The effects of mandatory IFRS adoption on financial analysts’ forecast: Evidence from Jordan

This paper examines the effect of the mandatory adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) on the ability of financial analysts to forecast earnings accurately in Jordan during the period 2002–2013. The methodology involved the use of a panel data model and the regression with te...

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Main Author: Najeb Masoud
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Cogent Business & Management
Subjects:
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2017.1290331
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spelling doaj-eb1557b5a8684389acc9faef698d28a02021-02-08T14:35:57ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Business & Management2331-19752017-01-014110.1080/23311975.2017.12903311290331The effects of mandatory IFRS adoption on financial analysts’ forecast: Evidence from JordanNajeb Masoud0Aqaba University of TechnologyThis paper examines the effect of the mandatory adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) on the ability of financial analysts to forecast earnings accurately in Jordan during the period 2002–2013. The methodology involved the use of a panel data model and the regression with temporal “dummy” variables in order to test the hypotheses formulated for the study. The research findings show after mandatory IFRS adoption has improvements in the ability of analysts to forecast earnings (decrease in error and dispersion). These findings are evidence of an improvement in earnings quality of Jordan listed firms after the collective requirement to adopt IFRS. The evidence from the study also shows the debate on the desirability of the current move towards one global set of accounting standards as results are robust to several changes in model specifications. The study contributes to the previous finding dealing with the additional quality informational content stemming and, more specifically the quality of earnings from mandatory of IFRS adoption. The originality of this study consists primarily in the use of a long analysis period following the implementation of IFRS that should reduce divergences between analysts, causing a decrease in earnings forecast error and dispersion. Therefore, this study examines only the Jordan context; it’s interesting for future research to study the effect of IFRS mandatory adoption for several countries, especially in emerging market.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2017.1290331m41m49g14g18k22
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Najeb Masoud
spellingShingle Najeb Masoud
The effects of mandatory IFRS adoption on financial analysts’ forecast: Evidence from Jordan
Cogent Business & Management
m41
m49
g14
g18
k22
author_facet Najeb Masoud
author_sort Najeb Masoud
title The effects of mandatory IFRS adoption on financial analysts’ forecast: Evidence from Jordan
title_short The effects of mandatory IFRS adoption on financial analysts’ forecast: Evidence from Jordan
title_full The effects of mandatory IFRS adoption on financial analysts’ forecast: Evidence from Jordan
title_fullStr The effects of mandatory IFRS adoption on financial analysts’ forecast: Evidence from Jordan
title_full_unstemmed The effects of mandatory IFRS adoption on financial analysts’ forecast: Evidence from Jordan
title_sort effects of mandatory ifrs adoption on financial analysts’ forecast: evidence from jordan
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Business & Management
issn 2331-1975
publishDate 2017-01-01
description This paper examines the effect of the mandatory adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) on the ability of financial analysts to forecast earnings accurately in Jordan during the period 2002–2013. The methodology involved the use of a panel data model and the regression with temporal “dummy” variables in order to test the hypotheses formulated for the study. The research findings show after mandatory IFRS adoption has improvements in the ability of analysts to forecast earnings (decrease in error and dispersion). These findings are evidence of an improvement in earnings quality of Jordan listed firms after the collective requirement to adopt IFRS. The evidence from the study also shows the debate on the desirability of the current move towards one global set of accounting standards as results are robust to several changes in model specifications. The study contributes to the previous finding dealing with the additional quality informational content stemming and, more specifically the quality of earnings from mandatory of IFRS adoption. The originality of this study consists primarily in the use of a long analysis period following the implementation of IFRS that should reduce divergences between analysts, causing a decrease in earnings forecast error and dispersion. Therefore, this study examines only the Jordan context; it’s interesting for future research to study the effect of IFRS mandatory adoption for several countries, especially in emerging market.
topic m41
m49
g14
g18
k22
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2017.1290331
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