INTERNET FINANCIAL REPORTING: THE CASE OF PHILIPPINE BANKS

The purpose of this research is to evaluate the extent of internet financial reporting (IFR) of Philippine banks.  Used as samples were top commercial banks and thrift banks operating in the country considering their total assets as of March,                                                          ...

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Main Authors: Jesus P. Briones, Doringer P. Cabrera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Diponegoro 2016-05-01
Series:Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejournal.undip.ac.id/index.php/akuditi/article/view/13865
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spelling doaj-b547e95f10dd485483d043f2ea54406e2020-11-24T21:01:39ZengUniversitas DiponegoroJurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing1412-66992549-76502016-05-0113111810.14710/jaa.v13i1.1386510606INTERNET FINANCIAL REPORTING: THE CASE OF PHILIPPINE BANKSJesus P. Briones0Doringer P. Cabrera1University of BatangasUniversity of BatangasThe purpose of this research is to evaluate the extent of internet financial reporting (IFR) of Philippine banks.  Used as samples were top commercial banks and thrift banks operating in the country considering their total assets as of March,                                                                                                                                                                                      2012 as published by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas in its website. Financial information in the websites of the sampled banks were evaluated during the third quarter of 2012.  The study revealed that the quality and extent of IFR of Philippine commercial banks is “average” based on their IFR index score of 44.50 while thrift banks posted a below average IFR index score of 21.56 resulting to a highly significant difference between bank types. Among the four evaluation criteria used, the subject-banks’ content disclosure provides the highest percentage contribution to their IFR index scores as this is the main focus of their financial reporting. Among the components of content disclosure, corporate information, chairman’s report and the auditor’s report emerged as the top three often included in the financial disclosure of the subject-banks while vision statement and press release are the components often updated by both bank types in their websites with the commercial banks notably updating more frequently compared to thrift banks.   Relative to technology, online feedback is the most common component in the banks’ website while link to homepage is the most usual user support feature relative to the bank’s financial reporting practice. Lastly, asset size and bank type were found to have a high significant relationship with the extent of IFR.https://ejournal.undip.ac.id/index.php/akuditi/article/view/13865internet financial reportingcommercial banksthrift banksasset sizebank type
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jesus P. Briones
Doringer P. Cabrera
spellingShingle Jesus P. Briones
Doringer P. Cabrera
INTERNET FINANCIAL REPORTING: THE CASE OF PHILIPPINE BANKS
Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing
internet financial reporting
commercial banks
thrift banks
asset size
bank type
author_facet Jesus P. Briones
Doringer P. Cabrera
author_sort Jesus P. Briones
title INTERNET FINANCIAL REPORTING: THE CASE OF PHILIPPINE BANKS
title_short INTERNET FINANCIAL REPORTING: THE CASE OF PHILIPPINE BANKS
title_full INTERNET FINANCIAL REPORTING: THE CASE OF PHILIPPINE BANKS
title_fullStr INTERNET FINANCIAL REPORTING: THE CASE OF PHILIPPINE BANKS
title_full_unstemmed INTERNET FINANCIAL REPORTING: THE CASE OF PHILIPPINE BANKS
title_sort internet financial reporting: the case of philippine banks
publisher Universitas Diponegoro
series Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing
issn 1412-6699
2549-7650
publishDate 2016-05-01
description The purpose of this research is to evaluate the extent of internet financial reporting (IFR) of Philippine banks.  Used as samples were top commercial banks and thrift banks operating in the country considering their total assets as of March,                                                                                                                                                                                      2012 as published by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas in its website. Financial information in the websites of the sampled banks were evaluated during the third quarter of 2012.  The study revealed that the quality and extent of IFR of Philippine commercial banks is “average” based on their IFR index score of 44.50 while thrift banks posted a below average IFR index score of 21.56 resulting to a highly significant difference between bank types. Among the four evaluation criteria used, the subject-banks’ content disclosure provides the highest percentage contribution to their IFR index scores as this is the main focus of their financial reporting. Among the components of content disclosure, corporate information, chairman’s report and the auditor’s report emerged as the top three often included in the financial disclosure of the subject-banks while vision statement and press release are the components often updated by both bank types in their websites with the commercial banks notably updating more frequently compared to thrift banks.   Relative to technology, online feedback is the most common component in the banks’ website while link to homepage is the most usual user support feature relative to the bank’s financial reporting practice. Lastly, asset size and bank type were found to have a high significant relationship with the extent of IFR.
topic internet financial reporting
commercial banks
thrift banks
asset size
bank type
url https://ejournal.undip.ac.id/index.php/akuditi/article/view/13865
work_keys_str_mv AT jesuspbriones internetfinancialreportingthecaseofphilippinebanks
AT doringerpcabrera internetfinancialreportingthecaseofphilippinebanks
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