Auditors are faced with the dilemma of inferring materiality based, in part, on whether a given level of financial misstatement will affect the decisions of statement users. Misstatements in accounting information that are below the materiality threshold are not expected to change users' assessments of a company's economic condition. While the auditing profession accepts materiality in concept, its application in practice is more controversial. In certain settings, the nature of a misstatement, such as changing a small profit into a loss, may affect an auditor's materiality judgment. However, in many cases the magnitude of the misstatement is a critical factor in judging materiality. We focus solely on the issue of magnitude and examine whether financial misstatements that are at or below commonly applied materiality thresholds result in market prices that differ from those resulting from correctly stated information. We conduct a series of 12 experimental asset markets each consisting of 12 independent three‐minute trading periods with six traders in each market. We then compare prices for companies generated by markets that are provided either correctly stated information, information containing misstatements that would typically be considered immaterial, or information containing material misstatements. Results indicate that undisclosed misstatements within materiality thresholds that are consistent with current audit practice do not affect market prices, while misstatements well above these thresholds do.
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1 March 2002
Research Article|
March 01 2002
The Effect of Misstatements on Decisions of Financial Statement Users: An Experimental Investigation of Auditor Materiality Thresholds
Brad Tuttle, Associate Professor;
Brad Tuttle, Associate Professor
aUniversity of South Carolina.
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Maribeth Coller, Associate Professor;
Maribeth Coller, Associate Professor
aUniversity of South Carolina.
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R. David Plumlee, Professor
R. David Plumlee, Professor
bUniversity of Utah.
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Online ISSN: 1558-7991
Print ISSN: 0278-0380
American Accounting Association
2002
AUDITING: A Journal of Practice & Theory (2002) 21 (1): 11–27.
Citation
Brad Tuttle, Maribeth Coller, R. David Plumlee; The Effect of Misstatements on Decisions of Financial Statement Users: An Experimental Investigation of Auditor Materiality Thresholds. AUDITING: A Journal of Practice & Theory 1 March 2002; 21 (1): 11–27. https://doi.org/10.2308/aud.2002.21.1.11
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