Abstract

Despite the extensive research on audit fees, few studies have examined the effect of audit fees on the cost of debt. Based on the credence goods theory, we examine whether the effect of audits on the cost of debt is affected by the type of audit (voluntary or mandatory) and the audit fees, as well as whether there is a combined effect of voluntary audits and audit fees, so that the effect of voluntary audits on the cost of debt is affected by audit fees. Using a sample of Spanish SMEs, we find an asymmetric effect of audit fees on the cost of debt: higher audit fees are associated with a lower cost of debt for voluntarily audited companies, while the association is not significant for mandatory audits. Results suggest that, although the type of audit and the audit fees do not have a direct effect on the credibility of audits, the combination of both factors has relevance for lenders, so that higher audit fees in the voluntary setting are positively valued by them. The study contributes to the literature on auditing by showing that voluntary audits are relevant for capital providers as long as audits are perceived of quality.

Highlights

  • Despite the extensive research about audit fees, there are few studies that have examined the effect of audit fees on the credibility of accounting information and on the cost of debt, and the evidence is mixed (Dhaliwal, Gleason, Heitzman, & Melendrez, 2008; Jiang & Zhou, 2017)

  • Using a sample of Spanish SMEs, we find an asymmetric effect of audit fees on the cost of debt: higher audit fees are associated with a lower cost of debt for voluntarily audited companies, while the association is not significant for mandatory audits

  • The highest correlation is that between GROWTH and LIQ (0.7253), followed by those between solvency ratio (SOLV) and LEV (-0.5735), coverage ratio (COV) and ROBA (0.4971), COV and COST_D: Cost of debt; VOL: 1 if voluntary audits, 0 if mandatory audits; LNFEES: Natural logarithm of audit fees; LNASS: Natural logarithm of total assets; ROBA: Return on Business Assets; LEV: Leverage; LIQ: Liquidity ratio; TAN: Tangibility ratio; GROWTH: Growth of sales; SOLV: Solvency ratio; COV: Coverage ratio; age of the company (AGE): Age of the company

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Summary

Introduction

Despite the extensive research about audit fees, there are few studies that have examined the effect of audit fees on the credibility of accounting information and on the cost of debt, and the evidence is mixed (Dhaliwal, Gleason, Heitzman, & Melendrez, 2008; Jiang & Zhou, 2017). In spite of the assumed idea that audits help to enhance the credibility of accounting information, the empirical evidence on the association between voluntary audits and the cost of debt is mixed (Huguet & Gandıa, 2014; Lennox & Pittman, 2011). We consider that the credibility of voluntary audits may depend on the audit fees paid by the auditee. This study states whether the association between the cost of debt and voluntary audits can be affected by the fees paid to auditors. HUGUET setting, there are differences in the perception of audit quality by users, or in their signalling effect, based on the fees paid to auditors

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