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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Earnings Management for Swedish Listed Firms : An Empirical Study on Real Earnings Management Prior to Stock Repurchases

Lardner, Simon, Willner, Pierre January 2017 (has links)
In this study, we follow Cooper et al. (2017) and intend to further investigate income-decreasing real earnings management through altering production and discretionary expenditure and focus on such actions taken by management prior to stock repurchase. We take on a European perspective of IFRS on real earnings management and empirically test to what extent Swedish listed firms use real earnings management prior to stock repurchases to lower share prices. We follow Roydchowdhury (2006) and Cooper et al. (2017) and establish the firms normal level of real earnings management to compare with the period when firms anticipate stock repurchases. We present our data and results through descriptive statistics and use variables identified by Zang (2011) to perform correlation and regression tests accordingly with Cooper et al. (2017). Our results suggest that managers of Swedish firms on average engage in income-increasing real earnings management and decrease such management actions prior to stock repurchases. These findings emphasize the influence of real operating decisions by firms’ that must be considered by the market around major corporate events similar to repurchasing stock.
22

Corporate Social Responsibility and Earnings Management : Two sides of the relationship

Appelqvist Östman, Vanja, Sharp, Olivia January 2022 (has links)
Sustainability is becoming a more important topic, not just in terms of the environment but also through social and governmental aspects. There are different views on what responsibility firms should take and what their incentives might be. Companies get more pressure from society to perform activities related to Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and not just focus on maximizing wealth for their shareholders. Thus, creates incentives to manipulate their earnings, either by managing their accruals (AEM) or by performing real activity earnings management (REM), to please all parties. On the other hand, firms who already manipulate their earnings have motives to increase their participation in CSR activities as a cover to hide their performance of Earnings Management (EM). There are plenty of previous studies investigating the relationships between CSR and EM, but with contradicting results. Some have tested a one-way relationship while others have evaluated a bi-directional relationship. This thesis has provided evidence that there exists a relationship between CSR and EM, where AEM (REM) has a negative (positive) effect on CSR while CSR has a negative (positive) effect on AEM (REM). Also, there is a significant difference between their effects in both directions of the relationship. Thereby, the proposed research question is answered: ‘’What are the relationships between Corporate Social Responsibility and Earnings Management?’’. Firms who are highly engaged in CSR care about all of their stakeholders and they are ethical, therefore they manipulate their accruals less. But they can also have increased agency issues and therefore they perform more real activity earnings management. From the other perspective, firms who engage in accrual-based earnings management are likely to have an overconfident CEO who wants to send out the right signals but does not feel the need to hide their actions behind CSR activities. Moreover, the managers that execute real activity earnings management might feel the need to not get detected and therefore they hide their manipulations behind CSR activities. These findings are both aligned and contradicting several theories depending on what direction of the relationship one is looking at. However, the legitimacy theory has been found to have a large impact in both directions of the relationship, all companies feel the urge to either be legitimate, or appear as it. This is a quantitative cross-sectional study including 5.026 observations from European companies. The authors are aligned with the positivist paradigm and the study takes a deductive approach. The statistically significant results from OLS regression with fixed effects are backed up and compared to theories and previous studies within the area.
23

Kvinnliga styrelseledamöters påverkan på earnings management : En studie på svenska börsbolag

Hamrén, Caroline, Persson, Linnea January 2016 (has links)
Antalet kvinnliga styrelseledamöter i svenska börsbolag förväntas öka i och med en politisk strävan efter förbättrad jämställdhet i bolagsledningarna. På grund av att studier har funnit en skillnad i synen på risk mellan kvinnor och män är det möjligt att en representation av fler kvinnor i styrelserna skulle kunna leda till lägre earnings management då earnings management medför risk. Samtidigt har tidigare forskning på sambandet mellan kvinnor och earnings management erhållit varierande resultat. Syftet med denna uppsats är att undersöka om det finns ett negativt samband mellan kvinnliga styrelseledamöter och earnings management i svenska börsbolag. Hypoteserna har undersökts med en kvantitativ metod baserat på bolag på Nasdaq OMX Stockholm mellan åren 2010-2014, där earnings management har estimerats med Jones uppdaterade modell och sambandet mellan kvinnor och earnings management har prövats med multipla regressioner. Resultaten visar ett signifikant svagt negativt samband mellan kvinnor och earnings management.
24

