Partner compensation plans in large accounting firms tend to emphasize either local office profits or worldwide firm profits (“small-pool” or “large-pool” firms, respectively) (Trompeter 1994). Some have expressed concern over possible impairment of auditor independence when a small-pool compensation plan is used, and Trompeter (1994) found in an experimental setting that partners in small-pool firms were less likely to require income-decreasing adjustments.
We examine, in an archival setting, the association of partner compensation plans and client size with auditors' propensity to issue going-concern audit opinions to stressed clients. We find no evidence that auditors' going-concern reporting decisions were directly affected by partner compensation plans. However, there is evidence of an interaction between partner compensation plans and client size. This interaction suggests that auditors in small-pool firms may be more sensitive to client size than partners in large-pool firms when making certain going-concern opinion decisions.
Insider trading is viewed as a threat to the fairness and integrity of the capital markets. The securities market's allocation of resources depends on: (1) the preservation of a fair system in which investors are willing to trade, and (2) the assurance that market participants are properly rewarded for identifying good investment opportunities. The duties and responsibilities of market participants in acquiring and using information can be based on their fiduciary duties, the obligations associated with the possession of price-sensitive information, or the processes by which the information is acquired.
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