Accounting - Research Publications

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    The differential use and effect of knowledge-based system explanations in novice and expert judgment decisions
    Arnold, V ; Clark, N ; Collier, PA ; Leech, SA ; Sutton, SG (SOC INFORM MANAGE-MIS RES CENT, 2006-03)
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    Top Management Turnover: An Examination of Portfolio Holdings and Fund Performance
    Gallagher, DR ; Nadarajah, P ; Pinnuck, M (SAGE Publications, 2006-01-01)
    We examine the performance and portfolio characteristics of actively managed equity funds impacted by top management turnover. Utilizing a unique database of monthly portfolio holdings, our study finds that, post-replacement, previously poor performing funds experience improved returns. However, this improved performance is not attributable to superior stock selection skill. We also find these new managers decrease the fund's reliance on momentum strategies and decrease the portfolio's concentration, which then leads to a reduced tracking-error volatility. Prior to the replacement event, underperforming investment managers exhibit preferences for larger, growth-oriented stocks, as well as riding momentum strategies and increasing portfolio turnover.
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    Qualitative management accounting research: rationale, pitfalls and potential A comment on Vaivio (2008)
    Lillis, A (EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD, 2008)
    Purpose This paper's purpose is to provide a commentary on “Qualitative management accounting research: rationale, pitfalls and potential,” a paper by Juhani Vaivio. Design/methodology/approach The approach is to draw on alternative research paradigms to expand the definition and discussion of qualitative research in management accounting. Findings The paper endorses many of the prescriptions in Vaivio but expands the definition and discussion of qualitative research in management accounting to recognize the blurred boundaries with field research more generally, and to be more inclusive of qualitative field research from a positivist/functionalist perspective. Similarly, the need for qualitative research to challenge textbook, economics and consulting representations of management accounting is acknowledged, but the range of catalysts is expanded to highlight the potential for qualitative research building on both qualitative and quantitative extant research. This paper also seeks to broaden the discussion of legitimate study design characteristics and data collection methods, and to stress the importance of matching research design with research question. Originality/value The paper stresses the value of pluralism and inclusiveness in both methodological and method choices.
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    A multi-method approach to building causal performance maps from expert knowledge
    Abernethy, MA ; Horne, M ; Lillis, AM ; Malina, MA ; Selto, FH (Elsevier BV, 2005-06-01)
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    Seasonality in fund performance: An examination of the portfolio holdings and trades of investment managers
    Gallagher, DR ; Pinnuck, M (WILEY, 2006-09-01)
    Abstract:  This study examines the extent to which seasonal variation arises across calendar months in the performance of active Australian equity managers. While it is well documented that there is seasonality in equity market returns, it is unknown whether calendar month variation in managed fund performance exists. Employing a unique database of monthly stock holdings, we find evidence consistent with systematic variation in the risk‐adjusted performance of active investment managers over the calendar year. Specifically, we find fund performance is higher in the months when corporate earnings are announced. We also document that the performance of fund managers is lower in the months preceding the tax year‐end. Finally, we report evidence that investment manager performance is greater than normal in December, possibly due to both window dressing and the Christmas holiday effect. These findings have important implications for investors attempting to exploit anomalies in fund returns by timing their entry and exit points from active equity funds.
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    Management control for market transactions: The relation between transaction characteristics, incomplete contract design, and subsequent performance
    Anderson, SW ; Dekker, HC (INFORMS, 2005-12)
    Using an unusually comprehensive database on 858 transactions for information technology products and accompanying services, we study how close partners who are exposed to opportunistic hazards structure and control a significant transaction. We analyze data on the terms of contracting to determine whether transaction and supplier characteristics that generate opportunistic hazards are related to the formal management control structure. We also examine whether misalignment between transaction and supplier characteristics and the control structure is associated with ex post performance problems. Characteristics associated with hazards are found to be positively related to contract extensiveness. Factor analysis of the use of 24 contract terms reveals four groups of contract terms that are commonly used in combination. We interpret these factors as “dimensions of management control” and label them: assignment of rights, product and price, after-sales service, and legal recourse. Characteristics associated with hazards are positively related to the use of all four dimensions of management control, with different hazards associated with different controls. We then examine the relation between transaction characteristics and ex post transaction problems, demonstrating that even in the presence of mutually agreeable contracts, hazards remain. We conclude that costs of contracting are associated with increased use of contract terms on assignment of rights, after-sales service, and legal recourse. Finally, we present evidence that management control structures that are better aligned with transaction hazards mitigate subsequent performance problems, though at a nontrivial cost of contracting.
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    Diagnosing decision quality
    Davern, MJ ; Mantena, R ; Stohr, EA (ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 2008-04)
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    An examination of the performance of the trades and stock holdings of fund managers: Further evidence
    Pinnuck, M (UNIV WASHINGTON SCH BUSINESS & ADMINISTRATION, 2003-12)