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Is financial reporting shaped by equity markets or by debt markets? An international study of timeliness and conservatism

Ray Ball (), Ashok Robin () and Gil Sadka ()
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Ray Ball: University of Chicago
Ashok Robin: Rochester Institute of Technology
Gil Sadka: Columbia University

Review of Accounting Studies, 2008, vol. 13, issue 2, No 2, 168-205

Abstract: Abstract We hypothesize debt markets—not equity markets—are the primary influence on “association” metrics studied since Ball and Brown (1968 J Account Res 6:159–178). Debt markets demand high scores on timeliness, conservatism and Lev’s (1989 J Account Res 27(supplement):153–192) R 2, because debt covenants utilize reported numbers. Equity markets do not rate financial reporting consistently with these metrics, because (among other things) they control for the total information incorporated in prices. Single-country studies shed little light on debt versus equity influences, in part because within-country firms operate under a homogeneous reporting regime. International data are consistent with our hypothesis. This is a fundamental issue in accounting.

Keywords: Reporting quality; Association studies; Debt; Conservatism; Timeliness; International; F30; G15; G18; G32; K33; M41 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2008
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DOI: 10.1007/s11142-007-9064-x

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