A Comparison: Accrual Versus Cash Flow Based Financial Measures’ Performance in Predicting Business Failure

Authors

  • Shyam Bhandari Bradley University
  • Vince Showers Bradley University
  • Anna J. Johnson-Snyder East Carolina University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jaf.v19i6.2313

Keywords:

Accounting, Finance, Business Failure, Discriminant Analysis, Financial Ratios, Cash Flow

Abstract

Most business failure prediction models use accrual-accounting-based financial ratios; a few used cashflow- based measures. Comparison of the two approaches on the same dataset are rare. This study investigates the prediction accuracy of six accrual-accounting, six cash-flow-based, and the combined 12 ratios on companies’ financial data collected during the 2008-2010 recession. Careful to avoid prior research pitfalls (Sharma, 2001), we perform many analyses on a matched set of 50 failed and 50 nonfailing companies. We propose that cash-flow-based measures are better predictors but find that a mixed model of two accrual-accounting- and two cash-flow-based ratios perform significantly better than other models.

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Published

2019-10-18

How to Cite

Bhandari, S., Showers, V., & Johnson-Snyder, A. J. (2019). A Comparison: Accrual Versus Cash Flow Based Financial Measures’ Performance in Predicting Business Failure. Journal of Accounting and Finance, 19(6). https://doi.org/10.33423/jaf.v19i6.2313

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Section

Articles