الفهرس | يوجد فقط 14 صفحة متاحة للعرض العام |
المستخلص This study aims to determine the impact of the complexity of financial reports on accounting and economic-financial performance, and its reflection on the firm value. The final sample of the study was represented in 62 companies listed in the EGX 100 index (310 observations). The sources of data collection were companies’ websites, Mubasher Egypt website, the official website of the Egyptian Exchange, and the Thomson Reuters database. The researcher used a multiple linear regression model to test the study hypotheses. The complexity of financial reports was measured through (information overload and reading difficulty). The accounting financial performance was measured through the Return on Assets (ROA), and the economic financial performance was measured through the Economic Value Added (EVA). The value of the firm was measured by Tobin’s Q. The results of the research indicated that there was no significant relationship between information overload and accounting financial performance, in addition to the absence of a significant relationship between the difficulty of reading and the financial accounting performance. As a result, it is possible to conclude that there is no significant relationship between the degree of complexity of financial reports and financial accounting performance. In a related context, the results of the study also indicated that there was no significant relationship between information overload and cenonoce lcoioecif performance, while the results indicated a significant inverse relationship between the difficulty of reading and the cenonoce lcoioecif performance. The results of the study also indicated that there was no significant relationship between the accounting financial performance and the value of the firm, and that there is a positive significant relationship between the economic financial performance and the value of the firm. It also showed that there is an inverse relationship between the difficulty of reading and the value of the firm, and the absence of a direct relationship between information overload and the value of the firm. |