Risk reporting and earnings smoothing: signaling or managerial opportunism?

Purpose The purpose of this study is to examine the association between two reporting mechanisms used by managers to communicate risk information to the capital market: risk disclosure and earnings smoothing. Design/methodology/approach This study juxtaposes two competing hypotheses, the “opportunis...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inReview of accounting & finance Vol. 21; no. 5; pp. 377 - 397
Main Authors Monjed, Hend, Ibrahim, Salma, Jørgensen, Bjørn N.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Patrington Emerald Publishing Limited 03.11.2022
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Purpose The purpose of this study is to examine the association between two reporting mechanisms used by managers to communicate risk information to the capital market: risk disclosure and earnings smoothing. Design/methodology/approach This study juxtaposes two competing hypotheses, the “opportunistic” and the “signaling”, and empirically investigates whether one dominates the other for a sample of large UK firms for the period 2005–2015. This study also uses the global financial crisis as an arguably exogenous shock on overall risk in the economy to investigate its effect on managers' joint use of textual risk disclosures and earnings smoothing. Findings This study finds that risk disclosure and earnings smoothing are negatively associated. This finding supports that managers with incentives to mask the firm’s true underlying risk through smoothing earnings provide lower levels of risk-related disclosures. This study documents that the trade-off between risk disclosure and earnings smoothing is more pronounced during the global financial crisis period than before and after the crisis period. Further, this study demonstrates a more negative association for firms with higher volatility of cash flows. This negative association is robust to various model specifications, additional corporate governance related controls and an alternative measure of earnings smoothing. Originality/value The findings provide new empirical evidence about the association between risk disclosure and earnings smoothing and support the opportunistic hypothesis, especially when firms are faced with increased risk.
ISSN:1475-7702
1758-7700
DOI:10.1108/RAF-10-2021-0286