Title: Accounting Restatements and the Efficiency of Industry Investment
1Accounting Restatements and the Efficiency of
Industry Investment
- Art Durnev, Mcgill University
- Claudine Mangen, Concordia University
2Introduction
- Wave of accounting scandals in the early 2000s
Adelphia, Enron, Worldcom, etc. - Various degrees of accounting errors
- accounting errors within GAAP ?
earnings management - accounting errors outside of GAAP ? restatements
- accounting errors outside of GAAP with intent to
deceive ? fraud
3Introduction
- Do accounting errors have real consequences?
- For the firms that commit the errors
- Fraud Negative announcement returns of -20
(Palmrose et al., 2004) - Restatements Negative announcement returns of
between -4 and -9 - Palmrose et al., 2004 Anderson and Yohn, 2002
General Accounting Office, 2002 Wu, 2002 Turner
et al., 2001 Dechow et al., 1996 - Reasons
- diminished company prospects
- increased uncertainty
4Introduction
- Competitors of firms that restate financial
statements are adversely affected and the loss is
significant
The number of restatements, by year Abnormal
returns of competitor firms
Mean abnormal returns are calculated over 11
event window The number of restatements for year
2002 is multiplied by two because the sample ends
in June 2002
5The cumulative loss for competitors of restating
firms is substantial
6Introduction
- Do accounting errors have real consequences?
- For competitors of restating firms
- Restatements Negative announcement returns of
about -0.4 (Gleason et al., 2004 Xu et al.,
2006) - Why?
- This study proposes a novel explanation
- investment inefficiency
7Investment Inefficiency Explanation
-
- Investments are conditioned on information about
other companies in the industry - Dixit and Pindyck, 1994 Admati and Pfleiderer,
2000 - If financial statements of a firm turn out to
have been erroneous and are restated, then - its competitors made investments based on
erroneous information - its competitors' investments were inefficient
and its competitors experiences a loss in value
when this inefficiency is revealed
8Aim of This Study
- Test the investment inefficiency explanation for
competitors' loss in market value at restatement
announcements - Control for the explanation so far proposed in
the literature contagion
9Contribution
- Adds to the literature on the real effects of
accounting irregularities for competitors - first to propose and test the investment
inefficiency explanation - Extends literature on the relation between
financial reporting and real decisions - suggests that financial reporting has
implications for other firms' real decisions
10Contribution
- Contributes to the literature on the relation
between information quality and investment
efficiency (Durnev et al., 2004 Chen et al.,
2006 Ferreira and Laux, 2006) - analyzes an alternative measure of information
quality, namely restatements - Policy implications
- intense debate about the benefits and costs of
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act - the full evaluation of reforms requires
consideration of - the companies directly targeted by the reforms
- their competitors!
11Hypotheses
- Information quality in a firm's financial
statements can affect its competitors'
investments through two channels - 1. Indirect channel
- Firm values are correlated (Foster, 1981
Freeman and Tse, 1992 Admati and Pfleiderer,
2000). - Firm's disclosure reduces information asymmetry
about its competitors, increases liquidity and
decreases trading costs. - ? affects its competitors' cost of external
financing
12Hypotheses
- Information quality in a firm's financial
statements can affect its competitors'
investments through two channels - 2. Direct channel
- Signal to its competitors when to enter a market
(Dye, 1985). - Signal to its competitors when to exit a market
(Foster, 1981) - Affects its competitors decisions regarding
mergers and acquisitions - Hypothesis 1. Competitors of restating firms
experience more negative abnormal returns around
restatement announcements when their past
investments were more inefficient
13Hypotheses
-
- Restatements occur more often in certain
industries - (Palmrose et al., 2004)
- - 36 in manufacturing
- - 26 in technology
- - 12 in financial and other services
- Industries with more restatements have higher
proportion of erroneous financial statements - Competitors in such industries have used
increasingly erroneous information - Hypothesis 2. In industries with more
restatements - past investments were more inefficient
- abnormal returns at restatement announcements
across all competitors are more negative
14Hypotheses
-
- Competitors can be defined on various SIC
levels - Coca-Cola versus Pepsi versus Starbucks
- Competitors on a 4-digit SIC level
- are more similar to each other than competitors
on a 3-digit or a 2-digit level are more likely
to take into account information about their
peers than competitors on a 3-digit or a 2-digit
level - Hypothesis 3. When competitors of restating firms
are defined at the 4-digit SIC level rather than
the 3-digit SIC level, and when they are defined
at the 3-digit SIC level rather than the 2-digit
SIC level, then - their past investments were more inefficient
- their abnormal returns at restatement
announcements are more negative
15Hypotheses
-
- Firms with a larger market are observed more
closely - Competitors' investments are affected more by
financial statements of firms with a larger
