131 research outputs found

    Financial Disclosure Requirements and Foreign Stock Exchange Listing Decisions

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    Perceptions and characteristics of financial statement users in developing countries : the case of Iran

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    We examine the perceptions and characteristics of users of corporate financial statements in Iran. We provide evidence based on a survey of seven different user groups. Our results suggest that annual reports are regularly used as a basis for making investment and other economic decisions. As in many developing countries, users depend more heavily on information obtained from the published annual reports than on advice from stockbrokers and acquaintances or on tips and rumours. While respondents differed in their rating of the importance of different sections of the annual report, the overall results showed that they ranked the income statement, the auditors' report, and the balance sheet as the three most important parts of the annual report (in that order). There is a weak level of consensus among bank loan officers, tax officers, and auditor groups about the importance of several information items. Most users believe that a delay in publishing annual reports, lack of reliability of the information, and lack of adequate disclosure are the main concerns with corporate financial reports in Iran

    Financial Disclosure Levels and Foreign Stock Exchange Listing Decisions

    No full text

    Perceptions and characteristics of financial statement users in developing countries : the case of Iran

    No full text
    We examine the perceptions and characteristics of users of corporate financial statements in Iran. We provide evidence based on a survey of seven different user groups. Our results suggest that annual reports are regularly used as a basis for making investment and other economic decisions. As in many developing countries, users depend more heavily on information obtained from the published annual reports than on advice from stockbrokers and acquaintances or on tips and rumours. While respondents differed in their rating of the importance of different sections of the annual report, the overall results showed that they ranked the income statement, the auditors' report, and the balance sheet as the three most important parts of the annual report (in that order). There is a weak level of consensus among bank loan officers, tax officers, and auditor groups about the importance of several information items. Most users believe that a delay in publishing annual reports, lack of reliability of the information, and lack of adequate disclosure are the main concerns with corporate financial reports in Iran

    Perceptions and characteristics of financial statement users in developing countries: Evidence from Iran

    No full text
    We examine the perceptions and characteristics of users of corporate financial statments in Iran. We provide evidence based on a survey of seven different user-groups. Our results suggest that annual reports are regularly used as a basis for making investment and other economic decisions. As in many developing countries, users depend more heavily on information obtained from the published annual reports than on advice from stockbrokers and acquaintances or on tips and rumors. While respondents differed in their rating of the importance of different sections of the annual report, the overall results showed that they ranked the income statement, the auditors' report, and the balance sheet as the three most important parts of the annual report (in that order). There is a weak level of consensus among bank loan officers, tax officers, ancl auditor groups about the importance of several information items. Most users believe that a delay in publishing annual reports, lack of reliability of the informalion, and lack of adequate disclosure are the main concerns with corporate financial reports in Iran. The evidence on Iran is relevant to other developing countries in the Middle East and beyond
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