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Earnings management when firms face mandatory contributions

Yiyi Qin (School of Finance, Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, Chengdu, China)
Jun Cai (Department of Economics and Finance, City University of Hong Kong, Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong)
Steven Wei (School of Accounting and Finance, Faculty of Business, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Kowloon, Hong Kong)

China Finance Review International

ISSN: 2044-1398

Article publication date: 28 June 2021

Issue publication date: 20 October 2021

786

Abstract

Purpose

In this paper, we aim to answer two questions. First, whether firms manipulate reported earnings via pension assumptions when facing mandatory contributions. Second, whether firms alter their earnings management behavior when the Financial Accounting Standard Board (FASB) mandates disclosure of pension asset composition and a description of investment strategy under SFAS 132R.

Design/methodology/approach

Our basic approach is to run linear regressions of firm-year assumed returns on the log of pension sensitivity measures, controlling for current and lagged actual returns from pension assets, fiscal year dummies and industry dummies. The larger the pension sensitivity ratios, the stronger the effects from inflated ERRs on reported earnings. We confirm the early results that the regression slopes are positive and highly significant. We construct an indicator variable DMC to capture the mandatory contributions firms face and another indicator variable D132R to capture the effect of SFAS 132R. DMC takes the value of one for fiscal years during which an acquisition takes place and zero otherwise. D132R takes the value of one for fiscal years after December 15, 2003 and zero otherwise.

Findings

Our sample covers the period from June 1992 to December 2017. Our key results are as follows. The estimated coefficient (t-statistic) on DMC is 0.308 (6.87). Firms facing mandatory contributions tend to set ERRs at an average 0.308% higher. The estimated coefficient (t-statistic) on D132R is −2.190 (−13.70). The new disclosure requirement under SFAS 132R constrains all firms to set ERRs at an average 2.190% lower. The estimate (t-statistic) on the interactive term DMA×D132R is −0.237 (−3.29). When mandatory contributions happen during the post-SFAS 132R period, firms tend to set ERRs at 0.237% lower than they would do otherwise in the pre-SFAS 132R period.

Originality/value

When firms face mandatory contributions, typically firm experience negative stock market returns. We examine whether managers manage earnings to mitigate such negative impact. We find that firms inflate assumed returns on pension assets to boost their reported earnings when facing mandatory contributions. We also find that managers alter earnings management behavior, in the case of mandatory contributions, following the introduction of new pension disclosure standards under SFAS 132R that become effective on December 15, 2003. Under the new SFAS 132R requirement, firms need to disclose asset allocation and describe investment strategies. This imposes restrictions on managers' discretion in making ERR assumptions, since now the composition of pension assets is a key determinant of the assumed expected rate of return on pension assets. Firms need to justify their ERRs with their asset allocations.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank seminar participants at Sun Yat-Sen University for helpful comments and suggestions. City University of Hong Kong Strategic Grant (SRG 7008142) is gratefully acknowledged. All errors remain our own responsibility.

Citation

Qin, Y., Cai, J. and Wei, S. (2021), "Earnings management when firms face mandatory contributions", China Finance Review International, Vol. 11 No. 4, pp. 522-551. https://doi.org/10.1108/CFRI-01-2021-0020

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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