The puzzle of negative association of earnings quality with corporate performance: a finding from Chinese publicly listed firms

Similar documents
THE VALUE RELEVANCE OF ACCOUNTING INFORMATION: FOCUSING ON US AND CHINA

Dong Weiming. Xi an Jiaotong University, Xi an, China. Huang Qian. Xi an Physical Education University, Xi an, China. Shi Jun

Managerial compensation, ownership structure and firm performance in China's listed firms

The Role of Accounting Accruals in Chinese Firms *

OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME AND EARNINGS MANAGEMENT AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS BASED ON MODIFIED JONES MODEL

CAN WE BOOST STOCK VALUE USING INCOME-INCREASING STRATEGY? THE CASE OF INDONESIA

Managerial Power, Capital Structure and Firm Value

A Synthesis of Accrual Quality and Abnormal Accrual Models: An Empirical Implementation

Amir Sajjad Khan. 1. Introduction. order to. accrual. is used is simply. reflect. the asymmetric 2009). School of

Ac. J. Acco. Eco. Res. Vol. 3, Issue 2, , 2014 ISSN:

Stock price synchronicity and the role of analyst: Do analysts generate firm-specific vs. market-wide information?

Keywords: Equity firms, capital structure, debt free firms, debt and stocks.

A Study of Relationship between Accruals and Managerial Operating Decisions over Firm Life Cycle among Listed Firms in Tehran Stock Exchange

Whether Cash Dividend Policy of Chinese

The Effect of Financial Status on Earnings Quality of Chinese Listed Firms

Earnings quality and earnings management in Chinese-listed companies

An Empirical Examination of Traditional Equity Valuation Models: The case of the Athens Stock Exchange

Marketability, Control, and the Pricing of Block Shares

Additional Evidence on the Impact of the International Financial Reporting Standards on Earnings Quality: Evidence from Latin America

Effect of Earnings Growth Strategy on Earnings Response Coefficient and Earnings Sustainability

Elisabetta Basilico and Tommi Johnsen. Disentangling the Accruals Mispricing in Europe: Is It an Industry Effect? Working Paper n.

The Effects of Corporate Income Tax on Corporate Capital Structure---Based on the Data of Listed Companies in China

Chinese Firms Political Connection, Ownership, and Financing Constraints

The Effects of Shared-opinion Audit Reports on Perceptions of Audit Quality

Impact of Accruals Quality on the Equity Risk Premium in Iran

Relationship Between Voluntary Disclosure, Stock Price Synchronicity and Financial Status: Evidence from Chinese Listed Companies

A Replication Study of Ball and Brown (1968): Comparative Analysis of China and the US *

The relationship between conservatism in financial reporting and subsequent equity returns

Disproportional ownership structure and payperformance relationship: evidence from China's listed firms

Dividend Policy and Earnings Management: Based on Discretionary Accruals and Real Earnings Management

Analysis on accrual-based models in detecting earnings management

Examining the Earnings Persistence and Its Components in Explaining the Future Profitability

Program Studi Akuntansi, Fakultas Ekonomi, Universitas Atma Jaya. Yogyakarta. Jalan Babarsari 43-44, Yogyakarta

Related Party Cooperation, Ownership Structure and Value Creation

Research Methods in Accounting

Author for Correspondence

The Impact of Information Risk on the Systematic Risk

Earnings Management and Corporate Governance in Thailand

Researcher 2015;7(9)

The Journal of Applied Business Research March/April 2017 Volume 33, Number 2

The Month-of-the-year Effect in the Australian Stock Market: A Short Technical Note on the Market, Industry and Firm Size Impacts

INVESTOR SENTIMENT, MANAGERIAL OVERCONFIDENCE, AND CORPORATE INVESTMENT BEHAVIOR

Disproportional ownership structure and pay performance relationship: evidence from China's listed firms

The Effect of Financial Constraints, Investment Policy and Product Market Competition on the Value of Cash Holdings

The impact of corporate governance on earnings quality

The Reconciling Role of Earnings in Equity Valuation

The Introduction of China Accounting, Finance& Economic Research Databases

AN ANALYSIS OF THE DEGREE OF DIVERSIFICATION AND FIRM PERFORMANCE Zheng-Feng Guo, Vanderbilt University Lingyan Cao, University of Maryland

Corporate Life Cycle and the Accrual Model: An Empirical Study Based on Chinese Listed Companies

China Journal of Accounting Research

Does Analyst Forecasting Behavior Explain Anomalous Stock Market Reactions to Information in Cash and Accrual Earnings Components?

