Publication | Closed Access
The Timeliness of Accounting Write-Downs by U.S. Financial Institutions During the Financial Crisis of 2007-2008
176
Citations
45
References
2011
Year
Empirical FinanceFinancial Risk ManagementAccounting PracticeFinancial SystemCorporate Risk ManagementManagementFinancial AccountingU.s. Financial InstitutionsComplex ExposuresAccountingFinanceAccounting PolicyBusinessFinancial CrisisAccounting Write-downsFinancial StatementFinancial StructureCorporate FinanceFinancial Risk
I examine the timeliness of write-downs taken by U.S. financial institutions during the financial crisis of 2007–2008. The timeliness of write-downs is measured by benchmarking the quarterly accounting write-down schedule with the devaluation schedule implied by exposure-specific credit indices such as the ABX. The results show that the accounting write-downs are less timely than the devaluations implied by credit indices. In a cross-sectional analysis of the determinants of the timeliness of write-downs, I document that corporate governance quality, regulatory investigations, and litigation pressure are positively related to the timeliness of write-downs, whereas the write-downs by firms with higher financial leverage, tighter regulatory constraints, and more complex exposures are less timely. I control for numerous exposure-specific characteristics and document that less risky exposures and exposures that were affected later during the financial crisis were written down later. Regarding the consequences of timeliness, I find that the exposure to risky assets is reflected faster in stock returns for firms with timelier write-downs.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1