Unintended consequences of lowering disclosure thresholds: Proposed changes to SFAS No. 5

Recently, investors have asserted that firms' loss contingency disclosures are not adequate to allow them to assess the likelihood of material losses due to litigation (i.e., litigation risk), and a debate has developed over whether the threshold for disclosure should be lowered to provide inve...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fanning, Kirsten
Language:ENG
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3445156
id ndltd-UMASS-oai-scholarworks.umass.edu-dissertations-6162
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UMASS-oai-scholarworks.umass.edu-dissertations-61622020-12-02T14:32:13Z Unintended consequences of lowering disclosure thresholds: Proposed changes to SFAS No. 5 Fanning, Kirsten Recently, investors have asserted that firms' loss contingency disclosures are not adequate to allow them to assess the likelihood of material losses due to litigation (i.e., litigation risk), and a debate has developed over whether the threshold for disclosure should be lowered to provide investors with more information relating to litigation. Using an experiment, I investigate two unintended consequences of lowering a disclosure threshold, as the FASB has recently proposed. First, I find that adding low probability lawsuits to the disclosure of reasonably possible lawsuits lowers prospective investors' perceptions of litigation risk relating to the disclosure, even though more lawsuits are disclosed. Second, lowering the threshold allows firms to portray the entire disclosure opportunistically, diverting attention from higher probability to lower probability lawsuits. I find evidence that firms can use such an opportunistic presentation under a lower threshold to their advantage. Specifically, prospective investors' and even short investors' perceptions were just as favorable to the firm as long investors' when the disclosure threshold was lower and firms adopted an opportunistic disclosure strategy. Thus, my findings suggest that the FASB's proposal to require disclosure of lower probability loss contingencies may have unintended consequences for investors' perceptions of firms' loss exposure. 2011-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3445156 Doctoral Dissertations Available from Proquest ENG ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Accounting|Behavioral psychology
collection NDLTD
language ENG
sources NDLTD
topic Accounting|Behavioral psychology
spellingShingle Accounting|Behavioral psychology
Fanning, Kirsten
Unintended consequences of lowering disclosure thresholds: Proposed changes to SFAS No. 5
description Recently, investors have asserted that firms' loss contingency disclosures are not adequate to allow them to assess the likelihood of material losses due to litigation (i.e., litigation risk), and a debate has developed over whether the threshold for disclosure should be lowered to provide investors with more information relating to litigation. Using an experiment, I investigate two unintended consequences of lowering a disclosure threshold, as the FASB has recently proposed. First, I find that adding low probability lawsuits to the disclosure of reasonably possible lawsuits lowers prospective investors' perceptions of litigation risk relating to the disclosure, even though more lawsuits are disclosed. Second, lowering the threshold allows firms to portray the entire disclosure opportunistically, diverting attention from higher probability to lower probability lawsuits. I find evidence that firms can use such an opportunistic presentation under a lower threshold to their advantage. Specifically, prospective investors' and even short investors' perceptions were just as favorable to the firm as long investors' when the disclosure threshold was lower and firms adopted an opportunistic disclosure strategy. Thus, my findings suggest that the FASB's proposal to require disclosure of lower probability loss contingencies may have unintended consequences for investors' perceptions of firms' loss exposure.
author Fanning, Kirsten
author_facet Fanning, Kirsten
author_sort Fanning, Kirsten
title Unintended consequences of lowering disclosure thresholds: Proposed changes to SFAS No. 5
title_short Unintended consequences of lowering disclosure thresholds: Proposed changes to SFAS No. 5
title_full Unintended consequences of lowering disclosure thresholds: Proposed changes to SFAS No. 5
title_fullStr Unintended consequences of lowering disclosure thresholds: Proposed changes to SFAS No. 5
title_full_unstemmed Unintended consequences of lowering disclosure thresholds: Proposed changes to SFAS No. 5
title_sort unintended consequences of lowering disclosure thresholds: proposed changes to sfas no. 5
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2011
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3445156
work_keys_str_mv AT fanningkirsten unintendedconsequencesofloweringdisclosurethresholdsproposedchangestosfasno5
_version_ 1719364428880674816