1 / 37

Kenneth L. Bills University of Oklahoma May 2012

The Effects of Significant Changes in Auditor Clientele and Auditor-Client Mismatches on Audit Quality. Kenneth L. Bills University of Oklahoma May 2012. Presentation Overview. Research Topic Regulatory Concerns Hypothesis Development Methodology and Results. Research Topic.

sorena
Télécharger la présentation

Kenneth L. Bills University of Oklahoma May 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Effects of Significant Changes in Auditor Clientele and Auditor-Client Mismatches on Audit Quality Kenneth L. Bills University of Oklahoma May 2012

  2. Presentation Overview • Research Topic • Regulatory Concerns • Hypothesis Development • Methodology and Results

  3. Research Topic Strained Capacity at Local Audit Offices Excess Capacity at Local Audit Office Audit Quality Portfolio Management Decisions Audit Firm Size

  4. Research Topic Auditor-Client Mismatches Audit Quality

  5. Regulators’ Concerns Mandatory Audit Firm Rotation Arguments For • ↑ Auditor Independence • ↑Audit Firm Competition • Fresh Viewpoint • Concern about what New Audit Firm will Find Arguments Against • Forced Switch from Most Experienced Audit Firm • Company-Specific Knowledge is a GOOD Thing • Cost to Companies is Burdensome

  6. Additional Potential Concerns • Increased Frequency of Auditor Changes May • Disrupt Audit Firms’ Operations • Interfere with their Ability to Focus on Perform High Quality Audits • Audit Firms May Not Have the Capacity to Assign Appropriately Qualified Personnel to New Engagements • Rotation Requirement May Limit a Company’s Choice of Auditor

  7. Mandatory Audit Firm Rotation Volatility in Audit Firms’ Clientele Portfolios Strained or Excess Audit Firm Capacity Audit Quality

  8. Mandatory Audit Firm Rotation Mandating Auditor Changes & Limiting a Company’s Choice in Audit Firm Auditor-Client “Mismatches” Audit Quality

  9. Regulators’ Concerns Contingency Planning for Significant Changes in Audit Firm Capacity in a Geographic Area 2008 Technical Committee Report International Association of Securities and Exchange Commissions (IOSCO)

  10. Strained and Excess Capacity • Causes • External Shocks to the Audit Market • Changes in Capacity Inputs • Changes in Capacity Outputs

  11. Strained and Excess Capacity Significant Changes in Local Audit Office Clientele

  12. Steps to Reduce Strained or Excess Capacity • Hiring/Firing Employees • Hiring/Firing Clients • Use of Built in Cushion • Use of Flexible Capacity (Overtime, Outsourcing) • Transferring Employees (Larger Audit Firms) • May Be Insufficient for Extreme Changes in Clientele

  13. Hypothesis Development

  14. Hypotheses – Audit Quality • Production Economics Literature • Maintaining Delivery Dependability and Quality is More Difficult in Tightly Constrained Systems • Lovelock (1984) and Sridharan (1998)

  15. Proper Judgment Hypotheses – Audit Quality • Reduce Risk • Proper Judgment • Poor Judgment • Proper Judgment • Proper Judgment • Relationship Concerns

  16. Hypotheses – Audit Quality H1: Companies audited by local audit offices with strained (excess) capacity will have audit quality similar to companies audited by local audit offices without strained (excess) capacity.

  17. Hypotheses – Audit Quality • Discretionary Accruals Model • Modified Jones Model (Dechow et al. 1995) • Kothari et al. (2005) Performance Matched • Absolute Value • A Broad Measure of Audit Quality

  18. Hypothesis – Audit Firm Size • Reputational Concerns • “More to Lose” (DeAngelo 1981) • National Office • Established Client-Acceptance Procedures • Established Audit Performance Standards • Ability to Transfer Personnel • Greater Flexibility to Reduce Excess and Strained Capacity

  19. Hypothesis – Audit Firm Size H2: The effects of strained (excess) capacity on audit quality will be smaller forBig 4 and second-tier audit firms than for other firms.

