Accounting - Theses

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Essays on the intermediation of investors
    Kavourakis, James Peter ( 2020)
    Institutions that intermediate between investors and companies are crucial to the proper functioning of capital markets. These institutions provide marketplaces for and facilitate the transaction activity of investors, gather and disseminate information, and record the property rights of securities holders. The effectiveness of these institutions should be valuable to economies as they allow investors to effectively exercise and maximize the rights of ownership (La Porta et al., 2002; Claessens and Laeven, 2003; Hail and Leuz, 2006; Dixit, 2009). This thesis contains two essays that examine the value of different institutions involved in such intermediation. In the first essay, I examine the effect of securities transfer agents. Transfer agents are used to intermediate between the company and company-registered shareholders. Their primary responsibility is the proper maintenance of shareholder records, and the administration of shareholder transactions. Recent compliance failures by transfer agents, including reported acts of malfeasance by transfer agent staff, have increased regulatory scrutiny of the industry. Follow these events, the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has released draft updates to the existing transfer agent regulatory requirements designed to improve the quality of transfer agent services and prevent further failures. Given concerns regarding the effect of this regulation on the costs of operating securities transfer agencies and competition, I examine two questions relevant to the regulatory discussion: Do transfer agents differ in quality? And, do these quality differences matter to investors? In the second essay, I examine the effect of the minimum price requirements (“MPRs”) of the NASDAQ and New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”). MPRs permit exchanges to delist firms with stock prices persistently below $1.00. Proponents of MPRs argue they allow exchanges to maintain the quality of listed companies. Critics of the requirements argue they lack fundamental basis, limit access to capital, and harm investors. The merits of MPRs are likely rooted in the quality of firms subject to MPRs, the response of firm managers to (potential) breaches of MPRs, and the steps taken in the event of forced delisting. In this essay, I focus on the actions of firms in response to noncompliance with MPRs and examine whether these noncompliant firms respond by increasing news flow to the market.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Accounting conservatism: evidence from the oil and gas industry
    Al Jabr, Yahya A. ( 2004)
    Prior evidence in the oil and gas industry suggests that investors, when assessing firm value, seem to distinguish between different degrees of accounting conservatism that result from the application of the successful efforts (SE) method versus the full cost (FC) method. However, research addressing the valuation implications of accounting choice in the oil and gas industry primarily investigated periods prior to the issuance of SFAS 121. The effect of SFAS 121 on accounting conservatism in the oil and gas industry and hence on the usefulness of the SE method, relative to the FC method, remains untested. This study extends the existing literature by re-examining the effect of accounting conservatism on the usefulness of accounting numbers produced by SE and FC methods during the period 1995-2001, a period in which both SFAS 121 and the ceiling test rules were applied. Empirical results show that in an environment of both SFAS 121 and the ceiling test, there is no difference between SE and FC firms with respect to conservatism associated with the application of accounting rules. Moreover, the results show that the usefulness of accounting numbers to investors does not differ across SE and FC methods. That is, investors attach no valuation premium of one method over the other in the oil and gas industry. This examination provides updated evidence that should be of interest to regulators and standards setters.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    An architecture for computer-based accounting information systems
    SEDDON, PETER ( 1991)
    The question addressed in this thesis is whether cost-effective, computer-based accounting systems can be used to generate "better" accounting information than existing transaction processing accounting systems. The first half of the thesis is devoted to gathering and summarizing information about how computer-based accounting systems work today, and what might constitute "better" accounting information. Data about present-day computer-based accounting systems was collected by mail questionnaires and personal reviews of widely-used packaged accounting software. Information about what constitutes "better" accounting information was collected, first, by reviewing the normative accounting literature, second, by reviewing the empirical literature on the inflation accounting experiments in the US (SFAS 33) and UK (SSAP 16), and third, by reviewing the academic literature on computer-based accounting, particularly the work of Ijiri, McCarthy, and Weber. To reconcile the apparent conflict between the empirical evidence that (a) inflation accounting is essential in times of very high inflation and (b) the empirical studies had found very little evidence of additional information content in SFAS 33 and SSAP 16 reports, it is suggested that the benefits of inflation accounting must only become apparent when general price-level changes exceed, say, 15% - 20% p.a.. Thus the ideas of the normative theorists are not rejected, and it is decided that a computer-based general ledger system that (a) is inflation-tolerant, (b) draws its data from the firm's transaction processing system database, and (c) can provide accounting reports based on different sets of accounting rules (called Multiview Accounting), would be likely to meet the objectives for the thesis. The second half of the thesis focuses on the design of such a system. To build inflation-tolerance into the profit measurement system, it is proposed that the constant-value journal entries and constant-value ledger account balances of conventional ledger systems should be replaced by formulae like those in spreadsheets. It is shown that a coherent system of double-entry bookkeeping, called Formula Accounting, can be developed, where ledger account balances may be functions of any variable that is likely to change in value over time, e.g., time itself, stock market prices, and price-index series. For automatic generation of Formula Accounting (FA) journal entries it is proposed that either the firm's many special-purpose transaction processing systems should be modified, or that a combination of (a) a specially-defined accounting data model (called the REE model), and (b) a computer program that encodes the rules used by accountants when they prepare journal entries (called an Interpreter), should be developed. To demonstrate the feasibility of all these proposals, a prototype REE-Interpreter-FA system was developed in roughly 4,000 lines of Prolog. Multiview Accounting is illustrated by using the prototype system to generate Historical Cost and Current Cost/Constant Purchasing Power interpretations of representative Exchange Events for both a trading firm and a manufacturing firm.