Are key audit matter disclosures useful in assessing the financial distress level of a client firm?
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2024
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Muñoz-Izquierdo, N., Pincus, M., & Wellmeyer, P. (2024). Are key audit matter disclosures useful in assessing the financial distress level of a client firm?. The British Accounting Review, 56(2), 101200.
Abstract
This study examines the usefulness of new expanded audit report key audit matters (KAM) disclosures in assessing the level of financial distress present at a client firm. Using six years of KAM disclosures for U.K. Premium-listed firms beginning in 2013, we investigate the relation between firm financial distress and the number, risk level, financial statement impact, and individual nature of auditor-disclosed KAMs. We expand on literatures examining audit report disclosures in gauging financial distress assessments as well as the utility of expanded audit reporting. We find the greater the number of KAMs disclosed, the higher a firm's financial distress level. Additionally, results show entity-level KAMs, account-level KAMs with a primary impact on profitability and solvency, and certain types of individual KAMs are more likely to be disclosed when client firms face higher levels of financial distress. The results are robust to alternative measures of financial distress and to endogeneity tests. Our findings also indicate KAMs have predictive ability in assessing subsequent periods' financial distress levels. In all, evidence from this study suggests a way financial statement users can use independent auditor disclosures to assess one of the main risks associated with a firm - the risk of failure.
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Highlights
• We examine the usefulness of expanded audit reports in assessing client firm financial distress.
• The greater the number of KAMs disclosed, the greater the risk of client firms' financial distress.
• The usefulness of KAMs in assessing financial distress increases when considering individual KAMs.
• For assessing financial distress: consider going-concern, fraud, acquisition, exceptional items, revenue, accrual and estimate KAMs.
• KAMs may help financial statement users to assess the risk of a client firm's financial distress.