Part 11. Financial Reporting Quality Flashcards
Financial reporting quality
This refers to the characteristics of firms financial statements, with primary criterion being adherence to generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) in the jurisdiction in which firm operates.
High quality financial reporting
This must be decision useful.
2 characteristics:
- relevance - must also be material in that knowledge of it would likely affect decision of users of financial statements.
- faithful representation - encompasses the qualities of completeness, neutrality, and absence of errors.
Quality of earnings
- This can be judged based on the sustainability of earnings as well as on their level.
- Sustainability can be evaluated by determining the proportion of reported earnings that can be expected to continue in the future.
- Increase in reported earnings resulting from a change in ER or by sales of assets have appreciated over many periods are not typically sustainable, but higher profits from increased efficiency or market share are.
- The higher probability that high-quality earnings will continue in future periods increases their impact on the value of the firm, calculated as PV of expected future earnings.
Importance of level of earnings/quality:
- Reported earnings must be high enough to sustain the company’s operations and existence over time, and high enough to provide an adequate return to companies investors.
- sustainability of reported cash flows in determining the quality of reported earnings, the value of items reported on the balance sheet.
- inadequate accruals for probable liabilities and overstatement of asset values can decrease quality or reported earnings and bring sustainability to question.
- it is possible for firm has high financial reporting quality, but low quality of reported earnings, such as earnings reported may be GAAP compliant and relevant, but low sustainability or low enough in the amount that provision of adequate investor returns.
Categorisation of quality levels of financial reports from best to worse:
- Reporting compliant with GAAP and decision-useful; earnings are sustainable and adequate.
- Reporting is compliant with GAAP and decision-useful, but earnings quality is low (earnings are not sustainable or adequate).
- Reporting is compliant with GAAP, but earnings quality is low, and reporting choices and estimates are biased.
- Reporting is compliant with GAAP, but the amount of earnings is actively managed to increase, decrease, or smooth reported earnings.
- Reporting is not compliant with GAAP, although the numbers presented are based on the company’s actual economic activities.
- Reporting is not compliant and includes numbers that are essentially fictitious or fraudulent.
Conservative accounting
The choices made within GAAP wrt reported earnings, if they tend to decrease the companys reported earnings and financial positon for the current period.
This results in increase future period earnings.
Often used by management for different periods to smooth earnings overtime as greater earnings volatility tends to reduce value of company shares.
Aggressive accounting
The choices that increase reported earnings or improve the financial position for the current period.
This results in decreased earnings in future periods.
Earnings smoothing
This is accomplished through adjustment of accrued liabilities based on management estimates.
- In higher than expected earnings, management may employ conservative bias by adjusting accrued liability upward to reduce reported earnings for that period.
- This allows deferral of recognition of earnings to future period that are less expected.
- In future period, accrued liability adjusted downward increases reported earnings for that period to meet market expectations.
Examples of aggressive accounting
- capitalising current period costs
- longer estimates of lives of depreciable assets
- higher estimates of salvage values
- straight line depreciation
- delayed recognition of impairments
- less accrual of reserves for bad debt
- smaller valuation allowances on DTA
Examples of conservative accounting
- expensing current period costs
- shorter estimates of lives of depreciable assets
- lower estimates of salvage values
- accelerated depreciation
- early recognition of impairments
- more accrual of reserves for bad debt
- larger valuation allowances on DTA
Bias
- This can be present in the way financial results are presented.
- A company may present transparent statements helping analysts understand results and activities led to them.
- A company may provide minimal disclosure in attempt to emphasise positive developments and obscure info from negative developments.
Examples where GAAP introduce conservatism:
- Imposing higher standard of verification for revenue and profit that for expenses and accrual of liabilities:
e. g. research costs expensed in period incurred due to uncertainty about future benefits to be provided from research activities, while associated revenue not reocgnised until some future period.
e. g. accrual for legal liabilities recorded when future payment becomes probable, while standard recognising increasing accrued asset value is stricter.
e. g. US GAAP write downs of inventory values required when FV likely impaired, but increases in inventory value may not be recorded until inventory is sold.
Benefits of conservative bias
- Reducing probability for future litigation from users claiming they were misled, in reducing current period tax liability, and in protecting interests of those who have less complete information than company management, such as buyers of company debt.
Manager motivations
For aggressive accounting:
- choices meet or exceed benchmark number for earnings per share.
- report earnings greater than earnings guidance offered earlier by management.
- report earnings greater than consensus analyst expectations.
- report earnings greater than those of same period in prior year.
reasons:
- career orientated, seeking to enhance reputation and improve career opportunities.
- beating benchmarks is important to subsequent stock price movements
- motivated by incentive compensation (bonus) that depends on stock returns.
- gain credibility with equity market investors
- improve the way company is viewed by customers and suppliers.
- for highly leveraged companies and unprofitable companies, it is a desire to avoid violating debt covenants.
3 factors where management provide low quality financial reporting:
- motivation
- opportunity
- rationalisation of behaviour i.e. “ill fix it next period”