Henry He Huang
Associate Professor
Department of Accounting
Yeshiva University
United States of America
Biography
Professor Huang is an Associate Professor of Accounting at Yeshiva University’s Sy Syms School of Business. He possesses a Ph.D. degree in accounting (with finance minor) and has also earned law degrees from both U.S. and China. Professor Huang’s practical expertise covers international investment and trade, accounting information system, accounting-related securities litigation, and entrepreneurial planning. His research has been frequently cited by both the academic and professional communities and has won research grants from the Research Grants Council of Hong Kong. Before joining Yeshiva University, Professor Huang taught accounting courses at University of Houston, Butler University in Indianapolis, and Prairie View A&M University (a Member of Texas A&M University System) in Houston.
Research Interest
Professor Huang’s current teaching interests are managerial accounting and contemporary topics in accounting such as International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and accounting research based on FASB codification and eIFRS. Professor Huang’s research focuses on the impact of external monitoring mechanisms (e.g., securities litigation, shareholder rights, regulations, and hedge fund activism) on firms’ accounting practice, valuation, and internal governance. Recent research interests also include the value relevance of religiosity and climate risk across the countries.
Publications
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Huang H, LoboG, WangC, Hong X (2016) Customer concentration and tax avoidance. J bank Fin 72: 184-200.
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Huang H, Lobo G, Wang C, hen H (2016) Religiosity and the cost of debt. J Bank Fin 70: 70-85.
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Cheng A, Huang H, Li Y (2015) Hedge fund intervention and accounting conservatism. Contemporary Accounting Research 32: 392-421.