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Regulation and Markets in a Certification Society: The Case of Financial Reporting. Karim Jamal and Shyam Sunder Carnegie Mellon University August 25-26, 2006. Summary. Examination of audit certification in the broader context of certification activities in the economy
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Regulation and Markets in a Certification Society: The Case of Financial Reporting Karim Jamal and Shyam Sunder Carnegie Mellon University August 25-26, 2006
Summary • Examination of audit certification in the broader context of certification activities in the economy • Extent and nature of certification services • Ubiquity of certification and conflicts of interest • Fineness of certification categories (2-100) • Merits of fineness of categorization • Field study of unregulated market for certification of baseball cards • Twenty three firms • Market value and strictness of grading services • Implications for corporate governance, auditing
Regulatory Attempts to Improve Auditing • Seven decades of regulation under the SEC • Major changes in regulation in 2002 (SOX) • Ban on certain consulting services for audit clients to minimize conflict of interest • Corporate governance reforms to promote auditor independence • Transfer of responsibility for setting auditing standards to a government agency (PCAOB) • Transfer of responsibility for oversight of auditing to a government agency (PCAOB) • Controversy over whether these reforms improve auditing (Kinney et al., 2004)
A Broader Context for Examination of Auditing • Certification services are widely available in many sectors of the economy (Power 1994) • Try to understand audit market as a special case of markets for certification services • Great variations on the range and characteristics of certification services • 2-100 point scales • Cross-selling of services by certifiers • Assessing the quality of certification service • Competition in markets for certification services • Implications for regulation of audit services, and recent reforms
Extent of Certification Services • In 1996, US Government documented 93,000 national standards developed by 80 government and 604 private agencies (Jamal and Sunder 2006) • National and international standards cover virtually all aspects of the economy (Jamal and Sunder 2006) • To what extent are standards accompanied by availability of services to certify compliance?
The Audit Society • “Audit explosion” in society (Power 1994): education, healthcare, government supported activities • Demand for audit fueled by political demands for accountability and control (Power 1999) • U.S. audit firms attempted to expand and re-label their “assurance” services into other sectors of the economy in the 1990s (Elliott 1998) • Retail customer as the new client for services • Audit firms failed in attempt to expand into e-commerce assurance market: could not compete with the business models of BBB Online and TRUSTe (Jamal, Maier and Sunder 2003) • Attempt to empirically assess the extent of availability of certification services
Sample Selection • Selected a sample of 817 items sold online and offline during June 12-July 25, 2004 • 400 items from eBay.com (online) • 358 items from BLS Producer Price Index • 59 items from BLS Consumer Price Index
Types of Certification Services • Expert opinion about compliance with formal written standards (91%) • Expert opinion in absence of formal standards (7%) • Ratings given by lay people (no standards) 1% • Popularity/activity meters (best-seller lists for books, music, films, TV, etc.) 0.5% • Total: 99.5% have some kind of certificate • All four kinds of certification available for 40%
Table 1: Certification Services for Products Sold Online and Offline in the US
Extent of Certification • Results suggest support for Power’s characterization of ours as a “audit society” • AICPA failed in its attempt to fill what they thought were empty spaces in the market for assurance services • Although Power (1994) focused his study on the public sector, the certification is also ubiquitous in the private good space • Demand for certification for private goods must be driven by broader economic forces, not just politics
Data Obtained from One Official Partner of eBay (XYZ) • 128 experts • Offer opinions on 1,850 separate items • $9.95 fee for basic service • $29.95 for enhanced service • Experts do not follow any written standards • Opinions do not reference any written standards • Provides descriptions of experts (accreditation by professional institutes, education, related business, relevant experience): two examples
Self-Assessment of XYZ’s Experts • 128 experts as of July 12, 2004 • 39% had formal accreditation from a professional body • 25% formal relevant educational credentials • 70% ran a business in the products for which they provided certification • Only 9% reported themselves to be hobbyists
Table 2: Qualifications of Experts Providing Opinions on XYZ Website
Fineness of Ratings/Certification • Auditor reports are essentially pass/fail • Auditor gains a broad understanding of the quality of internal controls, governance, accounting policies, estimates, and disclosure • The coarse pass/fail grading does not attempt to convey this detailed information to the client • No incentives for companies to report more • Shouldn’t a finer report be more informative to the clients
Implications for Auditing • Conflict of interest appears to be pervasive in certification services in general (79%), not confined to auditing • Confirm Moore et al. (2006) • Do we (the academic researchers) fall in this category? • Conflict of interest as a norm, not exception • Unacceptability of consulting services to audit clients in a regulated market (Francis 2004) contrasts sharply with this data from unregulated domains • Clients pay cash for opinions/assessments of self-proclaimed experts who have known conflicts of interest • Is it possible that clients have other means of protecting themselves from self-serving advice, and find it worthwhile to pay for such services? • Could clients of audit services do the same? • Could the prohibition of consulting services to audit clients be a case of regulatory overkill?
