2016
DOI: 10.1111/1911-3846.12244
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The Effect of Joint Auditor Pair Composition on Audit Quality: Evidence from Impairment Tests

Abstract: Using a sample of firms from France, where the law requires the use of two auditors, we study the effect of auditor pair composition on audit quality by examining a specific account, goodwill impairment. We document that firms audited by a Big 4-non-Big 4 auditor pair (BS) are more likely to book an impairment and book a larger impairment than firms audited by a Big 4-Big 4 auditor pair (BB) when low-performance indicators suggest a greater likelihood of impairment. Moreover, firms audited by a BB pair reduce … Show more

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Cited by 81 publications
(69 citation statements)
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References 47 publications
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“…Bedard, Piot, and Schatt [2012] show that earnings management seems less aggressive when two Big 4 firms perform the audit than when a Big 4 works in tandem with a non-Big 4. Using a disclosure score for companies composing the French SBF 120 index from 2006 to 2009, Lobo, Paugam, and Casta [2012] provide evidence that the combination of Big 4/non-Big 4 auditors generates higher impairment-related disclosure levels than other combinations, that is, two Big 4 or two non-Big 4. These results are partly consistent with Proposition 5(ii): adding a firm with higher technological efficiency will improve audit quality (i.e., Big 4/non-Big 4 is better than two non-Big 4).…”
Section: Audit Qualitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bedard, Piot, and Schatt [2012] show that earnings management seems less aggressive when two Big 4 firms perform the audit than when a Big 4 works in tandem with a non-Big 4. Using a disclosure score for companies composing the French SBF 120 index from 2006 to 2009, Lobo, Paugam, and Casta [2012] provide evidence that the combination of Big 4/non-Big 4 auditors generates higher impairment-related disclosure levels than other combinations, that is, two Big 4 or two non-Big 4. These results are partly consistent with Proposition 5(ii): adding a firm with higher technological efficiency will improve audit quality (i.e., Big 4/non-Big 4 is better than two non-Big 4).…”
Section: Audit Qualitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prior literature has only rarely addressed the influence of audit quality on the timeliness of impairment losses. Lobo et al (2017) examine the impact of auditor pairs in France, where joint audits are mandatory. They find that firms audited by a Big 4-non-Big 4 auditor pair are more likely to recognize goodwill impairments than firms audited by a Big 4-Big 4 auditor pair, when low-performance indicators suggest that goodwill is likely to be impaired.…”
Section: Prior Literature and Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Goodwill impairment tests are often the main focus of auditors, due to the generally high risk of material misstatement and the considerable attention from enforcement institutions. Focusing on the timeliness of goodwill impairments might, therefore, enable powerful tests of the monitoring effect that auditors have on ensuring appropriate and reasonable impairment tests (Lobo et al, 2017). An increase in audit quality might increase the timeliness of goodwill impairments, as strong external monitoring mechanisms are expected to reduce information asymmetries and deter management from engaging in opportunistic reporting practices, due to an increased risk of detection and the associated penalties (Jensen and Meckling, 1976;Fama and Jensen, 1983).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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