Earnings Management and Executive Compensation: Evidence from Banking Industry

Sources of Financing in Different Forms of Corporate Liquidity and the Performance of M&As

Capital allocation in Indian business groups

Fama-French in China: Size and Value Factors in Chinese Stock Returns

Dividend Policy and Earnings Management: Based on Discretionary Accruals and Real Earnings Management

Eli Amir ab, Eti Einhorn a & Itay Kama a a Recanati Graduate School of Business Administration,

Interactions among China-related stocks: evidence from a causality test with a new procedure

A Study of Corporate Governance Factors and Earnings Management Behaviors of Taiwan Public Companies

An Extended Examination of the Effectiveness of the Sarbanes Oxley Act in Reducing Pension Expense Manipulation

Earnings Quality Determinants of the Jordanian Manufacturing Listed Companies

Does health capital have differential effects on economic growth?

EARNINGS ATTRIBUTES AND INVESTOR PROTECTION: INTERNATIONAL EVIDENCE

Deviations from Optimal Corporate Cash Holdings and the Valuation from a Shareholder s Perspective

Conservatism and Accruals: Are They Interactive? Evidence from the Greek Capital Market

What Drives the Earnings Announcement Premium?

Firm-Specific Estimates of Differential Persistence and their Incremental Usefulness for Forecasting and Valuation

Security Structure Choice and Earnings Management for A-REITs

Classification Shifting in the Income-Decreasing Discretionary Accrual Firms

CEO Tenure and Earnings Quality

Does the interest rate for business loans respond asymmetrically to changes in the cash rate?

CORPORATE CASH HOLDING AND FIRM VALUE

Does market liquidity explain the idiosyncratic volatility puzzle in the Chinese stock market?

Earnings quality and earnings management : the role of accounting accruals Bissessur, S.W.

How Markets React to Different Types of Mergers

The relationship between book-tax differences and earnings growth within Indonesian manufacturing firms

Market Overreaction to Bad News and Title Repurchase: Evidence from Japan.

Exploring the Changes in the Value Relevance of Direct Cash Flows under the Accounting Standards of Business Enterprises in China Yu SONG

*Corresponding author. Keywords: Corporate Bond, Credit Rating, Profitability, Credit Rating Quality.

Evidence of Asset Impairment Reversals from China: Economic Reality or Earnings Management?

An Empirical Analysis on the Management Strategy of the Growth in Dividend Payout Signal Transmission Based on Event Study Methodology

Mutual Fund Ownership, Firm Specific Information, and Firm Performance: Evidence from China

An Empirical Study about Catering Theory of Dividends: The Proof from Chinese Stock Market

Earnings Management and Audit Quality in Europe: Evidence from the Private Client Segment Market

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AND CASH HOLDINGS: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF CHINESE AND INDIAN FIRMS

State Ownership and Earnings Management around Initial Public. Offerings: Evidence from China

The Role of Credit Ratings in the. Dynamic Tradeoff Model. Viktoriya Staneva*

The Effect of Managerial Ability on Earnings Quality in the Pre and Post IFRS Adoption Periods

Adjusting for earnings volatility in earnings forecast models

Servicing Assets and Gain-On-Securitization under SFAS 156. Abstract

The Impact of IFRS Adoption on Real Activities Manipulation: Evidence from China

PM2.5, Investor Sentiment, and Stock Returns

Government intervention and corporate M&A transactions: Evidence

CASH FLOW ACTIVITIES AND STOCK RETURNS IN MANUFACTURING OF INDONESIA: A MODERATING ROLE OF EARNING MANAGEMENT

Do Auditors Use The Information Reflected In Book-Tax Differences? Discussion

DO AUDITORS WITH A DEEP POCKET PROVIDE A HIGH QUALITY AUDIT?

