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The impact of constructive operating lease capitalisation on key accounting ratios

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The impact of constructive operating lease capitalisation on key accounting ratios. / Beattie, Vivien; Edwards, Keith; Goodacre, Alan.
In: Accounting and Business Research, Vol. 28, No. 4, 1998, p. 233-254.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Beattie, V, Edwards, K & Goodacre, A 1998, 'The impact of constructive operating lease capitalisation on key accounting ratios', Accounting and Business Research, vol. 28, no. 4, pp. 233-254. https://doi.org/10.1080/00014788.1998.9728913

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Vancouver

Beattie V, Edwards K, Goodacre A. The impact of constructive operating lease capitalisation on key accounting ratios. Accounting and Business Research. 1998;28(4):233-254. doi: 10.1080/00014788.1998.9728913

Author

Beattie, Vivien ; Edwards, Keith ; Goodacre, Alan. / The impact of constructive operating lease capitalisation on key accounting ratios. In: Accounting and Business Research. 1998 ; Vol. 28, No. 4. pp. 233-254.

Bibtex

@article{0e1d66d43ccd440c8ac30f54b8304ab1,
title = "The impact of constructive operating lease capitalisation on key accounting ratios",
abstract = "Current UK lease accounting regulation does not require operating leases to be capitalised in the accounts of lessees, although this is likely to change with the publication of FRS 5. This study conducts a prospective analysis of the effects of such a change. The potential magnitude of the impact of lease capitalisation upon individual users' decisions, market valuations, company cash flows, and managers' behaviour can be indicated by the effect on key accounting ratios, which are employed in decision-making and in financial contracts. The capitalised value of operating leases is estimated using a method similar to that suggested by Imhoff, Lipe and Wright (1991), adapted for the UK accounting and tax environment, and developed to incorporate company-specific assumptions. Results for 1994 for a random sample of 300 listed UK companies show that, on average, the unrecorded long-term liability represented 39% of reported long-term debt, while the unrecorded asset represented 6% of total assets. Capitalisation had a significant impact (at the 1% level) on six of the nine selected ratios (profit margin, return on assets, asset turnover, and three measures of gearing). Moreover, the Spearman rank correlation between each ratio before and after capitalisation revealed that the ranking of companies changed markedly for gearing measures in particular. There were significant inter-industry variations, with the services sector experiencing the greatest impact. An analysis of the impact of capitalisation over the five-year period from 1990 to 1994 showed that capitalisation had the greatest impact during the trough of the recession. Results were shown to be robust with respect to key assumptions of the capitalisation method. These findings contribute to the assessment of the economic consequences of a policy change requiring operating lease capitalisation. Significant changes in the magnitude of key accounting ratios and a major shift in company performance rankings suggest that interested parties' decisions and company cash flows are likely to be affected.",
author = "Vivien Beattie and Keith Edwards and Alan Goodacre",
year = "1998",
doi = "10.1080/00014788.1998.9728913",
language = "English",
volume = "28",
pages = "233--254",
journal = "Accounting and Business Research",
issn = "0001-4788",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The impact of constructive operating lease capitalisation on key accounting ratios

AU - Beattie, Vivien

AU - Edwards, Keith

AU - Goodacre, Alan

PY - 1998

Y1 - 1998

N2 - Current UK lease accounting regulation does not require operating leases to be capitalised in the accounts of lessees, although this is likely to change with the publication of FRS 5. This study conducts a prospective analysis of the effects of such a change. The potential magnitude of the impact of lease capitalisation upon individual users' decisions, market valuations, company cash flows, and managers' behaviour can be indicated by the effect on key accounting ratios, which are employed in decision-making and in financial contracts. The capitalised value of operating leases is estimated using a method similar to that suggested by Imhoff, Lipe and Wright (1991), adapted for the UK accounting and tax environment, and developed to incorporate company-specific assumptions. Results for 1994 for a random sample of 300 listed UK companies show that, on average, the unrecorded long-term liability represented 39% of reported long-term debt, while the unrecorded asset represented 6% of total assets. Capitalisation had a significant impact (at the 1% level) on six of the nine selected ratios (profit margin, return on assets, asset turnover, and three measures of gearing). Moreover, the Spearman rank correlation between each ratio before and after capitalisation revealed that the ranking of companies changed markedly for gearing measures in particular. There were significant inter-industry variations, with the services sector experiencing the greatest impact. An analysis of the impact of capitalisation over the five-year period from 1990 to 1994 showed that capitalisation had the greatest impact during the trough of the recession. Results were shown to be robust with respect to key assumptions of the capitalisation method. These findings contribute to the assessment of the economic consequences of a policy change requiring operating lease capitalisation. Significant changes in the magnitude of key accounting ratios and a major shift in company performance rankings suggest that interested parties' decisions and company cash flows are likely to be affected.

AB - Current UK lease accounting regulation does not require operating leases to be capitalised in the accounts of lessees, although this is likely to change with the publication of FRS 5. This study conducts a prospective analysis of the effects of such a change. The potential magnitude of the impact of lease capitalisation upon individual users' decisions, market valuations, company cash flows, and managers' behaviour can be indicated by the effect on key accounting ratios, which are employed in decision-making and in financial contracts. The capitalised value of operating leases is estimated using a method similar to that suggested by Imhoff, Lipe and Wright (1991), adapted for the UK accounting and tax environment, and developed to incorporate company-specific assumptions. Results for 1994 for a random sample of 300 listed UK companies show that, on average, the unrecorded long-term liability represented 39% of reported long-term debt, while the unrecorded asset represented 6% of total assets. Capitalisation had a significant impact (at the 1% level) on six of the nine selected ratios (profit margin, return on assets, asset turnover, and three measures of gearing). Moreover, the Spearman rank correlation between each ratio before and after capitalisation revealed that the ranking of companies changed markedly for gearing measures in particular. There were significant inter-industry variations, with the services sector experiencing the greatest impact. An analysis of the impact of capitalisation over the five-year period from 1990 to 1994 showed that capitalisation had the greatest impact during the trough of the recession. Results were shown to be robust with respect to key assumptions of the capitalisation method. These findings contribute to the assessment of the economic consequences of a policy change requiring operating lease capitalisation. Significant changes in the magnitude of key accounting ratios and a major shift in company performance rankings suggest that interested parties' decisions and company cash flows are likely to be affected.

U2 - 10.1080/00014788.1998.9728913

DO - 10.1080/00014788.1998.9728913

M3 - Journal article

VL - 28

SP - 233

EP - 254

JO - Accounting and Business Research

JF - Accounting and Business Research

SN - 0001-4788

IS - 4

ER -