Publication | Closed Access
Non‐GAAP reporting: Evidence from academia and current practice
224
Citations
100
References
2018
Year
AuditingAlternative Performance MetricsSecurities LawAccounting RuleNon‐gaap MetricsIntegrated ReportingAccountingAccounting PolicyAccounting PracticeBusinessGeneral BusinessAudit RegulationFinancial StatementNon‐gaap ReportingFinancial AccountingFinanceNon-financial ReportingCorporate Finance
Abstract The number of firms reporting earnings on a non‐GAAP basis has increased dramatically over the last decade, and non‐GAAP reporting is now commonplace in capital markets. This proliferation of non‐GAAP reporting has renewed both regulators’ and standard setters’ interests in these alternative performance metrics. For example, the SEC, FASB, and IASB have all recently questioned what this increasing reporting trend means for IFRS‐ and US‐GAAP‐based reporting and whether these measures are misleading to investors. This increasing focus on non‐GAAP metrics motivates us to synthesize the nearly two decades of research on non‐GAAP reporting to provide insights on what academics have learned to date about this reporting practice. Then, we utilize a novel dataset of detailed non‐GAAP disclosures to provide new descriptive evidence on current trends in non‐GAAP reporting and its recent proliferation. Finally, we discuss important questions for future researchers to consider in moving the literature forward.
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