. While conventional profitability measures suggest a strong relationship between option compensation and firm performance, profitability measures that are adjusted for the impact of discretionary accruals show no relationship with option compensation. In contrast, the estimated impact of corporate governance variables on firm performance more than doubles when discretionary accruals are eliminated from measured profitability.

EARNINGS MANAGEMENT IN CORPORATE ENTERPRISES

EARNINGS MANAGEMENT IN CORPORATE ENTERPRISES
Author: Sandeep Goel
Publisher: Independent Author
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2023-05-29
Genre:
ISBN: 9781805294382

Earnings management by companies has long been documented in the academic literature. The scale of the problem came under the spotlight, with major scandals around the world, shaking investors' faith in published company accounts. CEOs and other top executives have been found to manage their earnings aggressively, not only through accounting sleight-of-hand but also by skewing corporate policies in the hope of improving their company's apparent performance. In many cases, earnings management was driven by the desire to prop the company's stock price, often the key basis for executive compensation. Earnings management is the intentional misstatement of earnings leading to bottom line numbers that would have been different in the absence of any manipulation. Earnings management does not necessarily mean upward manipulation of earnings, but it includes downward manipulation as well. Earnings management in the present competitive world is an economic reality. In the words of Ralph Ward, "It is easier to hide voodoo numbers under headings that are already fuzzy". The regulators are now increasingly cracking down hard on companies indulging in earnings management and questioning the efficacy of even those accounting standards that were quite acceptable till a few years ago. The borrower firms, in particular, are still comfortable and not helpless in market that supports them more than the lenders. So, what are the options before stakeholders who have always attached extraordinary importance to and relied excessively on financial statements which are now posing new challenges to them. Think of the plight of a common man (shareholder)! Users of financial statements are often forced to wrestle with dramatic differences in reporting practices between companies within the same industries; asymmetry of information abounds. Intangibles, such as the credibility or reputation of corporate management, must be considered when analyzing a company. Discretionary choices in financial reporting that can ultimately lead to, or create; future earnings that drive stock prices must be identified and adjusted for. As a result, financial statements users must develop a keen understanding of the fundamentals underlying each firm's business operations. While the regulatory bodies, viz. SEC and SEBI have been expressing concern over the issue and their comments to investigate earnings manipulation have sparked renewed interest in the area, there has been little contribution in the academic and professional literature on the detection of earnings manipulation, particularly in India. This book is based on a study that aims to unfold designed earnings practices in the Indian corporate enterprises for the period 2003-04 to 2007-08. It contributes to the literature by increasing the knowledge as to where and when earnings management is likely to occur. It tries to assist investors and creditors in making investing and lending decisions by making them aware not only of the reliability (or truthfulness) of financial statements, but also to the relevance and predictive value of information presented in financial statements. Answers to issues and questions raised in the above discussion can help standard setters assess the effects of accounting standards that require management judgment. It would ultimately lead to less erosion of shareholders' value in particular and economy resources in general. So, an insight into earnings management is essential for all the market participants to extract the best use of financial statements. In some sense, the onus lies on academia and financial practitioners to focus on the importance of understanding a firm's accounting practices.

Earnings Management

Earnings Management
Author: Kathleen Yates
Publisher: Nova Science Publishers
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2016
Genre: Antologier
ISBN: 9781634855112

Earnings management is an issue that directly affects the overall integrity and quality of financial reporting and to date, many studies have been conducted in an attempt to gain an understanding of whether firms are engaging in earnings management, why they do so, what are the motives that drive managers' discretionary behaviour, what are the economic consequences and whether investors can see through this behaviour? In this book, Chapter One reviews the developments and the trends in the contemporary earnings management research and discuss several possible avenues for future research. Chapter Two provides an overview of the most recent studies on earnings management in relation to the financial crisis and the institutional environment and firm characteristics. Chapter Three provides a description of the nowadays most commonly used methods for measuring earnings management in accounting and finance literature. Chapter Four examines earnings management and corporate social responsibility as an entrenchment strategy.