Conservatism and stock return skewness

Earnings quality and earnings management : the role of accounting accruals Bissessur, S.W.

Re-Examining the Association Between Unexpected Earnings and Abnormal Security Returns in the Present of Financial Leverage

Management Science Letters

Transcription:

University of Wollongong Research Online Faculty of Business - Papers Faculty of Business 2013 The puzzle of negative association of earnings quality with corporate performance: a finding from Chinese publicly listed firms Shiguang Ma University of Wollongong, shiguang@uow.edu.au Publication Details Ma, S. (2013). The puzzle of negative association of earnings quality with corporate performance: a finding from Chinese publicly listed firms. China Finance Review International Conference (pp. 1-23). Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: research-pubs@uow.edu.au

The puzzle of negative association of earnings quality with corporate performance: a finding from Chinese publicly listed firms Abstract Introduction - Earnings management - Accounting data management. - Real earnings management. - Earnings quality - Financial statement accurately and unbiased reports corporate operating status and financial position. - Earnings quality as the degree to which earnings persists or sustains into next period. - Corporate performance - Low earnings quality leads to low corporate performance. - Theoretically approved, but empirical evidences are not consistent. - The Puzzle of Negative Association of Earnings Quality with Corporate Performance in China - Probably, it is rational in an emerging market. Keywords finding, chinese, publicly, listed, firms, association, earnings, quality, corporate, puzzle, performance, negative Disciplines Business Publication Details Ma, S. (2013). The puzzle of negative association of earnings quality with corporate performance: a finding from Chinese publicly listed firms. China Finance Review International Conference (pp. 1-23). This conference paper is available at Research Online: http://ro.uow.edu.au/buspapers/283

The Puzzle of Negative Association of Earnings Quality with Corporate Performance: A Finding from Chinese Publicly Listed Firms 6 th China Finance Review International Conference Jiaotong University, Shanghai Shiguang Ma School of Accounting and Finance University of Wollongong, Australia 1

1. Introduction Earnings management Accounting data management. Real earnings management. Earnings quality Financial statement accurately and unbiased reports corporate operating status and financial position. Earnings quality as the degree to which earnings persists or sustains into next period. Corporate performance Low earnings quality leads to low corporate performance. Theoretically approved, but empirical evidences are not consistent. The Puzzle of Negative Association of Earnings Quality with Corporate Performance in China Probably, it is rational in an emerging market. 2

2. Literature review Ball and Brown (1967, 1968) contend that high earning quality should be valued on the equity market. Schipper and Vincent (2003) indicate that low-quality earnings can lead to a misallocation of capital, and may generate inappropriate outcomes for contracts that use accounting data as inputs Dechow and Schrand (2004) state that a high-quality earnings number accurately reflects a company s current operating performance and is a good indicator of future operating performance. Francis et al. (2004) argue that Low-quality earnings also introduce an information risk to the investors, and thereby increase the cost of capital. 3

2. Literature review (continued) Chan et al. (2006) examine the market valuation of earnings quality. They find that earnings increases accompanied by high accruals suggest low earnings quality. Penman and Zhang (2002) document that growth firms in sale or net operating assets appear lower earnings quality. Dechow and Schrand (2004) indicate that companies in growing industries will typically have high accruals and large estimation errors. 4

3. Research hypothesis Based on the existing literature (for example, the last three) Based on the existing/applied methods for the calculation of earnings quality measures. Firm-year specific method Year-industry methods Dechow et al. (2010) set a framework for thinking about earnings quality: Reported earnings = f (X), where X is firm s fundamental performance and f represents the accounting system that converts the unobservable X into observable earnings. 5

3. Research hypothesis Reported earnings benchmark earnings = (reported earnings real earnings) + (real earnings benchmark earnings). An example: Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 Year 6 Firm A Earnings 500 510 520 530 540 550 Assets 3600 3600 3600 3600 3600 3600 Firm B Earnings 500 540 520 560 540 580 Assets 3600 3600 3600 3600 3600 3600 Firm A earnings quality is higher than Firm B Firm B performance is better than Firm A 6

