Earnings management and equity incentives: evidence from the European banking industry
Purpose ? This study aims to examine the effect of equity incentives on earnings management that occurs
via the use of loan loss provisions by using a sample of 204 bank-year observations over the period 2006-2011.
Design/methodology/approach ? The authors use the data of 39 European banks to test the main
hypothesis. Several valuation models and regressions are used to measure the main proxies for executives?
compensation and the determinant factors of loan loss provisions.
Findings ? The empirical results reveal that earnings management that occurs via discretionary loan loss
provisions is associated with equity incentives in the banking industry. In particular, European banks?
executives with high equity incentives are found to manage reported earnings upwards by reducing loan loss
provisions. The results therefore show that income-increasing earnings management via discretionary loan
loss provisions is widely practised by the executives of European banks and that this is partly motivated by
executives? compensation.
Practical implications ? The findings of this paper present important implications for regulators in the
European Union, who should take further steps to reform the regulatory environment to monitor and mitigate
the earnings management practices that occur via the manipulation of loan loss provisions. Earnings
management practices do not just negatively affect subsequent performance but are also found to lead to
firms? failure. Thus, regulators should take the necessary reforms to protect the wealth of stakeholders
(investors, creditors, etc.).
Originality/value ? This study provides the first evidence on the relationship between equity incentives
and earnings management in the European banking industry. The study sheds more light on an issue of great
interest to a broad audience that does not receive much attention in the prior research, thus opening new
avenues for future research