12 results on '"Brooke Beyer"'
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2. Discontinued operations and analyst forecast accuracy
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Binod Guragai, Brooke Beyer, and Eric T. Rapley
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050208 finance ,Earnings ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,05 social sciences ,Accounting ,050201 accounting ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Corporate finance ,Incentive ,Income statement ,0502 economics and business ,Quality (business) ,Financial accounting ,business ,health care economics and organizations ,Finance ,Financial statement ,Anecdotal evidence ,media_common - Abstract
The Financial Accounting Standards Board requires separate reporting of discontinued operations within the income statement to provide better information about companies’ future earnings for financial statement users. However, discontinued operations can increase the complexity of forecasting earnings because a portion of permanent earnings is being eliminated, the future effect on continuing operations may be unclear, and there are incentives for opportunistic reporting. Additionally, anecdotal evidence also shows that analysts, an important proxy for financial statement users, have difficulty in adjusting their forecasts when companies report discontinued operations. This study empirically examines whether reporting of discontinued operations affects analyst earnings forecast accuracy. Our results suggest that forecast accuracy initially declines following the reporting of discontinued operations, and the effect is more pronounced for firms with lower quality discontinued operations disclosures. Results also show the initial decline in forecast accuracy dissipates after a year and is concentrated in firms with potentially more opportunistic reporting within discontinued operations.
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- 2021
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3. High-Quality Information Technology and Capital Investment Decisions
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Eric T. Rapley, John L. Abernathy, Brooke Beyer, and Jimmy F. Downes
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Finance ,Information Systems and Management ,Capital investment ,business.industry ,Investment efficiency ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Decision quality ,Information technology ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Management Information Systems ,Microeconomics ,Human-Computer Interaction ,Capital expenditure ,Investment decisions ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Accounting ,Fixed asset ,Quality (business) ,business ,Quality information ,Software ,media_common ,Information Systems - Abstract
We examine the effect of high-quality information technology (IT) on management's capital investment decisions. Evaluating capital investment decisions with contemporary investment efficiency and long-term measures of investment effectiveness, we document a positive relation between high-quality IT and capital investment decision quality. In particular, we find high-quality IT is associated with more optimal levels of investment as well as fewer future fixed asset write-downs. We also disaggregate investment efficiency and find the relation with IT quality holds for investment decisions related to capital expenditures and acquisitions, but not research and development expenditures. Overall, our results suggest managers equipped with better internal information from higher-quality IT are able to make superior capital investment decisions. Our study contributes to the literature by providing evidence of a significant determinant of capital investment decision quality and documenting a specific mechanism that mediates the indirect effect of IT quality on future performance. JEL Classifications: D83; E22; G31; M15; M41. Data Availability: We thank InformationWeek for providing annual rankings that were previously published. All other data are publicly available from regulatory filings; we obtained data from the Compustat, Execucomp, and I/B/E/S databases.
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- 2019
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4. Early Evidence on the Use of Foreign Cash Following the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017
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Jimmy F. Downes, Brooke Beyer, Mollie E. Mathis, and Eric T. Rapley
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Capital expenditure ,Cost of capital ,Cash ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Debt ,Capital (economics) ,Dividend ,Business ,Monetary economics ,Capital market ,media_common ,Market liquidity - Abstract
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) reduces U.S. multinational companies’ (MNC) internal capital market frictions related to repatriation costs by decreasing costs to access internal capital (i.e., foreign cash). This study examines MNCs’ responses to the TCJA and finds spending and investment behavior are dependent upon liquidity, investment opportunities, and borrowing costs. Domestic capital expenditures increased for MNCs with low domestic liquidity and high domestic investment opportunities. These firms also increased share repurchases. In contrast, MNCs with low domestic liquidity and low domestic investment opportunities increased dividends. MNCs with low domestic investment opportunities and high cost of debt reduced their outstanding debt. We also investigate responses to global intangible low-taxed income (GILTI) incentives and find that MNCs with more foreign cash and a greater likelihood of being affected by the GILTI regime increase their foreign but not domestic capital expenditures - a potential unintended consequence of TCJA.
