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Earnings Permanence and the Incremental Information Content of Cash Flows from Operations
Information content, Cash flows from operations, Earnings permanence, Transitory earnings
CAFR 1999–2021, the past two decades and a look ahead
The China Accounting and Finance Review (CAFR) was jointly established in 1999 by the Hong Kong Polytechnic University and Tsinghua University. Over the past 22 years, CAFR has published original papers in accounting and finance with a focus on China-related research. In this article, we review the journal’s publishing patterns and the impactful articles it has published, with the aim of better understanding past research on China-related issues and recent publication patterns and trends as well as developing new insight that may inspire future submissions. We divide past CAFR articles by topic into six groups: (i) information disclosure; (ii) auditing; (iii) corporate governance; (iv) market efficiency; (v) corporate finance; and (vi) miscellaneous. We use these categories as the basis of our review for articles published before 2020. We also summarize articles by their regional setting, research methodology, and authors’ university affiliation. We then highlight the contributions of a few impactful CAFR articles that are actively cited in both the Chinese and English literature. We complement the literature review by going over China’s financial stability research in JFS. We also compare CAFR with other major accounting and finance journals in the Asia-Pacific region. CAFR stands out by welcoming research using a diversity of regional settings and research topics. Finally, we discuss the new editorial strategies that began in 2020. Under the new editorial policy, CAFR now publishes more non-China and more cross-disciplinary studies than it used to. We review several recent publications to demonstrate the change. Going forward, we intend to call for the publication of more high-quality papers in accounting and finance that are not restricted to a region, area, or methodology providing new insights into accounting and finance.
Failure of the Net Profit Share Leasing Experiment for Offshore Petroleum Resources
A current trend among oil-producing nations with private oil sectors is to move toward tax systems that are based upon pr ofits rather than production. The authors present a case study of wha t can go wrong with profit-based tax schemes. They study the implemen tation of the net profit share leasing system in the United States in the early 1980s. They conclude that the information requirements of the scheme are heavy, perhaps prohibitive, and that the net profit sh are system can easily backfire if the informational requirements can not be met. The authors also show that the U.S. government misused th e limited amount of information that was available to it. Copyright 1988 by MIT Press.
Disclosure of financial items in 10-Ks and stock price informativeness
Non-Linearity and Specification Problems in Unexpected Earnings Response Regression Model
[In the last two decades of accounting research, many studies have investigated the relation between accounting variables and risk-adjusted security returns. The earliest studies (e.g., Ball and Brown 1968) used simple, nonparametric methods and focused mainly on the question of whether accounting earnings are associated with residual equity returns. Subsequent studies made methodological refinements in both the measurement and the statistical techniques. One important statistical refinement was the "unexpected earnings response regression model" (UERRM), a linear statistical model that uses the unexpected earnings variable as a regressor to explain risk-adjusted returns. The UERRM has become well-known, and many recent studies (e.g., Cornell and Landsman 1989, 686; Daley et al. 1988, 580; Doran et al. 1988, 392; Landsman and Damodaran 1989, 107; McNichols 1989, 15) have used some form of it as a "benchmark" model, against which to compare more complicated models. In one paradigm (so popular that it has become almost standard practice), various accounting variables are added to the UERRM, and their "incremental information content" is assessed by testing the statistical significance of their coefficients. The inferences derived from this procedure are, of course, conditional on the degree to which the UERRM is correctly specified. A critical problem caused by using a misspecified UERRM is that its least squares estimator can lead to erroneous inferences in the research design. Despite the UERRM's popularity, researchers have expressed concerns regarding its specification. For example, Lev (1989) recently surveyed a large number of research papers that used some form of an UERRM and found that for the most part R2 s were low and often bordered on "the negligible." His table 1, which includes statistics from 19 studies, indicates that most reported R2 s are less than 10 percent. Although low R2 s are not proof of major specification problems, Lev does suggest that they are a cause for concern and may be the result of specification problems. Investigation of multiple specification problems is an important aspect of the present study because the various specification issues are interrelated. For example, nonnormality can be associated with nonlinearity, which, in turn, can be associated with heteroscedasticity or variation in the coefficients (Judge et al. 1985, 455, 814, 839). Thus, ad hoc tests for a single specification problem can be misleading and can fail to identify the fundamental problems. To our knowledge, no studies have comprehensively and formally evaluated the specification of the cross-sectional, ordinary least squares model that relates unexpected earnings to risk-adjusted security returns. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to test such a model systematically and empirically for specification problems. Specifically, this study tests for nonlinearity, heteroscedasticity, residual nonnormality, omitted variables, and interfirm systematic and random coefficient variation. Also, when appropriate, adjusted R2 -statistics are included to indicate the degree of misspecification-information that is not directly observable from the tests themselves. A high degree of generality is obtained by using three samples of earnings forecasts as proxies for expected earnings. These were obtained from IBES financial analyst consensus forecasts, Value Line financial analyst forecasts, and COMPUSTAT-based time-series forecasts. Daily and monthly security returns are considered for short and long event-windows, respectively. In addition, one study recently published in The Accounting Review (Cornell and Landsman 1989) is replicated. The findings from all of the samples and the replication indicate that the specification error is large enough to affect conclusions regarding economic relationships. For example, in the replication, the specification problems are shown to lead to substantial instability in inferences from the model.]
