Audit Quality and Investment Efficiency with Endogenous Information in Markets
57 Pages Posted: 1 Aug 2018 Last revised: 30 Aug 2021
Date Written: August 16, 2021
Abstract
We study audit quality and investment efficiency when information produced by a third
party, e.g., a financial analyst, can curb overvaluation, and auditors are subject to legal liability
following audit failure. With the auditor's damage payment based on the price inflation caused
by audit failure, the analyst's information brings prices closer to fundamentals and provides
a hedge to the auditor against legal liability risk. This weakens incentives for audit quality,
and the analyst responds with more information production due to the penalty for mispricing.
Consequently, in equilibrium, stricter legal liability leads to higher audit quality, which reduces
overinvestment, but also less information production, which increases underinvestment. Thus,
stricter legal liability has a non-monotonic effect on firm value: it increases the value of high
growth firms, but reduces the value of low growth firms. The results have implications for the
optimal level of legal liability that maximizes the expected value of the firm.
Keywords: Auditor liability, financial reporting quality, analyst's forecast, information production, capital investment
JEL Classification: M41, M42, G14, G23, G32
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