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Effect of accruals on financial, non-financial, and audit information in payment default prediction

Effect of accruals on financial, non-financial, and audit information in payment default prediction This study analyses the contingency effects of accruals on default prediction. Information is classified into three categories: financial statement, audit report, and non-financial information. It is proposed that absolute accruals moderate the relationship between default risk and financial statement information: the more accruals, the less important is the information. It is also proposed that absolute accruals moderate audit report information: the more accruals, the more important is the information. It is also proposed that absolute accruals do not moderate non-financial information. Estimation data consist of 300 default and 300 non-default Finnish firms. Empirical results are validated in large validation data. The logistic regression analysis is used to estimate two kinds of prediction models. First, financial statement variables, audit report information, and non-financial variables are used to predict default. Second, a model where financial statement, audit report, and non-financial information are moderated by absolute accruals is estimated. Empirical evidence largely supports the hypotheses. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png International Journal of Accounting, Auditing and Performance Evaluation Inderscience Publishers

Effect of accruals on financial, non-financial, and audit information in payment default prediction

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Publisher
Inderscience Publishers
Copyright
Copyright © Inderscience Enterprises Ltd. All rights reserved
ISSN
1740-8008
eISSN
1740-8016
DOI
10.1504/IJAAPE.2009.027878
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

This study analyses the contingency effects of accruals on default prediction. Information is classified into three categories: financial statement, audit report, and non-financial information. It is proposed that absolute accruals moderate the relationship between default risk and financial statement information: the more accruals, the less important is the information. It is also proposed that absolute accruals moderate audit report information: the more accruals, the more important is the information. It is also proposed that absolute accruals do not moderate non-financial information. Estimation data consist of 300 default and 300 non-default Finnish firms. Empirical results are validated in large validation data. The logistic regression analysis is used to estimate two kinds of prediction models. First, financial statement variables, audit report information, and non-financial variables are used to predict default. Second, a model where financial statement, audit report, and non-financial information are moderated by absolute accruals is estimated. Empirical evidence largely supports the hypotheses.

Journal

International Journal of Accounting, Auditing and Performance EvaluationInderscience Publishers

Published: Jan 1, 2009

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