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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

Earnings as an Explanatory Variable for Returns

Authors
Peter D. Easton and Trevor Harris
Date
January 1, 1991
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting Research

In this paper we investigate whether the level of earnings divided by price at the beginning of the stock return period is relevant for evaluating earnings/returns associations. The primary model motivating this research relies on the idea that book value (owners' equity) and market value are both "stock" variables indicating the wealth of the firm's equity holders. The related "flow" variables (after adjusting for dividends) are, respectively, earnings divided by price at the beginning of the return period (A/P-1) and market returns.

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Do Management Forecasts of Earnings Affect Stock Prices in Japan?

Authors
M. Darrough and Trevor Harris
Date
January 1, 1991
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting, Auditing and Finance

Japan's capital markets have played a crucial role in the recent increase in the globalization of international capital markets. As a result it has become important to understand the similarities and differences in the way Japanese markets operate in comparison to the more familiar Anglo-American environment. One of the major differences that has attracted a great deal of attention is the relatively high average price/earnings [PE] ratio (Viner [1988]) for the stocks listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

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An Evaluation of Accounting Rate-of-Return

Authors
Stephen Penman
Date
January 1, 1991
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting, Auditing and Finance

This article evaluates the role of rate of return (ROE) in assessing cross-sectional differences in prices and price changes of ROE. Accounting ROE is traditionally regarded as the major summary number in financial statement analysis. Findings of the study indicate that ROE is best interpreted as a profitability measure and not as a risk measure and observed ROE indicates future profitability and thus distinguishes market-to-book ratios. The comparison of earnings to book values in the ROE calculation provides information about how earnings project to future earnings.

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Accounting Disclosures and the Market's Valuation of Oil and Gas Properties: Evaluation of Market Efficiency and Functional Fixation

Authors
Trevor Harris and James A. Ohlson
Date
October 1, 1990
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Accounting Review

This article provides confirmatory evidence of the value-relevance of book values of oil and gas properties. Harris and Ohlson (1987) find that the book values correlate significantly with the inferred market values of oil and gas properties. Reserve recognition accounting requires the simultaneous publication of alternative measures that are often assumed to be more relevant values of the oil and gas properties.

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The Predictive Ability of Geographic Segment Disclosures

Authors
Ramji Balakrishnan, Trevor Harris, and Pradyot K. Sen
Date
January 1, 1990
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting Research

The issue of providing segment disclosures has renewed significance because the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) has been considering the extension of segment disclosures, both line-of-business (LOB) and geographically segmented (GEOG), to all interim financial statements. To determine whether GEOG data provide incremental information about the earnings process, the specific contribution of sales and income GEOG data was evaluated by estimating their predictive ability. Two sets of GEOG predictions were used in the predictive accuracy tests.

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Voluntary Forecast Disclosure, Nondisclosure, and Stock Prices

Authors
Baruch Lev and Stephen Penman
Date
January 1, 1990
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting Research

In this study we consider managerial earnings forecasts as voluntary information releases and compare their properties with predictions from a screening or signaling scenario.

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Financial Statement Analysis and the Prediction of Stock Returns

Authors
Jane Ou and Stephen Penman
Date
November 1, 1989
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting and Economics

This paper performs a financial statement analysis that combines a large set of financial statement items into one summary measure which indicates the direction of one-year-ahead earnings changes. Positions are taken in stocks on the basis of this measure during the period 1973–1983, which involve canceling long and short positions with zero net investment. The two-year holding-period return to the long and short positions is in the order of 12.5%. After adjustment for "size effects" the return is about 7.0%. These returns cannot be explained by nominated firm risk characteristics.

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Production, Sales, and the Change in Inventories: An Identity That Doesn't Add Up

Authors
Jeffrey Miron and Stephen Zeldes
Date
July 1, 1989
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Monetary Economics

We examine two measures of monthly manufacturing production. The first is the index of industrial production; the second is constructed from the accounting identity that output equals sales plus the change in inventories. We show that the means, variances, and serial correlation coefficients of the log growth rates differ substantially between the two series, and the cross-correlations are in most cases less than 0.4.

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Inflation, Translation and Conflicts in Statements of Financial Accounting Standards

Authors
Michael Adler and Trevor Harris
Date
June 1, 1989
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of International Financial Management and Accounting

This paper utilizes the concept of aggregative consistency defined in Rubinstein and Fishburn [1986], and the FASB's concept of representational faithfulness to evaluate foreign currency translation and accounting for changing prices as embodied in SFAS 70. The paper shows that SFAS 70 produces measurement errors and creates a foreign currency translation adjustment which does not reflect the effects of exchange rate changes. The conditions defined in the paper also facilitate an evaluation of the relative merits of restate/translate and translate/restate.

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