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The informativeness of U.S. banks’ statements of cash flows

Weijia Li (Lancaster University, Lancaster, United Kingdom)
John O’Hanlon (Lancaster University, Lancaster, United Kingdom)

Journal of Accounting Literature

ISSN: 0737-4607

Article publication date: 10 April 2019

Issue publication date: 31 December 2019

218

Abstract

Banks, financial statement users, and accounting standard setters have long disagreed on the informativeness of banks’ statements of cash flows (SCFs) and there is a lack of relevant evidence in the literature. This paper examines the informativeness of the SCFs of U.S. commercial banks in two settings where SCFs are purported to be useful. The first analysis tests the incremental value relevance of banks’ SCFs beyond income statements and balance sheets and compares bank's SCFs with those of industrial firms. We find that banks’ SCFs have limited incremental value relevance, and are much less value relevant than industrial firms’ SCFs. The second analysis examines and finds no distress-predictive power of banks’ SCFs, especially in the presence of standard distress predictors. Overall, our results are consistent with the view that banks’ SCFs have limited informativeness.

Keywords

Citation

Gao, Z., Li, W. and O’Hanlon, J. (2019), "The informativeness of U.S. banks’ statements of cash flows", Journal of Accounting Literature, Vol. 43 No. 1, pp. 1-18. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acclit.2019.03.001

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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