HCBE Faculty Articles
Audit Partner Rotation and Financial Reporting Quality
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory
ISSN
0278-0380
Publication Date
2014
Abstract/Excerpt
Audit partner rotation has received considerable attention globally and in the U.S. since the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 accelerated the rotation period from seven to five years and expanded the cooling-off period from two to five years. However, research on the effects of audit partner rotation on financial reporting quality in the U.S. is virtually non-existent, largely due to the absence of publicly available information on audit partners. Using a novel approach to determine audit partner rotation, we investigate the effect of rotation on financial reporting quality in the U.S. We find evidence of lower financial reporting quality following an audit partner change. Specifically, we find lower financial reporting quality during the first two years with a new audit partner relative to the final two years with the outgoing partner. We find the lower financial reporting quality to be more prevalent for larger clients. Further analyses suggest the initial year post-rotation presents audit challenges for Big 4 partners, which persist for at least three years for non-Big 4 partners. Audit challenges also appear greater for city-level non-industry specialist auditors and smaller audit offices. We discuss the implications of our results for regulators, policymakers, and the profession at large.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2308/ajpt-50753
Volume
33
Issue
3
First Page
59
Last Page
86
NSUWorks Citation
Litt, Barri A.; Sharma, Divesh S.; Simpson, Thuy; and Tanyi, Paul N., "Audit Partner Rotation and Financial Reporting Quality" (2014). HCBE Faculty Articles. 759.
https://nsuworks.nova.edu/hcbe_facarticles/759