The change of auditors in businesses and earnings conservatism

This paper investigates the level of earnings conservatism during the first year of auditor change. We hypothesize that newly-appointed auditors demand more conservative accounting compared to established auditors due to lack of specific knowledge about the new client and higher litigation risks. We...

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Published in:ISBELA 2012 - IEEE Symposium on Business, Engineering and Industrial Applications
Main Author: Kamarudin K.A.; Ismail W.A.W.
Format: Conference paper
Language:English
Published: IEEE Computer Society 2012
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84874371701&doi=10.2139%2fssrn.2049759&partnerID=40&md5=ba83892aadec2abedadb5efe3b9ea3a1
id 2-s2.0-84874371701
spelling 2-s2.0-84874371701
Kamarudin K.A.; Ismail W.A.W.
The change of auditors in businesses and earnings conservatism
2012
ISBELA 2012 - IEEE Symposium on Business, Engineering and Industrial Applications


10.2139/ssrn.2049759
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84874371701&doi=10.2139%2fssrn.2049759&partnerID=40&md5=ba83892aadec2abedadb5efe3b9ea3a1
This paper investigates the level of earnings conservatism during the first year of auditor change. We hypothesize that newly-appointed auditors demand more conservative accounting compared to established auditors due to lack of specific knowledge about the new client and higher litigation risks. We measure earnings conservatism based on the asymmetric recognition speed of good news and bad news on earnings, using Basu's reverse regression. The sample includes 3,054 firm-year observations from 2003-2008. Our results indicate that firms with a newly-appointed auditor experienced significantly higher earnings conservatism than other firms. We also find that the level of earnings conservatism required by newly-appointed auditors depends on the size of the former auditor and that of the successor. Specifically, we find that firms that change from a small audit firm to one of the Big 4 exhibit significantly higher earnings conservatism than firms that change from one of the Big 4 to a small audit firm. This evidence is consistent with the argument that auditors require more conservative accounting when the risk of litigation is higher. Copyright © 2012 IEEE.
IEEE Computer Society

English
Conference paper

author Kamarudin K.A.; Ismail W.A.W.
spellingShingle Kamarudin K.A.; Ismail W.A.W.
The change of auditors in businesses and earnings conservatism
author_facet Kamarudin K.A.; Ismail W.A.W.
author_sort Kamarudin K.A.; Ismail W.A.W.
title The change of auditors in businesses and earnings conservatism
title_short The change of auditors in businesses and earnings conservatism
title_full The change of auditors in businesses and earnings conservatism
title_fullStr The change of auditors in businesses and earnings conservatism
title_full_unstemmed The change of auditors in businesses and earnings conservatism
title_sort The change of auditors in businesses and earnings conservatism
publishDate 2012
container_title ISBELA 2012 - IEEE Symposium on Business, Engineering and Industrial Applications
container_volume
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.2139/ssrn.2049759
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84874371701&doi=10.2139%2fssrn.2049759&partnerID=40&md5=ba83892aadec2abedadb5efe3b9ea3a1
description This paper investigates the level of earnings conservatism during the first year of auditor change. We hypothesize that newly-appointed auditors demand more conservative accounting compared to established auditors due to lack of specific knowledge about the new client and higher litigation risks. We measure earnings conservatism based on the asymmetric recognition speed of good news and bad news on earnings, using Basu's reverse regression. The sample includes 3,054 firm-year observations from 2003-2008. Our results indicate that firms with a newly-appointed auditor experienced significantly higher earnings conservatism than other firms. We also find that the level of earnings conservatism required by newly-appointed auditors depends on the size of the former auditor and that of the successor. Specifically, we find that firms that change from a small audit firm to one of the Big 4 exhibit significantly higher earnings conservatism than firms that change from one of the Big 4 to a small audit firm. This evidence is consistent with the argument that auditors require more conservative accounting when the risk of litigation is higher. Copyright © 2012 IEEE.
publisher IEEE Computer Society
issn
language English
format Conference paper
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