We predict and find that accounting restatements that adversely affect shareholder wealth at the restating firm also induce share price declines among non‐restating firms in the same industry. These share price declines are unrelated to changes in analysts' earnings forecasts, but instead seem to reflect investors' accounting quality concerns. Peer firms with high industry‐adjusted accruals experience a more pronounced share price decline than do low‐accrual firms. This accounting contagion effect is concentrated among revenue restatements by relatively large firms in the industry. We also find that investors impose a larger penalty on the stock prices of peer firms with high earnings and high accruals when peer and restating firms use the same external auditor. Our results are consistent with the notion that some accounting restatements cause investors to reassess the financial statement information previously released by non‐restating firms.
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1 January 2008
Research Article|
January 01 2008
The Contagion Effects of Accounting Restatements
Cristi A. Gleason;
Cristi A. Gleason
aThe University of Iowa
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Nicole Thorne Jenkins;
Nicole Thorne Jenkins
bVanderbilt University
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W. Bruce Johnson
W. Bruce Johnson
cThe University of Iowa
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Online ISSN: 1558-7967
Print ISSN: 0001-4826
American Accounting Association
2008
The Accounting Review (2008) 83 (1): 83–110.
Citation
Cristi A. Gleason, Nicole Thorne Jenkins, W. Bruce Johnson; The Contagion Effects of Accounting Restatements. The Accounting Review 1 January 2008; 83 (1): 83–110. https://doi.org/10.2308/accr.2008.83.1.83
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