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Journal ArticleDOI

Does Mandatory IFRS Adoption Affect Crash Risk

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TLDR
This article examined the impact of mandatory IFRS adoption on firm-level "crash risk", defined as the frequency of extreme negative stock returns, and found that crash risk decreases relatively more among industrial firms where IFRS results in more credible changes to local GAAP.
Abstract
We examine the impact of mandatory IFRS adoption on firm-level “crash risk,” defined as the frequency of extreme negative stock returns. An important feature of our study is that we separately analyze industrial firms and firms in finance-related industries. This is important because IFRS adoption is likely to affect industrial firms through different mechanisms than financial firms, and as a result may affect crash risk differently. We find that for companies in poor information environments, crash risk decreases among industrial firms and increases among financial firms after the IFRS mandate. We also find that crash risk decreases relatively more among industrial firms where IFRS results in more credible changes to local GAAP, and that crash risk increases relatively more among banks with less restrictive regulations. In addition, we find that earnings volatility declines after IFRS adoption for industrial firms but increases for financial firms. Overall, our findings are consistent with mandatory IFRS adoption decreasing crash risk among industrial firms by improving reporting quality, and increasing crash risk among financial firms by inducing greater volatility and affording more opportunities for manipulation.

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Citations
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The effect of fair value accounting on the performance evaluation role of earnings

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of fair value accounting on the association between net income and cash pay following the 2005 worldwide adoption of IFRS was studied and it was found that while non-fair value provisions were associated with an increase in this association, its fair value provisions are associated with a decrease in it.
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Information leakage, site visits, and crash risk: Evidence from China

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors used Chinese listed firms during 2009-2014 to examine how conditional skewness (crash risk) reacts to the information revealed by site visits.
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Financial information quality and investment efficiency: Evidence from Malaysia

TL;DR: In this paper, the association between financial information quality and investment efficiency among firms in Malaysia was empirically examined, and the results provided support that financial information is significantly positively related to investment efficiency.
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Mandatory Disclosure Reform, Monitoring, and Executive Compensation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine whether an exogenously imposed disclosure reform that increases the amount of information affects the level of executive compensation and find results consistent with compensation increasing after IFRS adoption implying a net reduction in managers' informational advantage and private benefits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Convergence of accounting standards and financial reporting externality: evidence from mandatory IFRS adoption

TL;DR: This article examined whether reporting externalities can be magnified when financial disclosures are based on a common set of accounting standards and found that the changes in publicly available information of mandatory IFRS adopters can impact the investment efficiency of prior voluntary adopters.
References
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Posted Content

Law and Finance

TL;DR: This paper examined legal rules covering protection of corporate shareholders and creditors, the origin of these rules, and the quality of their enforcement in 49 countries and found that common law countries generally have the best, and French civil law countries the worst, legal protections of investors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Expected stock returns and volatility

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the relation between stock returns and stock market volatility and found that the expected market risk premium (the expected return on a stock portfolio minus the Treasury bill yield) is positively related to the predictable volatility of stock returns.
BookDOI

Governance matters VII : aggregate and individual governance indicators 1996-2007

TL;DR: The 2009 update of the Worldwide Governance Indicators (WGI) research project, covering 212 countries and territories and measuring six dimensions of governance between 1996 and 2008: Voice and Accountability, Political Stability and Absence of Violence/Terrorism, Government Effectiveness, Regulatory Quality, Rule of Law, and Control of Corruption as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Economic Consequences of Increased Disclosure

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study German firms that have switched from the German to an international reporting regime (1AS or U.S. GAAP) and show that proxies for the information asymmetry component of the cost of capital for the switching firms, namely, the bid-ask spread and trading volume behave in the predicted direction compared to firms employing the German reporting regime.
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Risk measurement when shares are subject to infrequent trading

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a method for measuring beta when share price data suffer from this problem, using a one-in-three random sample of all U.K. Stock Exchange shares from 1955 to 1974.
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