SEC Regulation of Corporate 10K Filing Dates: The Effect on Earnings Management and Market Recognition

Russ, Robert W. 01 January 2006 (has links)
In November 2002, the Securities and Exchange Commission released a final ruling regarding a filing requirement change. The proposed requiredment change was for domestic companies to file annual and quarterly reports within 60 and 30 days, respectfully. This requirement was recommended for companies with a market value of at least $75 million and would reduce by 30 days the time allowed to file these reports. The Wall Street Journal article announcing this proposal stated the change was an effort to address some of the problems arising from accounting scandals such as the Enron scandal of 2001. A potential added benefit of the SEC rule change might be a reduction in earnings management. The purpose of this study is two fold. The first part is to test the theory that earnings management takes time. The second purpose is to examine the question of market recognition of earnings management. Sloan (1996) and other researchers report that the market does not recognize earnings management in the long term. Xie's (2001) results suggest that the market over prices earnings management. Balsam et al. (2002) found the market reacted negatively to abnormal accruals. The current research study uses a larger sample including firms not suspected of earnings management and fails to confirm the Balsam et al. result. The findings of the current study suggest that the results of the Balsam et al. study are either the result of the data selection process used in that study or the data selection processs used by Balsam et al. controlled for other market fluctuations not included in the current study. The results of this study suggest a positive relationship between earnings management and the time to file annual reports. Thsi finding supports the theory that moving earnings management from a future period to the current period requires time. Thus, the SEC rule change to reduce the time to file annual reports should reduce a company's ability to manipulate earnings.
25

The Role of Taxes in Foreign Earnings Management: Implications for Pricing of Foreign Earnings

Huang, Jingjing 29 September 2014 (has links)
U.S. multinational corporations are well known for shifting income to low tax foreign subsidiaries to avoid U.S. income tax. Yet little is known about how multinational corporations opportunistically use low tax foreign subsidiaries for financial reporting purpose. Understanding this question has implications for U.S. accounting regulators to set enforcement targets. Using worldwide consolidated financial statements, I examine the role of taxes for multinational corporations to manage earnings in foreign subsidiaries. I find that by managing earnings in low tax foreign countries, multinational corporations can reduce the effective tax rate on pretax accrual earnings by an average of 4.3%. To examine the implication of opportunistic foreign earnings management on investors' equity valuation, I find evidence that investors do not seem to overvalue foreign managed earnings compared to domestic managed earnings, though foreign earnings are on average valued higher than domestic earnings.
26

Reserving, reinsurance and earnings management : evidence from the United Kingdom's property-liability insurance market

Veprauskaite, Elena January 2013 (has links)
This thesis examines the joint impact of earnings management incentives (i.e., income smoothing, solvency management and tax management) and reinsurance, together with other institutional factors, on the magnitude and direction of claim (loss) reserves errors in the UK’s property-liability insurance industry. Two reserve error definitions, found in literature, are employed to conduct the analysis. Furthermore, a panel data generalised methods of moments (GMM) estimator is employed to incorporate the dynamic nature of current and past loss reserving errors. Using the GMM estimator in a panel of 151 firms over a period from 1991 and 2005, the study finds support for the conclusions of some prior studies but also inconsistencies with other previous research. The present study finds that the inferences drawn from empirical analyses can be influenced by the definition of loss reserving errors and to some extent how other incentive variables are defined. The results of this study suggest that discretionary loss reserving behaviour tends to persist from one year to another. Therefore, ignoring the dynamic nature of loss reserving errors could lead to biased and unreliable conclusions. The empirical results of this study also find that property-liability insurance managers manipulate claims reserves in order to smooth company’s earnings across accounting periods. Furthermore, empirical evidence is found which indicates that high levels of reinsurance ceded help to reduce the incidence of error in loss reserves. Contrary to expectations, the evidence presented in this thesis suggests that highly solvent insurers under-estimate their claims liabilities. However, no empirical support is found to indicate that insurers over-reserve in order to reduce and/or postpone period tax liabilities. The study also produced mixed results regarding the relation between the type of reinsurance cover used and claim reserve errors. Nevertheless, the empirical results show that firm-specific effects, such as company size and product mix, can have effect on the accuracy of insurers’ reserves. Finally, as this study gives an important insight on discretionary loss reserve manipulation, its conclusions could be of interest and relevance to the business decisions of investors, policyholders, regulators, and other interested parties (e.g., credit rating agencies and accounting standard settlers).
27

