The constant changes in the business context and international relations have led companies to be provided with financial reporting with useful information, including their relevance, comparability and harmonization as required by International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). This study analyzes the level of disclosure of derivative financial instruments from companies in the PSI20 stock index, in the Euronext Lisbon stock exchange, according to requirements of IRFS 7. A disclosure index was created, based on the reports and accounts of companies in the period 2015-2017. To analyze the evolution of the disclosure level according to companies' characteristics (dimension, profitability, share price and auditor type), we applied a cluster analysis. The results show a high level of disclosure. This evidence may be related to the mandatory adoption of IAS / IFRS and may also reflect companies' greater concern in disclosing this type of information due to the negative impact that the global financial crisis has had on corporate performance in general. The dimension is the variable that affects disclosure. That is, there is a tendency to, the higher the company the higher the level of disclosure. However, the results show that smaller companies also have high levels of disclosure. This may be associated with greater or lesser quantity or value of derivative financial instruments used.
The COVID-19 pandemic is having a very negative economic and social impact on Portugal's economy, with the year 2020 expected to represent the largest economic recession since the 1970s. According to the Bank of Portugal forecasts, employment is expected to fall significantly, with the unemployment rate estimated at around 10%, with a special focus on young graduates. Simultaneously, several research papers have revealed the importance of entrepreneurship in job creation and economic development, highlighting the role of entrepreneurial ecosystems and government support for creating successful businesses. In this sense, this study has as its main objective to characterize a support program to the investment of young unemployed entrepreneurs and evidence its potential impact on Portugal's economic growth and social progress.
This chapter aims to present some limitations of financial reporting on innovation with an impact on the investor's decision-making process. In order to do so, the authors show how accounting recognizes and measures innovation factors: the intangibles. Based on the literature, the authors discuss how the value relevance of financial reporting on innovation is conditioned by non-financial factors. The impacts of the adoption of IFRSs, the effect of the industry sectors and the effect of the individual characteristics of the different countries on the value relevance of the intangible assets are analyzed. The literature suggests a decrease in the value relevance of financial statements due to the manner in which intangibles are recognized and measured in accounting. However, financial reporting on innovation is value relevant to the investor's decision-making and is conditioned by non-financial factors. Value relevance differs among different industry sectors, between different countries and is conditioned by the accounting systems used in the preparation of the financial information.
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