Published December 27, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article Open

The Effect of Fraud Hexagon on Fraudulent Financial Reporting with Accounting Complexity as a Moderating Variable in Financial Sector Companies

  • 1. Postgraduate Program in Economics, Accounting Concentration, Sriwijaya University

Description

Financial statement fraud is one form of fraud that has the most damaging impact on the sustainability of the company, the stability of the financial industry, and public trust. This phenomenon is increasingly complex with increasing business pressures, financial market dynamics, and changes in accounting standards that expand the scope of managerial considerations. This study aims to provide empirical evidence regarding the influence of the six elements of the Fraud Hexagon Pressure, Opportunity, Rationalization, Ability, Ego, and Collusion on financial statement fraud in financial sector companies listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX) for the period 2020-2024. In addition, this study examines whether accounting complexity acts as a moderating variable that can strengthen or weaken the relationship between the Fraud Hexagon and financial statement fraud. The study uses a quantitative approach with panel data regression. Model selection is carried out through the Chow and Hausman Test , which shows that Fixed The Effect Model (FEM) was the best model. The results showed that the variables Pressure (X1), Ability (X4), and Collusion (X6) had a positive and significant effect on financial statement fraud, while Opportunity (X2), Rationalization (X3), and Ego (X5) had no significant effect. Accounting complexity was not proven to be a moderating variable. These findings emphasize the importance of strengthening internal control systems and corporate governance oversight to reduce fraud risk.

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