Fair Value (fair + value)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Business, Economics, Finance and Accounting

Terms modified by Fair Value

  • fair value accounting

  • Selected Abstracts


    Issues in the Drive to Measure Liabilities at Fair Value

    AUSTRALIAN ACCOUNTING REVIEW, Issue 21 2000
    MICHAEL E. BRADBURY
    This paper compares the discussion on liability measurement in Accounting The0y Monograph 10 with the liability measurement requirements in recent international proposals on accounting for financial instruments. Rather than conducting a detailed review of the Monograph, the paper examines three major issues which wawant amplifjing, extending or criticising: What is "fair value"? Why fair value liabilities? Should fair value include an entity's own credit risk? The focus is on financial liabilities such as "plain vanilla" debt; other financial liabilities, such as insurance obligations, pensions, wawanties and environmental damage restoration involve additional considerations and are therefore not considered. [source]


    ,Fair Value' for Financial Instruments: How Erasing Theory is Leading to Unworkable Global Accounting Standards for Performance Reporting

    AUSTRALIAN ACCOUNTING REVIEW, Issue 21 2000
    JOANNE HORTON
    The LASC is pursuing proposals for accounting for financial instruments that are conceptually flawed and unworkable in practice. "Fair value" has been elevated to a catch-all concept to resolve measurement issues objectively. Adoption of fair value, as cuwently interpreted by standard-setters (eg, by the FASB in Concepts Statement No. 7, issued in February 2000), threatens to drive out a long-understood, theory-based approach to the rationales for cuwent value accounting , founded on "deprival value" , that has recently been comprehensively restated in Accounting Theory Monograph 10, issued by the Australian Accounting Research Foundation in 1998, and reaffirmed in the UK Accounting Standards Board's Statement of Principles for Financial Repovting, issued in December 1999. [source]


    Managing Stock Option Expense: The Manipulation of Option-Pricing Model Assumptions,

    CONTEMPORARY ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, Issue 2 2006
    Derek Johnston
    Abstract This paper examines whether firms that voluntarily recognize stock option expense in their financial statements manage that expense downward more than firms that do not recognize the expense by adjusting option-pricing model assumptions. To examine this issue, I collect option-pricing model assumptions from fiscal year 2002 for both a sample of firms that voluntarily recognize stock option expense ("recognizing firms") and a sample of control firms that do not ("disclosing firms"). The empirical results suggest that recognizing firms manage the recognized stock-based compensation expense reported in their financial statements downward more than do firms that only disclose the expense. Additional analyses reveal that recognizing firms assume a lower level of volatility than disclosing firms in the option-pricing model calculations; however, I find no evidence that recognizing firms manage the dividend yield and risk-free interest rate assumptions more than disclosing firms. The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) recently issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 123(R), which requires the expensing of the fair value of stock options, so these results may be of interest to capital-market participants and the FASB as they assess the reliability of stock option expense as determined by option-pricing models. [source]


    Valuing executive stock options: performance hurdles, early exercise and stochastic volatility

    ACCOUNTING & FINANCE, Issue 3 2008
    Philip Brown
    G13 Abstract Accounting standards require companies to assess the fair value of any stock options granted to executives and employees. We develop a model for accurately valuing executive and employee stock options, focusing on performance hurdles, early exercise and uncertain volatility. We apply the model in two case studies and show that properly computed fair values can be significantly lower than traditional Black,Scholes values. We then explore the implications for pay-for-performance sensitivity and the design of effective share-based incentive schemes. We find that performance hurdles can require a much greater fraction of total compensation to be a fixed salary, if pre-existing incentive levels are to be maintained. [source]


    Management Motivation and Market Assessment: Revaluations of Fixed Assets

    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT & ACCOUNTING, Issue 2 2001
    Bikki Jaggi
    The study examines Hong Kong managers' motivation for upward revaluation of fixed assets. The results show that revaluations are positively associated with the firms' future operating performance, suggesting that the managers' primary motivation for upward revaluation of fixed assets has been to signal fair value of assets to financial statements users. Another motivation for revaluations has been to improve the firm's borrowing capacity. The results also indicate a significantly positive association between revaluations and stock prices and returns, suggesting that the market's assessment aligns with the managers' revaluations. [source]


    Price Premium and Foreclosure Risk

    REAL ESTATE ECONOMICS, Issue 2 2006
    Seow Eng Ong
    Many previous studies identify loan, property, borrower and environmental factors that impact the probability of foreclosure. Implicit in these studies is the assumption that the property was purchased at fair value. We question this assumption based on several empirical findings regarding property value uncertainty. In contrast to previous research, we explicitly quantify the price premium from a hedonic pricing model. Using a comprehensive database of real estate transactions in Singapore during 1989,2000, we document a price premium associated with properties that are subsequently foreclosed based on actual sales transactions. In addition, we find that the premium paid at purchase significantly increases the probability of foreclosure. These results are robust and continue to hold after controlling for other property-specific factors, time-varying macroeconomic conditions, alternative model specifications and definitions of price premium. [source]


