That America's public capital markets have lost
some of their allure is no longer much disputed. Eminences as unlikely as
Chuck Schumer and Eliot Spitzer have taken to bemoaning the fact and calling
for some sort of fix, albeit without doing much.
Tort reform -- to reduce jackpot justice in
securities class-action suits -- would certainly help. So would easing the
compliance costs and regulatory burden placed on publicly traded companies
by Sarbanes-Oxley, Regulation FD and the like. (See Robert Grady nearby.)
The good news is that, as usual, private-sector innovation is finding a way
around these government obstacles through the rapid growth of something
known as the Rule 144a market.
First, a little capital-markets background: Most
Americans are familiar with the "public markets," which consist of the New
York Stock Exchange, the Nasdaq and other stock markets. These are open to
investors of every stripe and are where the stocks of most of the world's
best-known companies are traded. Nearly anyone can invest, and these
exchanges are comprehensively regulated by the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Less well understood is another, more restricted
market known after SEC Rule 144a that governs participation in it. As on
stock exchanges, this market allows for the buying and selling of the stock
of companies that offer their shares for sale. But participation is strictly
limited. To be what is called a "qualified buyer" in this market, you must
be a financial institution with at least $100 million in investable assets.
If you meet these criteria, you are free to buy stocks of both U.S. and
foreign companies that have never offered their shares to the investing
public.
And here's the real beauty of it: Companies that
issue stock under Rule 144a can access America's deep pools of capital
without submitting to public-company accounting rules or to the tender
mercies of Sarbanes-Oxley. In exchange, however, they must strictly limit
the number of qualified U.S. investors in their company -- to 500 total for
U.S.-based firms and 300 for foreign-based. They are also barred from
offering comparable securities for sale in the public market. The 144a
market is also for the most part nontransparent, often illiquid and thus in
some ways riskier. But increasingly, this is a trade that institutional
investors and companies seeking capital are willing to make.
There are estimated to be about 1,000 companies
whose stocks trade in the 144a market. And last year, for perhaps the first
time, more capital was raised in the U.S. by issuing these so-called
unregistered securities than through IPOs on all the major stock exchanges
combined. Even more telling is that the large institutional investors
eligible to buy these unregistered securities are more than happy to oblige.
There is no selling without buying, and for the 144a market to overtake the
giant stock exchanges, institutional investors who control trillions of
dollars in capital must see better opportunities outside the regulations
built by Congress and the SEC.
In a sign of these times, none other than Nasdaq is
now stepping in to bring some greater order, liquidity and transparency to
the Rule 144a market. Any day now, the SEC is expected to propose giving the
green light to a Nasdaq project called Portal. Portal aims to be a central
clearing house for buyers and sellers of Section 144a securities. You will
still need to be a "qualified institutional buyer" to purchase 144a
securities. And the companies whose stocks change hands on Portal will still
need to meet the limitations on numbers of investors to offer their stock
there.
So Portal will not bring unregistered securities to
the masses -- at least not directly. It is forbidden to do so because the
entire U.S. regulatory system is designed to protect individual investors
from such things. What Portal will do, if it operates as intended, is make
the trading of Rule 144a securities easier and less costly. And this could,
in turn, further increase their attractiveness to issuers and investors
alike. Average investors will at least be able to participate indirectly via
mutual and pension funds, most of which meet the standards for "qualified
institutional buyers."
Given the limitations on eligibility for Rule 144a
assets, they will never replace our public markets. But their growth is one
more sign that investors, far from valuing current regulation, are seeking
ways to avoid its costs and complications. Nasdaq's participation is
especially notable given its stake as an established public exchange. Nasdaq
seems to have concluded that there is a new market opportunity created by
overregulation, so it is following the money.
This leaves our politicians with two choices. They
can move to meddle with and diminish this second securities market -- which
will only drive more business away from U.S. shores. Or they can address the
overregulation that is hurting public markets and prompting both investors
and companies to seek alternatives.
"Twitter's Recent 8-K Begs for More Transparency," by Anthony H.
Catanach, Jr., Grumpy Old Accountants Blog, February 16, 2014 ---
http://grumpyoldaccountants.com/blog/2014/2/16/twitters-recent-8-k-begs-for-more-transparency
With all
of the bad weather here in the East, this aging number cruncher has had his
hands full with scraping and shoveling. But I just had to take a break and
comment on Twitter’s recent Form 8-K (February 5, 2014), particularly given
the Company CEO’s comments last Fall on the importance of transparency to
being a good leader.
According to
Kurt Wagner of Mashable, CEO Dick Costolo said the
following about transparency at a TechCrunch Disrupt event last September:
The way you build trust
with your people is by being forthright and clear with them from day
one. You may think people are fooled when you tell them what they want
to hear. They are not fooled. As a leader, people are always looking at
you. Don't lose their trust by failing to provide transparency in your
decisions and critiques.
Well, when you go “on the record” about one
of my favorite themes, I just had to give Twitter’s 8-K a look. And what did
I find? Apparently, Twitter’s CFO does not share the same
transparency philosophy as his boss.
But before I
begin, I thought it useful to report on the accuracy of some predictions
that I made about Twitter’s financial performance before the Company’s IPO.
In “What
Will Twitter’s Financials Really Tell Us?”,
I took a shot at forecasting the Company’s post-IPO balance sheet using a
comp group consisting of Facebook, Sina Corp, Yelp Inc., and Meetme Inc. And
while the average revenue to assets percentage for this comp group (46.84%)
yielded total assets of only $1.3 billion instead of $3.4 billion, the
forecasted balance sheet category percentages were quite close as
illustrated in the following table:
Continued in article
Moral Hazard: Hedge Fund ShortsHi
Dean,
Thank you for the kind words.
Hedge fund shorts are often used in expectations to re-buy. You might take a
look at the following:
"Subprime crisis: the lay-out of a puzzle: An empirical investigation into the
worldwide financial consequences of the U.S. subprime crisis" ---
http://oaithesis.eur.nl/ir/repub/asset/5163/0509ma281597wm.pdf
. . .
Market neutral strategy: This strategy focusses on
profits made either by arbitrage in a market neutral investment or by
arbitrage over time, for instance investing in futures and shorting the
underlying. This strategy was obtained by the Long-Term Capital Management
fund of Nobel Prize laureates Myron Scholes and Robert C. Merton.
Short selling strategy: The hedge fund shorts
securities in expectation of a rebuy at a lower price at a future date. This
lower price is a result of overconfidence of the other party, who thought
they had bought an undervalued asset.
Special situations: A popular and probably the most
well-known strategy is the behaviour of hedge fund in special situations
like mergers, hostile takeovers, reorganisations or leveraged buy-outs.
Hedge funds often buy stocks from the distressed company, thereby trying to
profit from a difference in the initial offering price and the price that
ultimately has to be paid for the stock of the company.
Timing strategy: The manager of the hedge fund tries
to time his entrance to or exit from a market as good as possible. High
returns can be generated when investing at the start of a bull market or
exiting at the start of a bear market.
Continued in article
Money for Nothing How CEOs and Boards Enrich Themselves While Bankrupting
America
by John Gillespie and David Zweig
Simon and Schuster
http://books.simonandschuster.ca/Money-for-Nothing/John-Gillespie/9781416559931/excerpt_with_id/13802
All eyes are on the CEO, who has gone without sleep
for several days while desperately scrambling to pull a rabbit out of an
empty hat. Staffers, lawyers, advisors, accountants, and consultants scurry
around the company headquarters with news and rumors: the stock price fell
20 percent in the last hour, another of the private equity firms considering
a bid has pulled out, stock traders are passing on obscene jokes about the
company's impending death, the sovereign wealth fund that agreed to put in
$1 billion last fall is screaming at the CFO, hedge fund shorts are
whispering that the commercial paper dealers won't renew the debt tomorrow,
the Treasury and the Fed aren't returning the CEO's calls about bailout
money, six satellite trucks—no, seven now—are parked in front of the
building, and reporters with camera crews are ambushing any passing employee
for sound bites about the prospects of losing their jobs.
Chaos.
In the midst of this, the board of directors—the
supposedly well-informed, responsible, experienced, accountable group of
leaders elected by the shareholders, who are legally and ethically required
to protect the thousands of people who own the company—are . . . where? You
would expect to them to be at the center of the action, but they are merely
spectators with great seats. Some huddle together over a computer screen in
a corner of the boardroom, watching cable news feeds and stock market
reports that amplify the company's death rattles around the world; others
sit beside a speakerphone, giving updates to board colleagues who couldn't
make it in person. Meetings are scheduled, canceled, and rescheduled as the
directors wait, hoping for good news but anticipating the worst.
The atmosphere is a little like that of a family
waiting room outside an intensive care unit—a quiet, intense churning of
dread and resignation. There will be some reminiscing about how well things
seemed to be going not so long ago, some private recriminations about
questions never asked or risks poorly understood, a general feeling of
helplessness, a touch of anger at the senior executives for letting it come
to this, and anticipation of the embarrassment they'll feel when people
whisper about them at the club. Surprisingly, though, there's not a lot of
fear. Few of the directors are likely to have a significant part of their
wealth tied up in the company; legal precedents and insurance policies
insulate them from personal liability. Between 1980 and 2006, there were
only thirteen cases in which outside directors—almost all, other than Enron
and WorldCom, for tiny companies—had to settle shareholder lawsuits with
their own money. (Ten of the Enron outside directors who settled—without
admitting wrongdoing—paid only 10 percent of their prior net gains from
selling Enron stock; eight other directors paid nothing. A number of them
have remained on other boards.) More significant, the CEO who over shadowed
the board will hardly hurt at all, and will probably leave with the tens or
even hundreds of millions of dollars that the directors guaranteed in an
employment contract.
So they sit and wait—the board of directors of this
giant company, who were charged with steering it along the road to profit
and prosperity. In the middle of the biggest crisis in the life of the
company, they are essentially backseat passengers. The controls, which they
never truly used, are of no help as the company hurtles over a cliff, taking
with it the directors' reputations and the shareholders' money. What they
are waiting for is the dull thud signaling the end: a final meeting with the
lawyers and investment bankers, and at last, the formality of signing the
corporate death certificate—a bankruptcy filing, a forced sale for cents on
the dollar, or a government takeover that wipes out the shareholders. The
CEO and the lawyers, as usual, will tell the directors what they must do.
THIS IS NOT JUST A GLOOMY, hypothetical fable about
how an American business might possibly fail, with investors unprotected,
company value squandered, and the governance of enormous and important
companies breaking down. This is, unfortunately, a real scenario that has
been repeated time and again during the recent economic meltdown, as
companies have exploded like a string of one-inch firecrackers. When the
spark runs up the spine of the tangled, interconnected fuses, they blow up
one by one.
Something is wrong here. As Warren Buffett observed
in his 2008 letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, "You only learn who
has been swimming naked when the tide goes out—and what we are witnessing at
some of our largest financial institutions is an ugly sight."
Just look at some of the uglier sights. Merrill
Lynch, General Motors, and Lehman Brothers, three stalwart American
companies, are only a few examples of corporate collapses in which
shareholders were burned. The sleepy complicity and carelessness of their
boards have been especially devastating. Yet almost all the public attention
has focused on the greed or recklessness or incompetence of the CEOs rather
than the negligence of the directors who were supposed to protect the
shareholders and who ought to be held equally, if not more, accountable
because the CEOs theoretically work for them.
Why have boards of directors escaped blame?
Probably because boards are opaque entities to most people, even to many
corporate executives and institutional investors. Individual shareholders,
who might have small positions in a number of companies, know very little
about who these board members are and what they are supposed to be doing.
Their names appear on the generic, straight-to-the-wastebasket proxy forms
that shareholders receive; beyond that, they're ciphers. Directors rarely
talk in public, maintaining a code of silence and confidentiality;
communications with shareholders and journalists are invariably delegated to
corporate PR or investor relations departments. They are protected by a vast
array of lawyers, auditors, investment bankers, and other professional
services gatekeepers who keep them out of trouble for a price. At most,
shareholders might catch a glimpse of the nonexecutive board members if they
bother to attend the annual meeting. Boards work behind closed doors, leave
few footprints, and maintain an aura of power and prestige symbolized by the
grand and imposing boardrooms found in most large companies. Much of this
lack of transparency is deliberate because it reduces accountability and
permits a kind of Wizard of Oz "pay no attention to the man behind the
curtain" effect. (It is very likely to be a man. Only 15.2 percent of the
directors of our five hundred largest companies are women.) The opacity also
serves to hide a key problem: despite many directors being intelligent,
experienced, well-qualified, and decent people who are tough in other
aspects of their professional lives, too many of them become meek, collegial
cheerleaders when they enter the boardroom. They fail to represent
shareholders' interests because they are beholden to the CEOs who brought
them aboard. It's a dangerous arrangement.
On behalf of the shareholders who actually own the
company and are risking their money in anticipation of a commensurate return
on their investments, boards are elected to monitor, advise, and direct the
managers hired to run the company. They have a fiduciary duty to protect the
interests of shareholders. Yet, too often, boards have become enabling
lapdogs rather than trust-worthy watchdogs and guides.
There are, unfortunately, dozens of cases to choose
from to illustrate the seriousness of the situation. Merrill, GM, and Lehman
are instructive because they were companies no one could imagine failing,
although, in truth, they fostered such dysfunctional and conflicted
corporate leadership that their collapses should have been foretold. As you
read their obituaries, viewer discretion is advised. You should think of the
money paid to the executives and directors, as well as the losses in stock
value, not as the company's money, as it is so often portrayed in news
accounts, but as your money—because it is, in fact, coming from your
mutual funds, your 401(k)s, your insurance premiums, your savings account
interest, your mortgage rates, your paychecks, and your costs for goods and
services. Also, think of the impact on ordinary people losing their
retirement savings, their jobs, their homes, or even just the bank or
factory or car dealership in their towns. Then add the trillions of
taxpayers' dollars spent to prop up some of the companies' remains and,
finally, consider the legacy of debt we're leaving for the next generation.
———
DURING MOST OF HIS nearly six years at the top of
Merrill Lynch, Stanley O'Neal simultaneously held the titles of chairman,
CEO, and president. He required such a high degree of loyalty that insiders
referred to his senior staff as the Taliban. O'Neal had hand-picked eight of
the firm's ten outside board members. One of them, John Finnegan, had been a
friend of O'Neal's for more than twenty years and had worked with him in the
General Motors treasury department; he headed Merrill's compensation
committee, which set O'Neal's pay. Another director on the committee was
Alberto Cribiore, a private equity executive who had once tried to hire
O'Neal.
Executives who worked closely with O'Neal say that
he was ruthless in silencing opposition within Merrill and singleminded in
seeking to beat Goldman Sachs in its profitability and Lehman Brothers in
the risky business of packaging and selling mortgage-backed securities. "The
board had absolutely no idea how much of this risky stuff was actually on
the books; it multiplied so fast," one O'Neal colleague said. The colleague
also noted that the directors, despite having impressive rÉsumÉs, were
chosen in part because they had little financial services experience and
were kept under tight control. O'Neal "clearly didn't want anybody asking
questions."
For a while, the arrangement seemed to work. In a
triumphal letter to shareholders in the annual report issued in February
2007, titled "The Real Measure of Success." O'Neal proclaimed 2006 "the most
successful year in [the company's] history—financially, operationally and
strategically," while pointing out that "a lot of this comes down to
leadership." The cocky message ended on a note of pure hubris: "[W]e can and
will continue to grow our business, lead this incredible force of global
capitalism and validate the tremendous confidence that you, our
shareholders, have placed in this organization and each of us."
The board paid O'Neal $48 million in salary and
bonuses for 2006—one of the highest compensation packages in corporate
America. But only ten months later, after suffering a third-quarter loss of
$2.3 billion and an $8.4 billion writedown on failed investments—the largest
loss in the company's ninety-three-year history, exceeding the net earnings
for all of 2006—the board began to understand the real measure of failure.
The directors discovered, seemingly for the first time, just how much risk
Merrill had undertaken in becoming the industry leader in subprime mortgage
bonds and how overleveraged it had become to achieve its targets. They also
caught O'Neal initiating merger talks without their knowledge with Wachovia
Bank, a deal that would have resulted in a personal payout of as much as
$274 million for O'Neal if he had left after its completion—part of his
board-approved employment agreement. During August and September 2007, as
Merrill was losing more than $100 million a day, O'Neal managed to play at
least twenty rounds of golf and lowered his handicap from 10.2 to 9.1.
Apparently due to sheer embarrassment as the
company's failures made headlines, the board finally ousted O'Neal in
October but allowed him to "retire" with an exit package worth $161.5
million on top of the $70 million he'd received during his time as CEO and
chairman. The board then began a frantic search for a new CEO, because, as
one insider confirmed to us, it "had done absolutely no succession planning"
and O'Neal had gotten rid of anyone among the 64,000 employees who might
have been a credible candidate. For the first time since the company's
founding, the board had to look outside for a CEO. In spite of having shown
a disregard for shareholders and a distaste for balanced governance, O'Neal
was back in a boardroom within three months, this time as a director of
Alcoa, serving on the audit committee and charged with overseeing the
aluminum company's risk management and financial disclosure.