Economic Theory • Dubey and Geanakoplos (2005): In general, an optimal grading scheme should have an intermediate level of fineness • Coarse reports have less information and do not motivate the reporting agent to exert more effort • Fine reports magnify the consequences of measurement errors • 3-10 point grading scale may be optimal • Grading scheme should create a small elite • Absolute grading schemes dominate relative
Data on the Fineness of Government Standards • Visited websites of 80 departments of the federal government that set standards (Toth 1996) • We able to access standards of 64 (80%) of these agencies • Examined the standards for fineness • 53/64 (83%) set minimum requirements (pass/fail only) • 11/64 (17%) use finer grading (e.g., AAA beef) • Given lack of funds and authority, agencies my be induced to use finer scales of quality • SEC’s shortage of staff/funding does not seem to induce finer scales from that agency • DG: Most federal agencies use absolute standards, but do not set elite grades or use intermediate fineness scales (FDA is an exception)
Greater Variability in Fineness of Scales in Private Standards • Pass/fail (e.g., UL) • Multiple seals (TRUSTe for e-commerce privacy, Jamal, Maier, Sunder 2003, 2005) • 10-100 point rating scales (baseball cards, Consumer Reports on cars) • Often characterized by competition among rival standards and scales • Rating scales as a dimension of competition among services (Jin, Cato and List 2004)
Market for Baseball Card Certification Services • Jin, Cato and List (2004) • Dominant player is PSA: 1991, 10-point scale with 1 point inc., not graded on curve, 10% cards get 10 (no super elite grade) • BGS: 1999, 10-point scale with ½ point inc., numerical and qualitative labels (mint), subgrades for corners, centering, surface, edges; 0.1% cards get 10, publishes grade distribution on-line; three brands of service (BVG, BGS, and BCCG) • SGC: 1999, smaller market share, 100-point scale (confusion, conversion table to 10-point scale) • 20 other smaller players (Table 3), largely consistent with DG predictions (no curve, intermediate fineness, super elite)
Comparison with the Market for Audit Services • Only binary pass/fail reports, little further detail permitted • Possible bases for auditor reputation: size, care in client selection, monitoring GAAP compliance, premium services • If the purpose of SOX is to convey information about internal controls, will switch from pass/fail to graded report on IC, governance, quality of accounting methods and governance give better value to investors? • The current system suppresses the detailed knowledge gained by the auditor; more consistent with govt. not private markets
Value of Certification in Sports Card Market • Prospective sellers of sports cards can hire a certification agency to grade and certify their merchandise before selling • Issuers of securities are required to hire auditors to add credibility to their FSs • Independence and audit quality are difficult to observe in the audit market • Baseball card market includes pure and multi-service certifiers, allows a cleaner measure of “audit quality” in grading strictness, observation of an unregulated market and dimensions of competition (e.g., value pricing, computer grading, multiple experts grading the same card, letting customers choose their own grade) • Anxiety about race-to-the-bottom and independence in accounting (Dye and Sunder 2001)
Data for Assessing the Value of Certification Services • 321,045 cards traded on eBay during August 19-September 3, 2004 • Partitioned cards by decades of origin, single-rookie, graded-ungraded (Table 4) • Randomly selected 1,000 rookie and 1,000 singles cards from graded cards • Market shares of six major firms (Table 5) in the sample of graded cards (PSA 78 in singles, 39 rookie; BGS 6 singles, 34 rookie) Tables 5A, B
Table 4: Baseball Card Certification Services (Baseball Cards Traded on eBay, N=321,045) Singles (272,399 cards) Rookies (48,646 cards)
Assessing Strictness of Grading • Jin, Cato and List (2005) gave the same 212 cards to PSA, BGS and SGC online and to three offline dealers • Average scores: 8.5 for BGS and two dealers; 8.7 for PSA and one dealer, and 8.9 for SGC (BGS tighter cut-offs, precise); Table 5C • Tables 5A and B: empirical frequencies in our sample (self-selection bias): BVG’s premium service stands out (GAI, SGC) • Becket’s value brand (BCCG) is lower priced, also has relaxed standards • GEM gives the top grade of 10 to 73% percent of the singles cards • In rookie Table 5B: roughly similar results • Is the market able to adjust itself for differences in grading?
