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Market valuation and earnings manipulation

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Title: Market valuation and earnings manipulation


1
Market valuation and earnings manipulation
  • Shing-yang Hu
  • and
  • Yueh-hsiang Lin

2
Motivation
  • How firms are priced? What determines firm value
    or return (the difference of the value)?
  • Market valuation has its impact
  • Subrahmanyam and Titman (2001) stock prices can
    affect fundamentals. A higher stock price may
    signal that the firm has a good product, and
    induce consumers to adopt its product.
  • Literature of behavior corporate finance
    managers corporate decisions such as investment,
    financing, dividend, MA may be responses of
    market valuation.

3
Motivation
  • Scandals in early 2000s Enron, WorldCom,
    eToy,etc.
  • A lesson to be learned trying to maintain a
    higher market valuation, managers may take action
    such as earnings manipulation that will reduce
    long-term firm value.
  • Paul Volcker (the former Federal Reserve
    Chairman)
  • Optimistic visions of a new economic era set the
    stage for an explosion in financial values. It
    was an environment in which incentives for
    business management to keep reported revenues and
    earnings growing to meet expectations were
    amplified.

4
Motivation
  • Jensen (2005) agency costs of overvalued equity
  • Overvalued EquityManagerial Heroin. It feels
    great at the beginning. But lead to massive pain
    in the end.
  • Managers use overvalued equity to make
    acquisitions to satisfy growth expectation.
  • Managers use access to cheap debt and equity
    capital to engage in excessive internal spending
    unprofitable risky greenfield investments.
  • Finally, they turn to manipulation and even
    fraud to satisfy the markets demands.
  • Equity-based incentive compensation cannot solve
    the problem. High equity or option holdings are
    like throwing gasoline on a fire.

5
Objective
  • There is no study so far to empirically examine
    the relation between market valuation and future
    earnings manipulation.
  • We fill a gap in the literature by providing
    evidence of the relation.
  • We ask
  • Does the relation exist?
  • Why does it exist?
  • Can good governance mechanism alleviate this
    problem?

6
Hypotheses
  • Manipulation hypothesis Managers of firms with a
    higher valuation will manipulate future earnings
    more (have larger future accruals) to meet
    investors expectations.
  • Based on the assumption that keeping higher
    expected growth rates of cash flows needs larger
    reported earnings.
  • Expected growth hypothesis Managers of firms
    with a higher valuation expect future performance
    better and increases accruals accordingly.
  • For example, managers may build up inventory to
    meet growing demand.

7
Findings
  • In our sample (all non-financial companies listed
    on the NYSE, Amex, and Nasdaq in the period of
    1988-2004), averagely, there is a positive
    relation between market valuation and future
    accruals.
  • The manipulation hypothesis is more pronounced
    only in firms with limited attention or poorer
    performance.
  • For firms with more attention or better
    performance, the evidence does not support the
    manipulation hypothesis.
  • Higher valuation firms that issue equities are
    especially aggressive in accounting accruals.
  • Can good governance alleviate the incentive to
    manipulate earnings by higher valuation
    companies? Yes.
  • No evidence that high valuation companies with a
    stronger governance system or equity-based
    compensations will manipulate more.

8
Methodology
  • Measure of market valuation
  • Market-to-book ratio of equity
  • Price-to-earnings ratio or the price-to-cash flow
    ratio?
  • May be inappropriate.
  • For example, if earnings and accruals are
    positively correlated and accruals are
    autocorrelated, a higher price to earnings ratio
    will be correlated with a higher future accrual
    due to its definition.

9
Methodology
  • Measures of earnings manipulation total accrual
  • Calculated from items of the balance sheet (BS)
  • Calculated from items of the cash flows
    statements (CF)
  • Collins and Hribar (2002) argue that accruals
    from the BS may be biased due to the reasons such
    as MA. Therefore, here we only present results
    on accruals from the CF.
  • The data on the CF is only available from 1987,
    and the number of firms reported in 1987 is
    limited so we choose to start the sample from
    1988.