At the Merrill Lynch annual meeting in April 2008,
Ann Reese, the head of the board's audit committee, fielded a question from
a shareholder about how the board could have missed the massive risks
Merrill was undertaking in the subprime mortgage-backed securities and
collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) that had ballooned from $1 billion to
$40 billion in exposure for the firm in just eighteen months. Amazingly,
since it is almost unheard of for a director of a company to answer
questions in public, Reese was willing to talk. This was refreshing and
might have provided some insight for shareholders, except that what she said
was curiously detached and unabashed. "The CDO position did not come to the
board's attention until late in the process," she said, adding that
initially the board hadn't been aware that the most troublesome securities
were, in fact, backed by mortgages.
Merrill's new CEO and chairman, John Thain, jumped
in after Reese, saying that the board shouldn't be criticized based on
"20/20 hindsight" even though he had earlier admitted in an interview with
the Wall Street Journal that "Merrill had a risk committee. It just
didn't function." As it happens, Reese, over a cup of English tea, had
helped recruit Thain, who lived near her in Rye, New York. Thain had
received a $15 million signing bonus upon joining Merrill and by the time of
the shareholders' meeting was just completing the $1.2 million refurnishing
of his office suite that was revealed after the company was sold.
Lynn Turner, who served as the SEC's chief
accountant from 1998 to 2001 and later as a board member for several large
public companies, recalled that he spoke about this period to a friend who
was a director at Merrill Lynch in August 2008. "This is a very well-known,
intelligent person," Turner said, "and they tell me, 'You know, Lynn, I've
gone back through all this stuff and I can't think of one thing I'd have
done differently.' My God, I can guarantee you that person wasn't qualified
to be a director! They don't press on the issues. They get into the
boardroom—and I've been in these boardrooms—and they're all too chummy and
no one likes to create confrontation. So they get together five times a year
or so, break bread, all have a good conversation for a day and a half, and
then go home. How in the hell could you be a director at Merrill Lynch and
not know that you had a gargantuan portfolio of toxic assets? If people on
the outside could see the problem, then why couldn't the directors?"
The board was so disconnected from the company that
when Merrill shareholders met in December 2008 to approve the company's sale
to Bank of America after five straight quarterly losses totaling $24 billion
and a near-brush with bankruptcy, not a single one of the nine nonexecutive
directors even attended the meeting. Finance committee chair and former IRS
commissioner Charles Rossotti, reached at home in Virginia by a reporter,
wouldn't say why he wasn't there: "I'm just a director, and I think any
questions you want to have, you should direct to the company." The board
missed an emotional statement by Winthrop Smith, Jr., a former Merrill
banker and the son of a company founder. In a speech that used the word
shame some fourteen times, he said, "Today is not the result of the
subprime mess or synthetic CDOs. They are the symptoms. This is the story of
failed leadership and the failure of a board of directors to understand what
was happening to this great company, and its failure to take action soon
enough . . . Shame on them for not resigning."
When Merrill Lynch first opened its doors in 1914,
Charles E. Merrill announced its credo: "I have no fear of failure, provided
I use my heart and head, hands and feet—and work like hell." The firm died
as an independent company five days short of its ninety-fifth birthday. The
Merrill Lynch shareholders, represented by the board, lost more than $60
billion.
AT A JUNE 6, 2000, stockholders annual meeting,
General Motors wheeled out its newly appointed CEO, Richard Wagoner, who
kicked off the proceedings with an upbeat speech. "I'm pleased to report
that the state of the business at General Motors Corporation is strong," he
proclaimed. "And as suggested by the baby on the cover of our 1999 annual
report, we believe our company's future opportunities are virtually
unlimited." Nine years later, the GM baby wasn't feeling so well, as the
disastrous labor and health care costs and SUV-heavy product strategy caught
up with the company in the midst of skyrocketing gasoline prices and a
recession. GM's stock price fell some 95 percent during Wagoner's tenure;
the company last earned a profit in 2004 and lost more than $85 billion
while he was CEO. Nevertheless, the GM board consistently praised and
rewarded Wagoner's performance. In 2003, it elected him to also chair the
board, and in 2007—a year the company had lost $38.7 billion—it increased
his compensation by 64 percent to $15.7 million.
GM's lead independent director was George M. C.
Fisher, who himself presided over major strategic miscues as CEO and
chairman at Motorola, where the Iridium satellite phone project he initiated
was subsequently written off with a $2.6 billion loss, and later at Kodak,
where he was blamed for botching the shift to digital photography. Fisher
clearly had little use for shareholders. He once told an interviewer
regarding criticism of his tenure at Kodak that "I wish I could get
investors to sit down and ask good questions, but some people are just too
stupid." More than half the GM board was composed of current or retired
CEOs, including Stan O'Neal, who left in 2006, citing time constraints and
concerns over potential conflicts with his role at Merrill that had somehow
not been an issue during the previous five years.
Upon GM's announcement in August 2008 of another
staggering quarterly loss—this time of $15.5 billion—Fisher told a reporter
that "Rick has the unified support of the entire board to a person. We are
absolutely convinced we have the right team under Rick Wagoner's leadership
to get us through these difficult times and to a brighter future." Earlier
that year, Fisher had repeatedly endorsed Wagoner's strategy and said that
GM's stock price was not a major concern of the board. Given that all
thirteen of GM's outside directors together owned less than six
one-hundredths of one percent of the company's stock, that perhaps shouldn't
have been much of a surprise.
Wagoner relished his carte blanche relationship
with GM's directors: "I get good support from the board," he told a
reporter. "We say, 'Here's what we're going to do and here's the time
frame,' and they say, 'Let us know how it comes out.' They're not making the
calls about what to do next. If they do that, they don't need me." What GM's
leaders were doing with the shareholders' dwindling money was doubling their
bet on gas-guzzling SUVs because they provided GM's highest profit margins
at the time. As GM vice chairman Robert Lutz told the New York Times
in 2005: "Everybody thinks high gas prices hurt sport utility sales. In fact
they don't . . . Rich people don't care."
But what seemed good for GM no longer was good for
the country—or for GM's shareholders.
Ironically, GM had been widely praised in the early
1990s for creating a model set of corporate governance reforms in the wake
of major strategic blunders and failed leadership that had resulted in
unprecedented earnings losses. In 1992, the board fired the CEO, appointed a
nonexecutive chairman, and issued twenty-eight structural guidelines for
insuring board independence from management and increasing oversight of
long-term strategy. BusinessWeek hailed the GM document as a "Magna
Carta for Directors" and the company's financial performance improved for a
time. The reform initiatives, however, lasted about as long as the tailfin
designs on a Cadillac. Within a few years, despite checking most of the good
governance structural boxes, the CEO was once again also the board chairman,
the directors had backslid fully to a subservient "let us know how it comes
out" role, and the executives were back behind the wheel.
In November 2005, when GM's stock price was still
in the mid-20s, Ric Marshall, the chief analyst of the Corporate Library, a
governance rating service that focuses on board culture and CEO-board
dynamics, wrote: "Despite its compliance with most of the best practices
believed to comprise 'good governance,' the current General Motors board
epitomizes the sad truth that compliance alone has very little to do with
actual board effectiveness. The GM board has failed repeatedly to address
the key strategic questions facing this onetime industrial giant, exposing
the firm not only to a number of legal and regulatory worries but the very
real threat of outright business failure. Is GM, like Chrysler some years
ago, simply too big to fail? We're not sure, but it seems increasingly
likely that GM shareholders will soon find out."
By the time Wagoner was fired in March 2009, at the
instigation of the federal officials overseeing the massive bailout of the
company, the stock had dropped to the $2 range and GM had already run
through $13.4 billion in taxpayers' money. In spite of this, some directors
still couldn't wean themselves from Wagoner, and were reportedly furious
that his dismissal occurred without their consent. Others were mortified by
what had happened to the company. One prominent director, who had diligently
tried to help the company change course before it was too late, had
eventually quit the board out of frustration with the "ridiculous
bureaucracy and a thumb-sucking board that led to GM making cars that no one
wanted to buy." Another director who left the board recalled asking Wagoner
and his executive team in 2006 for a five-year plan and projections. "They
said they didn't have that. And most of the guys in the room didn't seem to
care."
The GM shareholders, represented by the board, lost
more than $52 billion.
IN A COMPANY as large and complex as Lehman
Brothers, you would expect the board to be seasoned, astute, dynamic, and
up-to-date on risks it was undertaking with the shareholders' money. Yet the
only nonexecutive director, out of ten, with any recent banking experience
was Jerry Grundhofer, the retired head of U.S. Bancorp, who had joined the
board exactly five months before Lehman's spectacular collapse into
bankruptcy. Nine of the independent directors were retired, including five
who were in their seventies and eighties. Their backgrounds hardly seemed
suited to overseeing a sophisticated and complicated financial entity: the
members included a theatrical producer, the former CEO of a Spanish-language
television company, a retired art-auction company executive, a retired CEO
of Halliburton, a former rear admiral who had headed the Girl Scouts and
served on the board of Weight Watchers International, and, until two years
before Lehman's downfall, the eighty-three-year-old actress and socialite
Dina Merrill, who sat on the board for eighteen years and served on the
compensation committee, which approved CEO Richard Fuld's $484 million in
salary, stock, options, and bonuses from 2000 to 2007. Whatever their
qualifications, the directors were well compensated, too. In 2007, each was
paid between $325,038 and $397,538 for attending a total of eight full board
meetings.
The average age of the Lehman board's risk
committee was just under seventy. The committee was chaired by the
eighty-one-year-old economist Henry Kaufman, who had last worked at a Wall
Street investment bank some twenty years in the past and then started a
consulting firm. He is exactly the type of director found on many boards—a
person whose prestigious credentials are meant to reassure shareholders and
regulators that the company is being well monitored and advised. Then they
are ignored.
Kaufman had been on the Lehman board for thirteen
years. Even in 2006 and 2007, as Lehman's borrowing skyrocketed and the firm
was vastly increasing its holdings of very risky securities and commercial
real estate, the risk committee met only twice each year. Kaufman was known
as "Dr. Doom" back in the 1980s because of his consistently pessimistic
forecasts as Salomon Brothers' chief economist, but he seems not to have
been very persuasive with Lehman's executives in getting them to limit the
massive borrowing and risks they were taking on as the mortgage bubble
continued to over-inflate.
In an April 2008 interview, Kaufman offered an
insight that might have been more timely and helpful a few years earlier in
both the Lehman boardroom and Washington, D.C.: "If we don't improve the
supervision and oversight over financial institutions, in another seven,
eight, nine, or ten years, we may have a crisis that's bigger than the one
we have today. . . . Usually what's happened is that financial markets move
to the competitive edge of risk-taking unless there is some constraint."
With little to no internal supervision, oversight, or constraint having been
provided by its board, the bigger crisis for Lehman came sooner rather than
later, and it collapsed just four and a half months later.
After Lehman's demise, Kaufman has continued to
offer advice to others. Without a trace of irony or guilt, he said to
another interviewer in July 2009, "If you want to take risks, you've got to
have the capital to do it. But, you can't do it with other people's money
where the other people are not well informed about the risk taking of that
institution." In his recent book on financial system reform (which largely
blames the Federal Reserve for the financial meltdown and has an entire
section listing his own "prophetic" warnings about the economy), Kaufman
neglects to mention either his role at Lehman or his missing the warning
signs when he personally invested and lost millions in Bernie Madoff's Ponzi
scheme. He does, however, note that "The shabby events of the recent past
demonstrate that people in finance cannot and should not escape public
scrutiny."
Dr. Doom did heed his own economic advice, while
providing an instructive case of exquisite timing—as well as of having your
cake, eating it too, and then patting yourself on the back for warning
others of the caloric dangers of cake. Lehman securities filings show that
about ten months before Lehman stock went to zero, Kaufman cashed in more
than half of the remaining stock options that had been given to him for
protecting shareholders' interests. He made nearly $2 million in profits.
"The Lehman board was a joke and a disgrace," said
a former senior investment banker who now serves as a director for several
S&P 500 companies. "Asleep at the switch doesn't begin to describe it." The
autocratic Richard Fuld, whose nickname at the firm was "the Gorilla," had
joined Lehman in 1969 when his air force career ended after he had a
fistfight with a commanding officer. He served since 1994 as both CEO and
chairman of the board, an inherent conflict in roles that still occurs at 61
percent of the largest U.S. companies.
A lawsuit filed in early 2009 by the New Jersey
Department of Investment alleges that $118 million in losses to the state
pension fund resulted from fraud and misrepresentation by Lehman's
executives and the board. The role of the board is described in scathing
terms:
The supine Board that defendant Fuld handpicked provided no backstop to
Lehman's executives' zealous approach to the Company's risk profile, real
estate portfolio, and their own compensation. The Director Defendants were
considered inattentive, elderly, and woefully short on relevant structured
finance background. The composition of the Board according to a recent
filing in the Lehman bankruptcy allowed defendant "Fuld to marginalize the
Directors, who tolerated an absence of checks and balances at Lehman." Due
to his long tenure and ubiquity at Lehman, defendant Fuld has been able to
consolidate his power to a remarkable degree. Defendant Fuld was both the
Chairman of the Board and the CEO . . . The Director Defendants acted as a
rubber stamp for the actions of Lehman's senior management. There was little
turnover on the Board. By the date of Lehman's collapse, more than half of
the Director Defendants had served for twelve or more years."
John Helyar is one of the authors of Barbarians
at the Gate, which documents the fall of RJR Nabisco in the 1980s. He
also cowrote a five-part series for Bloomberg.com on Lehman Brothers'
collapse. Helyar was a keen observer of those companies' boards when they
folded. "The few people on the Lehman board who actually had relevant
experience were kind of like an all-star team from the 1980s back for an
old-timers' game in which they weren't even up on the new rules and
equipment," Helyar told us. "Fuld selected them because he didn't want to be
challenged by anyone. Most of the top executives didn't understand the risks
they were taking, so can you imagine a septuagenarian sitting in the
boardroom getting a PowerPoint presentation on synthetic CDOs and credit
default swaps?"
In a conference call announcing the firm's 2008
third-quarter loss of $3.9 billion, Fuld told analysts, "I must say the
board's been wonderfully supportive." Four days later the 159-year-old
company declared the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history. The Lehman
shareholders, represented by the board, lost more than $45 billion.
THE DISASTERS at Merrill Lynch, GM, and Lehman were
not isolated instances of hubris, incompetence, and negligence. Similar
stories of boards and CEOs failing to do their jobs on behalf of the
companies' owners can be told about Countrywide, Citigroup, AIG, Fannie Mae,
Bank of America, Washington Mutual, Wachovia, Sovereign Bank, Bear Stearns,
and most of the other companies directly involved in the recent financial
meltdown, as well as many nonfinancial businesses whose governance-related
troubles came to light in the resulting recession. In the short term, the
result has been the loss of hundreds of billions of dollars for
shareholders, and economic devastation for employees and others caught in
the wake. In the long term, a growing crisis of confidence among investors
could cripple our economy, as capital is diverted away from American
corporate debt and equity markets and companies suffocate from lack of
funding.
Investor mistrust takes hold fast and punishes
instantly in the modern economy. Enron, once America's seventh-largest
corporation, crashed in a mere three weeks once the scope of its failures
and corruption was exposed and its investors and creditors began to withdraw
their funds. Today's collapses can happen even faster. Because the companies
are larger, their operations more interconnected, and their financing so
complex and subject to hair-trigger reactions from institutional investors
with enormous trading positions, the impacts are greatly magnified and
reverberate globally. Bear Stearns went from its CEO claiming on CNBC that
"our liquidity position has not changed at all" to being insolvent two days
later.
Of the world's two hundred largest economies, more
than half are corporations. They have more influence on our lives than any
other institution—not just profound economic clout, but also enormous
political, environmental, and civic power. As they have grown in influence,
they have also become more concentrated: In 1950, the 100 largest industrial
companies owned approximately 40 percent of total U.S. industrial assets; by
the 1990s, they controlled 75 percent. Global corporations have assumed the
authority and impact that formerly belonged to governments and churches.
Boards of directors are supposed to be the most important element of
corporate leadership—the ultimate power in this economic universe—and while
some companies have made progress during the past decade in improving
corporate governance, the recurring waves of scandals and the blatant
victimization of shareholders that appear in the wake of economic crashes
prove that our approach to leading corporations is badly in need of
fundamental reform.
Ideally, a board of directors is informed, active,
and advisory, and maintains an open but challenging relationship with the
company's CEO. In reality, this rarely happens. In most cases, board members
are beholden to CEOs for their very presence on the board, for their
renominations, their compensation, their perquisites, their committee
assignments, their agendas, and virtually all their information. Even
well-intentioned directors find themselves hopelessly compromised, badly
conflicted, and essentially powerless. Not that all blame can be put on
bullying, manipulative CEOs; many boards simply fail to do their jobs. They
allow themselves to be fooled by fraudulent accounting; they look away
during the squandering of company resources; they miss obvious strategic
shifts in the marketplace; they are blind to massive risks their firms
assume; they approve excessive executive pay; they neglect to prepare for
crises; they ignore blatant conflicts of interest; they condone a lax
ethical tone. The head of one of the world's largest and most successful
private equity firms told us that he considers the current model of
corporate boards "fundamentally broken."
Continued in article
Hope this helps,
Bob Jensen
Question
Why do sales (cash) discounts have such high annual percentage rates?
