Abstract
This study examines a recent change in voluntary disclosure by investigating the issuance of management cash flow forecasts for a sample of 690 UK non-financial firm-year observations which are drawn from the top 500 UK listed firms by total market capitalization as listed by Financial Times on 30 March 2007. Automated content analysis is used to search for cash flow forecasts in annual reports narratives using QSR NVivo 8. The results of regression analysis provide support for institutional theory that companies try to imitate the disclosure practices of other companies in the same industry. Also, the results document that operating cash flow, industry behaviour, cross-listing, and company size are positively and significantly related to disclosure of cash flow forecasts, whereas performance and competition rate are negatively and significantly related to disclosure of cash flow forecasts. However, the results fail to find any significant relationship between normative or coercive isomorphism proxies and disclosure of cash flow forecasts.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 133–152 |
Journal | International Journal of Accounting, Auditing and Performance Evaluation |
Volume | 10 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2014 |
Keywords
- Narrative disclosure
- Cash flow forecasts
- Industry behaviour
- Imitation
- Leadership
- mimetic isomorphism
- normative isomorphism
- coercive isomorphism
- automated content analysis
- institutional theory
- forward-looking information
- panel data
- QSR NVivo 8