Over the last decade, disclosure of nonfinancial information is gaining a momentum and attracting the attention from managers, consultants, financial institutions, investors, financial analysts, governments and communities leading companies to implement relevant changes in several key areas of corporate reporting. Recently, an important milestone has been achieved by the approval of the Directive EU/95/2014 issued on October 22, 2014 and focused on Disclosure of non-financial and diversity information by large companies and groups. All European State members have to implement these requirements in their domestic laws calling for large companies to disclose some nonfinancial issues on environment, employees, diversity and so on, by the fiscal year 2017. The relevant need to demonstrate a potential influence of ESG factors on financial performance (Wang et al. 2014) lead most studies to evaluate Corporate Financial Performance (CFP) including into regression analysis several variables related to some profitability ratios or accounting-measured indexes (i.e., Return On Assets, Return On Investment, sales growth, Return On Equity, etc.) as well as market-based indicators (i.e. earnings per share, book value per share, cash flow per share, etc. ) but underestimating the effects of nonfinancial disclosure on Intellectual Capital Performance (ICP). To address this gap, firstly it is crucial to measure (i.e. through some scores) the extent of nonfinancial information disclosed by Italian listed companies in the year immediately before the adoption of the European Directive. Then, this explorative study can contribute to assess the potential relationship between such nonfinancial disclosure and CFP/ICP, given the key contribution of intangible resources to the firm’s value creation process (Padgett and Galan, 2010; Surroca et al., 2010; Lòpez-Gamero et al., 2011)

Bianchi Martini, S., Corvino, A., Doni, F. (2017). Nonfinancial Information Disclosure And Intellectual Capital Performance. Empirical Evidence Before The Implementation Of The Directive Eu/95/2014. INTERDISCIPLINARY WORKSHOP ON INTANGIBLES, INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION, 13, 1-22.

Nonfinancial Information Disclosure And Intellectual Capital Performance. Empirical Evidence Before The Implementation Of The Directive Eu/95/2014

Doni, F
Ultimo
2017

Abstract

Over the last decade, disclosure of nonfinancial information is gaining a momentum and attracting the attention from managers, consultants, financial institutions, investors, financial analysts, governments and communities leading companies to implement relevant changes in several key areas of corporate reporting. Recently, an important milestone has been achieved by the approval of the Directive EU/95/2014 issued on October 22, 2014 and focused on Disclosure of non-financial and diversity information by large companies and groups. All European State members have to implement these requirements in their domestic laws calling for large companies to disclose some nonfinancial issues on environment, employees, diversity and so on, by the fiscal year 2017. The relevant need to demonstrate a potential influence of ESG factors on financial performance (Wang et al. 2014) lead most studies to evaluate Corporate Financial Performance (CFP) including into regression analysis several variables related to some profitability ratios or accounting-measured indexes (i.e., Return On Assets, Return On Investment, sales growth, Return On Equity, etc.) as well as market-based indicators (i.e. earnings per share, book value per share, cash flow per share, etc. ) but underestimating the effects of nonfinancial disclosure on Intellectual Capital Performance (ICP). To address this gap, firstly it is crucial to measure (i.e. through some scores) the extent of nonfinancial information disclosed by Italian listed companies in the year immediately before the adoption of the European Directive. Then, this explorative study can contribute to assess the potential relationship between such nonfinancial disclosure and CFP/ICP, given the key contribution of intangible resources to the firm’s value creation process (Padgett and Galan, 2010; Surroca et al., 2010; Lòpez-Gamero et al., 2011)
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
nonfinancial information, disclosure of ESG data, Intellectual Capital, Tobin’s Q, Enterprise Value, VAIC TM, financial performance, Italian listed companies.
English
set-2017
2017
13
1
22
none
Bianchi Martini, S., Corvino, A., Doni, F. (2017). Nonfinancial Information Disclosure And Intellectual Capital Performance. Empirical Evidence Before The Implementation Of The Directive Eu/95/2014. INTERDISCIPLINARY WORKSHOP ON INTANGIBLES, INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION, 13, 1-22.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/182510
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