主題:What Do Auditors' Opinions Tell Us about Long-Term Macroeconomic
Activity? (審計師如何定義長期的宏觀經濟活動?)
主講人:Scott Joslin, 南加州大學馬歇爾商學院金融和商業經濟學副教授
日期:2018年11月14日(周三)
時間:上午10:00 - 11:30
地點:清華Betvictor中文版4号樓101教室
語言:英文
摘要:
This paper proposes and validates the macro-audit
hypothesis, an equilibrium theory of a relationship between a form of default
intensities the aggregate frequency of going concern opinions and the macro
economy, where auditors' access to private information across firms (through exposure to accounting data across
their client firms) provides superior information about long-term economic risk
and growth. More specially, motivated by economic framework that builds on
features of firms' audit processes and the corporate sector's role in the macro
economy, we posit and show that going concern opinions from firms' financial
reports provide useful information not only about the likelihood and severity
of firm default but also about long-term macroeconomic activity. We also show
that key capital markets players do not fully incorporate predictive
information embedded in going concern opinions. Overall, this paper is the first
to shed light on the link between audit information in firm-level financial
reports and the macro economy.
主講人簡介:
Scott Joslin is
an associate professor of Finance and Business Economics at USC Marshall School
of Business. His research focuses on asset pricing and related econometric
methods with applications to fixed income and options. He teaches elective
courses on fixed income and risk management in addition to finance in the
online MBA program. Prior to coming to USC, Dr. Joslin was an assistant
professor at MIT Sloan School of Management. He received his Ph.D. in finance
from Stanford Graduate School of Business.