ARE AUDITORS' GOING-CONCERN EVALUATIONS MORE USEFUL AFTER SOX?

Authors

  • Benjamin P. Foster University of Louisville
  • Terry J. Ward Middle Tennessee State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.60154/jaepp.1012.v13n1p41

Keywords:

Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX), going-concern modifications, bankruptcy, pre-SOX, post-SOX

Abstract

Bankruptcy risk is a crucial factor in auditors’ decisions whether or not to modify their audit opinion based on the going-concern assumption. SOX required more extensive audit procedures than those required before its passage. More extensive audit procedures should result in more meaningful audit reports. This study examines whether the auditors’ going-concern opinion provides more useful incremental information after SOX than before SOX in distinguishing between distressed companies that become bankrupt in the next year and those that do not. We find that an audit opinion variable adds more useful information to bankruptcy prediction models after SOX than before SOX. Our findings provide evidence that financial statement users have derived benefits from the costly procedures required under SOX.

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Published

2023-05-05

How to Cite

Foster, B. P., & Ward, T. J. (2023). ARE AUDITORS’ GOING-CONCERN EVALUATIONS MORE USEFUL AFTER SOX?. Journal of Accounting, Ethics & Public Policy, JAEPP, 13(1), 41. https://doi.org/10.60154/jaepp.1012.v13n1p41