Expected earnings growth and the cost of capital: an analysis of accounting regime change in the European financial market |
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Authors: | Christina Dargenidou Stuart McLeay Ivana Raonic |
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Affiliation: | University of Wales Bangor; National Bank of Greece and an Assistant Lecturer at the Athens University of Economics and Business; Cass Business School, City University in London |
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Abstract: | This study focuses on the relation between the cost of equity capital and earnings expectations when the properties of accounting that determine earnings vary across different regulatory regimes. More particularly, it addresses the European setting where different types of GAAP regime have continued to function in the presence of the gradual harmonization of the underlying legal framework, and where the adoption of internationally recognized accounting standards by certain firms has anticipated the requirement for International Financial Reporting Standards. On the basis of estimates of the cost of equity that are implied by analysts' earnings forecasts, the article provides evidence that financial market integration may have already contributed to mitigating the economic consequences of accounting diversity, and that switching to IFRS could have a short lived impact on capital markets. Moreover, based on firm level transparency and disclosure rankings provided by Standard and Poor's, it is shown how the quality of financial reporting conditions the implied cost of equity under different GAAP. |
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Keywords: | Abnormal earnings growth Analysts' forecasts Cost of capital Harmonization International financial reporting standards Transparency and disclosure |
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