This study examines the moderating effect of firm attributes on the value relevance of accounting information in Saudi Arabia. Using a sample of 630 firm-year observations from 126 Saudi listed firms over 2018–2022, the research evaluates whether audit quality, size, leverage, growth potential, board diversity, and profitability complement the valuation role of earnings per share (EPS) and book value per share (BVPS) and if so then which direction of the attribute gave greater value relevance. Results reveal that all the firm attributes tested have a significant moderating effect on value relevance. Lower leverage, higher growth potential, greater board diversity, and profitability all lead to higher predicted market value for given EPS and BVPS. Big 4 audit quality and larger firm size are found to moderate the value relevance of accounting information rather than to influence share price directly. Both attributes strengthen the value relevance of earnings per share (EPS)—the EPS coefficient is significantly higher for firms audited by a Big 4 firm and for larger firms—while weakening the value relevance of book value per share (BVPS), with the BVPS coefficient being significantly lower in both cases. The combined effect is that earnings carry greater pricing weight, and book values carry lesser pricing weight, when audit quality is high and when firms are larger. Results also reveal that cohorts with Big 4 auditor, larger size, lower leverage, higher growth potential, more diverse boards, and profitability all have greater value relevance (higher R2) than cohorts with the alternative for each attribute. Hence, tests provide evidence that these attributes strengthen the association between selective accounting figures (EPS and BVPS) and share prices. The findings contribute to agency, information asymmetry, and value-relevance theory by showing that firm attributes condition the EPS and BVPS pricing weights rather than affecting price directly. The results have implications for regulators and firms seeking to improve financial reporting credibility and usefulness amid concentrated ownership. This study contributes timely empirical evidence on the multifaceted drivers of value relevance in an under-researched Middle Eastern emerging market.
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Abdulaziz S. Al Naim
King Faisal University
Abdulrahman Alomair
College of Accounting
Alan Farley
La Trobe University
International Journal of Financial Studies
La Trobe University
Victoria University
King Faisal University
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Naim et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a27add2a963992e16267f68 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/ijfs14060153