Hi Pat and Tom,
In theory there may be justification for not treating the entire
sales discount as interest revenue. When setting the amount of a sales
discount, a vendor may be factoring in considerations other than time value
of money.
There’s a concise illustration at
http://snipurl.com/grossnet

Note the last paragraph and the wording “about the same.”
There’s another consideration that I’ve not seen raised anywhere.
If sales discounts are recorded net and the “Discount Not Taken” account is
considered interest revenue, some discounts are so great that they might be
a violation of usury law in many states of the United States.
This begs the question of why sales discounts have such high APR
amounts. The reason I think is that there are factors other than time value
of money built into sales discounts. One such factor is that sales discounts
may reduce the probabilities of bad debts. If a customer is on the edge and
has to ration payoffs of accounts payable, the vendors with the highest
sales discounts are likely to be paid off much faster than vendors with no
sales discounts. It would be stupid for a customer to miss a sales discount
and then ration payments of all accounts due at the end of the month.
Or put it in another way. Bad debt expense in reality is factored
into the gross price of goods sold by vendors on account. Vendors that offer
sales discounts are really rewarding customers who won’t become bad debts.
And there is another factor in setting a high APR for sales
discounts. Vendors may be trying to buy customer loyalty and goodwill among
their best customers who keep coming back in part because of the high sales
discounts (without reasoning that the vendor might treat them even better
with a lower gross price). This is what I would call a Dan Ariely argument
---
http://web.mit.edu/ariely/www/MIT/
Here’s the traditional basic accounting way “gross” sales
discounts have been taught for maybe 100 years or more.
Video: Sales Discounts ---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HV4ana221HU
It’s harder to find a video on the net method, possibly because
basic accounting instructors often only teach the gross method so as not to
complicate accounting instruction at the very earliest stages.
Bob Jensen
New Accounting Rule Lays Bare A Firm's Liability if
Transaction Is Later Disallowed by the IRS
CPA auditors have always considered their primary role as attesting to
full and fair corporate disclosures to investors and creditors under Generally
Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). Now it turns out that this extends,
perhaps unexpectedly, to the government as well.
"How Accounting Rule (FIN
48) Led to Probe Disclosure of Tax Savings Firms Regard as Vulnerable Leaves
Senate Panel a Trail," by Jesse Drucker, The Wall Street Journal,
September 11, 2007; Page A5 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118947026768923240.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
The probe, by the Senate's Permanent Subcommittee
on Investigations, appears to have been sparked by an accounting rule known
as FIN 48, which took effect in January. The rule for the first time
requires companies to disclose how much they have set aside to pay tax
authorities if certain tax-cutting transactions are successfully challenged
by the government. The disclosures require companies to attach a dollar
figure to tax-savings arrangements they think could be vulnerable.
Although intended to inform investors, the
disclosures also serve as a kind of road map for government authorities,
guiding them to companies that may have taken an aggressive stance on
tax-related arrangements.
The probe, by the Senate's Permanent Subcommittee
on Investigations, appears to have been sparked by an accounting rule known
as FIN 48, which took effect in January. The rule for the first time
requires companies to disclose how much they have set aside to pay tax
authorities if certain tax-cutting transactions are successfully challenged
by the government. The disclosures require companies to attach a dollar
figure to tax-savings arrangements they think could be vulnerable.
Although intended to inform investors, the
disclosures also serve as a kind of road map for government authorities,
guiding them to companies that may have taken an aggressive stance on
tax-related arrangements.
The FIN 48 disclosures generally reveal how much a
company has set aside in an accounting reserve called "unrecognized tax
benefits." The reserve represents the portion of the tax benefits realized
on a company's tax return that also hasn't been recognized in its financial
reporting.
In the letters, sent Aug. 23, Senate investigators
seek to obtain more details about the underlying transactions in the FIN 48
disclosures. One letter viewed by The Wall Street Journal asks the companies
to "describe any United States tax position or group of similar tax
positions that represents five percent or more of your total [unrecognized
tax benefit] for the period, including in the description of each whether
the tax position involved foreign entities or jurisdictions."
The subcommittee, led by Sen. Carl Levin (D.,
Mich.), has held numerous hearings on tax shelters, tax avoidance, and the
law firms and accounting firms that set up such structures.
The Senate's inquiry also includes questions about
other tax-cutting arrangements. For tax-cutting transactions on which
companies spent at least $1 million for legal fees or other costs, Senate
investigators are asking companies to identify the amount of the tax
benefit, as well as "the tax professional(s) who planned or designed the
transaction or structure and the law firm(s) that authored the tax opinion
or advice."
Continued in article
"Accounting for Uncertainty (FIN 48)," by Damon M. Fleming and Gerald
E. Whittenburg, Journal of Accountancy, October 2007 --- ---
http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/oct2007/uncertainty.htm
FASB Interpretation no. 48 (FIN 48), Accounting for
Uncertainty in Income Taxes, sets the threshold for recognizing the benefits
of tax return positions in financial statements as “more likely than not”
(greater than 50%) to be sustained by a taxing authority. The effect is most
pronounced where the uncertainty arises in the timing, amount or validity of
a deduction.
Thresholds applicable to tax practitioners have
been revised from a “realistic possibility” to “more likely than not” that a
tax position will be sustained, as set forth in the U.S. Troop Readiness,
Veterans’ Care, Katrina Recovery, and Iraq Accountability Appropriations Act
of 2007 that was signed into law in May.
A third threshold, that a tax position possesses a
“reasonable basis” in tax law, has been regarded as reflecting 25%
certainty. In addition, taxpayers are subject to penalties if an
understatement of liability is caused by a position that lacks “substantial
authority,” a threshold for which no percentage of certainty has been
established but has been regarded as between the reasonable-basis and
more-likely-than-not standards.
Being familiar with the different thresholds for
the reporting of uncertain tax positions can help CPAs effectively advocate
for their clients’ tax positions and be impartial in financial reporting.
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review
on June 1, 2007
Lifting the Veil on Tax Risk
by Jesse Drucker
The Wall Street Journal
May 25, 2007
Page: C1
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118005869184314270.html?mod=djem_jiewr_ac
TOPICS: Accounting,
Accounting Theory, Advanced Financial Accounting, Disclosure
Requirements, Financial Accounting Standards Board, Financial
Analysis, Financial Statement Analysis, Income Taxes
SUMMARY: FIN
48, entitled Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes--An
Interpretation of FASB Statement No. 109, was issued in June 2006
with an effective date of fiscal years beginning after December 15,
2006. As stated on the FASB's web site, "This Interpretation
prescribes a recognition threshold and measurement attribute for the
financial statement recognition and measurement of a tax position
taken or expected to be taken in a tax return. This Interpretation
also provides guidance on derecognition, classification, interest
and penalties, accounting in interim periods, disclosure, and
transition." See the summary of this interpretation at
http://www.fasb.org/st/summary/finsum48.shtml As noted in this
article, "in the past, companies had to reveal little information
about transactions that could face some risk in an audit by the IRS
or other government entities." Further, some concern about use of
deferred tax liability accounts to create so-called "cookie jar
reserves" useful in smoothing income contributed to development of
this interpretation's recognition, timing and disclosure
requirements. The article highlights an analysis of 361 companies by
Credit Suisse Group to identify those with the largest recorded
liabilities as an indicator of risk of future settlement with the
IRS over disputed amounts. One example given in this article is
Merck's $2.3 billion settlement with the IRS in February 2007 over a
Bermuda tax shelter; another is the same company's current dispute
with Canadian taxing authorities over transfer pricing. Financial
statement analysis procedures to compare the size of the uncertain
tax liability to other financial statement components and follow up
discussions with the companies showing the highest uncertain tax
positions also is described.
QUESTIONS:
1.) Summarize the requirements of Financial Interpretation No. 48,
Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes--An Interpretation of
FASB Statement No. 109 (FIN 48).
2.) In describing the FIN 48 requirements, the author of this
article states that "until now, there was generally no way to know
about" the accounting for reserves for uncertain tax positions. Why
is that the case?
3.) Some firms may develop "FIN 48 opinions" every time a tax
position is taken that could be questioned by the IRS or other tax
governing authority. Why might companies naturally want to avoid
having to document these positions very clearly in their own
records?
4.) Credit Suisse analysts note that the new FIN 48 disclosures
about unrecognized tax benefits provide investors with information
about risks companies are undertaking. Explain how this information
can be used for this purpose.
5.) How are the absolute amounts of unrecognized tax benefits
compared to other financial statement categories to provide a better
frame of reference for analysis? In your answer, propose a financial
statement ratio you feel is useful in assessing the risk described
in answer to question 4, and support your reasons for calculating
this amount.
6.) The amount of reserves recorded by Merck for unrecognized tax
benefits, tops the list from the analysis done by Credit Suisse and
the one done by Professors Blouin, Gleason, Mills and Sikes. Based
only on the descriptions given in the article, how did the two
analyses differ in their measurements? What do you infer from the
fact that Merck is at the top of both lists?
7.) Why are transfer prices among international operations likely to
develop into uncertain tax positions?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
|
FIN 48
October 21, 2009 message from Dennis Beresford
[dberesfo@TERRY.UGA.EDU]
IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman spoke at a conference
of the National Association of Corporate Directors that I attended earlier
this week. He covered the income tax risk issues that directors should be
concerned about. I thought this was a very good summary of both what
auditors and tax accountants should be interested in and I refer interested
parties to his posted remarks at:
http://media-newswire.com/release_1103133.html
Denny Beresford
Bob Jensen's threads on FIN 48, 2009 ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#FIN48
Bob Jensen's taxation helpers are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/BookBob1.htm#010304Taxation
Deferred Tax Asset Teaching Case
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on May 27, 2011
Sony Expects Hefty Loss
by: Juro Osawa
May 24, 2011
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Earning
Announcements, Earnings Forecasts, Income Taxes, Supply Chains, Tax
Deferrals
SUMMARY: "Sony Corp.
warned it expects to post an annual loss of $3.2 billion, reversing a
previous prediction of a return to profitability as the Japanese electronics
giant struggles to recover from the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Sony
said it would take a $4.4 billion write-off on a certain portion of deferred
tax assets in Japan, in what would be the company's third straight year of
red ink....Sony said that under U.S. accounting standards, a third straight
year of losses from the part of the company's operations based in Japan-due
partly to the yen's strength-raised questions over the validity of its
deferred tax assets in Japan."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article is excellent for class use to cover deferred tax asset valuation
allowances but it also touches on supply chain issues. The article is as
well useful to discuss management forecasts (guidance), interim and annual
reporting practices in Japan, foreign private issuers' filings on Form 20-F,
and Sony's use of U.S. GAAP. One question also asks the students to consider
whether the effects of the Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami should be
expected to be treated as extraordinary under U.S. GAAP. By the time
students answer this last question, the company should have made its filing
on Form 20-F which will allow for verification of the assessment.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) Summarize your understanding of the announcement
that Sony has made and that is reported in this article. For what time
period is the company reporting? In your answer, comment on the usual fiscal
year-end date for Japanese companies.
2. (Introductory) What is a deferred tax asset? What is a deferred
tax asset valuation allowance?
3. (Introductory) For what reasons did Sony Corp. record deferred
tax assets? Why must the company now write them down by establishing
valuation allowances? In what reporting period will the company show the
charge for this write down as a deduction in determining net income?
4. (Advanced) Why does this deferred tax asset write-down become an
"admission that the March disaster has shattered its [Sony's] expectations
for a robust current fiscal year"?
5. (Advanced) Access the Filing on Form 6-K which describes the
investor briefing regarding the revision of management's forecast of
consolidated results that is reported on in thie article. The filing is
available at
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/313838/000115752311003320/a6733820.htm
Explain your understanding of the importance of the taxable income shown by
"Sony Corporation as an unconsolidated unit and its consolidated tax filing
group companies in Japan" to the loss that will be reported by Sony.
6. (Advanced) Why does Sony focus on the impact of the Japanese
taxable income on accounting under U.S. GAAP? In your answer, comment on the
financial reporting requirements for companies traded on U.S. stock
exchanges.
7. (Introductory) What was the impact of the "Great East Japan
Earthquake" on sales and operating profits in the last fiscal year? In the
current year?
8. (Advanced) Do you think that the impact of the earthquake and
tsunami described above will be give extraordinary item treatment under U.S.
GAAP? Support your answer.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"Sony Expects Hefty Loss," by: Juro Osawa, The Wall Street Journal,
May 24, 2011 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304520804576340750302051690.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
Sony Corp. on Monday said it expects to post a $3.2
billion net loss for the just-ended fiscal year, blaming a $4.4 billion
write-off on a certain portion of deferred tax assets in Japan, in what
would be the company's third straight year of red ink.
The write-off is an admission from the
entertainment and electronics conglomerate that the March 11 earthquake and
tsunami has shattered its expectations for a robust current fiscal year.
While the disaster's direct impact on the company's operating profit wasn't
large, the post-quake outlook put Sony in a position where it had to set
aside reserves of 360 billion yen on certain deferred tax assets in its
fiscal fourth quarter.
Sony lowered its net outlook for the fiscal year
that ended in March to a loss of 260 billion yen from the profit of 70
billion yen it forecast in February. In the previous fiscal year, the
company racked up a loss of 40.8 billion yen.
The company, however, said it predicts a return to
profitability for the current business year through March 2012.
Sony said that under U.S. accounting standards, a
third straight year of losses from the part of the company's operations
based in Japan—due partly to the yen's strength—raised questions over the
validity of its deferred tax assets in Japan. But until March, Sony saw no
need to write off the assets.
"Until the quake hit, we had been counting on a
considerable recovery in earnings," in the current fiscal year, Sony Chief
Financial Office Masaru Kato said at a news briefing.
But conditions have changed drastically since the
earthquake and tsunami. In the wake of the disaster, Sony temporarily shut
10 plants in and around the quake-hit region. All but one of those plants
have since resumed operations, at least partially.
Sony said the disaster siphoned off 22 billion yen
from the company's sales and 17 billion yen from its operating profit in the
just-ended business year.
The company left its forecast for operating profit
unchanged at 200 billion yen, but lowered its revenue outlook to 7.18
trillion yen from 7.2 trillion yen.
Sony didn't disclose what it expects for the fiscal
fourth quarter, but according to a Dow Jones Newswires calculation, it is
estimated to have posted a net loss of 389.2 billion yen for the
January-March quarter. That compares with a loss of 56.57 billion yen a year
earlier.
Like other Japanese auto and electronics makers,
Sony continues to face uncertainties because its recovery prospects are
partially dependent on parts and materials suppliers, many of which have
also been affected by the quake.
"The supply-chain situation should recover
significantly in the second half of this fiscal year," Mr. Kato said.
In the current fiscal year, Sony estimates that the
quake is likely to have a negative impact of about 440 billion yen on sales
and 150 billion yen on operating profit, mainly through supply-chain
disruptions.
Despite the quake's expected impact, Sony said it
expects that its revenue will increase this fiscal year, and that its
operating profit will be about the same as the previous fiscal year.
Continued in article
"CLEAN UP THE BALANCE SHEET: GET RID OF DEFERRED TAXES," by Anthony H.
Catanach and J. Edward Ketz, Grumpy Old Accountants, August 13, 2012 ---
http://blogs.smeal.psu.edu/grumpyoldaccountants/archives/714
Jensen Comment
I don't always agree with the the Grumps, especially on lease accounting where
they never really address really, really big issue of operating leases --- the
issue of lease renewals. In the case of deferred taxes I'm inclined to agree but
for a different reason. Deferred taxes constitute Reason 1,638,211 on how the
accounting standard setters relegated the concept of earnings to a black hole in
the universe.
Lifting the Veil on Tax Risk
by Jesse Drucker
The Wall Street Journal
May 25, 2007
Page: C1
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118005869184314270.html?mod=djem_jiewr_ac
TOPICS: Accounting, Accounting Theory, Advanced
Financial Accounting, Disclosure Requirements, Financial Accounting
Standards Board, Financial Analysis, Financial Statement Analysis, Income
Taxes
SUMMARY: FIN 48, entitled Accounting for Uncertainty in
Income Taxes--An Interpretation of FASB Statement No. 109, was issued in
June 2006 with an effective date of fiscal years beginning after December
15, 2006. As stated on the FASB's web site, "This Interpretation prescribes
a recognition threshold and measurement attribute for the financial
statement recognition and measurement of a tax position taken or expected to
be taken in a tax return. This Interpretation also provides guidance on
derecognition, classification, interest and penalties, accounting in interim
periods, disclosure, and transition." See the summary of this interpretation
at
http://www.fasb.org/st/summary/finsum48.shtml As noted in this article,
"in the past, companies had to reveal little information about transactions
that could face some risk in an audit by the IRS or other government
entities." Further, some concern about use of deferred tax liability
accounts to create so-called "cookie jar reserves" useful in smoothing
income contributed to development of this interpretation's recognition,
timing and disclosure requirements. The article highlights an analysis of
361 companies by Credit Suisse Group to identify those with the largest
recorded liabilities as an indicator of risk of future settlement with the
IRS over disputed amounts. One example given in this article is Merck's $2.3
billion settlement with the IRS in February 2007 over a Bermuda tax shelter;
another is the same company's current dispute with Canadian taxing
authorities over transfer pricing. Financial statement analysis procedures
to compare the size of the uncertain tax liability to other financial
statement components and follow up discussions with the companies showing
the highest uncertain tax positions also is described.
