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Compliance Costs and Comparability Benefits of Cross-listing: Evidence from Accounting Standard Differences and IFRS Adoption

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference Paperpeer-review

Abstract

This paper examines two channels through which accounting standard differences could affect cross-listing: compliance costs and/or comparability benefits. We use two settings to disentangle the two channels. First, financial reporting requirements are more stringent for cross-listings via direct listings than cross-listings via depositary receipts; as a result, the effect of compliance costs (if any) would be manifested differently in the two venues of cross-listings. Second, some host countries allow foreign firms to report under IFRS without mandating IFRS for domestic firms; compared to host countries that mandate IFRS for both domestic and foreign firms, these IFRS-permitting countries provide a setting to test the importance of comparability benefits while holding constant compliance costs. We find that prior to IFRS adoption, direct listings decrease with accounting standards differences between two countries while depositary receipts increase with such differences, consistent with the costs of complying with host country’s accounting standards affecting firms’ cross-listing decisions. After the harmonization of accounting standards, we find that IFRS-mandating host countries gain cross-listings from other IFRS-mandating jurisdictions, while IFRS-permitting countries do not experience such gains. These combined results suggest that accounting related compliance costs and comparability benefits both influence cross-listing decisions.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusPublished - May 2017
EventConference Contribution -
Duration: 1 May 20171 May 2017

Conference

ConferenceConference Contribution
Period1/05/171/05/17

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