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Leavey School of Business Santa Clara University
Department ofAccounting

Selected Publications

Does financial reporting conservatism mitigate underinvestment?

Yongtae Kim, Associate Dean and Robert and Barbara McCullough Professor of Accounting

Journal of Accounting, Auditing & Finance (2019)

Hong, H. A., Kim, Y., & Lobo, G. J. (2019). Does Financial Reporting Conservatism Mitigate Underinvestment? Journal of Accounting, Auditing & Finance, 34(2), 258–283. https://doi.org/10.1177/0148558X17719786


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Abstract

This study examines the role of financial reporting conservatism in mitigating underinvestment problems. Recognizing that volatile cash flows increase the need to access external capital markets and that agency conflicts and information asymmetry make external capital costlier than internal capital, which leads managers to forgo valuable investment projects, Minton and Schrand document a negative relation between cash flow volatility and investment. We draw on Minton and Schrand’s framework to isolate underinvestment problems and hypothesize and document that conservatism mitigates the negative relation between cash flow volatility and investment and that this mitigative effect is more pronounced for firms with ex ante more severe agency conflicts. We also document that conservatism mitigates the sensitivity of investment to cash flow volatility by facilitating access to external capital.

Research
LSB Research, ACTG, 2019, Yongtae Kim