Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://theses.ncl.ac.uk/jspui/handle/10443/3454
Title: Implications of IFRS 8 adoption on UK listed companies' disclosure practices and earnings' predictive ability
Authors: Al-Aamri, Ibrahim Ali Saleh
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Newcastle University
Abstract: International Financial Reporting Standard No. 8 (IFRS 8) was issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) in November 2006 and became effective for periods beginning on or after January 2009. IFRS 8 is issued as a part of the IASB convergence program with the USA Financial Accounting Standard Board (FASB). IFRS 8 provides guidelines on how segment information should be reported to external users. It requires segment information to be reported in accordance with the management approach. In particular, operating segments are to be identified in the same way they are reported to Chief Operating Decision Makers (CODM). It is worth noting that IFRS 8 replaced International Accounting Standard No. 14 Revised (IAS 14R). IAS 14R requires reportable segments to be identified in accordance with the (risk and reward) approach. There are three main objectives to this study: (i) to evaluate and compare the disclosure of segment information pre and post the implementation of IFRS 8 for UK listed companies; (ii) to investigate the impact of the management approach on analysts’ earnings forecast accuracy; and (iii) to investigate the impact of the quality of segments’ profit information on stock market ability to anticipate future changes in earnings. For the purpose of achieving these research objectives a positivist theoretical framework is implemented. The three objectives of this study are investigated using two methods; descriptive statistics and mean difference tests; and regression analysis using Ordinary Least Square (OLS), Fixed Effect and Tobit regressions. The findings of this study suggest that the disclosure of segmental information post the adoption of IFRS 8 has witnessed significant and sizable changes. The comparison of segment information reporting pre and post IFRS 8 indicates that UK listed companies provide more disaggregated information post the adoption of IFRS 8. The results show that the implementation of IFRS 8 has resulted in more segments reported for both Line of Business (LOB) and Geographical (GEO) segments. The mean number of reported segments increased from 2.98 to 3.34 for LOB segments and from 4.08 to 4.71 for GEO segments. Statistical tests show that the increase in the number of geographical segments is statistically significant. In addition, the analysis documents a statistically significant increase in the quality (i.e. fineness) of geographical segments disclosed post IFRS 8. However, in contrast the results also show that post the implementation of IFRS 8 the number of line items disclosed has decreased for both LOB and GEO segments. The findings x show that the decline in geographical segments’ line items is statistically different from zero. Also, the results reveal that the most significant line item that is no longer provided for geographical segment is related to earnings/profit information. In addition, the analysis documents a decline in the quality of segment profit reported by companies post the adoption of IFRS 8. With regards to the impact of segmental information on analysts’ earnings forecast accuracy, the results indicate that the adoption of the management approach (IFRS 8), and reporting finer geographical segments provide financial analysts with a significantly better insight about future changes in earnings. In addition, the analysis shows that better quality of segmental earnings disclosure provides financial analysts with a better insight into future changes in earnings. Moreover, we find evidence that companies which defined their main operating segments based on line of business characteristics have been perceived by financial analysts as more informative about future earnings. With regards to the particular impact of the quality of segmental earnings disclosure on stock price ability to anticipate and reflect future changes in earnings, the study finds strong evidence for the impact of quality of segmental profit disclosure on the market ability to anticipate future changes in earnings. The regression results reveal that when the segmental profit margin is different from the consolidated margin, the market has better ability to foresee future change in earnings over short and long term periods. Reporting earnings figures for both main operating segments and entity-wide segments (mostly geographical) improves stock price’s ability to incorporate future earnings for short term periods (i.e. next year earnings). In addition the study shows that when segment profit matches the consolidated income statement the market anticipation power of the next year’s earnings is higher.
Description: PhD Thesis
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10443/3454
Appears in Collections:Newcastle University Business School

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Al-Aamri, I 2016.pdfThesis2.71 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
dspacelicence.pdfLicence43.82 kBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.