SEC reviews and earnings quality at IPO

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SEC reviews and earnings quality at IPO. / Tran, Vy Ngoc Khanh; Hemmings, Danial; Jaafar, Aziz.
Yn: Journal of Accounting Literature, 21.03.2025.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

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Tran VNK, Hemmings D, Jaafar A. SEC reviews and earnings quality at IPO. Journal of Accounting Literature. 2025 Maw 21. doi: 10.1108/JAL-09-2024-0268

Author

Tran, Vy Ngoc Khanh ; Hemmings, Danial ; Jaafar, Aziz. / SEC reviews and earnings quality at IPO. Yn: Journal of Accounting Literature. 2025.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - SEC reviews and earnings quality at IPO

AU - Tran, Vy Ngoc Khanh

AU - Hemmings, Danial

AU - Jaafar, Aziz

PY - 2025/3/21

Y1 - 2025/3/21

N2 - Purpose:We examine the sensitivity of SEC reviews to financial reporting quality in S-1 registration filings of firms conducting IPOs in the US. The investigation is important as market participants rely on this information to make formative investment decisions, whilst there are well-known incentives for IPO firms to disclose earnings opportunistically.Design/Methodology/Approach:Using a sample of US IPO filings on NYSE, NASDAQ, and AMEX, we initially conduct a manual content analysis of themes covered in a training sample of comments from initial comment letters; then a Naïve Bayes machine learning algorithm is employed to expand the coding to the full sample. In testing the hypotheses, a series of negative binomial regression models are developed to examine the relationship between SEC S-1 reviews and earnings management.Findings:We show that IPO firms with greater accruals-based earnings management (AEM) tend to experience more extensive SEC reviews, suggesting they are effective in addressing poor accrual quality. Weak evidence on the effectiveness of the SEC review in addressing discretionary-expense-based real earnings management (REM) is identified. These associations have strengthened under the JOBS Act. On the contrary, SEC reviews are insensitive to sales-based REM, particularly under the JOBS Act. Overall, our study sheds new light on the sensitivity of SEC reviews to earnings management, identifying some areas for further scrutiny.Originality/Value:We incrementally add to the literature by demonstrating the SEC are effective in detecting income-increasing earnings management through accruals-based and, to some extent, discretionary-expenses-based manipulations by IPO firms when preparing their registration statements. Further, our study is the first to identify that SEC reviews appear not to effectively target real earnings management via sales manipulation by IPO firms. We also document an increased risk of earnings management following JOBS, a finding that should be of interest to investors and policymakers, as it implies that the quality of earnings information has deteriorated under the JOBS Act.

AB - Purpose:We examine the sensitivity of SEC reviews to financial reporting quality in S-1 registration filings of firms conducting IPOs in the US. The investigation is important as market participants rely on this information to make formative investment decisions, whilst there are well-known incentives for IPO firms to disclose earnings opportunistically.Design/Methodology/Approach:Using a sample of US IPO filings on NYSE, NASDAQ, and AMEX, we initially conduct a manual content analysis of themes covered in a training sample of comments from initial comment letters; then a Naïve Bayes machine learning algorithm is employed to expand the coding to the full sample. In testing the hypotheses, a series of negative binomial regression models are developed to examine the relationship between SEC S-1 reviews and earnings management.Findings:We show that IPO firms with greater accruals-based earnings management (AEM) tend to experience more extensive SEC reviews, suggesting they are effective in addressing poor accrual quality. Weak evidence on the effectiveness of the SEC review in addressing discretionary-expense-based real earnings management (REM) is identified. These associations have strengthened under the JOBS Act. On the contrary, SEC reviews are insensitive to sales-based REM, particularly under the JOBS Act. Overall, our study sheds new light on the sensitivity of SEC reviews to earnings management, identifying some areas for further scrutiny.Originality/Value:We incrementally add to the literature by demonstrating the SEC are effective in detecting income-increasing earnings management through accruals-based and, to some extent, discretionary-expenses-based manipulations by IPO firms when preparing their registration statements. Further, our study is the first to identify that SEC reviews appear not to effectively target real earnings management via sales manipulation by IPO firms. We also document an increased risk of earnings management following JOBS, a finding that should be of interest to investors and policymakers, as it implies that the quality of earnings information has deteriorated under the JOBS Act.

KW - Initial Public Offering

KW - IPO

KW - SEC review

KW - Earnings management

KW - S-1 filings

U2 - 10.1108/JAL-09-2024-0268

DO - 10.1108/JAL-09-2024-0268

M3 - Article

JO - Journal of Accounting Literature

JF - Journal of Accounting Literature

SN - 0737-4607

ER -