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Climate news and accounting comparability

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Climate news and accounting comparability. / Chircop, Justin; Nguyen, Nhat; Nguyen, Tri.
In: Advances in Accounting, Vol. 69, 100841, 31.12.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Chircop, J, Nguyen, N & Nguyen, T 2025, 'Climate news and accounting comparability', Advances in Accounting, vol. 69, 100841. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.adiac.2025.100841

APA

Chircop, J., Nguyen, N., & Nguyen, T. (2025). Climate news and accounting comparability. Advances in Accounting, 69, Article 100841. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.adiac.2025.100841

Vancouver

Chircop J, Nguyen N, Nguyen T. Climate news and accounting comparability. Advances in Accounting. 2025 Dec 31;69:100841. Epub 2025 Aug 4. doi: 10.1016/j.adiac.2025.100841

Author

Chircop, Justin ; Nguyen, Nhat ; Nguyen, Tri. / Climate news and accounting comparability. In: Advances in Accounting. 2025 ; Vol. 69.

Bibtex

@article{d88bafd158d84b5c98fbdd8a0fbb0cd2,
title = "Climate news and accounting comparability",
abstract = "We examine the effect of climate news on accounting comparability. We argue that climate news informs market participants about firms' climate exposure, inducing a reassessment of the firms' future cash flows. This reassessment increases the variance in accounting estimates, hence reducing accounting comparability among industry peers. Consistently, we find a negative relationship between market-level measures of climate news and one-year-ahead firm-level accounting comparability. This finding is robust to several sensitivity checks. This relationship is mediated by the intensity with which firms apply accounting standards to transform economic events into accounting numbers and moderated by the extent to which firms are exposed to climate risks and by firms' environmental performance. Our study contributes to the growing literature examining the negative effect of climate change on firm values and to the literature examining the determinants of accounting comparability. The practical implication of our study is that market participants should be cautious when comparing peer firms after periods of increased climate news.",
author = "Justin Chircop and Nhat Nguyen and Tri Nguyen",
year = "2025",
month = aug,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1016/j.adiac.2025.100841",
language = "English",
volume = "69",
journal = "Advances in Accounting",
issn = "0882-6110",
publisher = "Elsevier S.A.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Climate news and accounting comparability

AU - Chircop, Justin

AU - Nguyen, Nhat

AU - Nguyen, Tri

PY - 2025/8/4

Y1 - 2025/8/4

N2 - We examine the effect of climate news on accounting comparability. We argue that climate news informs market participants about firms' climate exposure, inducing a reassessment of the firms' future cash flows. This reassessment increases the variance in accounting estimates, hence reducing accounting comparability among industry peers. Consistently, we find a negative relationship between market-level measures of climate news and one-year-ahead firm-level accounting comparability. This finding is robust to several sensitivity checks. This relationship is mediated by the intensity with which firms apply accounting standards to transform economic events into accounting numbers and moderated by the extent to which firms are exposed to climate risks and by firms' environmental performance. Our study contributes to the growing literature examining the negative effect of climate change on firm values and to the literature examining the determinants of accounting comparability. The practical implication of our study is that market participants should be cautious when comparing peer firms after periods of increased climate news.

AB - We examine the effect of climate news on accounting comparability. We argue that climate news informs market participants about firms' climate exposure, inducing a reassessment of the firms' future cash flows. This reassessment increases the variance in accounting estimates, hence reducing accounting comparability among industry peers. Consistently, we find a negative relationship between market-level measures of climate news and one-year-ahead firm-level accounting comparability. This finding is robust to several sensitivity checks. This relationship is mediated by the intensity with which firms apply accounting standards to transform economic events into accounting numbers and moderated by the extent to which firms are exposed to climate risks and by firms' environmental performance. Our study contributes to the growing literature examining the negative effect of climate change on firm values and to the literature examining the determinants of accounting comparability. The practical implication of our study is that market participants should be cautious when comparing peer firms after periods of increased climate news.

U2 - 10.1016/j.adiac.2025.100841

DO - 10.1016/j.adiac.2025.100841

M3 - Journal article

VL - 69

JO - Advances in Accounting

JF - Advances in Accounting

SN - 0882-6110

M1 - 100841

ER -