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- 2021
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5. Real Earnings Management by Benchmark-Beating Firms: Implications for Future Profitability
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Eric T. Rapley, Sandeep Nabar, and Brooke Beyer
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050208 finance ,Earnings management ,business.industry ,Accounting ,0502 economics and business ,05 social sciences ,Benchmark (computing) ,Profitability index ,050201 accounting ,business - Abstract
SYNOPSIS Prior studies document both an improvement (Gunny 2010) and deterioration (Bhojraj, Hribar, Picconi, and McInnis 2009) in the future operating performance of firms engaging in real earnings management (REM) to meet earnings benchmarks. These results suggest that some firms use REM to signal their favorable prospects, whereas others use REM opportunistically. We hypothesize that firms with less robust information environments, more costly REM, and fewer incentives to meet short-term earnings benchmarks are more likely to engage in REM to signal future performance. Consistent with expectations, we find the positive relation between REM and future profitability is limited to firms that have less robust information environments (measured with stock return volatility, bid/ask spread, and analysts following), more costly REM (measured with market share and financial health), and fewer incentives to meet short-term earnings benchmarks (measured with market-to-book ratio, transient investors, and seasoned equity offering). In supplementary analysis, we note that Bhojraj et al. (2009) restrict their sample to relatively large firms, whereas Gunny's (2010) sample includes both large and small firms. Our analysis indicates that the difference in sample composition explains the differing results. We find that small firms use REM to signal positive future performance, but large firms do not. JEL Classifications: M40; M41.
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- 2018
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6. Income Statement Reporting Discretion Allowed by FIN 48: Interest and Penalty Expense Classification
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John L. Abernathy, Andrew Gross, Brooke Beyer, and Eric T. Rapley
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050208 finance ,Actuarial science ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Fin 48 ,05 social sciences ,Expense account ,Gross income ,ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING ,Accounting ,050201 accounting ,Discretion ,International taxation ,Income statement ,0502 economics and business ,Deferred tax ,Economics ,Financial accounting ,business ,Finance ,media_common - Abstract
Financial Accounting Standards Board Interpretation No. 48 (FIN 48, FASB 2006) allows discretion regarding the income statement classification of interest and penalty expenses for unrecognized tax benefits (UTBs). We investigate whether tax avoidance, management compensation, and debt agreements affect the expense classification election and whether this discretion has implications for financial statement users. We find firms that engage in tax avoidance activities, measured by effective tax rates (ETRs) and involvement in tax disputes, are more likely to include interest and penalties in tax expense. We also find that interest and penalties are more likely to be classified as tax expense when CEO compensation is more sensitive to pre-tax income. Finally, we find that UTB interest and penalty expense classification is associated with analysts' ETR forecast accuracy, which suggests there is a potential unintended consequence related to decision usefulness of FIN 48 reporting due to expense classification discretion.
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- 2017
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7. Internal capital market inefficiencies, shareholder payout, and abnormal leverage
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Eric T. Rapley, Jimmy F. Downes, and Brooke Beyer
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040101 forestry ,Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,Leverage (finance) ,Strategy and Management ,05 social sciences ,Financial system ,Return of capital ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Cash flow forecasting ,Shareholder ,Operating cash flow ,Multinational corporation ,0502 economics and business ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Business ,Business and International Management ,Cash management ,Capital market ,Finance - Abstract
• We examine internal capital market inefficiencies and U.S. multinational firms' return of capital to shareholders.
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- 2017
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8. How the Source of Audit Committee Accounting Expertise Influences Financial Reporting Timeliness
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John L. Abernathy, Chad M. Stefaniak, Adi Masli, and Brooke Beyer
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Finance ,business.industry ,Audit committee ,Audit evidence ,Chief audit executive ,Accounting ,Audit plan ,Public relations ,Comparison of management accounting and financial accounting ,Joint audit ,Accounting information system ,Financial accounting ,business - Abstract
SUMMARY This article summarizes “The Association between Characteristics of Audit Committee Accounting Experts, Audit Committee Chairs, and Financial Reporting Timeliness” (Abernathy, Beyer, Masli, and Stefaniak 2014), which investigates the association between audit committee members' accounting expertise and financial reporting timeliness. While we find a positive relation between audit committee accounting expertise and financial reporting timeliness, interestingly, we also find that accounting expertise gained from public accounting experience is associated with more timely financial reporting than accounting expertise gained from CFO experience. We discuss implications of these findings for auditors, companies, and regulators.