market share - Hypothesis 4. As the market share of restating
firms rises - their competitors' past investments were more
inefficient - their competitors' abnormal returns at
restatement announcements are more negative
16Sample
- Restatements from Jan 1997 to June 2002 compiled
by General Accounting Office - search in Lexis-Nexis
- concentrates on misinterpretation of accounting
rules and fraud - we confirmed it
- 916 restatements in total
- 836 restatements by 785 firms remain
17Competitors to firms that restate their financial
statements experience negative abnormal returns
around the time of the restatement announcement
18Investment Inefficiency
19Investment Inefficiency
- Present value of cash flows of marginal dollar
of capital - To measure it,
- Using 1997-2002 it can be estimated on industry
level by pooling firms
20Investment Inefficiency
- Measure of investment efficiency
- deviation of from optimal level
- first choose optimal level equal to 1
- corporate and dividend taxes, and other
frictions can push optimal marginal q away from 1 - optimal q can vary across industries
- Considering taxes, optimal is around 0.8
- Try different threshold levels
- Let the data choose optimal level
- Firm estimates as deviation of from
industry average level (Ferreira and Laux (2006)) - (1)
- (2)
21Dividends, share repurchases, interest
Drop observations with growth in value and
capital stock gt200
22Lower efficiency of investment (deviation of
marginal q from one) in industries with less
informative stock prices
more informative prices
- Durnev, Morck, Yeung (2004)
23Controls
- Variables that effect competitors returns and
industry efficiency - industry concentration, Herfidahl index
- in more competitive industries the effect of
restatement can be larger business conditions
are more predictable in more concentrated
industries - firm and industry size
- smaller firms have larger reaction to
restatements announcements - leverage
- curbs agency problems of excess cash
- past performance
- market reaction to adverse news depends on
companys past performance
24Controls
- Variables that control for previously documented
contagion effect - governance quality
- competitors firms are less likely to fudge their
numbers if they have sound governance system - Gompers, Ishi, Metrick (2003), IRCC
- change in the dispersion of analysts' forecasts
- if restatements increase investors' uncertainty,
then the uncertainty about competitors should
rise around the restatement announcement - Structural variables
- industry and firm fixed effects
- correlated errors
- omitted firm and time characteristics
25Summary Statistics
26H1 Competitors of restating firms experience
lower abnormal returns when their past
investments were more inefficient
27Lagged investment efficiency of competitors in
industries with and without restatements
Longer bars indicate less efficient
investment Investment efficiency measure is
lagged by 1 year Numbers indicate t-statistics of
means comparison tests
28Controls
- Industry size
- firms in larger industries may have more
internal cash flow and easier access to external
financing larger firms restate less frequently - Diversification
- more diversified firms shift income between
divisions more likely to restate earnings
because of governance problems - Leverage
- disciplining role of debt and bankruptcy costs
- Industry concentration
- Liquidity
- firms with more cash are more likely to
overinvest - Market-to-book
- high growth opportunities may induce investment
uncertainty - Industry fixed effects
29H2 In industries with more restatements, past
investments were more inefficient
30H2 In industries with more restatements,
abnormal returns at restatement announcements
across all competitors are more negative.
31Over-investment and number of restatements Result
s are driven by firms that over-invest Supports
Jensens (1986) free-cash problem and Rolls
(1986) hubris hypothesis
32H3 Comparison across different SIC levels
33H4. As the market share of restating firms rises,
their competitors' past investments were more
inefficient
34H4. As the market share of restating firms rises,
their competitors' abnormal returns at
restatement announcements are more negative
35Addressing Contagion Further
Contagion may explain some of results. Two-step
regression 1. Decompose investment inefficiency
into two components part explained by
contagion part not explained by contagion 2.
Repeat using the explained and unexplained parts
of investment inefficiency
36Sensitivity analysis
- Drop financial companies
- small fraction of the sample, results become
stronger - Clustered standard errors as suggested in
Petersen (2006) - Heteroskedastic standard errors due to industry
averages, weighted least squares estimation - Outliers
- Hadi (1992) method
- winsorizing of main variables
- rank-ordering of skewed variables
- Significance of abnormal returns
- logit regressions
- Issues with estimation of investment efficiency
- threshold levels of 0.75, 0.8, 0.85, 0.9
- non-linear estimation
- industry-specific thresholds
- drop firms with growth rates in value and
capital stock gt 300, 100
37Conclusions
- When firms announce restatements, their
competitors experience a decline in their market
value - This decline occurs because competitors made
inefficient investments based on erroneous
financial statements - Implication for evaluating governance
regulations the effect of such regulation on
competitors needs to be considered