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Articulation-based accruals
The role of audit verification in debt contracting: evidence from covenant violations
Mixing fair-value and historical-cost accounting: predictable other-comprehensive-income and mispricing of bank stocks
Earnings co-movements and earnings manipulation
Joint audit, audit market structure, and consumer surplus
Book-tax conformity and capital structure
Audit firms face downward-sloping demand curves and the audit market is far from perfectly competitive
The role of specialists in financial reporting: Evidence from pension accounting
The contribution of bank regulation and fair value accounting to procyclical leverage
Our analysis of how banks’ responses to asset price changes can result in procyclical leverage reveals that, for banks with a binding regulatory leverage constraint, absent differences in regulatory risk weights across assets, procyclical leverage does not occur. For banks without a binding constraint, fair value and bank regulation both can contribute to procyclical leverage. Empirical findings based on a large sample of U.S. commercial banks reveal that bank regulation explains procyclical leverage for banks relatively close to the regulatory leverage constraint and contributes to procyclical leverage for those that are not. We also show that fair value accounting does not contribute to procyclical leverage.