Peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill

This study investigates the peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill. We find that firms imitate their peers in the initial recognition of goodwill. The higher the tendency for imitation, the higher the proportion of goodwill recognized. Imitation behavior in the initial recognition of goo...

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Main Authors: Liping Xu, Yueqin Guan, Zhihong Fu, Yu Xin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-03-01
Series:China Journal of Accounting Research
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755309120300010
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spelling doaj-512ae37ebaf94bae9c5d4aa6ccae3b252020-11-25T03:20:18ZengElsevierChina Journal of Accounting Research1755-30912020-03-011315777Peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwillLiping Xu0Yueqin Guan1Zhihong Fu2Yu Xin3Center for Accounting, Finance and Institutions/Business School, Sun Yat-sen University, ChinaCenter for Accounting, Finance and Institutions/Business School, Sun Yat-sen University, ChinaCenter for Accounting, Finance and Institutions/Business School, Sun Yat-sen University, ChinaCorresponding author.; Center for Accounting, Finance and Institutions/Business School, Sun Yat-sen University, ChinaThis study investigates the peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill. We find that firms imitate their peers in the initial recognition of goodwill. The higher the tendency for imitation, the higher the proportion of goodwill recognized. Imitation behavior in the initial recognition of goodwill cannot be explained by information acquisition or rivalry motivations. Instead, we find evidence that managers’ opportunistic motivations explain the peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill and the overestimation of goodwill arising from imitation tendencies. Executive overconfidence weakens the peer effect but exacerbates the overestimation of goodwill caused by imitation tendencies. Finally, the higher the imitation tendency, the greater the probability and amount of goodwill impairment in the future. This further confirms that the peer effect leads to overestimation of goodwill. The findings of this study enrich the literature on goodwill and provide insightful empirical evidence for regulating goodwill accounting. The results show that the conservatism principle should be reinforced in the initial recognition of goodwill. Keywords: Initial Recognition of Goodwill, Peer Effect, Goodwill Impairmenthttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755309120300010
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Liping Xu
Yueqin Guan
Zhihong Fu
Yu Xin
spellingShingle Liping Xu
Yueqin Guan
Zhihong Fu
Yu Xin
Peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill
China Journal of Accounting Research
author_facet Liping Xu
Yueqin Guan
Zhihong Fu
Yu Xin
author_sort Liping Xu
title Peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill
title_short Peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill
title_full Peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill
title_fullStr Peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill
title_full_unstemmed Peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill
title_sort peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill
publisher Elsevier
series China Journal of Accounting Research
issn 1755-3091
publishDate 2020-03-01
description This study investigates the peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill. We find that firms imitate their peers in the initial recognition of goodwill. The higher the tendency for imitation, the higher the proportion of goodwill recognized. Imitation behavior in the initial recognition of goodwill cannot be explained by information acquisition or rivalry motivations. Instead, we find evidence that managers’ opportunistic motivations explain the peer effect in the initial recognition of goodwill and the overestimation of goodwill arising from imitation tendencies. Executive overconfidence weakens the peer effect but exacerbates the overestimation of goodwill caused by imitation tendencies. Finally, the higher the imitation tendency, the greater the probability and amount of goodwill impairment in the future. This further confirms that the peer effect leads to overestimation of goodwill. The findings of this study enrich the literature on goodwill and provide insightful empirical evidence for regulating goodwill accounting. The results show that the conservatism principle should be reinforced in the initial recognition of goodwill. Keywords: Initial Recognition of Goodwill, Peer Effect, Goodwill Impairment
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755309120300010
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AT zhihongfu peereffectintheinitialrecognitionofgoodwill
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