Chapter 1
Chapter 1
Information Asymmetry
If we live in an ideal world where a companys financial information is known to everyone, there will be no market for financial information. However, we live in a world with Information Asymmetry. There are two types of information asymmetry:
Adverse Selection Moral Hazard
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Example
Innovate Inc. and Copycat Inc. are two software companies. In 2013, they both spent $300,000 in research and development on new software. Innovate Inc. is ready to sell the product early 2014, whereas Copycat Inc. is still in the early research phase. Assume that there are no rules on how research and development spending be recorded, and both companies have recorded the $300,000 as assets. No other information is available to investors on the new software. 1. How do investors evaluate the future performance of these two companies? 2. If both companies seek capital from the equity market, who will be able to raise more money? 3. How can accounting rules help investors to distinguish the quality between these two companies?
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Financial Engineering
CA 1-3
The national credit rating agency downgraded the credit rating of Grand Limited by 2 levels from BB to B+. The credit rating agency was concerned about the companys ability to refinance portions of its debt. Both BB and B+ are considered junk bonds and are below the BBB category, which is the lowest grade that many pension and mutual funds are allowed to hold. Financial statement analysts said that the companys financial profile had weakened due to tight covenants and resulting cash flow restrictions. Who are the stakeholders from Grand Limiteds perspective and what bias Grand might have when it issues its financial statements?
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Other sources:
Background information and basis for conclusion (also found in the Handbook) Pronouncements by accounting standard bodies in other jurisdictions. Exposure drafts where no primary sources apply Other sources must be consistent with the Conceptual Framework.
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US GAAP also has a conceptual framework similar to IFRS, however, there are a lot of interpretations by FASB and SEC that become rules and pushed US GAAP toward a rules based system.
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Principles based:
Pros: based on principles, therefore difficult to manipulate by management Cons: requires professional judgment, not as easy to apply and audit.
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Ethics
Since financial statements are only one form of information to aid investors for decision making, it is important that they are accurate and free of bias, otherwise, the role of financial statements in the capital allocation process may diminish. E.g. Post Enron and WorldCom scandals, market lost confidence in financial reporting and the auditing profession, which prompted more government intervention (Sarbanes Oxley Act) to regulate the financial reporting process.
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