Although investor perceptions of audit quality play a critical role in maintaining systemic confidence in the integrity of financial accounting reports (Levitt [2000]), prior research on the effects of auditor tenure from an investor perspective is relatively sparse. In this study, we investigate whether investors price audit firm tenure for Big Five audits by examining the relation between tenure and the ex ante equity risk premium, that is, the excess of the company-specific ex ante cost of equity capital over the risk-free interest rate. Based on prior research, whereas the “auditor learning” argument predicts that audit quality will change in only one direction (i.e., improve) with tenure, the “auditor-client closeness” argument suggests that audit quality may decrease beyond some (albeit unspecified) length of tenure because of impaired auditor independence and objectivity. Consistent with prior theoretical arguments, we find some evidence of a nonlinear relation between audit firm tenure and the ex ante equity risk premium, that is, we find that the equity risk premium decreases in the early years of tenure but increases with additional years of tenure. These findings persist after we control for well-known risk factors and company characteristics that have been shown in prior research to be related to the cost of equity capital. The implications of our findings are discussed.
We examine whether the December 2007 PCAOB disciplinary order against Deloitte affected Deloitte's switching risk, audit fees, and audit quality relative to the other Big 4 firms over a three-year period following the censure. Our findings suggest that the PCAOB censure was associated with a decrease in Deloitte's ability to retain clients and attract new clients, and a decrease in Deloitte's audit fee growth rates. However, methodologies used in extant archival studies yield little or no evidence to suggest that Deloitte's audit quality was different from that of the other Big 4 firms during a three-year window either before or after the censure. Overall, our results suggest that the PCAOB censure imposed actual costs on Deloitte.
Data Availability: All data are publicly available.
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