Publication | Closed Access
Financial Restatements, Audit Fees, and the Moderating Effect of CFO Turnover
124
Citations
51
References
2009
Year
Continuous AuditingFirm PerformanceFinancial RestatementsExecutive TurnoverAudit FeeFinancial RegulationAuditingManagementFinancial AccountingAudit Market StructureAudit FeesModerating EffectFinancial ManagementAccountingCorporate GovernanceFinanceCfo TurnoverBusinessAccounting Audit
SUMMARY: We examine post-restatement audit fees and executive turnover for a sample of firms that restated their 2003 financial statements. We investigate and find evidence that audit fees are higher for restatement firms compared with a matched-pair control group of non-restatement firms. We propose that the higher audit fees reflect a cost of both an increase in perceived audit risk and a loss of organizational legitimacy. Prior literature suggests that changing top management is a response to a legitimacy crisis; thus we expect to find that executive turnover moderates the positive relationship between restatement and audit fees. Our results indicate that a change in CFO for a restatement firm moderates the increased audit fee, but a change in CEO does not.
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