We examine how auditors perceive managerial overconfidence during audit reporting by testing the relationship between managerial overconfidence and the likelihood of issuing a first-time going-concern modified audit opinion to financially distressed firms. After controlling for the factors affecting auditor’s going-concern modified audit opinion decision, we find that the likelihood of issuing a first-time going-concern modified audit opinion is positively associated with managerial overconfidence, suggesting that auditors adversely value overconfident management in financially distressed firms and thus tend to issue a first-time going-concern modified audit opinion to them. We also find that the positive association above is reinforced with capital market uncertainty.
CITATION STYLE
Ji, G., & Lee, J. E. (2015). Managerial overconfidence and going-concern modified audit opinion decisions. Journal of Applied Business Research, 31(6), 2123–2137. https://doi.org/10.19030/jabr.v31i6.9471
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