Market reaction to and valuation of IFRS reconciliation adjustments: first evidence from the UK |
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Authors: | Joanne Horton George Serafeim |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Accounting, London School of Economics, Room E307, Houghton Street, London, WC2A 2AE, UK;(2) Department of Accounting and Management, Harvard Business School, Morgan Hall 378, Boston, MA 02163, USA |
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Abstract: | We investigate the market reaction to, and the value-relevance of, information contained in the mandatory transitional documents required by International Financial Reporting Standards 1 (2005). We find significant negative abnormal returns for firms reporting negative earnings reconciliation. Although the informational content of the positive earnings adjustments is value-relevant before disclosure, for negative earnings adjustments it is value-relevant only after disclosure. This finding is consistent with managers delaying the communication of bad news until IFRS compliance. A finer model shows that adjustments attributed to impairment of goodwill, share-based payments, and deferred taxes are incrementally value-relevant but that only the impairment of goodwill and deferred taxes reveal new information. Our results indicate that mandatory IFRS adoption alters investors’ beliefs about stock prices. |
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