QUESTIONS:
1.) Summarize the requirements of Financial Interpretation No. 48,
Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes--An Interpretation of FASB
Statement No. 109 (FIN 48).
2.) In describing the FIN 48 requirements, the author of this article states
that "until now, there was generally no way to know about" the accounting
for reserves for uncertain tax positions. Why is that the case?
3.) Some firms may develop "FIN 48 opinions" every time a tax position is
taken that could be questioned by the IRS or other tax governing authority.
Why might companies naturally want to avoid having to document these
positions very clearly in their own records?
4.) Credit Suisse analysts note that the new FIN 48 disclosures about
unrecognized tax benefits provide investors with information about risks
companies are undertaking. Explain how this information can be used for this
purpose.
5.) How are the absolute amounts of unrecognized tax benefits compared to
other financial statement categories to provide a better frame of reference
for analysis? In your answer, propose a financial statement ratio you feel
is useful in assessing the risk described in answer to question 4, and
support your reasons for calculating this amount.
6.) The amount of reserves recorded by Merck for unrecognized tax benefits,
tops the list from the analysis done by Credit Suisse and the one done by
Professors Blouin, Gleason, Mills and Sikes. Based only on the descriptions
given in the article, how did the two analyses differ in their measurements?
What do you infer from the fact that Merck is at the top of both lists?
7.) Why are transfer prices among international operations likely to develop
into uncertain tax positions?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on May 27,
2011
Sony Expects Hefty Loss
by: Juro Osawa
May 24, 2011
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Earning
Announcements, Earnings Forecasts, Income Taxes, Supply Chains, Tax
Deferrals
SUMMARY: "Sony
Corp. warned it expects to post an annual loss of $3.2 billion, reversing a
previous prediction of a return to profitability as the Japanese electronics
giant struggles to recover from the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Sony
said it would take a $4.4 billion write-off on a certain portion of deferred
tax assets in Japan, in what would be the company's third straight year of
red ink....Sony said that under U.S. accounting standards, a third straight
year of losses from the part of the company's operations based in Japan-due
partly to the yen's strength-raised questions over the validity of its
deferred tax assets in Japan."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article is excellent for class use to cover deferred tax asset valuation
allowances but it also touches on supply chain issues. The article is as
well useful to discuss management forecasts (guidance), interim and annual
reporting practices in Japan, foreign private issuers' filings on Form 20-F,
and Sony's use of U.S. GAAP. One question also asks the students to consider
whether the effects of the Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami should be
expected to be treated as extraordinary under U.S. GAAP. By the time
students answer this last question, the company should have made its filing
on Form 20-F which will allow for verification of the assessment.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) Summarize your understanding of the announcement
that Sony has made and that is reported in this article. For what time
period is the company reporting? In your answer, comment on the usual fiscal
year-end date for Japanese companies.
2. (Introductory) What is a deferred tax asset? What is a deferred
tax asset valuation allowance?
3. (Introductory) For what reasons did Sony Corp. record deferred
tax assets? Why must the company now write them down by establishing
valuation allowances? In what reporting period will the company show the
charge for this write down as a deduction in determining net income?
4. (Advanced) Why does this deferred tax asset write-down become an
"admission that the March disaster has shattered its [Sony's] expectations
for a robust current fiscal year"?
5. (Advanced) Access the Filing on Form 6-K which describes the
investor briefing regarding the revision of management's forecast of
consolidated results that is reported on in thie article. The filing is
available at
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/313838/000115752311003320/a6733820.htm
Explain your understanding of the importance of the taxable income shown by
"Sony Corporation as an unconsolidated unit and its consolidated tax filing
group companies in Japan" to the loss that will be reported by Sony.
6. (Advanced) Why does Sony focus on the impact of the Japanese
taxable income on accounting under U.S. GAAP? In your answer, comment on the
financial reporting requirements for companies traded on U.S. stock
exchanges.
7. (Introductory) What was the impact of the "Great East Japan
Earthquake" on sales and operating profits in the last fiscal year? In the
current year?
8. (Advanced) Do you think that the impact of the earthquake and
tsunami described above will be give extraordinary item treatment under U.S.
GAAP? Support your answer.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"Sony Expects Hefty Loss," by: Juro Osawa, The Wall Street Journal,
May 24, 2011 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304520804576340750302051690.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
Sony Corp. on Monday said it expects to post
a $3.2 billion net loss for the just-ended fiscal year, blaming a $4.4
billion write-off on a certain portion of deferred tax assets in Japan, in
what would be the company's third straight year of red ink.
The write-off is an admission from the
entertainment and electronics conglomerate that the March 11 earthquake and
tsunami has shattered its expectations for a robust current fiscal year.
While the disaster's direct impact on the company's operating profit wasn't
large, the post-quake outlook put Sony in a position where it had to set
aside reserves of 360 billion yen on certain deferred tax assets in its
fiscal fourth quarter.
Sony lowered its net outlook for the fiscal
year that ended in March to a loss of 260 billion yen from the profit of 70
billion yen it forecast in February. In the previous fiscal year, the
company racked up a loss of 40.8 billion yen.
The company, however, said it predicts a
return to profitability for the current business year through March 2012.
Sony said that under U.S. accounting
standards, a third straight year of losses from the part of the company's
operations based in Japan—due partly to the yen's strength—raised questions
over the validity of its deferred tax assets in Japan. But until March, Sony
saw no need to write off the assets.
"Until the quake hit, we had been counting
on a considerable recovery in earnings," in the current fiscal year, Sony
Chief Financial Office Masaru Kato said at a news briefing.
But conditions have changed drastically
since the earthquake and tsunami. In the wake of the disaster, Sony
temporarily shut 10 plants in and around the quake-hit region. All but one
of those plants have since resumed operations, at least partially.
Sony said the disaster siphoned off 22
billion yen from the company's sales and 17 billion yen from its operating
profit in the just-ended business year.
The company left its forecast for operating
profit unchanged at 200 billion yen, but lowered its revenue outlook to 7.18
trillion yen from 7.2 trillion yen.
Sony didn't disclose what it expects for the
fiscal fourth quarter, but according to a Dow Jones Newswires calculation,
it is estimated to have posted a net loss of 389.2 billion yen for the
January-March quarter. That compares with a loss of 56.57 billion yen a year
earlier.
Like other Japanese auto and electronics
makers, Sony continues to face uncertainties because its recovery prospects
are partially dependent on parts and materials suppliers, many of which have
also been affected by the quake.
"The supply-chain situation should recover
significantly in the second half of this fiscal year," Mr. Kato said.
In the current fiscal year, Sony estimates
that the quake is likely to have a negative impact of about 440 billion yen
on sales and 150 billion yen on operating profit, mainly through
supply-chain disruptions.
Despite the quake's expected impact, Sony
said it expects that its revenue will increase this fiscal year, and that
its operating profit will be about the same as the previous fiscal year.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on FIN 48 are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory02.htm#FIN48
Teaching Case
When Rosie Scenario waved goodbye "Adjusted Consolidated Segment Operating
Income"
From The Wall Street Journal Weekly Accounting Review on August 19,
2011
Groupon Bows to Pressure
by:
Shayndi Raice and Lynn Cowan
Aug 11, 2011
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Advanced Financial Accounting, SEC, Securities and Exchange
Commission, Segment Analysis
SUMMARY: In filing its prospectus for its initial public offering
(IPO), Groupon has removed from its documents "...an unconventional
accounting measurement that had attracted scrutiny from securities
regulators [adjusted consolidated segment operating income]. The unusual
measure, which the e-commerce had invented, paints a more robust picture of
its performance. Removal of the measure was in response to pressure from the
Securities and Exchange Commission...."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The article is useful to introduce segment
reporting and the weaknesses of the required management reporting approach.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) What is Groupon's business model? How does it
generate revenues? What are its costs? Hint, to answer this question you may
access the Groupon, Inc. Form S-1 Registration Statement filed on June 2,
011 available on the SEC web site at
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1490281/000104746911005613/a2203913zs-1.htm
2. (Advanced) Summarize the reporting that must be provided for any
business's operating segments. In your answer, provide a reference to
authoritative accounting literature.
3. (Advanced) Why must the amounts disclosed by operating segments
be reconciled to consolidated totals shown on the primary financial
statements for an entire company?
4. (Advanced) Access the Groupon, Inc. Form S-1 Registration
Statement filed on June 2, 011 and proceed to the company's financial
statements, available on the SEC web site at
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1490281/000104746911005613/a2203913zs-1.htm#dm79801_selected_consolidated_financial_and_other_data
Alternatively, proceed from the registration statement, then click on Table
of Contents, then Selected Consolidated Financial and Other Data. Explain
what Groupon calls "adjusted consolidated segment operating income" (ACSOI).
What operating segments does Groupon, Inc., show?
5. (Introductory) Why is Groupon's "ACSOI" considered to be a
"non-GAAP financial measure"?
6. (Advanced) How is it possible that this measure of operating
performance could be considered to comply with U.S. GAAP requirements? Base
your answer on your understanding of the need to reconcile amounts disclosed
by operating segments to the company's consolidated totals. If it is
accessible to you, the second related article in CFO Journal may help answer
this question.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
Groupon's Accounting Lingo Gets Scrutiny
by Shayndi Raice and Nick Wingfield
Jul 28, 2011
Page: A1
CFO Report: Operating Segments Remain Accounting Gray Area
by Emily Chasan
Aug 15, 2011
Page: CFO
"Groupon Bows to Pressure," by: Shayndi Raice and Lynn Cowan, The Wall
Street Journal, August 11, 2011 ---
https://mail.google.com/mail/?shva=1#inbox/131e06c48071898b
Groupon Inc. removed from its initial public
offering documents an unconventional accounting measurement that had
attracted scrutiny from securities regulators.
The unusual measure, which the e-commerce had
invented, paints a more robust picture of its performance. Removal of the
measure was in response to pressure from the Securities and Exchange
Commission, a person familiar with the matter said.
In revised documents filed Wednesday with the SEC,
the company removed the controversial measure, which had been highlighted in
the first three pages of its previous filing. But Groupon's chief executive
defended the term Wednesday. [GROUPON] Getty Images
Groupon, headquarters above, expects to raise about
$750 million.
Groupon had highlighted something it called
"adjusted consolidated segment operating income", or ACSOI. The measurement,
which doesn't include subscriber-acquisitions expenses such as marketing
costs, doesn't conform to generally accepted accounting principles.
Investors and analysts have said ACSOI draws
attention away from Groupon's marketing spending, which is causing big net
losses.
The company also disclosed Wednesday that its loss
more than doubled in the second quarter from a year ago, even as revenue
increased more than ten times.
By leaving ACSOI out of its income statements, the
company hopes to avoid further scrutiny from the SEC, the person familiar
with the matter said. The commission declined comment.
Groupon in June reported ACSOI of $60.6 million for
last year and $81.6 million for the first quarter of 2011. Under generally
accepted accounting principles, the company generated operating losses of
$420.3 million and $117.1 million during those periods.
Wednesday's filing included a letter from Groupon
Chief Executive Andrew Mason defending ACSOI. The company excludes marketing
expenses related to subscriber acquisition because "they are an up-front
investment to acquire new subscribers that we expect to end when this period
of rapid expansion in our subscriber base concludes and we determine that
the returns on such investment are no longer attractive," the letter said.
There was no mention of when that expansion will
end, but the person familiar with the matter said the company reevaluates
the figures weekly.
Groupon said it spent $345.1 million on online
marketing initiatives to acquire subscribers in the first half and that it
expects "to continue to expend significant amounts to acquire additional
subscribers."
The latest SEC filing also contains new financial
data. Groupon on Wednesday reported second-quarter revenue of $878 million,
up 36% from the first quarter. While the company's growth is still rapid,
the pace has slowed. Groupon's revenue jumped 63% in the first quarter from
the fourth.
The company's second-quarter loss was $102.7
million, flat sequentially and wider than the year-earlier loss of $35.9
million.
Groupon expects to raise about $750 million in a
mid-September IPO that could value the company at $20 billion.
The path to going public hasn't been easy. The
company had to file an amendment to its original SEC filing after a Groupon
executive told Bloomberg News the company would be "wildly profitable" just
three days after its IPO filing. Speaking publicly about the financial
projections of a company that has filed to go public is barred by SEC
regulations. Groupon said the comments weren't intended for publication.
Continued in article
From The Wall Street Journal Weekly Accounting Review on September 30,
2011
Groupon Unsure on IPO Time
by:
Shayndi Raice and Randall Smith
Sep 26, 2011
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
Click here to view the video on WSJ.com ![WSJ Video]()
TOPICS: Accounting Changes and Error Corrections, Audit Report,
Auditing, Disclosure, Disclosure Requirements, Financial Accounting,
Financial Reporting, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission
SUMMARY: This article presents financial reporting and auditing
issues stemming from the Groupon planned IPO. Groupon originally filed for
an initial public offering in June 2011. At the time, the filing contained a
measure Adjusted Consolidated Segment Operating Income that is a non-GAAP
measure of performance. The SEC at the time required the company to change
its filing to use GAAP-based measures of performance. The SEC has continued
to scrutinize the Groupon financial statements and has required the company
to report revenue based only on the net receipts to the company from sales
of its coupons after sharing proceeds with the businesses for which it makes
the coupon offers.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The article is useful in financial
accounting and auditing classes. Instructors of financial accounting classes
may use the article to discuss reporting of the change in measuring revenues
and related costs. Instructors of auditing classes may use the article to
discuss non-standard audit reports. Links to SEC filings are included in the
questions. The video is long; discussion of Groupon's issues stops at 5:30.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) According to the article, what accounting and
disclosure issues have delayed the initial public offering of shares of
Groupon, Inc.? What overall economic and financial factors are also
affecting this timing?
2. (Introductory) What was the problem with Groupon CEO Andrew
Mason's letter to Groupon employees? Do you think Mr. Mason intended for
this letter to be made public outside of Groupon? Should he have reasonably
expected that to happen?
3. (Advanced) What accounting change forced restatement of the
financial statements included in the Groupon IPO filing documents? You may
access information about this restatement directly at the live link included
in the online version of the article.
http://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/grouponrestatement20110923.pdf
4. (Introductory) According to the article, by how much was revenue
reduced due to this accounting change?
5. (Introductory) Access the full filing of the IPO documents on
the SEC's web site at
http://sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1490281/000104746911008207/a2205238zs-1a.htm
Proceed to the Consolidated Statements of Operations on page F-5. How are
these comparative statements presented to alert readers about the revenue
measurement issue?
6. (Advanced) Move back to examine the consolidated balance sheets
on page F-4. Do you think this accounting change for revenue measurement
affected net income as previously reported? Support your answer.
7. (Advanced) Proceed to footnote 2 on p. F-8. Does the disclosure
confirm your answer? Summarize the overall impact of these accounting
changes as described in this footnote.
8. (Advanced) What type of audit report has been issued on the
Groupon financial statements in this IPO filing? Explain the wording and
dating of the report that is required to fulfill requirements resulting from
the circumstances of these financial statements.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
Groupon's Fast-growing Business Faces a Churning Point
by:
Rolfe Winkler
Sep 26, 2011
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
Click here to view the video on WSJ.com ![WSJ Video]()
TOPICS: Cost Accounting, Cost Management, Disclosure, Financial
Statement Analysis, Managerial Accounting
SUMMARY: This article focuses on financial statement analysis of
the Groupon IPO filing documents including some references to cost measures.
"Forget the snappy 'adjusted consolidated segment operating income.' That
profit measure...was rightly rejected by regulators. It is the complete
absence of details on subscriber churn that is more problematic. How often
are folks unsubscribing from Groupon's daily emails?...The issue is
important since...the cost of adding new subscribers has increased quickly."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The article may be used in a financial
statement analysis or managerial accounting class.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) What is the overall concern about Groupon's
business condition that is expressed in this article?
2. (Advanced) The author states that the cost of adding new
subscribers has increased. How was this cost determined? How does this
calculation make the cost assessment comparable from one period to the next?
3. (Advanced) What does Groupon CEO Andrew Mason say about the
company's cost of acquiring customers? What income statement expense item
shows this cost? How does the increasing unit cost discussed in answer to
question 2 above bring the CEO's assertion into question?
4. (Advanced) In general, how does the author of this assess the
quality of the filing by Groupon for its initial public offering? Why should
that assessment impact the thoughts of an investor considering buying the
Groupon stock when it is offered?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
Jensen Comment
In the 1990s, high tech companies resorted to various accounting gimmicks to
increase the price and demand for their equity shares ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm
"The trouble with tax tricks: Companies' tax avoidance schemes
inflate profits and distort the market – those responsible must be made to come
clean," by Prem Sikka, The Guardian, April 4, 2009 ---
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/apr/03/tax-avoidance-economics
Any action from G20 leaders who have focused on tax
havens and are promising reforms would be welcomed, as many countries are
losing tax revenues that could be used to improve social infrastructure.
However, none have made any commitment to force companies to explain how
their profits are inflated by tax avoidance schemes. This has serious
consequences for managing the domestic economy and equity between corporate
stakeholders.
