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Journal Article
The Real Effects of Financial Statement Recognition: Evidence from Corporate Credit Ratings
Management Science
Author(s)
We examine whether the recognition versus disclosure of identical accounting
information affects the credit rating process and ultimately corporate credit ratings. The
primary input into corporate credit ratings is adjusted financial statements, which the
rating agencies create by modifying reported financial statements to reflect credit-relevant
items not recognized under U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. The rating
agencies have claimed that this process means that accounting changes that move previously
disclosed information onto firms’ financial statements have virtually no effect on
firms’ adjusted financial statements or their credit ratings. We show that this claim is
incorrect using the implementation of Financial Accounting Standards Board Statement
No. 158 (SFAS158). This standard did not prescribe any new financial information. Rather,
it simply required the balance sheet recognition of a previously disclosed item. We find that
firms recognizing an additional pension liability due to SFAS158 had lower leverage on the
rating agency adjusted financial statements and received higher corporate credit ratings.
This counterintuitive result occurs because the rating agency adjustments made before
SFAS158 were punitive relative to the combination of the SFAS158 changes and the rating
agency adjustments made after SFAS158. The difference in rating agency adjustments
before and after SFAS158 was primarily due to rating agency adjustments in the pre-
SFAS158 period that did not account for minimum liability adjustments, an aspect of
pension accounting eliminated by SFAS158. Overall, our results indicate that SFAS158
generated real changes in rating agency adjustments and that these changes had real
consequences for firms’ credit ratings.
Date Published:
2019
Citations:
Naughton, James, Riddha Basu. 2019. The Real Effects of Financial Statement Recognition: Evidence from Corporate Credit Ratings. Management Science.