    Pricing VIX futures: Evidence from integrated physical and risk-neutral probability measures

    THE JOURNAL OF FUTURES MARKETS, Issue 12 2007
    Yueh-Neng Lin
    This study derives closed-form solutions to the fair value of VIX (volatility index) futures under alternate stochastic variance models with simultaneous jumps both in the asset price and variance processes. Model parameters are estimated using an integrated analysis of integrated volatility and VIX time series from April 21, 2004 to April 18, 2006. The stochastic volatility model with price jumps outperforms for the short-dated futures, whereas additionally including a state-dependent volatility jump can further reduce out-of-sample pricing errors for other futures maturities. Finally, adding volatility jumps enhances hedging performance except for the short-dated futures on a daily-rebalanced basis. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Jrl Fut Mark 27:1175,1217, 2007 [source]


    Commentary: Business,Black Swans,and the,Use and Abuse,of a Notion

    AUSTRALIAN ACCOUNTING REVIEW, Issue 2 2010
    Graeme Dean
    Historical enquiry reveals how ideas mutate. This paper traces how ideas and practices underpinning initial understandings of fair value accounting (FVA) have changed as the concept drifted from the utility rate-setting context to that of corporate financial reporting. The recall of history for the purpose of ,learning lessons from the past' has frequently resulted in misunderstandings of the historical record and misapplication of so-called lessons. A more fruitful approach to recalling history is to gain insights into the development of the ideas (good and bad) that have contributed to current predicaments. Initially fair value was the basis for specific pricing calculations related to companies with a highly restricted scope of operations. Later, more by accident than design, the concept became a general purpose application used in the financial statements of highly and freely adaptive companies. The mark-to-market (MtM) dispute emerging in the global financial crisis (GFC) has given rise to a further mutation of the use of FVA. Discarding MtM contradicts what history tells us was the purpose of adopting fair value into accounting for adaptive companies. This analysis also highlights how conducive accounting theory and practice are subject to politicisation. Accounting is an apparently unresisting victim of interested parties' special pleading, resulting in the corruption of its technical function , in this case primarily because it is inconvenient to have accounting data,tell it how it is. [source]


    Measurement Entering the 21st Century: A Clear or Blocked Road Ahead?

    AUSTRALIAN ACCOUNTING REVIEW, Issue 21 2000
    MALCOLM C. MILLER
    While progress has been made in rendering financial statements more relevant by the inclusion of current value information, a piecemeal standard-by-standard approach has resulted in a lack of consistency in the specification of the valuation bases. At the international level there is disagreement between standard- setters on a unifjing concept, with some advocating value to the entity and others favouring fair value. The IASC has a high-level steering committee addressing the key issues related to financial performance and it will be interesting to see if it can facilitate the progressive swing to current value by providing a sensible framework within which to report value changes. [source]


    Issues in the Drive to Measure Liabilities at Fair Value

    AUSTRALIAN ACCOUNTING REVIEW, Issue 21 2000
    MICHAEL E. BRADBURY
    This paper compares the discussion on liability measurement in Accounting The0y Monograph 10 with the liability measurement requirements in recent international proposals on accounting for financial instruments. Rather than conducting a detailed review of the Monograph, the paper examines three major issues which wawant amplifjing, extending or criticising: What is "fair value"? Why fair value liabilities? Should fair value include an entity's own credit risk? The focus is on financial liabilities such as "plain vanilla" debt; other financial liabilities, such as insurance obligations, pensions, wawanties and environmental damage restoration involve additional considerations and are therefore not considered. [source]


    ,Fair Value' for Financial Instruments: How Erasing Theory is Leading to Unworkable Global Accounting Standards for Performance Reporting

    AUSTRALIAN ACCOUNTING REVIEW, Issue 21 2000
    JOANNE HORTON
    The LASC is pursuing proposals for accounting for financial instruments that are conceptually flawed and unworkable in practice. "Fair value" has been elevated to a catch-all concept to resolve measurement issues objectively. Adoption of fair value, as cuwently interpreted by standard-setters (eg, by the FASB in Concepts Statement No. 7, issued in February 2000), threatens to drive out a long-understood, theory-based approach to the rationales for cuwent value accounting , founded on "deprival value" , that has recently been comprehensively restated in Accounting Theory Monograph 10, issued by the Australian Accounting Research Foundation in 1998, and reaffirmed in the UK Accounting Standards Board's Statement of Principles for Financial Repovting, issued in December 1999. [source]


