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A Statistical Analysis of Reliability of Audit Opinions as Bankruptcy Predictors

A Statistical Analysis of Reliability of Audit Opinions as Bankruptcy Predictors
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摘要 This research measures the reliability of audit firms in predicting bankruptcy for United States (US) listed financial institutions. The object of analysis is the going concern opinion (GCO), widely considered as a bankruptcy warning signal to stakeholders. The sample is composed of 42 US listed financial companies that filed for Chapter 11 between 1998 and 2011. To highlight the differences between bankrupting and healthy firms, a matching sample composed of 42 randomly picked healthy US listed financial companies is collected. We concentrate on financial institutions, whereas the existing literature pays considerably greater attention to the industrial sector. This research imbalance is remarkable and particularly unexpected in the wake of recent financial scandals. Literature points out two main approaches on bankruptcy prediction: (1) purely mathematical; and (2) approaches based on a combination of auditor knowledge, expertise, and experience. The use of data mining techniques allows us to benefit from the best features of both approaches. Statistical tools used in the analysis are: Logit regression, support vector machines (SVMs), and an AdaBoost meta-algorithm. Findings show a quite low reliability of GCOs in predicting bankruptcy. It is likely that auditors consider further information in supporting their audit opinions, aside from financial-economic ratios. The scant predictive ability of auditors might be due to critical relationships with distressed clients, as suggested by recent literature.
出处 《Journal of Modern Accounting and Auditing》 2014年第9期917-931,共15页 现代会计与审计(英文版)
关键词 BANKRUPTCY financial institutions going concern opinion (GCO) data mining 可靠性预测 可靠性分析 审计人员 统计工具 破产 AdaBoost Logit模型 金融机构
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