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Financial Accounting & Auditing

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Financial Accounting & Auditing Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Financial Accounting & Auditing Faculty

Financial Accounting & Auditing Research

The Value Relevance of Network Advantages: The Case of E-Commerce Firms

Authors
Suresh Kotha, Shivaram Rajgopal, and Mohan Venkatachalam
Date
March 1, 2003
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting Research

We show that network advantages constitute an important intangible asset that goes unrecognized in the financial statements. For a sample of e-commerce firms, we find that network advantages created by Web site traffic have substantial explanatory power for stock prices over and above traditional summary accounting measures such as earnings and book value of equity. Also, network advantages are positively associated with one-year-ahead and two-year-ahead earnings forecasts provided by equity analysis.

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Abandonment Options and Information System Design

Authors
A. Arya and Jonathan Glover
Date
March 1, 2003
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Accounting Studies

We study a principal-agent model of moral hazard in which the principal has an abandonment option. The option to abandon a project midstream limits a firm's downside risk. From a consumption (production) perspective, the option is clearly beneficial. However, from an incentive perspective, the option can be costly. Removing the lower tail of the project's underlying cash flow distribution also eliminates the information it contains about an agent's (unobservable) productive input.

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The Role of Nonprofit Endowments

Authors
Raymond Fisman and R. Glenn Hubbard
Date
January 1, 2003
Format
Chapter
Book
The Governance of Not-for-Profit Organizations

We consider the role of the endowment in nonprofit organizations. Nonprofit managers often describe the endowment, or fund balance, as serving a precautionary savings function. We provide a description of endowment size, for nonprofit organizations in a wide range of industries in the United States, and find that a large number of organizations have endowments that exceed levels that would normally be considered to be appropriate from a consumption smoothing prospective.

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Taxing Multinationals

Authors
M. Devereux and R. Glenn Hubbard
Date
January 1, 2003
Format
Journal Article
Journal
International Tax and Public Finance

This paper analyzes the effects of tax policy on the strategic choices of multinationals and on national welfare. Contrary to existing theory, in the absence of foreign taxation, deferral of home-country taxation until earnings on outbound FDI are repatriated is generally superior to including those earnings in current income. This holds even if the home country taxes domestic investment less generously. This is also generally superior to exempting foreign income.

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The Effect of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 on the Location of Assets in Financial Services Firms

Authors
Rosanne Altshuler and R. Glenn Hubbard
Date
January 1, 2003
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Public Economics

This paper examines the effects of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 on the international location decisions of U.S. financial services firms. The Act included rule changes that made it substantially more difficult for U.S. firms to defer U.S. taxes on overseas financial services income held in low-tax jurisdictions. We use information from the tax returns of U.S. corporations to examine how local taxes affect the allocation of financial assets held abroad by financial services firms.

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The Association Between Changes in Interest Rates, Earnings, and Equity Values

Authors
Doron Nissim and Stephen Penman
Date
January 1, 2003
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Contemporary Accounting Research

Numerous studies have documented that stock returns are negatively related to changes in interest rates, but there has been little corroborating research on the information in interest rate changes about the fundamentals that the stock market prices. The negative correlation is often attributed to changes in the discount rate, a denominator effect in a valuation model. However, there may also be a numerator effect on the expected payoffs that are discounted.

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The Quality of Financial Statements: Perspectives from the Recent Stock Market Bubble

Authors
Stephen Penman
Date
January 1, 2003
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Accounting Horizons

During the recent stock market bubble, the traditional financial reporting model was assailed as a backward-looking system, out of date in the Information Age. With the bursting of the bubble, the quality of financial reporting is again under scrutiny, but now for not adhering to traditional principles of sound earnings measurement and asset and liability recognition. This paper is a retrospective on the quality of financial reporting during the 1990s. Did reporting under U.S. GAAP perform well during the bubble, or was its quality suspect?

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Performance Evaluation and Corporate Income Taxes in a Sequential Delegation Setting

Authors
Tim Baldenius and Amir Ziv
Date
January 1, 2003
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Accounting Studies

We consider a setting where a firm delegates an investment decision and, subsequently, a sales decision to a privately informed manager. For both decisions corporate income taxes have real effects. We show that compensating the manager based on pre-tax residual income can ensure after-tax NPV-maximization ("goal congruence") for each decision problem in isolation. However, this metric fails if both decisions are nontrivial, since it requires asset-specific hurdle rates and hence precludes asset aggregation.

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Delegated Investment Decisions and Private Benefits of Control

Authors
Tim Baldenius
Date
January 1, 2003
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Accounting Review

This paper studies the capital budgeting process in a setting where a manager is privately informed about the profitability of an investment project and enjoys nonpecuniary benefits of control ("empire benefits"). I characterize the optimal required rate of return and show that a delegation scheme with residual income-based compensation can replicate the benchmark performance achieved under centralization. The main result of the paper is that the optimal capital charge rate for computing residual income always exceeds the required rate of return as a result of empire benefits.

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