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Do Indian firms engage in classification shifting to report inflated core earnings?

Manish Bansal (Indian Institute of Management Kashipur, Kashipur, India)
Ashish Kumar (Indian Institute of Management Kashipur, Kashipur, India)
K. N. Badhani (Indian Institute of Management Kashipur, Kashipur, India)

Managerial Finance

ISSN: 0307-4358

Article publication date: 7 May 2021

Issue publication date: 22 October 2021

583

Abstract

Purpose

The authors aim at investigating different forms of classification shifting (CS). CS is a novel form of earnings management under which managers misclassify income statement line items and cash flow statement line items with an intent to report favorable operating performance of firms. In particular, the authors check the existence of revenue misclassification, expense misclassification and cash flows misclassification among Indian firms by taking the uniform sample of firms over a single period.

Design/methodology/approach

Operating revenue model (Malikov et al., 2018), core earnings expectation model (McVay, 2006) and operating cash flows model (Roychowdhury, 2006) are employed for measuring revenue misclassification, expense misclassification and cash flows misclassification, respectively. The panel data regression models are used to analyze the data for this study.

Findings

Based on the sample of 12,870 Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) listed firm-years observations between 2010 and 2018, we find that, on average, Indian firms are engaged in revenue misclassification rather than expense misclassification to report inflated core earnings. Firms are found to be engaged in cash flows misclassification too. Besides, we find that magnitude of shifting is greater among larger firms. Results also establish that adoption of Ind AS increases the scope of shifting practices. These results are based on several robustness checks.

Practical implications

The results suggest that investors conduct a comprehensive review of the items of financial statements before using them in their portfolio valuation. It suggests auditors check the basis of revenue classification and standard-setting authorities, like ICAI in India, to make more mandatory disclosure requirements for classification of revenues and cash flows. It suggests lenders not to make lending decisions by looking at the operating performance metrics, as CS is the most preferred tool to positively influence the perception of lenders toward operating performance.

Originality/value

It is the first study that investigates different forms of classification shifting jointly for a sample of firms. Most of the earlier studies have examined one kind of classification shifting at a time. This study adds to the existing literature on earnings management by documenting that some firm-specific factors pressurize firms to prefer one form of shifting over another to report inflated core earnings.

Keywords

Citation

Bansal, M., Kumar, A. and Badhani, K.N. (2021), "Do Indian firms engage in classification shifting to report inflated core earnings?", Managerial Finance, Vol. 47 No. 11, pp. 1533-1552. https://doi.org/10.1108/MF-01-2020-0016

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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