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On Litigation Risk and Disclosure Complexity: Evidence from Canadian Firms Cross-Listed in the US
Institution:1. Department of Finance, Terry College of Business, 452 Brooks Hall, University of Georgia; Athens, GA 30602, United States;2. Department of Finance, Sobey School of Business, Saint Mary''s University, Halifax, NS B3H 3C3, Canada;1. Nanyang Business School, Nanyang Technological University, Division of Banking and Finance, Singapore 639798, Singapore;2. Business School, University of Adelaide, 10 Pulteney Street, Adelaide 5005, Australia;3. Korea University Business School, Korea University, 145 Anam-ro, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea;1. ESSEC Business School, France;2. GSEM, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Abstract:We find that D&O insurance premiums for Canadian firms cross-listed in the US are more than twice those of Canadian-only listed firms, and audit fees are approximately 50% higher. While this supports the view that both service-providers view the US as a more litigious environment, our findings also suggest that these differentials for cross-listed firms reflect premia for both litigation risk and the complexity of firms' financial disclosures. In particular, we show that D&O liability insurers charge differently for cross-listed firms that have different levels of disclosure; while D&O premiums are significantly higher for all cross-listed firms, they increase and then decrease with increased disclosure complexity. In contrast, audit fees increase monotonically as the filing complexity increases. We also find that auditors appear to price abnormal premiums charged by D&O insurers. Thus, audit fee premia for cross-listed firms appear to capture aspects of both litigation risk and increased disclosure complexity.
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