3. Research hypothesis (continued) H1: In an emerging market of economic booming, it is possible that high corporate performance associate with low earnings quality due to undulate growth. H2: Earnings Management may distort earnings quality and manipulate corporate performance up. However, earnings management is not the main driver of high corporate performance and low earnings quality. H3: The association of low earnings quality with high corporate performance is probably an inherent phenomenon of emerging market. The fast and undulate growth results in the coexistence of low earnings quality and high corporate performance in the emerging market of China. 7

4. Variables and sample Earning quality measures (1) Accrual quality (Dechow and Dichev, 2002) (2) Earning persistence (Kormendi and Lipe, 1987) (3) Earnings predictability (Francis et al., 2004) 8

4. Variables and sample (continued) (4) Value relevance (Francis and Schipper, 1999) (5) Discretionary accrual (Jones, 1991) 9

4. Variables and sample (continued) Corporate performance measures (1) EBIT/asset (2) EBIT/sale (3) EBIT/asset %DA (Cornett et al., 2008) (4) CFO/asset + %NDA Tobin-Q1: the market value of equity is the total number of shares multiplying market price. Tobin-Q2: the market value of equity is the number of tradable shares multiplying market price plus book value of non-tradable shares. Control variables Logarithm of assets, Leverage ratio, Top5 ownership, Growth of sale, ST firm dummy, State dummy, B shares dummy, Industry dummy, Yearly dummy. 10

4. Variables and sample (continued) Sample Our initial sample comprises the firms that issued A shares and were listed on either the Shanghai or Shenzhen stock exchanges at least for six consecutive years from 1999 to 2010. The final sample consists of 1,176 firms with 7,921 firmyear observations reported from 2004 to 2010. The majority of data are collected from the China Stock Market and Accounting Research Database (CSMAR). Regression model P = α + β Q + F λ + I λ ++ Y λ + ε ' ' ' it, it, it, it, it, 2, t it, 3, t it, 4, t it, 11

5. Empirical result TABLE 1. Summary statistics Variable Definition Mean Median Panel A: Earnings quality measures Accrual quality 0.0418 0.0266 Earnings persistence 0.3677 0.2157 Earnings predictability 0.0571 0.0248 Discretionary accrual 0.0051 0.0001 Absolute value of discretionary accrual 0.0676 0.0360 Value relevance 0.1260 0.1867 Panel B: Corporate performance measures EBIT/asset 0.0264 0.0329 EBIT/sale 0.0254 0.0542 EBIT/asset %DA 0.0239 0.0349 CFO/asset + %NDA 0.0178 0.0210 Tobin-Q1 1.8355 1.3307 Tobin-Q2 2.3902 1.7159 12

5. Empirical result (continued) TABLE 2. Correlation analysis EBIT/ EBIT/ EBIT/asset CFO/asset Tobin- Tobinasset sale %DA + %NDA Q1 Q1 Accrual quality 0.046-0.002 0.053-0.014-0.202-0.244 (.001) (.889) (.001) (.250) (.001) (.001) Earnings persistence -0.084-0.098-0.057-0.019-0.043-0.034 (.001) (.001) (.001) (.084) (.000) (.003) Earnings predictability -0.024-0.028-0.012-0.093-0.249-0.335 (.033) (.013) (.275) (.001) (.001) (.001) Discretionary accrual (abs) 0.014 0.012 0.002-0.049-0.086-0.117 (.229) (.286) (.0.875) (.001) (.001) (.001) Value relevance -0.033-0.039-0.029-0.037-0.029 0.035 (.004) (.001) (.010) (.001) (.010) (.168) 13

