Earnings management may sound like harmless financial housekeeping, but in Australia’s dynamic corporate landscape, it’s a practice that can blur the line between smart accounting and outright deception. As we head through 2026, a renewed focus on financial transparency, policy crackdowns, and heightened investor scrutiny are changing the game. If you’re investing, working in finance, or just want to understand how listed companies shape their reported profits, this is essential reading.
Newsletter
Get new guides and updates in your inbox
Receive weekly Australian home, property, and service-planning insights from the Cockatoo editorial team.
What is Earnings Management—and Why Does It Matter?
At its core, earnings management involves using accounting techniques to influence reported profits. This isn’t always illegal; sometimes, it’s about timing revenue or expenses to smooth out earnings. But aggressive or deceptive practices can mislead investors and regulators, artificially boosting share prices or hiding underlying problems.
-
Cookie jar reserves: Setting aside excess profits in good years to release in leaner ones
-
Revenue recognition: Accelerating or delaying revenue to hit targets
-
Expense shifting: Deferring costs or moving them off the books
In 2026, with economic uncertainty and a competitive market for capital, some companies may feel increased pressure to "manage" their earnings more aggressively. The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has warned that these practices undermine market trust and can lead to significant penalties.
2026 Policy Crackdowns and Regulatory Trends
This year, ASIC and the Australian Accounting Standards Board (AASB) have doubled down on earnings management. New audit guidelines require more rigorous reviews of revenue recognition and provisioning, making it harder for companies to exploit grey areas.
-
ASIC’s 2026 Surveillance: ASIC’s expanded surveillance program now includes advanced analytics to spot patterns in company reports and disclosures. Their June 2026 report highlighted a 15% uptick in cases referred for deeper investigation, especially in the property, tech, and retail sectors.
-
Updated AASB Standards: Amendments to AASB 15 (Revenue from Contracts with Customers) and AASB 137 (Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets) have tightened the rules around when revenue can be recognized and how provisions are booked.
-
Director Accountability: The Treasury Laws Amendment (Corporate Transparency and Accountability) Bill 2026 raises the stakes, imposing personal liability on directors who sign off on misleading financials.
These changes mean auditors are under pressure to challenge management assumptions, and boards must demonstrate active oversight of financial reporting.
Red Flags: How Investors Can Spot Earnings Management
For investors, understanding how to spot the signs of earnings management is crucial. While not every case signals fraud, unusual patterns may warrant a closer look.
-
Consistently meeting or just beating earnings targets—even in volatile industries—can signal manipulation.
-
Sudden swings in provisions or reserves (for example, a sharp drop in bad debt expense with no clear reason).
-
Unexplained changes in accounting policies disclosed in the notes to accounts.
-
Large, one-off items or frequent restructuring charges that conveniently boost "underlying" profit.
Real-world example: In April 2026, an ASX-listed retailer came under fire after analysts noted a pattern of fourth-quarter revenue surges, coinciding with generous returns provisions that reversed in the following year. ASIC’s probe led to a restatement of earnings and a 12% share price correction.
Balancing Regulation and Reality
While tighter rules are welcome, it’s important to recognize that some degree of earnings management is inevitable—there’s always room for judgment in accounting. The challenge is distinguishing between healthy smoothing and deceptive manipulation. For Australian companies, the lesson from 2026’s enforcement blitz is clear: transparency wins. For investors, it pays to dig deeper than the headline numbers and ask tough questions about how profits are generated.
