Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Clawbacks And Restatements
A major provision of the Dodd-Frank Act
 requires corporate executives to certify the accuracy of financial 
statements, in part to help reduce restatements. Another provision of 
the Act requires that all public companies have a "clawback" provision 
that permits the recovery of any incentive compensation paid to 
executives if the restated financial statements show that the incentive 
compensation should not have been paid. In 2012, 87 percent of publicly 
traded companies had a clawback provision. Previous research has found 
that companies with a clawback provision are less likely to have 
restatements. This was attributed to executives doing a more diligent 
job when certifying the original financial statements. However, new 
research indicates that the drop
 in restatements may also be due to executives fighting restatements. 
Often, restatements are the result of auditors disagreeing with the 
original financial statements because of the accounting choices made. 
Since a restatement that reduces the company's reported performance can 
cause the initiation of the clawback, corporate executives appear more 
likely to fight restatements. 
