Abstract:This study provides comprehensive descriptive evidence on the occurrence, size, and reporting by managers and the financial press of debt value adjustments due to a change in own credit risk (DVAs). The study is motivated by a public debate about DVAs in which critics describe them as ''counterintuitive'' and claim that managers disclose DVA information strategically to make firms ''look good''. Analyzing a sample of 405 firm-quarters of 19 US financial firms that report DVAs between 2007 and 2014, I found tha… Show more
“…When a bank's own credit risk changes, any unrealized gains and losses from debt revaluation are recognized in the bank's income statement. This causes counterintuitive financial reporting results, as banks increase earnings when their own credit quality deteriorates (Lipe 2002;Rice 2012;Kaumanns 2019). Prior studies provide both experimental and archival evidence validating the controversial debate over fair value accounting for financial liabilities.…”
Section: Accounting For Earnouts and Financial Liabilitymentioning
“…When a bank's own credit risk changes, any unrealized gains and losses from debt revaluation are recognized in the bank's income statement. This causes counterintuitive financial reporting results, as banks increase earnings when their own credit quality deteriorates (Lipe 2002;Rice 2012;Kaumanns 2019). Prior studies provide both experimental and archival evidence validating the controversial debate over fair value accounting for financial liabilities.…”
Section: Accounting For Earnouts and Financial Liabilitymentioning
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