    The Effect of Exercise Date Uncertainty on Employee Stock Option Value

    JOURNAL OF BUSINESS FINANCE & ACCOUNTING, Issue 5-6 2003
    Brian A. Maris
    The IASC recently recommended that employee compensation in the form of stock options be measured at the ,fair value' based on an option pricing model and the value should be recognized in financial statements. This follows adoption of SFAS No. 123 in the United States, which requires firms to estimate the value of employee stock options using either a Black-Scholes or binomial model. Most US firms used the B-S model for their 1996 financial statements. This study assumes that option life follows a Gamma distribution, allowing the variance of option life to be separate from its expected life. The results indicate the adjusted Black-Scholes model could overvalue employee stock options on the grant date by as much as 72 percent for nondividend paying firms and by as much as 84 percent for dividend paying firms. The results further demonstrate the sensitivity of ESO values to the volatility of the expected option life, a parameter that the B-S model or a Poisson process cannot accommodate. The variability of option life has an especially big impact on ESO value for firms whose ESOs have a relatively short life (5 years, for example) and high employee turnover. For such firms, the results indicate a binomial option pricing model is more appropriate for estimating ESO value than the B-S type model. [source]


    Employee Stock Option Fair-Value Estimates: Do Managerial Discretion and Incentives Explain Accuracy?,

    CONTEMPORARY ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, Issue 4 2006
    Leslie Hodder
    Abstract We examine the determinants of managers' use of discretion over employee stock option (ESO) valuation-model inputs that determine ESO fair values. We also explore the consequences of such discretion. Firms exercise considerable discretion over all model inputs, and this discretion results in material differences in ESO fair-value estimates. Contrary to conventional wisdom, we find that a large proportion of firms exercise value-increasing discretion. Importantly, we find that using discretion improves predictive accuracy for about half of our sample firms. Moreover, we find that both opportunistic and informational managerial incentives together explain the accuracy of firms' ESO fair-value estimates. Partitioning on the direction of discretion improves our understanding of managerial incentives. Our analysis confirms that financial statement readers can use mandated contextual disclosures to construct powerful ex ante predictions of ex post accuracy. [source]


    Valuing executive stock options: performance hurdles, early exercise and stochastic volatility

    ACCOUNTING & FINANCE, Issue 3 2008
    Philip Brown
    G13 Abstract Accounting standards require companies to assess the fair value of any stock options granted to executives and employees. We develop a model for accurately valuing executive and employee stock options, focusing on performance hurdles, early exercise and uncertain volatility. We apply the model in two case studies and show that properly computed fair values can be significantly lower than traditional Black,Scholes values. We then explore the implications for pay-for-performance sensitivity and the design of effective share-based incentive schemes. We find that performance hurdles can require a much greater fraction of total compensation to be a fixed salary, if pre-existing incentive levels are to be maintained. [source]


    Changing the Concepts to Justify the Standards,

    ACCOUNTING PERSPECTIVES, Issue 4 2009
    Patricia C. O'brien
    ABSTRACT In this paper, I discuss the current project to converge the IASB and FASB conceptual frameworks, specifically efforts to purge the converged framework of concepts that hinder the promotion of balance sheet valuation using fair values. I discuss why I believe these efforts to be misguided, based on how investors who analyze financial statements employ accounting information. I focus on stewardship, reliability, and earnings , terms either demoted in importance or at risk of being eliminated in the framework convergence project. I explain their salience to financial statement users and argue against their deletion or demotion. [source]


    Relative Value Relevance of Alternative Accounting Treatments for Unrealized Gains: Implications for the IASB

    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT & ACCOUNTING, Issue 3 2006
    Stephen Owusu-Ansah
    We investigate the relative value relevance of the alternative accounting methods for unrealized gains on investment properties in New Zealand (NZ). Using both the Likelihood-ratio test and the F -test, we find that, while preferred by the NZ standard setter, recognition of unrealized gains in the income statement is not superior to (or significantly different from) recognition of unrealized gains in revaluation reserve in terms of their value relevance. The results are robust to the different research methods we used. Our results have implications for the International Accounting Standards Board in terms of: (i) recognizing changes in fair values of investment properties in the income statement under the revised IAS 40: Investment Property in countries where "realization" refers to net income available for distribution; (ii) its intent to issue a standard on a single statement of comprehensive income; and (iii) its initiative to reduce or eliminate alternative accounting treatments for similar fact situations in its standards. [source]


    An Eulerian-Lagrangian method for option pricing in finance

    NUMERICAL METHODS FOR PARTIAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS, Issue 2 2007
    Zheng Wang
    Abstract This article is devoted to the development and application of an Eulerian-Lagrangian method (ELM) for the solution of the Black-Scholes partial differential equation for the valuation of European option contracts. This method fully utilizes the transient behavior of the governing equations and generates very accurate option's fair values and their derivatives also known as option Greeks, even if coarse spatial grids and large time steps are used. Numerical experiments on two standard option contracts are presented which show that the ELM method (favorably) compares in terms of accuracy and efficiency to many other well-perceived methods. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Numer Methods Partial Differential Eq 23: 293,329, 2007 [source]