Evidence that market participants assess recognized and disclosed items similarly when reliability is not an issue
We provide evidence that disclosed items are not processed differently from recognized items when the disclosures are salient, not based on management estimates, and amenable to simple techniques for imputing as-if recognized amounts. For a sample of firms with both capital and operating leases, we find that as-if recognized amounts for leases are generally reliable and that both recognized lease obligations and disclosed lease obligations are associated with proxies for costs of debt and equity. The magnitudes of these associations are not statistically different across accounting treatments, suggesting that market participants impound as-if recognized operating lease obligations and recognized capital lease obligations similarly into costs of capital. Conditioning on the reliability of as-if recognized operating lease obligations, we find a difference in the association between recognized versus as-if recognized lease obligations and proxies for the costs of debt and equity when the operating lease disclosures are less reliable.
Duke Scholars
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- Accounting
- 3502 Banking, finance and investment
- 3501 Accounting, auditing and accountability
- 1501 Accounting, Auditing and Accountability
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Accounting
- 3502 Banking, finance and investment
- 3501 Accounting, auditing and accountability
- 1501 Accounting, Auditing and Accountability