We investigate the role that regulatory strictness plays on the enforcement of financial reporting transparency in the U.S. banking industry. Using a novel measure of regulatory strictness in the enforcement of capital adequacy, we show that strict regulators are more likely to enforce restatements of banks’ call reports. Further, we find that the effect of regulatory strictness on accounting enforcement is strongest in periods leading up to economic downturns and for banks with riskier asset portfolios. Overall, the results from our study indicate that regulatory oversight plays an important role in enforcing financial reporting transparency, particularly in periods leading up to economic crises. We interpret this evidence as inconsistent ...
We examine how the presence of multiple supervisory agencies affects firm-level compliance in form a...
This Article examines situations in which government regulation makes mandatory the use of certain d...
A lesson learned by regulators from the 2007-2008 financial crisis is that the stability and effici...
The study examines the economic consequences of regulated disclosure in the banking sector, focusing...
This paper examines the effects of heterogeneity in regulatory supervision on firms’ disclosure beha...
This paper investigates the role of banking supervision, measured in terms of enforcement outputs (i...
We study, using laboratory experiments, the extent to which disclosure policies about the financial ...
Majority of the literature on crash risk exclude financial firms due to the beliefs that they are un...
US state chartered commercial banks are supervised alternately by state and federal regulators. Each...
We examine how the presence of multiple supervisory agencies affects firm-level compliance in form a...
Using a sample of banks from 36 countries, we document that accounting enforcement is negatively rel...
We study the economic consequences of mandates that require bank auditors to report to bank regulato...
We apply a three-tier hierarchical model of regulation, developed along the lines of Laffont and Tir...
In a banking model with imperfect information, I find that more precise information increases the ec...
This thesis consists of five chapters. The first chapter provides an introduction and ties the three...
We examine how the presence of multiple supervisory agencies affects firm-level compliance in form a...
This Article examines situations in which government regulation makes mandatory the use of certain d...
A lesson learned by regulators from the 2007-2008 financial crisis is that the stability and effici...
The study examines the economic consequences of regulated disclosure in the banking sector, focusing...
This paper examines the effects of heterogeneity in regulatory supervision on firms’ disclosure beha...
This paper investigates the role of banking supervision, measured in terms of enforcement outputs (i...
We study, using laboratory experiments, the extent to which disclosure policies about the financial ...
Majority of the literature on crash risk exclude financial firms due to the beliefs that they are un...
US state chartered commercial banks are supervised alternately by state and federal regulators. Each...
We examine how the presence of multiple supervisory agencies affects firm-level compliance in form a...
Using a sample of banks from 36 countries, we document that accounting enforcement is negatively rel...
We study the economic consequences of mandates that require bank auditors to report to bank regulato...
We apply a three-tier hierarchical model of regulation, developed along the lines of Laffont and Tir...
In a banking model with imperfect information, I find that more precise information increases the ec...
This thesis consists of five chapters. The first chapter provides an introduction and ties the three...
We examine how the presence of multiple supervisory agencies affects firm-level compliance in form a...
This Article examines situations in which government regulation makes mandatory the use of certain d...
A lesson learned by regulators from the 2007-2008 financial crisis is that the stability and effici...