Evidence of the Abnormal Accrual Anomaly Incremental to Operating Cash Flows
Recent research provides evidence that the operating cash flows-to-price ratio subsumes accruals in explaining future annual returns. This suggests that the accrual anomaly is part of the overall value-glamour anomaly and does not represent the mispricing of earnings. We extend the literature by using multiple measures of abnormal accruals and separate analyses of future annual returns and future earnings announcement returns. The results reveal that the operating cash flows-to-price ratio does not subsume abnormal accruals in explaining future annual returns or future announcement returns. We also find that the operating cash flows-to-price ratio does not subsume total accruals in explaining future announcement returns. These results are not consistent with accruals being a manifestation of the value-glamour anomaly. Our study contributes to the current debate on the existence and the extent of the (abnormal) accrual anomaly. Moreover, the methodology employed can help researchers in exploring mispricing phenomena.
Overbidding in Mergers and Acquisitions: An Accounting Perspective
ABSTRACT Does accounting regime play a role in the well-documented phenomenon of overbidding in M&As? The 2001 regulatory change from a goodwill amortization to a non-amortization regime (SFAS 142) affords us a quasi-experimental setting for testing the consequences of M&A accounting rules for acquirers' bidding decisions. Relying on a novel approach to modeling optimal bidding, our primary finding indicates a significant increase in overbidding in the post-2001 period, suggesting that M&A accounting has real consequences for bidding decisions, and that this result is robust to a battery of sensitivity tests. In addition, supplementary tests show that overbidding is more pronounced in pooling versus purchase transactions, and that the accounting regime's implications for overbidding and acquisition premium are distinct. Overall, our findings shed light on the role accounting plays in shaping managerial decisions—and, ultimately, shareholder wealth—in an important corporate setting. They may thus inform researchers, corporate boards, and standards setters. Data Availability: Data are available from the public sources cited in the text. JEL Classifications: G34, M41.
Analyst forecasts: sales and profit margins
Hedge Fund Intervention and Accounting Conservatism
Abstract Hedge fund intervention has been associated with many positive corporate changes and is an important vehicle for informed shareholder monitoring. Effective monitoring has also been positively associated with accounting conservatism. Building upon these prior results, we predict an increase in accounting conservatism after hedge fund intervention. We use a large sample of hedge fund activist events and identify control firms with similar likelihoods of being targeted using the propensity score matching method to apply difference‐in‐difference tests. We find that when hedge fund activists have relatively large ownership and sufficient time to exert their monitoring power, target firms experience significant increases in conditional conservatism. CFO turnovers, upward/lateral auditor switches, and improvements in audit committee independence after intervention are accompanied by greater increases in conditional conservatism. Finally, we find greater increases in conditional conservatism when there is a lack of monitoring by dedicated institutional investors before the intervention. Our study suggests that hedge fund activists improve accounting monitoring tools and thus adds important new evidence on the effectiveness of shareholder monitoring on accounting practices.