Securities law precedents, legal liability, and financial reporting quality

Abstract In common-law systems, firms’ litigation risk depends both on written laws and how courts interpret these laws. Using 321 US circuit court rulings, we introduce a novel measure capturing courts’ attitudes toward defendants in securities lawsuits. Our results confirm that financial misreport...

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Veröffentlicht in:Review of Finance 2024-03, Vol.28 (2), p.413-445
Hauptverfasser: Franke, Benedikt, Huang, Allen H, Li, Reeyarn Z, Wang, Hui
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract In common-law systems, firms’ litigation risk depends both on written laws and how courts interpret these laws. Using 321 US circuit court rulings, we introduce a novel measure capturing courts’ attitudes toward defendants in securities lawsuits. Our results confirm that financial misreporting firms in more defendant-friendly circuits face fewer lawsuits. Consistent with lower expected litigation costs, firms in these circuits face less negative market reactions when misreporting is revealed, invest less in preventing misreporting, and are more likely to engage in aggressive misreporting. We conclude that defendant-friendly precedents reduce firms’ legal liability and worsen their financial reporting quality.
ISSN:1572-3097
1573-692X
1875-824X
DOI:10.1093/rof/rfad032