Table 5A: Frequency of Grades Given by 3rd Party Certification Services (For a Sample of 1,000 Graded Single Baseball Cards)
Table 5B: Frequency of Grades Given by 3rd Party Certification Services (For a Sample of 1,000 Graded Rookie Baseball Cards)
Pricing and Value of Baseball Card Certification Services • PSA charged a $99 membership fee (dropped recently) • Table 3: Price varies ($2-50), extra for faster turnaround • For each graded card in the sample, we located an ungraded card matched by player, maker, year of issue, single-rookie) • For unrated cards, we gathered price estimates from Beckett Baseball Card Monthly Guide (August 2004, Issue #234 online) • For rated cards, we recorded player, year, maker, grader, grade, buyer reputation, seller reputation, number of bids, and selling price • Table 6: Gross and net returns on baseball card grading services provided by six major service providers
Table 6: Average Returns to Grading of Rookie Cards (by Grader and Decade of Issue)
Gross and Net Returns to Certification • Gross returns are positive for all six services • Net returns: positive for strict graders (BGS, GAI); about zero for medium graders (SGC and PSA); negative for lenient graders (BCCG, GEM) • Older cards earn a higher return than more recent cards • Grade 10 cards earn a higher return • Overall it is better to get a rating of 9 from a strict grader than a rating of 10 from a lenient grader
Table 7: Regression Analysis Ri = 1+ 1Yeari + 2Gradei + 3GPSAi + 4GBGSi + 5GBecketti +6GGAIi + 7GGEMi + 8GSGCi + ei Regression (990)df, R2 = 0.1747, p < 0.001. (Adjusted R2 = 0.168) *** p <0.001 ** p < 0.01 * p < 0.05
Regression Analysis • Table 7: Year, grade and identity of grader have a significant effect on net return from the certification service • Certification service is more valuable for older cards (selection effect?) • The returns are ranked by strictness of grading scales, negative for the lenient graders • Easy grade of 10 from GEM does no good for the value of the card • No race to the bottom • Beckett able to provide different brands of service, and market is able to differentiate among them without getting confused
Back to Auditing • Regulatory objectives of auditing (quality of certification, independence, etc.) • In baseball card market 17/23 offer only certification services but six (including all major) players offer related services (pricing guides, dealers, magazines, shows) as well as handle other collectibles • Cross-sellers dominate the market and are able to collect premium price for their service, yielding positive net returns to their clients • Independence appears to be neither necessary nor sufficient condition for high quality service in this certification market • Why?
Skepticism about Deregulation • Will a deregulated market for auditing function properly (race to the bottom, Dye and Sunder)? • Recent policy changes (PCAOB) have gone in the other direction • Lenient graders generate negative returns to their clients • Jamal, Maier and Sunder (2003) on market for privacy seals in e-commerce dominated by higher quality • Does cross-selling of services promote or inhibit grade inflation? • What are the real reasons for poor enforcement of GAAP by audit firms?
Concluding Remarks • Evidence on ubiquity of certification • Certification by government agencies is mostly binary (pass/fail) • Private certification has finer scale • Field study of baseball card grading market • Dominated by cross sellers (conflict of interest) • Multiple dimensions of competition • No race to the bottom
Open Questions • Will the tough auditors win or lose? • Precision of grading – Significant? Should auditors issue more nuanced reports? • Does it pay to get audited (vs. reputation, warranty and disclosure) • Will de-regulated audit market lead to quality differentiation?