Accounting for Earnings Management through Bad Debt Expense

Keeney, Caroline 01 January 2019 (has links)
This paper studied earnings management through Bad Debt Expense. The goal of this thesis was to see if managers manipulate Bad Debt Expense in order to smooth their bottom line. In order to test this, I created several different variables relating to Bad Debt Expense and some control variables for Net Income. I found that my results are consistent with earnings management. The results are not clearly stated and therefore I cannot say that earnings management is definitely happening, but it is a possibility.
28

Tax-loss selling and managerial discretion

Sherry, Samuel, Accounting, Australian School of Business, UNSW January 2009 (has links)
This thesis examines the relationship between tax-loss selling (TLS), where investors with taxable gains sell stocks that have declined in value just before the fiscal year-end to generate offsetting tax losses, and managers?? incentives to influence stock prices, either through increased disclosure or by engaging in upwards earnings management. Firms whose stock prices represent greater potential tax losses in investors?? portfolios at year-end are predicted to increase their disclosure level in June to prevent further share price falls due to TLS, and have higher levels of accruals. Using the number of discretionary, market-sensitive news releases in the Signal G announcement database to measure disclosure frequency, this thesis finds that, for a sample of 14,713 firm-year observations drawn from all ASX firms for the years 1994 to 2007, stocks with larger negative returns have higher disclosure in June, after controlling for size, performance, risk and external financing dependence. This is particularly true of small mining and exploration companies that are more reliant on voluntary disclosure as a vehicle for lowering information asymmetry. This increased disclosure does not appear to contribute to the higher July returns earned by stocks that experienced significant TLS in June. Disclosure frequency is negatively associated with the magnitude of operating and total accruals, suggesting that earnings management is less likely for firms with higher disclosure. There is also evidence that smaller firms with poor stock price performance have higher levels of operating accruals and thus may be more likely to engage in earnings management.
29

Earnings Management using Classification Shifting

Bondegård, Michael, David, La January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
30

Earnings Management och Finanskrisen : En studie om earnings managements förekomst i Sverige, före och under den finansiella krisen

Johan, Wall, Magnus, Wiik January 2010 (has links)
<p>Tidigare studier har visat på att en finansiell kris leder till en minskad förekomst av earnings management som anses vara ett stort problemen i modern redovisning. Denna uppsats undersöker earnings managements förekomst bland svenska företag och hur den påverkas av en finansiell kris samt om det finns skillnader mellan olika branscher. Vi använder en modifierad variant av Jones modell för att mäta de diskretionära periodiseringarna, som likställs som earnings management, och jämför sedan förekomsten av earnings management före och under krisen samt mellan de fyra branscherna som studerats. Vi finner inte några skillnader i earnings managements förekomst innan och under finanskrisen men vi kan se att branschen Sällanköp i större utsträckning än övriga studerade branscher bedriver earnings management. Vår förklaring till detta är att övervakningen av företagens redovisning är generellt sett bra vilket minimerar möjligheten att bedriva earnings management men att det kan finnas brister för branschen Sällanköp.</p>

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