Tax avoidance has created a mirage of large
corporate profits, which has turned many a CEO into a media star and even
secured knighthoods and peerages for some. Yet the profits have been
manufactured by a sleight of hand. Let us get back to the basics. To
generate wealth, at the very least, three kinds of capital need to be
invested. Shareholders invest finance capital and expect to receive a
return. Markets exert pressure for this to be maximised. Employees invest
human capital and expect to receive a return in the shape of wages and
salaries. Society invests social capital (health, education, family,
security, legal system) and expects a return in the shape of taxes. Over the
years, corporate tax rates have been reduced, but the return on social
capital is under constant attack by tax avoidance schemes. The aim is to
transfer the return accruing to society to shareholders. Companies have
reported higher profits, not because they undertook higher economic activity
or produced more desirable goods and services, but simply by expropriating
the returns due to society. This can only be maintained as long as
governments and civil society remain docile.
Companies engaging in tax avoidance schemes publish
higher profits but do not explain the impact of tax avoidance schemes on
these profits. Consequently, markets cannot make assessment of the quality
of their earnings, ie how much of the profit is due to production of goods
and services and thus sustainable, and how much is due to expropriation of
wealth from society. In the absence of such information, markets cannot make
a rational assessment of future cashflows accruing to shareholders.
Inevitably, market assessment of risk is mispriced and resources are
misallocated. By concealing tax avoidance schemes, companies have
deliberately provided misleading information to markets. The subsequent
imposition of penalties for tax avoidance, if any, will reduce future
company profits. But the cost will be borne by the then shareholders rather
than by the earlier shareholders who benefited from the tax scams. Thus the
secrecy surrounding tax avoidance schemes causes involuntary wealth
transfers and must also undermine confidence in corporations because they
are not willing to come clean.
Governments collect data on corporate profits to
gauge the health of the economy and develop economic policies. However, this
barometer is misleading too because it does not distinguish between normal
commercial sustainable profits and profits inflated by tax avoidance.
Company executives are major beneficiaries of tax
avoidance because their remuneration is frequently linked to reported
profits. They can increase these through production of goods and services,
but many have deliberately chosen to raid the taxes accruing to society.
Company executives could provide honest information and explain how much of
their remuneration is derived from the use of tax avoidance schemes, but
none have done so. As a result, no shareholder or regulator can make an
objective assessment of company performance, executive performance or
remuneration. By the time the taxman catches up with the company and imposes
fines and penalties, many an executive has moved on to newer pastures and is
not required to return remuneration to meet any portion of those penalties.
Seemingly, there are no penalties for artificially inflating executive
remuneration.
Under the UK Companies Act 2006, company directors
have a duty to avoid conflicts of interests. They are required to promote
the success of the company for the benefit of its members, which is taken to
mean "long-term increase in value" and must also publish "true and fair"
accounts. It is difficult to see how such obligations can be discharged by
systematic misleading of markets, shareholders, governments and taxpayers.
Hopefully, stakeholders will bring test cases.
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on March 23,
2012
Disney's $200 Million Charge
by:
Erica Orden
Mar 20, 2012
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Earnings Forecasts, Financial Accounting, Financial
Statements, Fiscal Year, Segment Analysis, Segment Margins
SUMMARY: The article describes a significant loss in one segment of
Walt Disney Co.'s operations, Studio Entertainment, based on poor box office
results for the first 10 days of the movie's release. The earnings guidance
being offered by management in advance of fiscal third quarter earnings, the
quarter will end at approximately March 31, 2012 based on a 52-week fiscal
year ending around September 30. Questions ask students to access financial
statement filings on Form 10-K and 10-Q to confirm information in the
article.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: NOTE: Instructors will want to delete the
following information: the answer to question 5 can be found in the 10-Q
filing for the quarter ended April 2, 2011 and filed on May 5, 2011, and
available at
http://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/viewer?action=view&cik=1001039&accession_number=0001193125-11-134405&xbrl_type=v.
Click on notes to financial statements, Segment Information, and see the $77
million segment operating income for the Studio Entertainment segment in the
second panel.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) What is the impact of one movie, "John Carter,"
on the operations of Walt Disney Co.?
2. (Introductory) Is this impact on Disney's total operations or
something else? Explain.
3. (Advanced) Based on information given in the article, determine
Walt Disney Co.'s fiscal year end date. Why do you think this company has
such a year end date?
4. (Advanced) Access the most recent filing of Walt Disney
Company's annual financial statements by clicking on the live link to Walt
Disney Co. in the article, scrolling down the page, and clicking on SEC
Filings in the lower right hand corner. Search for filings on Form 10-K.
Find information on Disney's operating segments and confirm your answers to
questions 2 and 3, explaining how you do so.
5. (Advanced) Disney "rarely offers such advance financial
guidance" as it is giving in the information on which this article reports.
Why do you think the company is doing so now?
6. (Advanced) According to the article, the expected loss of
between $80 million and $120 million Disney has announced compares to "an
operating profit of $77 million during the same quarter last year." In what
financial statement filing can you find that information?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"Disney's $200 Million Charge," by Erica Orden, The Wall Street Journal,
March 23, 2012 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304724404577291972883469132.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
Walt Disney Co. DIS +0.05% expects to lose $200
million on its science-fiction epic "John Carter," the company said on
Monday, citing the costly movie's weak box-office performance.
As a result, Disney added, its movie studio is
expected to report an operating loss of between $80 million and $120 million
for its fiscal second quarter, ending March 31. Disney won't report its
earnings for the quarter until May, and rarely offers such advance financial
guidance.
Walt Disney Co. DIS +0.05% expects to lose $200
million on its science-fiction epic "John Carter," the company said on
Monday, citing the costly movie's weak box-office performance.
As a result, Disney added, its movie studio is
expected to report an operating loss of between $80 million and $120 million
for its fiscal second quarter, ending March 31. Disney won't report its
earnings for the quarter until May, and rarely offers such advance financial
guidance.
Continued in article
Tutorial: FIN 48 from different perspectives
Financial Accounting Standards Board Interpretation
No. 48 (FIN 48), Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes, is intended to
substantially reduce uncertainty in accounting for income taxes. Its
implementation and infrastructure requirements, however, generate a great deal
of uncertainty. This feature provides an overview of FIN 48, addresses some of
its federal and international tax issues, as well as issues arising at the state
and local level.
AccountingWeb, June 2007 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=103625
"GM Will Book $39 Billion Charge Write-Down of Tax
Credits Indicates That Profits Won't Come in Near Term," by John D. Stoll,
The Wall Street Journal, November 7, 2007; Page A3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB119438884709884385.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
General Motors Corp. will take a $39 billion,
noncash charge to write down deferred-tax credits, a signal that it expects
to continue to struggle financially despite significant restructuring and
cost cutting in the past two years.
The deferred-tax assets stem from losses and could
be used to offset taxes on current or future profits for a certain number of
years.
In after-hours trading, GM fell 2.9% to $35.14.
Before the disclosure, its shares finished at $36.16, up 16 cents, or less
than 1%, in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.
GM, the world's largest auto maker in vehicle
sales, was to report third-quarter financial results today. The company,
which was stung by big losses in 2005 and 2006, said the write-down was
triggered by three main issues: a string of adjusted losses in core North
American operations and Germany over the past three years, weakness at its
GMAC Financial Services unit, and the long duration of tax-deferred assets.
GM had appeared to be making progress in stemming
its losses. Its global automotive operations were profitable in the first
half of the year. It recently signed a labor deal with the United Auto
Workers that allows it to establish an independent trust to absorb its
approximately $50 billion in hourly retiree health-care liabilities. The
move promises to significantly reduce GM's cash health-care expenses and
combine with other labor-cost cuts in creating a more profitable North
American arm.
If it returns to steady profits, GM could remove
the valuation allowance and reclaim some or all of the $39 billion in
deferred credits.
For now, the massive charge promises to devastate
GM's headline financial results for the third quarter, and for the year,
likely leading to the worst annual loss in its 99-year history. Although the
charge is an accounting loss that doesn't involve cash, it is still a
staggering sum. By comparison, the company reported a total of $34 billion
in net income from 1996 to 2004.
GM will partially offset the charge with a gain of
more than $5 billion related to the sale of its Allison Transmission unit.
The charge follows more than $12 billion in losses
since the beginning of 2005. GM has been scrambling to cut the size of its
U.S. operation amid shrinking market share, rising costs and a rapidly
globalizing auto industry. Its restructuring has been complicated by a
slowdown in U.S. demand for automobiles and losses at GMAC.
The lending giant lost $1.6 billion in the third
quarter, the biggest quarterly setback since at least the 1960s. It made
money on auto lending and insurance but was dragged down by a $1.8 billion
setback at ResCap, its residential-mortgage business and a big player in
subprime loans. GM's exposure is limited because it sold 51% of GMAC to
Cerberus Capital Management LP last year. In the past, GMAC delivered
dividends to GM, including more than $9 billion in the decade before the
GMAC sale.
The write-down isn't expected to affect GM's
liquidity position, which stood at $27.2 billion as of June 30. GM has been
selling noncore assets in recent years to pad its bank account. In addition,
GM Chief Financial Officer Frederick "Fritz" Henderson said the write-down
won't preclude it from using loss carry-forwards or other deferred-tax
assets in the future. It is unclear whether GM's plunge deeper into negative
shareholder-equity status will affect it's borrowing capabilities or credit
rating.
The latest disclosure underscores the challenge
Chief Executive Officer Richard Wagoner faces in seeking a full-scale
turnaround as GM hangs on to its No. 1 global-sales ranking over Toyota
Motor Corp. by a thread. Delphi Corp., GM's top supplier, has failed in
attempts to emerge from bankruptcy protection, so GM must wait indefinitely
on cost savings it hopes to gain from a reorganized Delphi. Also, U.S.
automobile demand has withered to the lowest point in a decade, and, as oil
futures continue to escalate, pressure on high-profit trucks and SUVs
remains firm.
Denny Beresford provided a link to another reference ---
Click Here
November 7, 2008 reply from Amy Dunbar
[Amy.Dunbar@BUSINESS.UCONN.EDU]
>So they think it is more likely than not that they
will receive zero tax benefit from their tax loss carryforwards!
Hmmmmm, I doubt that is what GM thinks. As the news
release stated, "In making such judgments, significant weight is given to
evidence that can be objectively verified. A company's current or previous
losses are given more weight than its future outlook, and a recent
three-year historical cumulative loss is considered a significant factor
that is difficult to overcome." FAS 109, P 23 states, "Forming a conclusion
that a valuation allowance is not needed is difficult when there is negative
evidence such as cumulative losses in recent years."
As an aside, the more-likely-than-not standard in
FAS 109 existed before FIN 48 adopted the standard. FIN 48 doesn't talk
about objective evidence wrt the MLTN standard.
FIN 48, 6, states, "An enterprise shall initially
recognize the financial statement effects of a tax position when it is more
likely than not, based on the technical merits, that the position will be
sustained upon examination. As used in this Interpretation, the term more
likely than not means a likelihood of more than 50 percent; the terms
examined and upon examination also include resolution of the related appeals
or litigation processes, if any. The more-likely than- not recognition
threshold is a positive assertion that an enterprise believes it is entitled
to the economic benefits associated with a tax position. The determination
of whether or not a tax position has met the more-likely-than-not
recognition threshold shall consider the facts, circumstances, and
information available at the reporting date.
FIN 48, 7, states, "In assessing the
more-likely-than-not criterion as required by paragraph 6 of this
Interpretation: a. It shall be presumed that the tax position will be
examined by the relevant taxing authority that has full knowledge of all
relevant information. b. Technical merits of a tax position derive from
sources of authorities in the tax law (legislation and statutes, legislative
intent, regulations, rulings, and case law) and their applicability to the
facts and circumstances of the tax position. When the past administrative
practices and precedents of the taxing authority in its dealings with the
enterprise or similar enterprises are widely understood, those practices and
precedents shall be taken into account. c. Each tax position must be
evaluated without consideration of the possibility of offset or aggregation
with other positions."
In an appendix, FIN 48, B46, states, "In
considering the subsequent recognition of tax positions that do not
initially meet the more-likely-than-not recognition threshold and the
subsequent measurement of tax positions, the Board initially considered
whether specific external events should be required to effect a change in
judgment about the recognition of a tax position or the measurement of a
recognized tax position. The Board concluded in the Exposure Draft that a
change in estimate is a judgment that requires evaluation of all available
facts and circumstances, not a specific triggering event. Some respondents
to the Exposure Draft stated that the evidence supporting a change in
judgment should be objectively verifiable and that a triggering event is
normally required to subsequently recognize a tax benefit."
Since this language wasn't put in the standard, I
wonder if one could argue that the two MLTN standards are different. It
would be interesting to be a fly on the wall as some of the debate goes on
about uncertain tax positions.
Amy Dunbar
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on November 9,
2007
GM Will Book $39 Billion Charge
by John
D. Stoll
Nov 07, 2007
Page: A3
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB119438884709884385.html?mod=djem_jiewr_ac
TOPICS: Advanced
Financial Accounting, Income Taxes
SUMMARY: "General
Motors Corp. will take a $39 billion, noncash charge to
write down deferred tax assets, "...a signal that it expects
to continue to struggle financially despite significant
restructuring and cost cutting in the past two years."
CLASSROOM
APPLICATION: Use to cover accounting for deferred tax
assets and a related valuation account.
QUESTIONS:
1.) Define the terms deferred tax assets, deferred tax
liabilities, net operating loss carryforwards, and deferred
tax credits.
2.) Which of the above three items has General Motors
recorded for a total of $39 billion? In your answer, comment
on the opening statement in the article that GM will
write-down its "deferred tax credits."
3.) What is a valuation allowance against deferred tax
assets? When must such an allowance be recorded under
generally accepted accounting standards? Use GM's situation
as an example in your answer.
4.) GM states that its $39 billion write down was impacted
by three factors. Explain how each of these factors bears on
the determination of a valuation allowance against deferred
tax assets. Be specific.
5.) The author writes, "If it returns to steady profits, GM
could remove the valuation allowance and reclaim some or all
of the $39 billion in deferred credits," and that the
write-down does not preclude GM from future use of its net
operating loss carryforwards and deferred tax assets.
Explain these statements, including the entries that will be
recorded if the deferred tax assets are used in the future.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED
ARTICLES:
GM Statement on Noncash Charge
by General Motors, via PRNewswire
Nov 06, 2007
Online Exclusive
|
Controversy Over FAS 2 versus IAS 38 on Research and Development
(R&D)
Introductory Note
India is scheduled to adopt IFRS accounting standards but as of yet is still
under domestic accounting standards.
Also not there is some difference between capitalization of R&D between FASB
standards in the USA versus international IFRS standards where the FASB requires
more expensing of R&D relative to IFRS and India's current accounting standards:
"IFRS and US GAAP: Similarities and
Differences" according to PwC (October 2013 Edition)
http://www.pwc.com/en_US/us/issues/ifrs-reporting/publications/assets/ifrs-and-us-gaap-similarities-and-differences-2013.pdf
"Research and Development, Uncertainty, and Analysts’ Forecasts: The Case
of IAS 38," by Tami Dinh Thi, Brigitte Eierle, Wolfgang Schultze, and Leif
Steeger, SSRN, November 26, 2014 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2531094
Abstract:
This paper analyzes the consequences of the capitalization of development
expenditures under IAS 38 on analysts’ earnings forecasts. We use unique
hand-collected data in a sample of highly research and development (R&D)
intensive German listed firms over the period 2000 to 2007. We find that the
capitalization of development costs is significantly associated with both
higher individual analysts’ forecast errors and forecast dispersion. This
suggests that the increasing complexity surrounding the capitalization of
development costs negatively impacts forecast accuracy. However, for firms
with high underlying environmental uncertainty, forecast errors are
negatively associated with capitalized development expenditures. This
indicates that the negative impact of increased complexity on forecast
accuracy can be outweighed by the information contained in the signals from
capitalized development costs when the underlying environmental uncertainty
is high. The findings contribute to the ongoing controversial debate on the
accounting for self-generated intangible assets. Our results provide useful
insights on the link between capitalization of development costs,
environmental uncertainty, and analysts’ forecasts for accounting academics
and practitioners alike.
Teaching Case on How It Pay's to Look Under the Hood of Indian Financial
Statements
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on November 21,
2013
It Pays to Look Under Tata's Hood
by:
Abheek Bhattacharya
Nov 15, 2013
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Financial Accounting, Financial Ratios, Financial
Reporting, International Accounting
SUMMARY: Tata Motors is "India's largest auto company...[which]
leapt onto the world stage after buying JaguarLand Rover in 2008. Now that
the British luxury car maker makes up roughly 80% of Tata's revenue, this
Indian firm is competing with BMW, Mercedes-Benz and a host of American and
Japanese premium brands...Although its shares are up more than 20% so far
this year, the stock trades at 9.6 times estimated profit for the fiscal
year that ends next March...Yet Tata's valuation may be flattered by the way
it treats certain costs...At issue is how Tata treats research and
development costs...Indian accounting standards give Tata discretion in
accounting for such spending...Tata capitalized roughly 80% of R&D activity
last fiscal year."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The article provides an excellent comparison
of U.S. GAAP, IFRS, and Indian local accounting for R&D costs.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) What three accounting treatments for research and
development (R&D) activities are compared in this article?