5. Empirical result (continued) TABLE 3. Regression analyses on corporate performance: EBIT/asset Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Intercept -0.0686-0.0774-0.1716-0.0811-0.1775 (-1.36) (-1.47) (-3.57)*** (-1.55) (-3.32)*** Accrual quality -0.1846 (-1.96)** Earnings persistence -0.0108 (-4.44)*** Earnings predictability -0.2340 (-5.91)*** Discretionary accrual (abs) -0.1200 (-2.10)** Value relevance -0.0061 Logarithm of assets 0.0066 (2.78)*** Leverage ratio -0.1461 (-9.45)*** Top5 ownership 0.0003 (1.8)* Growth of sale 0.0491 (8.81)*** ST firm dummy -0.0547 (-7.82)*** 0.0083 (3.51)*** -0.1368 (-9.06)*** 0.0003 (2.05)** 0.0486 (10.36)*** -0.0404 (-6.15)*** 0.0130 (5.73)*** -0.1641 (-11.47)*** 0.0001 (0.36) 0.0417 (9.65)*** -0.0477 (-7.35)*** 0.008 (3.40)*** -0.1395 (-9.23)*** 0.0002 (1.98)** 0.0494 (10.48)*** -0.0433 (-6.85)*** (-2.43)** 0.014 (6.03)*** -0.1847 (-11.39)*** 0.0002 (1.38) 0.0498 (12.06)*** -0.0481 (-7.26)*** 14

5. Empirical result (continued) TABLE 4. Regression analyses on corporate performance: EBIT/sale Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Intercept -0.4979 (-2.45)** -0.4992 (-2.37)** -0.7184 (-3.84)*** -0.4405 (-2.08)** -0.7824 (-3.79)*** Accrual quality -0.9394 (-2.49)** Earnings persistence -0.0504 (-6.06)*** Earnings predictability -0.6505 (-5.19)*** Discretionary accrual (abs) -0.2834 (-1.68)* Value relevance -0.0341 (-3.31)*** Logarithm of assets 0.0312 (3.18)*** 0.0379 (4.00)*** 0.0489 (5.72)*** 0.0339 (3.60)*** 0.0535 (5.88)*** Leverage ratio -0.5026 (-8.65)*** -0.4589 (-7.85)*** -0.5366 (-9.38)*** -0.4687 (-8.04)*** -0.5924 (-8.64)*** Top5 ownership 0.0004 (0.73) 0.0003 (0.70) -0.0003 (-0.64) 0.0002 (0.48) 0.0002 (0.36) Growth of sale 0.172 (7.35)*** 0.1652 (8.39)*** 0.1468 (7.55)*** 0.1674 (8.45)*** 0.1672 (8.64)*** ST firm dummy -0.1489 (-4.2)*** -0.0872 (-2.48)** -0.1043 (-2.93)*** -0.0898 (-2.61)*** -0.149 (-4.02)*** State dummy 0.0096-0.0082-0.0034-0.0091-0.0073 15

5. Empirical result (continued) TABLE 5. Regression analyses on corporate performance: EBIT/asset %DA Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Intercept -0.0372 (-0.74) -0.0402 (-0.81) -0.1418 (-2.89)*** -0.0505 (-1.02) -0.15 (-2.78)*** Accrual quality -0.1430 (-1.43) Earnings persistence -0.0078 (-3.47)*** Earnings predictability -0.2176 (-5.82)*** Discretionary accrual (abs) -0.1057 (-1.97)** Value relevance -0.0051 (-1.79)* Logarithm of assets 0.0061 (2.59)*** 0.0069 (3.12)*** 0.012 (5.16)*** 0.0069 (3.10)*** 0.013 (5.52)*** Leverage ratio -0.1397-0.1337-0.1602-0.1366-0.1779 (-9.04)*** (-9.17)*** (-11.17)*** (-9.31)*** (-11.17)*** Top5 ownership 0.0002 (1.43) 0.0003 (2.07)** 0.0001 (0.62) 0.0003 (2.00)** 0.0002 (1.53) Growth of sale 0.0382 (6.73)*** 0.0383 (8.18)*** 0.0319 (7.20)*** 0.0389 (8.30)*** 0.0394 (9.40)*** ST firm dummy -0.0484 (-6.73)*** -0.0384 (-5.69)*** -0.0444 (-6.62)*** -0.0413 (-6.28)*** -0.044 (-6.36)*** State dummy -0.0016-0.0039-0.0018-0.0037-0.0033 16

