Publisher: Wiley, 2001, 347 pages
ISBN: 0-471-39879-9
Keywords: Finance
The ValueReporting™ Revolution: Moving Beyond the Earnings Game
The ValueReporting Revolution is a rallying cry for radical improvements in corporate reporting-a call to be heeded not just by executives who report on corporate performance and the investors who listen to what they say but also by governing boards, accounting firms, securities analysts, and regulators worldwide.
This revolution is about information. To make sound, long-term investment decisions, large institutional investors and astute individuals alike want to know more about what companies actually do to create value. They especially need information about market dynamics, corporate strategy, and nonfinancial value drivers that are leading indicators of a company's future financial performance and stock price.
Yet too many companies today find themselves locked in The Earnings Game. It's a never-ending and highly dysfunctional game focused myopically on short-term earnings, which in reality say very little about future stock price performance. The consequences of the game? Excessive stock price volatility, inaccurate valuations, and over-reliance on market gossip.
Nothing short of a ValueReporting Revolution will end this game and rid the markets of the crippling consequences. This book delivers a trenchant and often biting analysis of the severe problems that plague today's capital markets. More important, it articulates an array of practical, though controversial, solutions.
ValueReporting calls on corporate executives to provide more, rather than less, of the kind of information they use to create value. It exhorts investors to demand that companies do this. It urges boards of directors to make sure it gets done. And it puts accounting firms and securities analysts on notice that they must become part of the solution rather than part of the problem.
Often provocative and never hesitant to tell it like it is, The ValueReporting Revolution speaks with authority and clarity. It sounds its compelling call to arms to anyone with an interest in dramatically improving the markets on which so many depend.
A very good book, that justifies controllers. It also tries to justify auditors, but fails.
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