2. (Advanced) Briefly summarize the accounting under each of these
systems in your own words.
3. (Advanced) Do you agree with the statement in the article that,
under IFRS, German auto makers can capitalize R&D? Explain your answer.
4. (Introductory) How does the author compare the amount of R&D
capitalization under these three accounting systems?
5. (Advanced) What is the implication of these differing accounting
treatments for the assessment of different auto manufacturers' financial
performance? Be specific about the financial ratios used in the article to
compare the companies' results, valuation, and stock price.
6. (Advanced) How does the author adjust the amounts reported by
these companies in order to make them comparable? Be specific in describing
what accounting treatment and income measures to which the author converts
the reported numbers.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"It Pays to Look Under Tata's Hood," by Abheek Bhattacharya, The Wall Street
Journal, November 185, 2013 ---
http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303789604579199210852043816?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
India's Tata Motors TTM -1.05% is in the big league
of global car makers. When it comes to accounting for certain costs, though,
it doesn't play exactly the same way as its peers.
India's largest auto company by market value leapt
onto the world stage after buying JaguarLand Rover in 2008. Now that the
British luxury car maker makes up roughly 80% of Tata's revenue, this Indian
firm is competing with BMW, BMW.XE +0.37% Mercedes-Benz and a host of
American and Japanese premium brands.
And when compared with some of these peers, Tata
looks to be a relative bargain. Although its shares are up more than 20% so
far this year, the stock trades at 9.6 times estimated profit for the fiscal
year that ends next March. That is at a discount to Daimler, DAI.XE +0.20%
which owns Mercedes, and BMW.
Yet Tata's valuation may be flattered by the way it
treats certain costs. This has the effect of boosting its profit—in the near
term, at least. Taking that into account, Tata is more expensive than it
initially appears.
At issue is how Tata treats research and
development costs. Tata's R&D program, at 6% of sales, is higher than the 4%
or 5% global car makers typically spend on new products and designs.
Indian accounting standards give Tata discretion in
accounting for such spending. The company can treat it as an immediate
expense that cuts into income. Or it can capitalize the spending,
recognizing it over a longer period of time. Tata capitalized roughly 80% of
R&D activity last fiscal year. In this, Tata is ahead of Indian
counterparts—Indian SUV-maker Mahindra & Mahindra 500520.BY +0.44%
capitalized 44% of its R&D last fiscal year.
Tata's practice also contrasts with global rivals.
American and Japanese car makers expense all their R&D spending, as local
accounting rules require. German auto makers, who report under international
accounting standards, can capitalize R&D, though this has averaged only a
third at BMW the last five years.
To be sure, Tata may need more R&D than BMW and
Mahindra. JLR sported outdated models and platforms before 2008, and Tata
says it's treating the British unit as a young company hungry for new
designs. The company says it has followed this practice for years, meaning
it isn't changing course.
Still, Tata's R&D accounting bolsters the bottom
line. If all R&D spending were expensed, Tata's net profit for this fiscal
year would fall by two-thirds, estimates Bernstein Research. Tuning the
numbers this way decreases earnings by 10% at Daimler. And at BMW, it
actually boosts earnings 1% since this car maker amortizes older R&D
spending and bears the expense on its income statement.
Continued in article
"Failed Convergence of R&D Accounting:: Only Politicians and
Opportunists Would Have Downplayed the Implications," by Tom Selling, The
Accounting Onion, June 5, 2010 ---
Click Here
http://accountingonion.typepad.com/theaccountingonion/2010/06/failed-convergence-of-rd-accounting-only-politicians-and-opportunists-would-have-downplayed-the-implications.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+typepad%2Ftheaccountingonion+%28The+Accounting+Onion%29
Bob Jensen's threads on IASB-FASB standards convergence ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
"Is Accounting Blocking R&D Investments? Companies should resist the
urge to cut research expenses to meet an earnings per share target," John R.
Cryan, Joseph Theriault, CFO.com, December 5, 2012 ---
http://www3.cfo.com/article/2012/12/cash-flow_rd-eps-ebitda-accounting-treatment-of-rd
Jensen Comment
The "principles-based" IFRS allows for more subjectivity in capitalizing versus
expensing R&D relative to US GAAP having more bright lines
From
The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on November 12, 2009
3. (Advanced)
Focusing on accounting issues, state why cutting R&D operations quickly impact
any company's financial performance in a current accounting period. In you
answer, first address the question considering U.S. accounting standards.
4. (Advanced)
Does your answer to the question above change when considering reporting
practices under IFRS?
Pfizer Shuts Six R&D Sites After Takeover
by
Jonathan D. Rockoff
Nov 10, 2009
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Consolidation,
GAAP, International Accounting, Mergers and Acquisitions, Research & Development
SUMMARY: "Pfizer
Inc., digesting its $68 billion takeover of rival Wyeth last month, said Monday
it will close six of its 20 research sites, in the latest round of cost cutting
by retrenching drug makers....Pfizer executives wanted to cut costs quickly so
the integration didn't stall research....'When we acquired Warner-Lambert, it
took us almost two years to get into the position we will be in 30 to 60 days'
after closing the Wyeth deal, Martin Mackay, one of Pfizer's two R&D chiefs,
said in an interview."
CLASSROOM
APPLICATION: Questions
relate to understanding the immediate implications of reducing R&D expenditures
for current period profit under both U.S. GAAP and IFRS as well as to
understanding pharmaceutical industry consolidation and restructuring.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
What are the business issues within the pharmaceuticals industry in particular
that are driving the need to reduce costs rapidly? In your answer, comment on
industry consolidations and restructuring, including definitions of each of
these terms.
2. (Introductory)
What business reasons specific to Pfizer did their executives offer as reasons
to cut R&D costs quickly?
3. (Advanced)
Focusing on accounting issues, state why cutting R&D operations quickly impact
any company's financial performance in a current accounting period. In you
answer, first address the question considering U.S. accounting standards.
4. (Advanced)
Does your answer to the question above change when considering reporting
practices under IFRS?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
Pfizer to Pay $68 Billion for Wyeth
by Matthew Karnitschnig
Jan 26, 2009
Page: A1
The Wall
Street Journal,
November 10, 2009 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703808904574525644154101608.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC
Pfizer Inc., digesting its $68 billion takeover of rival Wyeth last month, said
Monday it will close six of its 20 research sites, in the latest round of cost
cutting by retrenching drug makers.
Pfizer was expected to cut costs as part of its consolidation with Wyeth, and
research and development was considered a prime target because the two
companies' combined R&D budgets totaled $11 billion. In announcing the
laboratory shutdowns Monday, Pfizer didn't say how many R&D jobs it would cut or
how much it hoped to save from the shutdowns.
For much of this decade, pharmaceutical companies have been closing labs, laying
off researchers and outsourcing more work from their once-sacrosanct R&D units.
Pfizer previously closed several labs, including the Ann Arbor, Mich., facility
where its blockbuster cholesterol fighter Lipitor was developed. In January,
before the Wyeth deal was announced, Pfizer said it would lay off as many as 800
researchers.
But analysts say Pfizer Chief Executive Jeffrey Kindler and other industry
leaders haven't done enough. A major reason for the industry consolidation this
year is the opportunity to slash spending further.
Pfizer previously said it expects $4 billion in savings from its combination
with Wyeth. It plans to eliminate about 19,500 jobs, or 15% of the combined
company's total.
Merck & Co., which completed its $41.1 billion acquisition of Schering-Plough
last week, is expected to cut 15,930 jobs, or about 15% of its work force. In
September, Eli Lilly & Co. said it will eliminate 5,500 jobs, or nearly 14% of
its total. Johnson & Johnson said last week that it will pare as many as 8,200
jobs, or 7%.
Drug makers are restructuring in anticipation of losing tens of billions of
dollars in revenues as blockbuster products, such as Lipitor, start facing
competition from generic versions. Setbacks developing new treatments have made
the need to reduce spending all the more urgent, analysts say, and have reduced
resistance to closing labs. The economic slump has only worsened the
pharmaceutical industry's plight, pressuring sales.
The sites Pfizer is set to close include Wyeth's facility in Princeton, N.J.,
which has been working on promising therapies for Alzheimer's disease, including
one called bapineuzumab under development by several companies. The Alzheimer's
work will move to Pfizer's lab in Groton, Conn., which will be the combined
company's largest site. The consolidation of Alzheimer's work "allows us to
fully focus on that, rather than have to coordinate activities," said Mikael
Dolsten, a former Wyeth official and one of two R&D chiefs at the combined
company.
Besides Princeton, Pfizer said research also is scheduled to end at R&D sites in
Chazy, Rouses Point and Plattsburgh, N.Y.; Gosport, Slough and Taplow in the
U.K.; and Sanford and Research Triangle Park, N.C. Pfizer is counting as a
single site labs close to each other, such as the facilities in Rouses Point and
Plattsburgh, Slough and Taplow, and Sanford and Research Triangle Park. Along
with the Princeton facility, those in Chazy, Rouses Point and Sanford had
belonged to Wyeth.
The company is also planning to move work from its Collegeville, Pa.; Pearl
River, N.Y., and St. Louis sites to other locations.
Pfizer executives wanted to cut costs quickly after the Wyeth deal's completion
so the integration doesn't stall research. That was a problem with Pfizer's
acquisition of Warner-Lambert in 2000 and its merger with Pharmacia in 2003. As
a result, critics say the deals destroyed billions of dollars in shareholder
value. Pfizer says it has learned from its past acquisitions.
"When we acquired Warner-Lambert, it took us almost two years to get into the
position we will be in 30 to 60 days" after closing the Wyeth deal, Martin
Mackay, one of Pfizer's two R&D chiefs, said in an interview. Up next, he said,
the newly combined company will prioritize its R&D work and decide which
potential therapies to abandon.
Comparisons
of IFRS with Domestic Standards of Many Nations
http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm
More Detailed
Differences
(Comparisons) between FASB and IASB Accounting Standards
2011 Update
"IFRS and US GAAP: Similarities and Differences" according to PwC
(2011 Edition)
http://www.pwc.com/us/en/issues/ifrs-reporting/publications/ifrs-and-us-gaap-similarities-and-differences.jhtml
Note the Download button!
Note that warnings are given throughout the document that the similarities and
differences mentioned in the booklet are not comprehensive of all similarities
and differences. The document is, however, a valuable addition to students of
FASB versus IASB standard differences and similarities.
It's not easy keeping track of what's changing and
how, but this publication can help. Changes for 2011 include:
- Revised introduction reflecting the current
status, likely next steps, and what companies should be doing now
(see page 2);
- Updated convergence timeline, including
current proposed timing of exposure drafts, deliberations, comment
periods, and final standards
(see page 7);
- More current analysis of the differences
between IFRS and US GAAP -- including an assessment of the impact
embodied within the differences
(starting on page 17); and
- Details incorporating authoritative standards
and interpretive guidance issued through July 31, 2011
(throughout).
This continues to be one of PwC's most-read
publications, and we are confident the 2011 edition will further your
understanding of these issues and potential next steps.
For further exploration of the similarities and
differences between IFRS and US GAAP, please also visit our
IFRS Video Learning Center.
To request a hard copy of this publication, please contact your PwC
engagement team or
contact us.
Jensen Comment
My favorite comparison topics (Derivatives and Hedging) begin on Page 158
The booklet does a good job listing differences but, in my opinion, overly
downplays the importance of these differences. It may well be that IFRS is more
restrictive in some areas and less restrictive in other areas to a fault. This
is one topical area where IFRS becomes much too subjective such that comparisons
of derivatives and hedging activities under IFRS can defeat the main purpose of
"standards." The main purpose of an "accounting standard" is to lead to greater
comparability of inter-company financial statements. Boo on IFRS in this topical
area, especially when it comes to testing hedge effectiveness!
One key quotation is on Page 165
IFRS does not specifically discuss the methodology
of applying a critical-terms match in the level of detail included within
U.S. GAAP.
Then it goes yatta, yatta, yatta.
Jensen Comment
This is so typical of when IFRS fails to present the "same level of detail" and
more importantly fails to provide "implementation guidance" comparable with the
FASB's DIG implementation topics and illustrations.
I have a
huge beef with the lack of illustrations in IFRS versus the many illustrations
in U.S. GAAP.
I have a
huge beef with the lack of illustrations in IFRS versus the many illustrations
in U.S. GAAP.
I have a huge beef with the lack of illustrations in
IFRS versus the many illustrations in U.S. GAAP.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standards setting controversies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Comparisons
of IFRS with Domestic Standards of Many Nations
http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm
"Canadian regulator decides against allowing early adoption of recent
IFRSs by certain entities," IAS Plus, November 1, 2011 ---
http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
. . .
In making its decision, the OSFI considered a
number of factors such as industry
consistency, OSFI policy positions on
accounting and capital, operational capacity and resource constraints of
Federally Regulated Entities (FREs), the ability to benefit from improved
standards arising from the financial crisis and the
notion of a level playing field with other Canadian
and international financial institutions.
OSFI concluded that FREs should not early adopt the following new or amended
IFRSs, but instead should adhere to their mandatory effective dates:
Continued
Jensen Comment
The clients, auditors, and the AICPA clamoring that U.S. firms should be able to
voluntarily choose IFRS instead of U.S. GAAP even before it has not been decided
that IFRS will ever replace FASB standards seem to ignore the problems that
voluntary choice of IFRS might cause for investors and analysts. The above
reasoning by the OSFI makes sense to me.
But then outfits like the AICPA have a self-serving interest in earning
millions of dollars selling IFRS training courses and materials.
November 2, 2011 reply from Patricia Walters
Does that mean you oppose options to early adopt standards in general,
not just IFRSs?
Pat
November 2, 2011 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Pat,
It's hard to say regarding early adoption of a particular national or
international standard, because there can be unique circumstances. For
example, FAS 123R simply altered how to make disclosures rather than alter
the disclosures themselves since employee option expenses had to be
disclosed before the FAS 123R adoption date. But even here early adoption of
FAS 123R by Company A versus late adoption by Company B made simple
comparisons of eps and P/E ratios between these companies less easy.
There's a huge difference between early adoption of a particular standard
and early adoption of an entire system of standards like switching from FASB
accounting standards to IFRS.
I think the Canadian position of early adoption of IFRS is probably correct
because of the mess early adoption of IFRS makes with comparisons of
companies using different accounting standards and the added costs of
regulation of more than one set of standards. Also think of the added burden
placed upon the courts to adjudicate disputes when differing sets of
standards are being used.
Even though we allow IFRS for SEC registered foreign companies, I think it
would be a total mess for the SEC, the PCAOB, investors, analysts,
educators, trainers, auditing, and even the IRS (where tax and reporting
treatments must sometimes be reconciled) if our domestic corporations could
choose between FASB versus IASB standards.
There are hundreds of differences between FASB and IASB standards. Allowing
companies domestic companies to cherry pick which system they choose before
it is even known if there will ever be official replacement of FASB
standards by IASB standards would be very, very confusing. What if there
never is a decision to replace FASB standards? Do want to simply allow
companies to choose to bypass FASB standards at their own discretion?
Of course, if information were costless it might be ideal to require
financial reporting where FASB and IASB outcomes are reconciled. But clients
and auditors generally contend that the cost of doing this greatly exceeds
benefits. And teaching financial accounting would become exceedingly
complicated if we had to teach two sets of standards on an equal basis.
I would certainly hate to face a CPA examination that had nearly equal
coverage of both FASB and IASB standards simultaneously. I say this
especially after viewing the hundreds of pages of complicated differences
between the two standards systems.
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standard setting controversies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
"Failed Convergence of R&D Accounting:: Only Politicians and
Opportunists Would Have Downplayed the Implications," by Tom Selling, The
Accounting Onion, June 5, 2010 ---
Click Here
http://accountingonion.typepad.com/theaccountingonion/2010/06/failed-convergence-of-rd-accounting-only-politicians-and-opportunists-would-have-downplayed-the-implications.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+typepad%2Ftheaccountingonion+%28The+Accounting+Onion%29
Bob Jensen's threads on R&D accounting are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#FAS02
Question
Are these just dirty tricks to keep some generic drugs off the market?
Pharmaceutical makers go to great lengths to protect
their exclusive marketing rights to best-selling brand-name drugs. But a pair of
lawsuits and a government antitrust investigation involving a drug made by
Abbott Laboratories could help define how far those companies can legally go to
fend off copycat rivals.
Shirley S. Wang
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on June 6, 2008
TriCor Case May Illuminate Patent Limits
by Shirley S.
Wang
The Wall Street Journal
Jun 02, 2008
Page: B1
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121236509655436509.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC
TOPICS: Financial
Accounting, Intangible Assets, Research & Development
SUMMARY: Aboott
Laboratories have been involved in lawsuits and a government
antitrust investigation in relation to its 33-year-old
cholesterol medication TriCor. This drug generated sales of $1.2
billion in 2007 but the patent on the original product--which
was developed in France--has now expired. When Abbott Labs
acquired the TriCor licensing rights in the late 1990s, the
company patented a new way to make the product. The antitrust
suit examines whether Abbot Labs "...violated antitrust laws in
its efforts to prevent an Israeli company from successfully
selling a generic version of the drug." The bases for the
arguments against Abbott Labs are that the company filed "...new
patents on questionable improvements to TriCor...[and] engaged
in a practice known as 'product switching'--retiring an existing
drug and replacing it with a modified version that is marketed
'new and improved,' preventing pharmacists from substituting a
generic for the branded drug when they fill prescriptions for
it." Though not against the law per se, these practices may have
violated antitrust laws if their sole purpose was to extend
Abbott's monopoly on sales of the product.