5. Empirical result (continued) TABLE 6. Regression analyses on corporate performance: CFO/Asset + %NDA Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Intercept 0.0038 (0.07) 0.0431 (0.84) -0.1051 (-2.2)** 0.016 (0.31) -0.0315 (-0.66) Accrual quality -0.2501 (-2.62)*** Earnings persistence -0.0023 (-0.77) Earnings predictability -0.2874 (-6.62)*** Discretionary accrual (abs) -0.1816 (-2.29)** Value relevance -0.0078 (-2.5)** Logarithm of assets 0.0042 (1.53) 0.003 (1.23) 0.0104 (4.57)*** 0.0036 (1.5) 0.0068 (3.03)*** Leverage ratio -0.1183-0.1168-0.1513-0.1211-0.1325 (-9.89)*** (-9.5)*** (-12.81)*** (-9.91)*** (-9.59)*** Top5 ownership 0.0006 (3.84)*** 0.0007 (4.71)*** 0.0005 (3.19)*** 0.0007 (4.58)*** 0.0006 (4.32)*** Growth of sale 0.0538 (5.52)*** 0.0585 (6.11)*** 0.0494 (5.56)*** 0.0587 (6.11)*** 0.045 (4.9)*** ST firm dummy -0.0418 (-5.38)*** -0.027 (-3.24)*** -0.0345 (-4.32)*** -0.0303 (-3.8)*** -0.0334 (-4.96)*** State dummy -0.0108-0.0147-0.0114-0.0134-0.0114 17

5. Empirical result (continued) TABLE 7. Regression analyses on earnings quality for firms with positive and negative discretionary accruals Dependent variable EBIT/asset EBIT/sale %DA>0 %DA 0 %DA>0 %DA 0 Accrual quality 0.2053 ( 2.18)** 0.1389 ( 0.92) 1.0199 ( 2.45)*** 0.7377 ( 1.39) Earnings persistence 0.0032 ( 1.20) 0.0144 ( 4.20)*** 0.0318 ( 4.09)*** 0.0569 ( 4.77)*** Earnings predictability 0.2347 0.2088 0.6234 0.6627 ( 4.59)*** ( 3.35)*** ( 3.83)*** ( 3.13)*** Value relevance 0.0052 ( 1.67)* 0.0067 ( 1.91)* 0.0205 ( 1.57) 0.0458 ( 3.22)*** Dependent variable EBIT/asset %DA CFO/asset + %NDA %DA>0 %DA 0 %DA>0 %DA 0 Accrual quality 0.1398 ( 1.48) 0.4769 ( 3.49)*** 0.4174 ( 2.80)*** 0.0245 ( 0.24) Earnings persistence 0.0018 ( 0.68) 0.0132 ( 4.04)*** 0.0022 ( 0.42) 0.0057 ( 1.90)* Earnings predictability 0.19164 0.2478 0.4541 0.0970 ( 4.34)*** ( 3.84)*** ( 6.59)*** ( 1.67)* Value relevance 0.0041 ( 1.23) 0.0066 ( 1.70)* 0.0082 ( 1.65)* 0.0092 ( 2.21)** 18

5. Empirical result (continued) TABLE 8 The differences of corporate performance and earnings quality between normal firms and ST firms ST firms Normal firms Difference %Difference t-statistics Wilcoxon test Panel A: Earnings quality measures Accrual quality 0.0655 0.0382 0.0273 71.46% 2.94*** 11.92*** Earnings persistence 0.3386 0.3722 0.0336 9.03% 0.90 7.94*** Earnings predictability 0.1336 0.0452 0.0884 195.57% 20.44*** 29.77*** Discretionary accrual (abs) 0.0711 0.0492 0.0219 45.51% 9.90*** 7.24*** Value relevance 0.1513 0.1221 0.0292 23.92% 1.45 1.57 Panel B: Corporate performance measures EBIT/asset 0.0639 0.0405 0.1044 257.78% 8.52*** 25.41*** EBIT/sale 0.2397 0.0666 0.3063 459.91% 9.26*** 20.76*** EBIT/asset %DA 0.0595 0.0399 0.0994 249.12% 5.53*** 18.62*** CFO/asset + %NDA 0.0500 0.0302 0.0802 265.56% 2.95*** 17.69*** 19