  20. Hypotheses – Portfolio Management Decisions • Strained Capacity • Ability to Discriminate Among Clients ↑ • Select “Most Preferred” Clients • Excess Capacity • Need to Fill Capacity • Client Acceptance Criteria May be Loosened

  21. Hypotheses – Portfolio Management Decisions • Shu (2000) and Landsman et al. (2009) • Mismatches Occur when Large Audit Firms Align with Clients Typically Served by Smaller Audit Firms and Vice Versa • Mismatches Are Not Preferred H3: Auditor-client mismatches are less (more) likely to occur when an audit firm has strained (excess) capacity.

  22. Hypotheses – Mismatches and Audit Quality • Mandatory Auditor Rotation may Increase the Occurrence of Mismatches • Especially where there are Few or No Viable Alternatives • Large Audit Firms Correlated with Higher Audit Quality • Francis et al. (1999), Becker et al. (1998) , etc. • Correlation Goes Away when Matched Sample Design is Used • Lawrence et al. 2011 TAR

  23. Hypotheses – Mismatches and Audit Quality H4a: Auditor-client mismatches where clients expected to be served by large audit firms are served by small audit firms have lower audit quality than where no mismatches are present. H4b: Auditor-client mismatches where clients expected to be served by small audit firms are served by large audit firms have higher audit quality than where no mismatches are present.

  24. Methodology- H1 • Estimate the Following Model Under Two Specifications ERRORit = μ0 + μ1STRAINft + μ2EXCESSft + μ3LATit + μ4Zit + μ5ΔZit + μ6AFEESit+ μ7NFEESit+ μ8GDPit+ μ9ΔGDPit+ μjYearit+ εit • Null Hypotheses: μ1 =0 , μ2 = 0 +/- +/-

  25. Methodology- H2 • Add to Each of the Models • Add an Interaction of LGAUDITOR with Each Variable of Interest • Test Significance • LGAUDITOR*STRAIN & LGAUDITOR*EXCESS

  26. Results of Going-Concern Opinion Error Test

  27. Methodology- H1 • Estimate the Following Model ABSPDAit= β0 + β1STRAINft + β2EXCESSft + β3LTAit + β4CFOit + β5LEVit+ β6MKTBKit+ βjYeart + εit • Null Hypotheses: β1 = 0 , β2 = 0 +/- +/-

  28. Results of Discretionary Accruals Test

  29. December and Non-December Year End

  30. Methodology- H3 • Sample Restricted to First Year Audit Engagements • Estimate the Following Model Under Two Specifications MISMATCH(1 or 2)ft= σ0 + σ1STRAINft + σ2EXCESSft + σ3AFEESit + σ4NFEESit + σ5GDPit + σ6ΔGDPit + σ7HERFft + σkYeart + εit • Hypotheses = σ1 < 0 , σ2 > 0 - +

  31. Results of Mismatch Test

  32. Methodology- H4 • Estimate the Following Model ABSPDAit= λ0 + λ1MISMATCH1ft + λ2MISMATCH2ft + λ3LTAit + λ 4CFOit + λ5LEVit+ λ5MKTBKit+ λjYeart + εit • Hypotheses = λ1 = 0 , λ2 = 0 + -

  33. Results of Discretionary Accruals-Mismatch Test

  34. Conclusion • Audit Quality may be Negatively Affected by Strained and Excess Capacity • The Negative Effect of Strained Capacity is Less for Larger Audit Firms

  35. Conclusions Continued… • Large Audit Offices with Strained Capacity are Less Likely to Accept New Clients that are Mismatches • Small Audit Firms with Strained Capacity are More Likely to Accept New Clients that are Mismatches • Mismatches may increase or decrease audit quality, depending on the size of the audit firm providing the audit.

  36. Thank You for Your Comments

More Related