Abstract
Incentives to manage accounting information are examined within 63 property-liability insurance company conversions from mutual ownership to common stock charter. In the conversion process, policyholders' embedded equity claims must be valued. Since mutuals have no separately traded equity, accounting numbers are a critical input in this valuation. Incentives for surplus management vary across firms; the strongest evidence of surplus management is observed among firms where the mutual's executives become the firm's principal stockholders following conversion. The evidence suggests that converting firms manage accounting information primarily by adjusting liabilities and selectively establishing investment losses-not by altering claims settlement policy.
Volume
Vol. 71, No. 2, June
Page
213-251
Year
2004
Categories
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Valuation
Equity Valuation
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Accounting and Reporting
Publications
Journal of Risk and Insurance, The