CLASSROOM
APPLICATION: The article clearly illustrates issues in
accounting for R&D and intangible assets and is therefore useful
in intermediate financial accounting and MBA accounting courses.
In addition, an ethical question of the cost impact on medical
patients of these patent rights may be included in class
discussion of this article.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) Summarize accounting in the two areas
of intangible assets and research and development (R&D)
expenditures. How are these two areas related?
2. (Introductory) Examine Abbott Laboratories' most
recent quarterly financial statement filing with the SEC,
available at
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1800/000110465908029545/a08-11202_110q.htm
or by clicking on the live link to Abbot Laboratories in the
on-line version of the article, then SEC Filings under "Other
Resources" in the left-hand column of the web page, selecting
the 10-Q filing submitted 2008-05-02 and selecting the html
version of the entire document. How large are Abbott Labs
intangible assets and research and development expenditures? In
your answer, specifically consider how you can best answer this
question using some basis for assessment.
3. (Advanced) Refer to your answer to question 2. How
do the accounting practices for intangible assets and R&D
expenditures impact the way in which you assess the size of
these items relative to Abbott Labs operations?
4. (Introductory) "Drug companies typically have three
to ten years of exclusive patent rights remaining when their
products hit the market." Why is this the case? In your answer,
specifically state how these business conditions impact the
required time period over which the cost of patents may be
amortized.
5. (Advanced) Again examine Abbott Labs 10-Q filing
made on May 2, 2008, in particular the footnote disclosure
related to intangible assets. Note 11--Goodwill and Intangible
Assets. What accounting policy is consistent with the
description of patent rights' useful lives discussed in answer
to question 4 above?
6. (Introductory) What steps has Abbott Labs undertaken
to extend the life of its patent on TriCor? Are steps like these
a business necessity or merely a method of generating excessive
profits for pharmaceutical companies? In your answer,
specifically consider ethical issues related to profitability,
continued R&D for new pharmaceutical products, and the cost to
both medical patients and insurance companies of patented,
brand-name products versus generic equivalents.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
|
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Educators' Review on April 23,
2004
TITLE: Brothers of Invention
REPORTER: Timothy Aeppel
DATE: Apr 19, 2004
PAGE: B1,3
LINK: http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108233054158486127,00.html
TOPICS: Research & Development, Intangible Assets
SUMMARY: Lahart reports on the growing instances of designing variations of
new
patent-protected products in an attempt to skirt the patent laws and offer
virtual clones of those products at lower prices.
QUESTIONS:
1.) What is a patent? How does one appropriately account for a patent that has
been granted to a firm? How does a patent differ from other intangible assets?
How is it similar? How does a patent give a firm a competitive advantage? In
the Aeppel article, what happens to this advantage when a design-around is
introduced?
2.) Explain impairment of an intangible asset. How do the "design
arounds"
described in the Aeppel article impair the value of the patent? How do you
account for such an impairment?
3.) What effect is this issue having on research & development (R&D)
expenditures for firms developing new patented products? Are R&D costs
expensed
or capitalized? What about R&D costs that result in the granting of a
patent?
4.) Why are valid patent-holders designing around their own products?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
"Brothers of Invention:
'Design-Arounds' Surge As More Companies Imitate Rivals' Patented
Products," by Timothy Aeppel, The Wall Street Journal, April 19, 2004, Page
B1 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108233054158486127,00.html
Nebraska rancher Gerald Gohl had a
bright idea: Create a remote-controlled spotlight, so he wouldn't have to roll
down the window of his pickup truck and stick out a hand-held beacon to look
for his cattle on cold nights.
By 1997, Mr. Gohl held a patent on the
RadioRay, a wireless version of his spotlight that could rotate 360 degrees
and was mounted using suction cups or brackets. Retail price: more than $200.
RadioRay started to catch on with ranchers, boaters, hunters and even police.
Wal-Mart
Stores Inc. liked it, too. Mr. Gohl says a buyer for Wal-Mart's Sam's Club
stores called to discuss carrying the RadioRay as a "wow" item, an
unusual product that might attract lots of attention and sales. Mr. Gohl said
no, worrying that selling to Sam's Club could drive the spotlight's price
lower and poison his relationships with distributors.
Before long, though, Sam's Club was
selling its own wireless, remote-controlled searchlight -- for about $60. It
looked nearly identical to the RadioRay, except for a small, plastic part
restricting the light's rotation to slightly less than 360 degrees. Golight
Inc., Mr. Gohl's McCook, Neb., company, sued Wal-Mart in 2000, alleging patent
infringement. The retailer countered that Mr. Gohl's invention was obvious and
that its light wasn't an exact copy of the RadioRay's design.
The legal battle between Mr. Gohl and
the world's largest retailer -- which Wal-Mart lost in a federal district
court and on appeal and is now considering taking to the Supreme Court --
reflects a growing trend in the high-stakes, persnickety world of patents and
product design. Patent attorneys say that companies increasingly are imitating
rivals' inventions, while trying to make their own versions just different
enough to avoid infringing on a patent. The near-copycat procedure, which
among other things helps companies avoid paying royalties to patent holders,
is called a "design-around."
"The thinking in engineering
offices more and more boils down to, 'Let's see what the patent says and see
if we can get around it and get something as good -- or almost as good --
without violating the patent,' " says Ken Kuffner, a patent attorney
in Houston who represents a U.S. maker of retail-display stands that designed
around the patent on plastic displays it used to buy from another company. He
declines to identify his client.
Design-arounds are nearly as old as the
patent system itself, underscoring the pressure that companies feel to keep
pace with the innovations of competitors. And U.S. courts have repeatedly
concluded that designing around -- and even copying products left unprotected
-- can be good for consumers by lowering prices and encouraging innovation.
The practice appears to be surging as
companies shift more manufacturing outside the U.S. in an effort to drive
costs lower. No one tracks overall design-around numbers, but "there's
really been a spike in this sort of activity in the last few years," says
Jack Barufka, a patent-attorney specializing in design-arounds at Pillsbury
Winthrop LLP in McLean, Va.
Mr. Barufka, a former physicist, has
handled design-arounds on exercise equipment, industrial parts, and factory
machinery. A client recently brought him a household appliance, which he won't
identify, to be dissected part-by-part so that his client can try to make a
similar product at a cheaper price, probably by using foreign suppliers.
"We design around competitor
patents on a regular basis," says James O'Shaughnessy, vice president and
chief intellectual property counsel at Rockwell Automation Inc. in Milwaukee,
a maker of industrial automation equipment. "Anybody who is really paying
attention to the patent system, who respects it, will still nevertheless try
to find ways -- either offshore production or a design-around -- to produce an
equivalent product that doesn't infringe."
Design-arounds are particularly common
in auto parts, semiconductors and other industries with enormous markets that
are attractive to newcomers looking for a way to break in. The practice also
happens in mature industries, where there are few big breakthroughs and
competitors rely on relatively small changes to gain a competitive advantage.
Patented products are attractive targets for an attempted end run because they
command premium prices, making them irresistible amid razor-thin profit
margins and expanding global competition.
Few companies will talk about their
design-around efforts, since the results often look like little more than
clones of someone else's idea. Even companies with patented products that are
designed-around usually keep quiet, sometimes because their own engineers are
looking for ways to make an end run on rivals.
The surge in design-arounds is pushing
research-and-development costs higher, since some companies feel forced to
protect their inventions from being copied by coming up with as many
alternative ways to achieve the same result -- and patenting those, too.
"A patent is basically worthless
if someone else can design around it easily and make a high-performing
component for less," says Morgan Chu, a patent attorney at Irell &
Manella LLP in Los Angeles.
Because successful design-arounds also
force prices lower, they make it harder for companies to recover their
investment in new products. Danfoss
AS, a Danish maker of air conditioning, heating and other industrial
equipment, discovered in the late 1990s that a customer in England had
switched to buying a designed-around part for a Danfoss agricultural machine
at a lower price from an English supplier. Danfoss eventually won back the
customer, but only after agreeing to a price concession, says Georg Nissen,
the Danish company's intellectual property manager, who notes they lowered
their price about 5%.
The main way for companies to fight
design-arounds is in court -- or the threat of it. Dutton-Lainson Co., a
Hastings, Neb., maker of marine, agricultural, and industrial products,
recently discovered that a rival was selling a tool used by ranchers to
tighten the barbed wire on fences that was identical to its own patented tool,
with an ergonomic handle shaped to fit the palm of a hand.
Continued in the article
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on
October 14, 2005
TITLE: In R&D, Brains Beat Spending in Boosting Profit
REPORTER: Gary McWilliams
DATE: Oct 11, 2005
PAGE: A2
LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB112898917962665021.html
TOPICS: Financial Accounting, Financial Analysis, Financial Statement Analysis,
Research & Development
SUMMARY: The article reports on a study by management consultants Booz Allen
Hamilton on firms� levels of R&D spending and related performance metrics.
QUESTIONS:
1.) How must U.S. firms account for Research and Development expenditures?
What is the major reasoning behind the FASB's requirement to treat these costs
in this way? In your answer, reference the authoritative accounting literature
promulgating this treatment and the FASB's supporting reasoning.
2.) How does the U.S. treatment differ from the treatment of R&D costs under
accounting standards in effect in most countries of the world?
3.) Describe the study undertake by Booz Allen Hamilton as reported in the
article. In your answer, define each of the terms for variables used in the
analysis. Why would a management consulting firm undertake such a study?
4.) What were the major findings of the study? How does this finding support
the FASB�s reasoning as described in answer to question 1 above?
5.) As far as you can glean from the description in the article, what are the
potential weaknesses to the study? Do these weaknesses have any bearing on your
opinion about the support that the results give to the current R&D accounting
requirements in the U.S.? Explain.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"In R&D, Brains Beat Spending in Boosting Profit," by Gary McWilliams, The
Wall Street Journal, October 11, 2005, Page A2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB112898917962665021.html
Booz Allen concluded that once a minimum level of
research and development spending is achieved, better oversight and culture
were more significant factors in determining financial results. The study
calculated the percentage of a company's revenue spent on R&D and compared
it with sales growth, gross profit, operating profit, market capitalization
and total shareholder result.
It found "no statistically significant difference"
when comparing the financial results of middle-of-the-pack companies with
those in the top 10% of their industry, said Barry Jaruzelski, Booz Allen's
vice president of Global Technology Practice. The result was the same when
viewed within 10 industry groups or across all industries evaluated.
"It is the culture, the skills and the process more
than the absolute amount of money available," he said. "It says tremendous
results can be achieved with relatively modest amounts" of spending.
He points to Toyota Motor Corp., which spent 4.1%
of revenue on R&D last year, but consistently has outperformed rivals such
as Ford Motor Co., which spent 4.3% of sales on research and development.
Toyota's success with hybrid, gasoline-electric cars resulted from better
spending, not more spending, Mr. Jaruzelski says.
The study rankles some. Allan C. Eberhart, a
professor of finance at Georgetown University, says the time period examined
is too short to catch companies whose results might have benefited from past
R&D spending. He co-authored a paper that found "economically significant"
increases in R&D spending did benefit operating profits. The paper, which
examined R&D spending at 8,000 companies over a 50-year period, found 1% to
2% increased operating profit at companies that increased R&D spending by 5%
or more in a single year.
Mr. Jaruzelski said less isn't always better. The
study found that companies that ranked among the bottom 10% of R&D spenders
performed worse than average or top spenders. The result suggests there is a
base level of research and development needed to remain healthy but that
spending above a certain level doesn't confer additional benefits.
R&D spending was positively associated with one
performance measure: gross margins. Median gross margins of the top half of
companies measured by R&D to sales spending were 40% higher than those in
the bottom half.
This is a good
slide show!
"The Truth Behind the Earnings
Illusion: The profit picture has never been so distorted. The surprise? Things
aren't as ugly as they look" by Justin Fox, Fortune, July 22, 2002 --- http://www.fortune.com/indexw.jhtml?channel=artcol.jhtml&doc_id=208677
Question:
Where are the major differences between book income and taxable income that favor booked
income reported to the investing public?
Answer according to Justin Fox:
What the heck happened? The most
obvious explanations for the disconnect are disparities in accounting for stock options
and pension funds. When a company's employees exercise stock options, the gains are
treated for tax purposes as an expense to the company but are completely ignored in
reported earnings. And while investment gains made by a company's employee pension fund
are counted in reported earnings, they don't show up in tax profits.
Analysts at Standard & Poor's
are working to remove those two distortions by calculating a new "core earnings"
measure for S&P 500 companies that includes options costs and excludes pension fund
gains. When that exercise is completed in the coming weeks, most of the profit disconnect
may disappear. Then again, maybe not. In struggling to deliver the outsized profits to
which they and their investors had become accustomed in the mid-1990s, a lot more CEOs and
CFOs may have bent the rules than we know about. "There was some cheating around the
edges," says S&P chief economist David Wyss. "It's just not clear how big
the edges are."
While conservative accounting is
now back in vogue, it's impossible to say with certainty that reported earnings have
returned to reality: Comparing the earnings per share of the S&P 500 with the tax
profits of all American corporations, both public and private (which is what the Commerce
Department reports), is too much of an apples and oranges exercise. But over the long run
reported earnings and tax earnings do grow at about the same rate--just over 7% a year
since 1960, according to Prudential Securities chief economist Richard Rippe, Wall
Street's most devoted student of the Commerce Department profit numbers. So the fact that
Commerce says after-tax profits came in at an annualized rate of $615 billion in the first
quarter--a record-setting pace if it holds up for the full year--ought to be at least a
little reassuring to investors. "I do believe the hints of recovery that we're seeing
in tax profits will continue," Rippe says.
That does not mean we're
due for another profit boom. Declining interest rates were the biggest reason profits rose
so fast in the 1990s, says S&P's Wyss. Rates simply don't have that far to fall now.
So even when investors start believing again what companies say about their earnings, they
may still be shocked at how slowly those earnings are growing.
Continued at http://www.fortune.com/indexw.jhtml?channel=artcol.jhtml&doc_id=208677
Reply by Bob Jensen:
For a technical explanation of the stock option accounting alluded to in the above
quotation, go to one of my student examinations at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Exams/5341sp02/exam02/Exam02VersionATeachingNotes.htm
The exam02.xls Excel workbook answers can be downloaded from http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Exams/5341sp02/exam02/
The S&P revised GAAP core earnings model alluded to in the above quotation can be
examined in greater detail at http://www.standardandpoors.com/Forum/MarketAnalysis/coreEarnings/index.html
The pause that refreshes just got a bit more refreshing - Coca-Cola Co. announced
Sunday it will lead the corporate pack by treating future stock option grants as employee
compensation. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/86333
Question:
Where are the major differences between book income and economic income that understate
book income reported to the investing public?
Answer:
This question is too complex to even scratch the surface in a short paragraph. One
of the main bones of contention between the FASB and technology companies is FAS 2 that
requires the expensing of both research and development (R&D) even though it is
virtually certain that a great deal of the outlays for these items will have economic
benefit in future years. The FASB contends that the identification of which
projects, what future periods, and the amount of the estimated benefits per period are too
uncertain and subject to a high degree of accounting manipulation (book cooking) if such
current expenditures are allowed to be capitalized rather than expensed. Other bones
of contention concern expenditures for building up the goodwill, reputation, and training
"assets" of companies. The FASB requires that these be expensed rather
than capitalized except in the case of an acquisition of an entire company at a price that
exceeds the value of tangible assets less current market value of debt. In summary,
many firms have argued for "pro forma" earnings reporting such that companies
can make a case that huge expense reporting required by the FASB and GAAP can be adjusted
for better matching of future revenues with past expenditures.
You can read more about these problems in the
following two documents:
Accounting Theory --- http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm
State of the Profession of Accountancy --- http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm
May 22, 2012 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Marc and Paul,
The "estate valuation" analogy over simplifies the real problem of asset
identification and valuation. For example, the estate of Steve Jobs most
likely was a piece of cake compared to preparing a 10-K for Apple
Corporation plus identifying and valuing Apple's intangible assets ---
patents, copyrights, reputation, and human resources.
When valuing Apple Corporation shares owned by estate of Steve Jobs as of a
given date we need only look up a table in the pages of the WSJ.
When providing accounting information to investors who make the daily market
for Apple Corporation shares, the task is much more daunting.
Estate valuation is a "market taking" task. Corporate accounting is a
"market making" task. This is where Baruch Lev stumbled when trying to value
intangibles. He relied upon share prices to value intangibles when in fact
the purpose of financial accounting is to help investors set those
transaction prices. Baruch put the cart full of intangibles in front of the
horse ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#TheoryDisputes
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
Hard Assets Versus Intangible Assets
Intangible assets are difficult to define because there are so many types and
circumstances. For example some have contractual or statutory lives (e.g.,
copyrights, patents and human resources) whereas others have indefinite lives (e.g.,
goodwill and intellectual capital). Baruch Lev classifies intangibles as follows in
"Accounting for Intangibles: The New Frontier" --- http://www.nyssa.org/abstract/acct_intangibles.html
:
- Spillover knowledge that creates new products and enhances
valuepatents, drugs, chemicals, software, etc. (i.e., Merck, Cisco, Microsoft, IBM).
