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An Examination of the Economic Circumstances Surrounding Decisions to Capitalize Brands

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An Examination of the Economic Circumstances Surrounding Decisions to Capitalize Brands. / Peasnell, Ken; Mather, Paul.
In: British Journal of Management, Vol. 2, No. 3, 30.09.1991, p. 151-164.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Peasnell K, Mather P. An Examination of the Economic Circumstances Surrounding Decisions to Capitalize Brands. British Journal of Management. 1991 Sept 30;2(3):151-164. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8551.1991.tb00023.x

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Peasnell, Ken ; Mather, Paul. / An Examination of the Economic Circumstances Surrounding Decisions to Capitalize Brands. In: British Journal of Management. 1991 ; Vol. 2, No. 3. pp. 151-164.

Bibtex

@article{d113e4061160427ca6a8fb66b8787b2b,
title = "An Examination of the Economic Circumstances Surrounding Decisions to Capitalize Brands",
abstract = "The paper reports both the results of an empirical investigation into the effects of the decisions of 13 UK companies to include brands in their published balance sheets on the prices of their shares, and also an examination of hte motivations for these decisions from a costly contracting perspective. Price gains appear to be positively associated with the proportionate increase in reported net assets caused by capitalizing brands. On the other hand, when allowance is made for the contemporaneous release of other information, little, if any, of the share price behaviour around the announcement dates can be attributed to the capitalization of brands - a finding consistent either with the capital market having already formed unbiased expectations of brand values prior to disclosure, or with its having serious doubts about the credibility of the valua- tions. Consistent with a costly contracting perspective of accounting method choice, we found that brand capitalization had a marked impact on reported gearing levels and more or less eliminated the higher gearing levels of capitalizing firms relative to similar companies, particularly as far as late adopting firms were concerned. Brand capitalization also had a particularly marked impact on book-to-market-equity ratios; capitalization served to increase the ratios of capitalizing firms to approximately the levels observed on the non-capitalizing controls.",
keywords = "Capitalisation of brands",
author = "Ken Peasnell and Paul Mather",
year = "1991",
month = sep,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1111/j.1467-8551.1991.tb00023.x",
language = "English",
volume = "2",
pages = "151--164",
journal = "British Journal of Management",
issn = "1045-3172",
publisher = "Blackwell Publishing Ltd",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - An Examination of the Economic Circumstances Surrounding Decisions to Capitalize Brands

AU - Peasnell, Ken

AU - Mather, Paul

PY - 1991/9/30

Y1 - 1991/9/30

N2 - The paper reports both the results of an empirical investigation into the effects of the decisions of 13 UK companies to include brands in their published balance sheets on the prices of their shares, and also an examination of hte motivations for these decisions from a costly contracting perspective. Price gains appear to be positively associated with the proportionate increase in reported net assets caused by capitalizing brands. On the other hand, when allowance is made for the contemporaneous release of other information, little, if any, of the share price behaviour around the announcement dates can be attributed to the capitalization of brands - a finding consistent either with the capital market having already formed unbiased expectations of brand values prior to disclosure, or with its having serious doubts about the credibility of the valua- tions. Consistent with a costly contracting perspective of accounting method choice, we found that brand capitalization had a marked impact on reported gearing levels and more or less eliminated the higher gearing levels of capitalizing firms relative to similar companies, particularly as far as late adopting firms were concerned. Brand capitalization also had a particularly marked impact on book-to-market-equity ratios; capitalization served to increase the ratios of capitalizing firms to approximately the levels observed on the non-capitalizing controls.

AB - The paper reports both the results of an empirical investigation into the effects of the decisions of 13 UK companies to include brands in their published balance sheets on the prices of their shares, and also an examination of hte motivations for these decisions from a costly contracting perspective. Price gains appear to be positively associated with the proportionate increase in reported net assets caused by capitalizing brands. On the other hand, when allowance is made for the contemporaneous release of other information, little, if any, of the share price behaviour around the announcement dates can be attributed to the capitalization of brands - a finding consistent either with the capital market having already formed unbiased expectations of brand values prior to disclosure, or with its having serious doubts about the credibility of the valua- tions. Consistent with a costly contracting perspective of accounting method choice, we found that brand capitalization had a marked impact on reported gearing levels and more or less eliminated the higher gearing levels of capitalizing firms relative to similar companies, particularly as far as late adopting firms were concerned. Brand capitalization also had a particularly marked impact on book-to-market-equity ratios; capitalization served to increase the ratios of capitalizing firms to approximately the levels observed on the non-capitalizing controls.

KW - Capitalisation of brands

U2 - 10.1111/j.1467-8551.1991.tb00023.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1467-8551.1991.tb00023.x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2

SP - 151

EP - 164

JO - British Journal of Management

JF - British Journal of Management

SN - 1045-3172

IS - 3

ER -