University of Auckland Business School RPS e-Journal Vol. 3, No. 6
This e-Journal issue of the Department of Accounting of Finance at the University of Auckland portrays the first selection of recent publications authored by its researchers. The next issue will feature a further selection of recent papers. The Department’s members conduct world-leading research in the areas of corporate finance, asset pricing, sustainability, machine learning, management accounting, financial accounting, and assurance & accounting information systems.
- Charl de Villiers, Charles H. Cho, Michael J. Turner, and Riccardo Scarpa: Are Shareholders Willing to Pay for Additional Financial, Social and Environmental Disclosure? A Choice-based Experiment
- Brigitte Eierle, Sven Hartlieb, David Hay, Lasse Niemi, and Hannu Ojala: Importance of Country Factors for Global Differences in Audit Pricing: New Empirical Evidence
- Yue Cao, Yizhe Dong, Diandian Ma, and Li Sun: Customer Concentration and Corporate Risk-taking
- Frederik Ng: Accounting at Your Service: University Survival, Recovery and Revolution from COVID-19
- Ramona Zharfpeykan and Chris Akroyd: Factors Influencing the Integration of Sustainability Indicators into a Company's Performance Management System
- Paul Geertsema and Helen Lu: Relative Valuation with Machine Learning
- Henk Berkman and Hamish Malloch: Stock Valuation During the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Explanation Using Option-based Discount Rates
- Dulani Jayasuriya, Mohamed Ayaz, and Michael Williams: The Use of Digital Footprints in the US Mortgage Market
- Yan Tian, Jina H. Yoo, and Hui Zhou: To Read or Not to Read: An Extension of the Theory of Planned Behaviour to Food Label Use
- Kevin Dow, Norman Jacknis, and Marcia W. Watson: A Framework and Resources to Create a Data Analytics-Infused Accounting Curriculum
- Tomomi Takada, David Lau, Jeffrey R. Casterella, and Norman Wong: There Is no ‘I’ in Team: An Analysis of Audit Partner Narcissism from the Team Aspect
- Steven F. Cahan, Seok-Joo Chang, Wei Siqueira, and Kinsun Tam: The Roles of XBRL and Processed XBRL in 10‐K Readability