Redovisningskonservatism -En studie om redovisningens försiktighet i Sverige
Abstract
This study aims to measure the effect of accounting conservatism and to identify the
business activities causing firms to undervalue owners’ equity. To estimate
accounting conservatism, we have followed the hypothesis that no firm over time can
generate a return greater than its cost of equity, i.e. CAPM. Thus, if a firm in fact
generates an excess return over time, we assume that the excess return is an estimate
of accounting conservatism within that firm.
The hypothesis originates from the corporate valuation model “Economic Value
Added®” which tries to adjust for accounting bias. The model assumes that excess
return generated by a firm is due to business goodwill, but over time the business
goodwill is said to fade away, and the remaining excess return will be a constant
accounting bias.
When testing the hypothesis on all of the thirty firms included in the Stockholm stock
exchange (OMXS30), we find that there is a measurable accounting bias caused by
heavy investment activities in intangible assets. We conclude that the accounting
practices for intangibles are outdated; as today’s practices lets you capitalize only on
a few of these investment expenditures, thus causing mismatching of costs and
revenues.
Keywords:
Accounting conservatism
Accounting bias
Accounting relevance
Excess return
Return on equity
Cost of equity
Economic Value Added®
Degree
Student essay
View/ Open
Date
2014-01-23Author
Gustavsson, Filip
Ahlm, David
Keywords
Försiktighetsredovisning, konservatism, värderelevans, överavkastning, ROE, COE, Economic Value Added
Series/Report no.
Externredovisning
13-14-5
Language
swe