Value-relevance of reporting comprehensive income under international GAAPs: Insights from major European financial markets
Olivier Ramond (),
Jean-Francois Casta () and
Stephen Lin
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Olivier Ramond: DRM - Dauphine Recherches en Management - Université Paris Dauphine-PSL - PSL - Université Paris Sciences et Lettres - CNRS - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
Stephen Lin: Accounting & Finance department - University of Miami [Coral Gables]
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Abstract:
This study investigates the extent to which three key summary accounting income figures, namely operating income, net income and comprehensive income, provide value-relevant information to investors in Germany, France, Italy, Spain and the UK. Using a large sample over the pre-IAS-compliance period 1992-2004, we find that all these three accounting income measures are statistically associated with share returns in any of the countries under analysis although our results show some disparities in the degree of 'usefulness' across country samples. Our main results are then threefold. We first provide evidence that comprehensive income is less value-relevant than both the bottom-line and operating income figures in all the sample countries. Second, our results show that aggregate other comprehensive income (or dirty surplus flow) is value-relevant and provides incremental price-relevant information beyond net income in most of the sample countries. This finding is rather different from the existing literature based in the US and UK that suggests other comprehensive income is generally not value-relevant especially when it is not separately disclosed in financial statements. Finally, we find that increased transparency on reporting other comprehensive income in financial statements as required by the UK (FRS3) and US (SFAS130) accounting standards may have warranted a stronger statistical association between firm share returns and comprehensive income. This last finding therefore strongly supports the ideology underlying the IASB/FASB joint project on 'Performance Reporting', and also provides evidence supporting Beaver's (1981) and Hirst and Hopkins' (1998) psychology-based financial reporting theory.
Keywords: Value-relevance; comprehensive income; other comprehensive income; performance reporting (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2007-02-02
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Published in American Accounting Association, International Accounting Section (IAS) Mid-Year Conference, Feb 2007, Charleston, United States. pp.57
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Working Paper: Value-relevance of reporting comprehensive income under international GAAPs: Insights from major European financial markets (2007)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:hal:journl:halshs-00163185
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