Effect of corporate governance and enforcement on fair value accounting in Brazil

被引:0
|
作者
Galdi, Fernando [1 ]
De Moura, Andre [2 ]
Damasceno, Felipe [1 ]
Andrade, Alexandre [3 ]
机构
[1] Fucape Business Sch, Dept Accounting & Finance, Vitoria, Brazil
[2] Fundacao Getulio Vargas Escola Administracao Empre, Dept Accounting Finance & Control, Sao Paulo, Brazil
[3] BNDES, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
关键词
Corporate governance; Fair value; Value relevance; Cross-listing; VALUE RELEVANCE; EMPIRICAL-EVIDENCE; IFRS; INFORMATION; STANDARDS; IMPACT; FIRMS; ADOPTION;
D O I
10.1108/MEDAR-08-2023-2139
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
PurposeThis paper aims to investigate whether Brazilian firms that legally bond to stricter enforcement and commit to stringent corporate governance requirements experience increased value relevance of discretionary fair value measurements (Levels 2 and 3), and how different measurement levels are associated with firms' systematic risk.Design/methodology/approachThe Brazilian data's distinctive feature helps in analyzing fair value's relevance in an emerging market with heterogeneous enforcement regimes. Given the inherent self-selection in corporate governance levels and cross-listing decisions, the authors use a two-step generalized method of moments approach. Building upon Song et al.'s (2010) framework, the authors carefully address potential selection biases. Furthermore, the authors expand Riedl and Serafeim's (2011) model, based on Ohlson's (1995) model, to explore whether the negative correlation between Level 1 net assets (assets minus liabilities) and firms' beta is more pronounced compared to Levels 2 or 3 net assets. Additionally, the authors investigate whether this relationship intensifies when firms align themselves with enhanced governance structures and stricter enforcement regimes.FindingsFair value measurements which require more judgment (Levels 2 and 3) are more value-relevant when a firm is legally bonded to higher enforcement and better corporate governance. Level 1 fair values of these firms' net assets are associated with lower systematic risk, while Levels 2 and 3 fair values (high subjectivity valuation) are not.Originality/valueThe authors show that firms that bond to better corporate governance and stricter enforcement regimes mitigate the information risk involved in subjective fair-value measurements.
引用
收藏
页码:2298 / 2320
页数:23
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