An empirical investigation into differences between companies that elected an early compliance with SFAS 52 and companies not electing an early compliance

The latest foreign currency translation standard, Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 52 (SFAS 52), promulgated in December of 1981, was issued in response to harsh criticisms of its predecessor, Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 8 (SFAS 8). Large foreign currency translation...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brown, Betty Coffee
Other Authors: Business
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/54449
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-54449
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-544492020-12-19T05:31:57Z An empirical investigation into differences between companies that elected an early compliance with SFAS 52 and companies not electing an early compliance Brown, Betty Coffee Business LD5655.V856 1985.B766 Foreign exchange Financial statements Corporations -- Accounting The latest foreign currency translation standard, Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 52 (SFAS 52), promulgated in December of 1981, was issued in response to harsh criticisms of its predecessor, Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 8 (SFAS 8). Large foreign currency translation gains and losses, resulting from the use of the temporal translation method, were required to be reported in net income under the al1—inclusive income concept mandated by SFAS 8. In contrast, SFAS 52 adopted the functional currency approach whereby companies whose functional currency is the local currency are required to use the current rate method, generally resulting in only minor translation gains and losses that are required to be reported in a separate component of stockholders' equity. This study compares seven specific financial attributes between 83 Fortune 500 companies electing a December 31, 1981, compliance and 103 Fortune 500 companies not opting for a 1981 adoption. Univariate t—tests on each attribute indicate the strongest difference between the two groups is in the foreign currency translation gains and losses for 1981. The multivariate Hotelling T2 test simultaneously compared differences in the seven attributes for the two groups. Test results indicate the two groups of companies are different. Since the "yo-yo" effect on earnings was an often cited reason for opposing SFAS 8, differences in the volatility in reported earnings between the two groups for the five-year period covered by SFAS 8 (1976-1980) were examined using three different measures. The overall conclusion was that companies adopting the standard early did not have more volatility in earnings than the other group during the period that SFAS 8 was in effect. Security price reactions to the early adoption were also investigated. Surprisingly, a strong market reaction was indicated. Significant differences between the cumulative average residuals (CARs) for the two groups began two weeks prior to year-end and continued for five months. The CARs for the group that adopted SFAS 52 early generally performed better than expected whereas the residuals for the companies that continued to report under the temporal method were worse than expected. Ph. D. 2015-07-10T20:00:08Z 2015-07-10T20:00:08Z 1985 Dissertation Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/54449 en_US OCLC# 13280229 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ xi, 175 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V856 1985.B766
Foreign exchange
Financial statements
Corporations -- Accounting
spellingShingle LD5655.V856 1985.B766
Foreign exchange
Financial statements
Corporations -- Accounting
Brown, Betty Coffee
An empirical investigation into differences between companies that elected an early compliance with SFAS 52 and companies not electing an early compliance
description The latest foreign currency translation standard, Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 52 (SFAS 52), promulgated in December of 1981, was issued in response to harsh criticisms of its predecessor, Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 8 (SFAS 8). Large foreign currency translation gains and losses, resulting from the use of the temporal translation method, were required to be reported in net income under the al1—inclusive income concept mandated by SFAS 8. In contrast, SFAS 52 adopted the functional currency approach whereby companies whose functional currency is the local currency are required to use the current rate method, generally resulting in only minor translation gains and losses that are required to be reported in a separate component of stockholders' equity. This study compares seven specific financial attributes between 83 Fortune 500 companies electing a December 31, 1981, compliance and 103 Fortune 500 companies not opting for a 1981 adoption. Univariate t—tests on each attribute indicate the strongest difference between the two groups is in the foreign currency translation gains and losses for 1981. The multivariate Hotelling T2 test simultaneously compared differences in the seven attributes for the two groups. Test results indicate the two groups of companies are different. Since the "yo-yo" effect on earnings was an often cited reason for opposing SFAS 8, differences in the volatility in reported earnings between the two groups for the five-year period covered by SFAS 8 (1976-1980) were examined using three different measures. The overall conclusion was that companies adopting the standard early did not have more volatility in earnings than the other group during the period that SFAS 8 was in effect. Security price reactions to the early adoption were also investigated. Surprisingly, a strong market reaction was indicated. Significant differences between the cumulative average residuals (CARs) for the two groups began two weeks prior to year-end and continued for five months. The CARs for the group that adopted SFAS 52 early generally performed better than expected whereas the residuals for the companies that continued to report under the temporal method were worse than expected. === Ph. D.
author2 Business
author_facet Business
Brown, Betty Coffee
author Brown, Betty Coffee
author_sort Brown, Betty Coffee
title An empirical investigation into differences between companies that elected an early compliance with SFAS 52 and companies not electing an early compliance
title_short An empirical investigation into differences between companies that elected an early compliance with SFAS 52 and companies not electing an early compliance
title_full An empirical investigation into differences between companies that elected an early compliance with SFAS 52 and companies not electing an early compliance
title_fullStr An empirical investigation into differences between companies that elected an early compliance with SFAS 52 and companies not electing an early compliance
title_full_unstemmed An empirical investigation into differences between companies that elected an early compliance with SFAS 52 and companies not electing an early compliance
title_sort empirical investigation into differences between companies that elected an early compliance with sfas 52 and companies not electing an early compliance
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/54449
work_keys_str_mv AT brownbettycoffee anempiricalinvestigationintodifferencesbetweencompaniesthatelectedanearlycompliancewithsfas52andcompaniesnotelectinganearlycompliance
AT brownbettycoffee empiricalinvestigationintodifferencesbetweencompaniesthatelectedanearlycompliancewithsfas52andcompaniesnotelectinganearlycompliance
_version_ 1719370966544416768