Affiliation:
1. Technical University Darmstadt
Abstract
ABSTRACT
When a company internally suspects material fraud, it faces difficult choices. It can choose to investigate internally or engage an external specialist. Additionally, it can choose to disclose the investigation or take the risk that the investigation is leaked to the public. I analyze whether the choice to engage an external specialist, rather than investigate internally, changes investors' willingness to invest in the company. I argue that, when engaging external specialists, disclosure choices matter. Conceptualizing the engagement of external specialists as an external credibility signal, I hypothesize that, when engaging external specialists, self-disclosure increases investors' willingness to invest compared to when the press reveals the investigation. Results from a 2 × 2 between-subjects experiment with 128 non-professional investors support my hypothesis. This suggests that aligning a signal of credible investigation efforts with forthcoming disclosure could be beneficial. Hence, companies conducting genuine investigations could benefit from resisting temptation of nondisclosure.
Publisher
American Accounting Association
Subject
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Accounting
Reference52 articles.
1. Amiram,
D.,
Bozanic
Z.,
Cox
J. D.,
Dupont
Q.,
Karpoff
J. M.,
and
SloanR. G.
2018.
Financial reporting fraud and other forms of misconduct: A multidisciplinary review of the literature.
Review of Accounting Studies23 (
2):
732–
783.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11142-017-9435-x
2. Anger,
H.
2018.
GroKo will unternehmensinterne Ermittlungen verbessern.
Available at: https://www.handelsblatt.com/unternehmen/industrie/internal-investigations-groko-will-unternehmensinterne-ermittlungen-verbessern/21059948.html?ticket=ST-3923424-qIeGpwfUQ3qjacLNwVy2-ap2
3. Arlen,
J.
2012.
Corporate criminal liability: Theory and evidence.
InResearch Handbook on the Economics of Criminal Law,
edited byHarelA. and
HyltonK. N.,144–
203.
Cheltenham, U.K.:
Edward Elgar.
4. Barton,
J.,
and
MercerM.
2005.
To blame or not to blame: Analysts' reactions to external explanations for poor financial performance.
Journal of Accounting and Economics39 (
3):
509–
533.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacceco.2005.04.006
5. Bartov,
E.,
Marra
A.,
and
MomentéF.
2021.
Corporate social responsibility and the market reaction to negative events: Evidence from inadvertent and fraudulent restatement announcements.
The Accounting Review(forthcoming).