Accounting treatment for goodwill among Bursa Malaysia main board companies: The case of MAS 6

This paper investigates the method of accounting for goodwill among Malaysian listed companies. The issue of accounting for goodwill is important because accounting bodies in Malaysia has attempted to address the issue by issuing two exposure drafts on goodwill but none had become operative. Using d...

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Main Authors: Abdullah, Shamsul Nahar, Ahmad, Junaidah Hanim, Ishak, Rokiah
Format: Article
Published: Malaysian Accountancy Research and Education Foundation 2004
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Online Access:http://repo.uum.edu.my/1607/
http://ari.uitm.edu.my/mar.html
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spelling my.uum.repo.16072010-11-29T09:08:57Z http://repo.uum.edu.my/1607/ Accounting treatment for goodwill among Bursa Malaysia main board companies: The case of MAS 6 Abdullah, Shamsul Nahar Ahmad, Junaidah Hanim Ishak, Rokiah HF5601 Accounting This paper investigates the method of accounting for goodwill among Malaysian listed companies. The issue of accounting for goodwill is important because accounting bodies in Malaysia has attempted to address the issue by issuing two exposure drafts on goodwill but none had become operative. Using data from Bursa Malaysia (BM) non-finance Main-Board listed companies over the period from 1996 to 2000, the study found that the percentage rate of firms employing the method of capitalization and amortization had increased steadily. Over the period, about two-third of the firms adopted the method. This evidence should reflect the Malaysians' firms' readiness to adopt an accounting policy that is used widely in developed countries. Findings from the logistic regression showed that a firm's size and goodwill were significant in determining the accounting policy choice for goodwill. The direction of the influence of firms' size on the choice of the accounting policy for goodwill, nevertheless, did not support the agency theory prediction. The findings showed that large firms did not choose the accounting policy method that capitalized and amortized. The size of goodwill was found to be associated with the policy that did not capitalize and amortize. This evidence is consistent with our predication. Malaysian Accountancy Research and Education Foundation 2004 Article PeerReviewed Abdullah, Shamsul Nahar and Ahmad, Junaidah Hanim and Ishak, Rokiah (2004) Accounting treatment for goodwill among Bursa Malaysia main board companies: The case of MAS 6. Malaysian Accounting Review, 3 (1). ISSN 1675-4077 http://ari.uitm.edu.my/mar.html
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Institutionali Repository
url_provider http://repo.uum.edu.my/
topic HF5601 Accounting
spellingShingle HF5601 Accounting
Abdullah, Shamsul Nahar
Ahmad, Junaidah Hanim
Ishak, Rokiah
Accounting treatment for goodwill among Bursa Malaysia main board companies: The case of MAS 6
description This paper investigates the method of accounting for goodwill among Malaysian listed companies. The issue of accounting for goodwill is important because accounting bodies in Malaysia has attempted to address the issue by issuing two exposure drafts on goodwill but none had become operative. Using data from Bursa Malaysia (BM) non-finance Main-Board listed companies over the period from 1996 to 2000, the study found that the percentage rate of firms employing the method of capitalization and amortization had increased steadily. Over the period, about two-third of the firms adopted the method. This evidence should reflect the Malaysians' firms' readiness to adopt an accounting policy that is used widely in developed countries. Findings from the logistic regression showed that a firm's size and goodwill were significant in determining the accounting policy choice for goodwill. The direction of the influence of firms' size on the choice of the accounting policy for goodwill, nevertheless, did not support the agency theory prediction. The findings showed that large firms did not choose the accounting policy method that capitalized and amortized. The size of goodwill was found to be associated with the policy that did not capitalize and amortize. This evidence is consistent with our predication.
format Article
author Abdullah, Shamsul Nahar
Ahmad, Junaidah Hanim
Ishak, Rokiah
author_facet Abdullah, Shamsul Nahar
Ahmad, Junaidah Hanim
Ishak, Rokiah
author_sort Abdullah, Shamsul Nahar
title Accounting treatment for goodwill among Bursa Malaysia main board companies: The case of MAS 6
title_short Accounting treatment for goodwill among Bursa Malaysia main board companies: The case of MAS 6
title_full Accounting treatment for goodwill among Bursa Malaysia main board companies: The case of MAS 6
title_fullStr Accounting treatment for goodwill among Bursa Malaysia main board companies: The case of MAS 6
title_full_unstemmed Accounting treatment for goodwill among Bursa Malaysia main board companies: The case of MAS 6
title_sort accounting treatment for goodwill among bursa malaysia main board companies: the case of mas 6
publisher Malaysian Accountancy Research and Education Foundation
publishDate 2004
url http://repo.uum.edu.my/1607/
http://ari.uitm.edu.my/mar.html
_version_ 1644278020469424128
score 13.214268