10
Methodology
  • To detect the effect of the normal business
    requirements on the total accruals, we use two
    conventional discretionary accrual models
  • Jones model JA
  • Modified Jones model MJA

11
Manipulation or expected growth hypothesis?
  • One-way grouping method For each fiscal year t
    we divide the sample into quartiles based on the
    market-to-book ratio of equity (M/B).
  • Test the difference in mean and median of
    accruals for year t1 between the highest and
    lowest M/B quartiles using t and the Wilcoxon
    statistics.
  • Under the two hypotheses, the differences should
    be positive.
  • If valuation proxies for expected growth, after
    controlling performance, the differences should
    be less pronounced.
  • Follow Kothari, Leone, and Wasley (2005) to
    calculate ROA-matched accruals to distinguish the
    two hypotheses.

12
Manipulation or expected growth hypothesis?
  • The differences in mean and median of accruals
    between the highest and lowest quartiles are
    significantly positive.
  • The differences in ROA-matched accruals between
    the highest and lowest quartiles are still
    significantly positive.
  • Consistent with the manipulation hypothesis.

13
A closer look at the Manipulation Hypothesis
  • What characteristics of firms will have larger
    differences in ROA-matched accruals between the
    highest and lowest M/B quartiles?
  • Manipulation Hypothesis (MH) 1 The difference is
    larger for firms that less attention from
    investment communities.
  • When attention is low, the information
    environment will be poor so that investors are
    not able to differentiate a true earning from a
    fake one.
  • Two-way independent sorting based on M/B and
    attention, in which we use three measures to
    proxy for attention the inclusion in the SP
    1500, the tracking by the Investor Responsibility
    Research Center (IRRC), and market
    capitalization.

14
Tests of H1
  • The differences are significantly positive only
    for less attention firms.
  • Results are consistent with MH 1.

15
Manipulation Hypothesis (MH) 2
  • Manipulation Hypothesis (MH) 2 The difference is
    larger for firms with poorer operating
    performance.
  • A high valuation company face much more pressure
    to improve its operating performance when it is
    poor than it is good.
  • Two-way independent sorting based on M/B and ROA.
  • Results are consistent with MH 2.

16
Manipulation Hypothesis (MH) 3
  • Manipulation Hypothesis (MH) 3 The difference is
    larger for firms that have equity offerings.
  • Given the earnings manipulation, the stock price
    will be higher and the SEO will be more
    attractive.
  • Two-way independent sorting based on M/B and the
    amount of the sale of equities (SEO).
  • Results are consistent with MH 3.

17
Manipulation Hypothesis (MH) 4
  • Manipulation Hypothesis (MH) 4 The difference is
    smaller for firms with a good governance system.
  • In a good governance system the manipulation is
    more likely to be found out, and managers may be
    replaced.
  • Use two measures to proxy for the alignment of
    the governance mechanism
  • Governance Index (GI) introduced by Gompers,
    Ishii, and Metrick (2003) from the IRRC database.
  • Incentive ratio (IR) used in Bergstresser and
    Philippon (2003) from the CEOs company stock and
    option holdings in the ExecuComp database.
  • Regress the discretionary accruals on the
    valuationGI and valuationIR as well as the
    aforementioned variables.

18
Tests of H4
  • Negative VGI The better the governance is, the
    smaller the impact of valuation on accruals.
  • Negative VIR The stronger equity-based
    compensation is, the smaller the impact of
    valuation on accruals.
  • Consistent with MH4 statistically but the
    magnitude is so small that the effect is weak
    economically (compared with coefficients on V).
  • Most of the four hypotheses are supported.

19
Conclusions
  • We provide the evidence of the relation between
    market valuation and future earnings
    manipulation.
  • In the U.S. companies, the relation occurs only
    in firms with limited attention or poorer
    performance.
  • For firms with more attention or better
    performance, there is no significant relation.
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