5. Empirical result (continued) TABLE 9. Regression analyses on corporate performance of Tobin-Q1 Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Intercept 16.304 (17.13)*** 18.6144 (19.19)*** 17.2809 (17.55)*** 18.029 (20.24)*** 16.1907 (17.81)*** Accrual quality -3.3340 (-3.76)*** Earnings persistence 0.0303 (1.49) Earnings predictability -2.4344 (-4.16)*** Discretionary accrual (abs) -1.6934 (-3.05)*** Value relevance -0.0282 (-0.171)* Logarithm of assets -0.7644-0.8001-0.7336-0.7783-0.6847 (-16.07)*** (-17.3)*** (-15.5)*** (-18.16)*** (-15.68)*** Leverage ratio 0.7159 (3.24)*** 0.7666 (3.36)*** 0.4824 (2.05)** 0.7495 (3.43)*** 0.6986 (2.79)*** Top5 ownership 0.0120 (5.07)*** 0.0069 (3.04)*** 0.0047 (2.22)*** 0.0065 (2.87)*** 0.0068 (3.18)*** Growth of sale 0.0796 (4.45)*** 0.1201 (4.03)*** 0.0391 (3.95)*** 0.1141 (4.05)** 0.1274 (3.49)*** ST firm dummy 0.2118 (1.82)* 0.3528 (2.84)*** 0.2891 (2.51)** 0.3126 (2.55)** 0.2273 (1.84)* State dummy -0.0228-0.2475-0.2159-0.2384-0.2671 20

5. Empirical result (continued) TABLE 10. Regression analyses on corporate performance of Tobin-Q2 Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Intercept 9.9493 (15.46)*** 12.0605 (17.73)*** 11.4961 (17.19)*** 11.7092 (18.79)*** 10.3638 (17.46)*** Accrual quality -1.8516 (-2.84)*** Earnings persistence 0.0110 (0.83) Earnings predictability -1.0364 (-2.87)*** Discretionary accrual (abs) -0.8175 (-2.17)** Value relevance -0.0427 (-1.67)* Logarithm of assets -0.4200-0.4606-0.4325-0.4468-0.3804 (-13.04)*** (-14.45)*** (-13.61)*** (-15.23)*** (-13.96)*** Leverage ratio 0.1460 (1.02) 0.1494 (0.97) 0.0283 (0.19) 0.1437 (0.96) 0.0934 (0.55) Top5 ownership -0.0036 (-2.19)** -0.0075 (-4.71)*** -0.0084 (-5.3)*** -0.0077 (-4.87)*** -0.0072 (-4.90)*** Growth of sale 0.0258 (3.60)*** 0.0570 (3.48)*** 0.0226 (3.37)*** 0.0536 (3.49)*** 0.0686 (2.79)*** ST firm dummy 0.0951 (1.46) 0.1482 (1.99)** 0.1210 (1.67)* 0.1277 (1.74)* 0.1042 (1.46) State dummy -0.0740-0.3049-0.2915-0.3031-0.3322 21

6. Conclusions Theoretical analyses assert that earnings quality has positive association with corporate performance. However, empirical evidences don t always support the theoretical conclusion. Our regression results show that, when the corporate performance measures include discretionary accruals, all the coefficients of earnings quality measures are negative and significant at convention level. When the effect of earnings management component is removed from the corporate performance measures, four out of five coefficients of the earnings quality measures are negative and significant. Our further analyses on the subsamples of earnings-increase management firms and earnings-decrease management firms as well as financially distressed (ST) firms provide almost consistent results. The robustness tests using market-based performance measure of Tobin-Q and using decile ranking of earning quality cannot generate results with meaningful change. The negative association of earnings quality with corporate performance is a general phenomenon of new emerging market with 22 booming economy, particularly in China.

Thank you very much! All comments are much appreciated! 23