Insider sales and earnings management [An article from: Journal of Accounting and Public Policy] Buy on Amazon

Insider sales and earnings management [An article from: Journal of Accounting and Public Policy]

Publisher Elsevier
8.95 USD

Available for download now

Book Details
Author(s) M.S. Park, T. Park
Publisher Elsevier
ISBN / ASIN B000RR0MM2
ISBN-13 978B000RR0MM2
Availability Available for download now
Sales Rank #12,625,259
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Description
This digital document is a journal article from Journal of Accounting and Public Policy, published by Elsevier in 2004. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
This study examines the relationship between managers' insider transactions and their strategic behavior on earnings management. Prior literature provides a theoretical basis to empirical studies of insider trading and earnings management (Elitzur and Yaari, 1995; Trueman, 1990; Bar-Gill and Bebchuk, 2003). We predict that managers adjust discretionary accruals (DAs) to increase current-period earnings before they sell their own firms' shares in the subsequent period. Our empirical results support that current discretionary accruals are higher for firms whose managers sell their ownership in the subsequent period than for other firms, indicating that managers of insider sales firms would have deliberately increased current-period earnings through DAs. However, the observed positive relationship between DAs and insider sales can also be explained such that managers may have adopted passive and opportunistic strategies by trading their shares after higher earnings are reported regardless of earnings manipulation. To address this causality issue, this study employs simultaneous equations approach. The two-stage least square estimation shows that our test results are insensitive to controlling for the possibility that managers time their transactions after observing unusually high accruals. We also find that, after accruals manipulation and insider sales, stock prices tend to be adjusted downward in the future and that current high discretionary accruals induced by the insider sales have an incremental explanatory power in explaining the post-transaction stock underperformance.
Donate to EbookNetworking
Prev
Next