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- 2015
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9. The association between characteristics of audit committee accounting experts, audit committee chairs, and financial reporting timeliness
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Brooke Beyer, Chad M. Stefaniak, Adi Masli, and John L. Abernathy
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Finance ,Actuarial science ,Fund accounting ,business.industry ,Accounting management ,Audit committee ,Accounting ,Comparison of management accounting and financial accounting ,Accounting information system ,Management accounting ,Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (United States) ,Financial accounting ,business - Abstract
We investigate the association between audit committee (AC) members' financial expertise and financial reporting timeliness, and extend the discussion by investigating how the source of accounting expertise (e.g., public accounting or CFO) differentially influences financial reporting timeliness. We predict and find that AC accounting financial expertise is associated with timelier accounting information. Further, we find that accounting expertise gained from public accounting experience is associated with timelier financial reporting; however, accounting expertise gained from CFO experience is not. We also find that AC chairs (ACCs) with accounting expertise from public accounting experience are significantly associated with timelier financial reporting while ACCs with CFO-sourced accounting expertise are not. Our results are important for two reasons. First, our results suggest that AC accounting financial expertise contributes to AC effectiveness by improving the timeliness of financial information. Second, our findings highlight how personal characteristics of accounting financial experts influence contributions toward AC effectiveness.
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- 2014
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10. Earnings Management Constraints and Classification Shifting
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Eric T. Rapley, John L. Abernathy, and Brooke Beyer
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Earnings response coefficient ,Labour economics ,Earnings ,Accrual ,Sample (statistics) ,Cash flow forecasting ,Microeconomics ,Earnings management ,Accounting ,Accounting information system ,Economics ,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous) ,Market share ,Finance - Abstract
Prior literature has investigated three forms of earnings management: real earnings management (REM), accruals earnings management (AEM) and classification shifting. Managers make trade-off decisions among these methods based on the costs, constraints and timing of each strategy. This study investigates whether managers use classification shifting when their ability to use other forms of earnings management is constrained. We find that when REM is constrained by poor financial condition, high levels of institutional ownership and low industry market share, managers are more likely to use classification shifting. Further, we find that when AEM is constrained by low accounting system flexibility and the provision of a cash flow forecast, managers are more likely to use classification shifting. In addition, when we limit our sample to firms that are most likely to have manipulated earnings, we continue to find support for constraints of both REM and AEM leading to higher levels of classification shifting. We also find support for the hypothesis that the timing of each earnings management strategy influences managers� trade-off decision. Our results indicate that managers use classification shifting as substitute form of earnings management for both AEM and REM.
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- 2014
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11. What It Means to be an Accounting Professor: A Concise Career Guide for Doctoral Students in Accounting
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Gary K. Meek, Brooke Beyer, Eric T. Rapley, and Don Herrmann
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ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION ,Point (typography) ,business.industry ,Process (engineering) ,Publishing ,Accounting ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Sociology ,Special Interest Group ,business ,Education - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to provide a concise career guide for current and potential doctoral students in accounting and, in the process, help them gain a greater awareness of what it means to be an accounting professor. The guide can also be used by accounting faculty in doctoral programs as a starting point in mentoring their doctoral students. We begin with foundational guidance to help doctoral students better understand the “big picture” surrounding the academic accounting environment. We then provide specific research guidance and publishing guidance to help improve the probability of publication success. Actions are suggested that doctoral students and new faculty can take to help jump-start their academic careers. We finish with guidance regarding some important acronyms of special interest to doctoral students in accounting.
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- 2010
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12. Disaggregated Capital Expenditures
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Don Herrmann, Brooke Beyer, and Eric T. Rapley
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Labour economics ,050208 finance ,business.industry ,Economic capital ,05 social sciences ,Accounting ,050201 accounting ,Monetary economics ,Fixed capital ,Capital budgeting ,Capital expenditure ,Physical capital ,Cost of capital ,0502 economics and business ,Expenses versus Capital Expenditures ,Capital employed ,Total capital ,Capital intensity ,Business - Abstract
SYNOPSIS Financial analysts and accounting regulators encourage companies to disclose the disaggregation of total capital expenditures (CAPX) into the portion for sustaining current performance (maintenance CAPX [MCAPX]) and the portion for pursuing additional opportunities (growth CAPX [GCAPX]). Using a hand-collected sample of voluntary disclosures, we document that traditional estimates of disaggregated CAPX components, using currently required financial statement disclosures, are inadequate proxies for actual (disclosed) values of MCAPX and GCAPX. Specifically, we find that estimation errors for disaggregated variables are associated with future financial performance (i.e., changes in sales and earnings), suggesting that disaggregated disclosure information is potentially useful in forecasting. We also find that these estimation errors are associated with analyst forecast revisions of sales and earnings per share, consistent with analysts incorporating disaggregated CAPX information into their forecasts. Our results provide evidence that disaggregated CAPX disclosures are superior to currently required aggregate CAPX disclosure for forecasting firms' financial performance.
- Published
- 2015
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