- Human Resources.
- Brands/Franchises.
- Structural capital, such as processes, and systems of doing
things. This is the fastest-growing group of intangibles.
He does not flesh in these groupings. I flesh in some examples below of unbooked
(unrecorded) intangible assets that may have value far in excess of all the booked assets
of a company.
- Spillover Knowledge
- Millions or billions expensed on R&D having good prospects for future economic
benefit
- Databases (e.g., prospective customer lists , knowledge bases, and AMR
Sabre System)
- Customer relationships including CRM software
- Operational software such as Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) installations and human
resource software
- Financial relationships such as credit reputation and international banking
contacts.
- Production backlog
- Human Resources.
- Highly skilled and experienced executives, staff, and labor (e.g., Steve Jobs, Bill
Gates, Warren Buffet, technicians, pilots, doctors, lawyers, accountants, etc.)
- Employee dedication and loyalty
- Mix of discipline and creative opportunity employment structure
- Brands/Franchises.
- Tradenames and logos
- Patents
- Copyrights
- Protections from many kinds of lawsuits (e.g., road builders are not sued for every
accident on roads they built and out of court settlements affording protections from
future lawsuits)
- Structural Capital, Processes, and Systems
- Machine and worker efficiencies and labor relations
- Risk management system and ethics environment
- Financial and operating leverage
- TQM
- Supply chain management AND marketing systems (the history of Dell Corporation)
- Political power (e.g., defense contractors, agricultural giants, and multinational oil
companies)
- Monopoly power (e.g., Microsoft corporation is worth more because there is so little
competition remaining in PC operating systems and MS Office products like Excel, Word, and
Powerpoint).
Baruch Lev's Value Chain Scorecard
Discovery/Learning
· Research and Development
· IT Development
· Employee Training
· Communities of Practice
· Customer Acquisition Costs
· Technology Purchase
· Reverse Engineering
-Spillovers
· IT Acquisition
· R&D Alliances/Joint Ventures
· Supplier/Customer Integration
Implementation
· Clinical Tests, FDA Approvals
· Beta Tests
· Unique Visitors
· Marketing Alliances
· Brand Support
· Stickiness and Loyalty Traffic Measures
· Work Practices
· Retention
· Hot Skills (Knowledge Workers
Commercialization
· Innovation Revenues
· Market Share/Growth
· Online Revenues
· Revenues from Alliances
· Revenue Growth by Segments
· Productivity Gains
· Online Supply Channels
· Earnings/Cash Flows
· Value Added
· Cash Burn Rate
· Product Pipeline
· Expected Restructuring Impact
· Market Potential/Growth
· Expected Capital Spending
|
The knowledge
capital estimates that Lev and Bothwell came up with during their run last fall of some 90
leading companies (see accompanying table) were absolutely huge. Microsoft,
for example, boasted a number of $211 billion, while Intel,
General
Electric and Merck
weighed in with $170 billion, $112 billion and $110 billion, respectively. Source: "The New Math," by Jonathan R. Laing, Barrons
Online, November 20, 2000 --- http://equity.stern.nyu.edu/News/news/levbarrons1120.html
Trinity students may go to J:\courses\acct5341\readings\levNov2000.htm |
- It is seldom, if ever mentioned, but Microsoft's
overwhelming huge asset is its customer lock-in to the Windows Operating System combined
with the enormous dominance of MS Office (Word, Excel, Outlook, etc) and MS Access.
The cost of shifting most any organization over to some other operating system and suite
software comparable to MS Office is virtually prohibitive. This
is the main asset of Microsoft, but measuring its value and variability is virtually
impossible.
- Intellectual property
- Trademarks, patents, copyrights
- In-process R&D
- Unrecorded goodwill
- Ways of doing business and adapting to technology
changes and shifts in consumer tastes
For example,
my (Baruch Lev's) recent computations show that Microsoft has
knowledge assets worth $211 billion -- by far the most of any company. Intel has knowledge
assets worth $170 billion, and Merck has knowledge assets worth $110 billion. Now, compare
those figures with DuPont's assets. DuPont has more employees than all of those companies
combined. And yet, DuPont's knowledge assets total only $41 billion -- there isn't much
extra profitability there. Source:
"The New Math," by Jonathan R. Laing, Barrons Online, November 20, 2000
--- http://equity.stern.nyu.edu/News/news/levbarrons1120.html
Trinity students may go to J:\courses\acct5341\readings\levNov2000.htm |
University logos of prestigious universities
(Stanford, Columbia, Carnegie-Mellon, Duke, etc.) are worth billions when discounting
their value in distance education of the future--- http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
|
Mergers, Acquisitions, and Purchase Versus Pooling: The Never Ending
Debate
What's Right and What's Wrong With
(SPEs), SPVs, and VIEs ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/speOverview.htm
Advanced Accounting
Teaching case on a accounting entry has AT&T made in relation to its proposed
acquisition of T-Mobile USA?
From The Wall Street Journal Weekly Accounting Review on December 2, 2011
AT&T's T-Mobile Deal Teeters
by:
Anton Troianovski, Greg Bensinger and Amy Schatz
Nov 25, 2011
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Contingent Liabilities
SUMMARY: 'AT&T and Deutsche Telekom insisted they weren't throwing
in the towel" on their proposed transaction for AT&T to acquire T-Mobile,
Deutsche Telekom's U.S. cellular phone operation. However, AT&T announced it
would take a charge in the fourth quarter's financial statements for a $4
billion break-up fee it agreed to in negotiations.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: Accounting for contingent liabilities and
the link to information being signaled to the market is the focus of this
review.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) What accounting entry has AT&T made in relation
to its proposed acquisition of T-Mobile USA? When will this entry impact
AT&T's reported results?
2. (Advanced) What accounting standard requires making this entry?
3. (Introductory) Access the filing made by AT&T to the SEC
regarding this matter. It is available on the SEC web site at
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/732717/000073271711000097/tmobile.htm.
Why do you think the company must make this disclosure at this time?
4. (Advanced) How does the accounting for this $4 billion become a
signal that the AT&T planned acquisition of T-Mobile "is more likely to fail
than to succeed"?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
Nuggets from the FCC's Scathing Report on AT&T/T-Mobile
by Anton Troianovski
Nov 30, 2011
Online Exclusive
"AT&T's T-Mobile Deal Teeters," by: Anton Troianovski, Greg Bensinger and Amy
Schatz, The Wall Street Journal, November 25, 2011 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204452104577057482069627186.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
AT&T Inc. signaled for the first time that its
planned $39 billion acquisition of T-Mobile USA is more likely to fail than
to succeed, saying Thursday it would set aside $4 billion in this year's
final quarter to cover the potential cost of the deal falling apart.
The move came after Federal Communications
Commission Chairman Julius Genachowski said this week he would seek a rare,
trial-like hearing on the merger, which would add months of arguments and
another big hurdle for the controversial deal.
AT&T and T-Mobile parent Deutsche Telekom AG
responded Thursday morning by pulling their application for merger approval
at the FCC in order to focus on their fight with the Justice Department,
which has sued to block the acquisition.
The federal agencies say a deal combining the No. 2
and No. 4 wireless carriers would damage competition and potentially raise
prices, with little offsetting benefit. AT&T needs both agencies to sign off
to get the merger through.
The moves, disclosed in the early hours of
Thanksgiving morning in the U.S. and just ahead of the market's opening in
Germany, reflect a changed internal calculus at AT&T about the deal's
chances to succeed.
AT&T and Deutsche Telekom insisted they weren't
throwing in the towel. Their strategy is to try to strike a settlement with
the Justice Department or to beat the agency in a trial that begins Feb. 13,
then reapply with the FCC for merger approval.
But it was clear that the odds have lengthened
significantly for a deal that would have created the country's largest
wireless operator. "There's a degree of giving up," said Bernstein Research
analyst Robin Bienenstock. "If you believed you could litigate your way out
of it or do something else, you wouldn't take the charge."
The developments could mean many more months of
uncertainty for the wireless industry and for consumers, particularly
T-Mobile's 33.7 million customers. T-Mobile has lost 850,000 contract
customers this year, and it failed to land the most sought-after device,
Apple Inc.'s iPhone. If the AT&T deal falls through, analysts and investors
expect Deutsche Telekom to try to find another way to exit the U.S. market.
A broken deal would send AT&T back to the drawing
board for a strategy to shore up its network and compete with larger rival
Verizon Wireless. AT&T has said it needs to buy T-Mobile to gain much-needed
rights to the airwaves. It also sees the deal as an expeditious way to shore
up its network, which has come under strain from the demands of millions of
iPhones and other devices, hurting call quality and prompting customer
complaints.
Justice Department officials were taking stock of
the developments but expected to continue preparing for trial, a person
familiar with the matter said. AT&T's move has increased the certainty felt
by many department officials that the company is unlikely to prevail in
court, this person said. A Justice Department spokesperson couldn't be
reached for comment.
For AT&T Chief Executive Officer Randall
Stephenson, the merger with T-Mobile represents the biggest gamble in a
four-year tenure that has been devoid of blockbuster deals, which were a
hallmark of his predecessor, Ed Whitacre. Mr. Whitacre created today's AT&T
over more than a decade of deal-making that pieced together fragments of Ma
Bell and rolled up several wireless companies.
Analysts had generally considered AT&T to be too
big to pull off any more mergers in the U.S. In order to persuade Deutsche
Telekom to go along, AT&T agreed to pay $3 billion in cash, and to turn over
valuable spectrum if the merger fell through, an unusually large breakup
fee.
For AT&T, the benefits of the deal are potentially
huge. T-Mobile, which uses the same network technology as AT&T, seemed to be
the answer to network constraints. Heavy overlap meant cost savings could be
huge. The deal would vault AT&T ahead of rival Verizon Wireless.
AT&T, which announced the deal on March 20, said
buying T-Mobile would allow it to extend its high-speed mobile network into
more of rural America, striking a chord in Washington. AT&T lined up
supporters among governors, members of Congress and interest groups.
Yet AT&T apparently failed to anticipate antitrust
officials' concerns about growing market concentration in the wireless
industry, already dominated by Verizon Wireless and AT&T.
On the morning of Aug. 31, Mr. Stephenson touted
the deal on CNBC. Later that day, the Justice Department filed suit to block
it on antitrust grounds.
Continued in article
Teaching Case from The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on
October 5, 2012
T-Mobile Redials America
by:
Miriam Gottfried
Oct 03, 2012
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Antitrust, business combinations, Mergers and Acquisitions
SUMMARY: In 2011, Deutsche Telekom had planned to stop investing in
its U.S. cellular operation, T-Mobile USA, and sell the company to AT&T.
However, that combination was stopped by the Justice Department for
anti-trust reasons. Deutsche Telekom now has announced a plan for T-Mobile
USA to merge with MetroPCS.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The article is useful to introduce the
process of business combinations in advance of teaching the accounting for
these transactions. The related article describes the accounting entry made
by AT&T to record a charge for the break-up fee associated with its
attempted combination with T-Mobile, clearly indicating likely failure of
the transaction.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) What are the competitive and strategic reasons
that form the "...many ways it actually makes sense for T-Mobile's parent,
Deutsche Telekom, to bulk up in the U.S. with the deal"?
2. (Advanced) What are the historical reasons to indicate that this
deal may face trouble amounting to "continuing to dig when you're in a
hole"? Refer to the related article to assist in your answer.
3. (Advanced) What form of business combination and "currency" for
the business combination does the author think is likely? What financing
reasons lead to this conclusion?
4. (Advanced) What is a "reverse merger"? How would that result in
Deutsche Telekom having a U.S. stock listing?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
AT&T's T-Mobile Deal Teeters
by Anton Troianovski, Greg Bensinger and Amy Schatz
Nov 25, 2011
Page: A1
"T-Mobile Redials America," by Miriam Gottfried, The Wall Street Journal,
October 3, 2012 ---
http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390443862604578032873818844376.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid&mg=reno64-wsj
When you are in a hole, you usually stop digging.
And yet struggling T-Mobile USA, after failing to sell itself to
AT&T,
T +0.44%
may be about to dig even deeper into the U.S. market:
It is in talks to purchase prepaid mobile carrier
MetroPCS
PCS +3.55%
.
In many ways, it actually makes sense for
T-Mobile's parent,
Deutsche Telekom,
DTE.XE +1.49%
to bulk up in the U.S. with the deal. It would
eliminate a low-cost competitor and give the combined companies 29.5% of the
prepaid market, according to Sanford C. Bernstein. Total subscribers would
be 42.5 million, against 56 million for
Sprint,
S -2.16%
111 million for
Verizon Wireless
VZ +2.07%
and 105 million for AT&T, as of the second quarter.
If T-Mobile were to structure the deal as a reverse
merger, as some analysts have suggested, it would give the company a U.S.
stock listing. That would allow it to finance itself separately and let
Deutsche Telekom sell down its exposure over time. MetroPCS's spectrum
holdings are geographically complementary with T-Mobile's. And a deal would
significantly bolster the latter's presence in the top 100 markets, as well
as giving it crucial bandwidth to build a next-generation LTE network.
Given future calls on T-Mobile's cash—from
integration expenses, network investment and the possible introduction of
the iPhone on its network—any deal is likely to be in stock. MetroPCS
shareholders would potentially own about one-quarter of the combined
company.
One key opportunity is for T-Mobile to move
subscribers off MetroPCS's network, which uses a different technology, and
eventually to turn it off. That would both free up spectrum and allow the
combined company to save money by merging cell sites, among other things.
But it can be a painful process as evidenced by
Sprint's ongoing shutdown of the Nextel network, which it bought in 2005.
Running both networks for so long has squeezed Sprint's margins. Sprint
expects the transition—which includes the cost of lost subscribers, in
addition to other expenses related to shutting down the network—to reduce
profit by $800 million in 2012 and by another $100 million in 2013.
T-Mobile will also be able to build a single LTE
network, although it will still have to spend billions that it would have
saved if the sale to AT&T hadn't been blocked by regulators on competition
grounds. The deal probably has little impact on T-Mobile's decision on
whether or not to offer the iPhone to better compete against AT&T and
Verizon Wireless. But UBS expects it to begin carrying the iPhone next year,
meaning hefty subsidy costs, particularly for postpaid subscribers who pick
the device.
If the deal goes through, the most obvious loser is
Sprint, which was widely seen as the most likely buyer for MetroPCS or
T-Mobile. In addition to being a sign that T-Mobile is prepared to invest in
its business, at least for now, the deal could make regulators less likely
to welcome any Sprint-T-Mobile tie-up in the future.
Continued in article
Teaching Case
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on December 10,
2010
Beauty of the Deal: Coty Seeks China Firm
by: Ellen Byron and Dana Cimilluca
Dec 04, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Investments, Mergers and Acquisitions
SUMMARY: "Coty Inc. is nearing a deal to buy Chinese skin-care company TJOY...in
what would cap a three-week acquisition binge led by CEO Bernd Beetz at the
closely held fragrance giant." Coty also recently "...agreed to buy
skin-care brand Philosophy Inc. [for a value of about]...$1 billion" and in
November announced "...a planned purchase of nail-polish maker OPI Products
Inc. in a deal people familiar with the matter [also] valued near $1
billion."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The article is useful to introduce corporate
strategies executed through business combinations particularly for an
advanced financial accounting class on consolidations. The product should be
of interest to students (at least approximately half of them!) and it is
useful to show M&A activity by a closely-held corporation.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) List all of the acquisitions Coty has made in the past
several weeks. Why is the company able to make so many purchases now?
2. (Introductory) What overall corporate strategy is the company executing
with these purchases?
3. (Advanced) How would you classify these acquisitions: vertical
integration, horizontal merger/acquisition, or conglomerate?
4. (Advanced) What specific synergies does Coty expect to obtain from the
acquisition of Chinese skin-care company TJOY?
5. (Introductory) How is Coty paying for its acquisition of TJOY?
6. (Advanced) "As with all such deals, this one could still fall apart."
Why?
7. (Advanced) Coty is a privately held firm. How is the WSJ able to obtain
information about its acquisition? Why are WSJ readers interested in this
information if they cannot become investors in Coty?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"Beauty of the Deal: Coty Seeks China Firm,"
by: Ellen Byron and Dana Cimilluca, The Wall Street Journal, December 4, 2010
---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704526504575634932200517748.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
Coty Inc. is nearing a deal to buy Chinese
skin-care company TJOY, people familiar with the matter said, in what would
cap a three-week acquisition binge led by CEO Bernd Beetz at the closely
held fragrance giant.
Mr. Beetz is trying to remake one of the world's
biggest fragrance makers into a diversified beauty company. In November, it
announced three major deals, most recently a planned purchase of nail-polish
maker OPI Products Inc. in a deal people familiar with the matter valued
near $1 billion.
It also agreed to buy skin-care brand Philosophy
Inc., which people close to the deal also valued around $1 billion, and
disclosed plans to buy German beauty firm Dr. Scheller Cosmetics AG for an
undisclosed sum.
Coty is planning to announce the TJOY deal Sunday
or Monday, according to the people familiar. The cash-and-stock deal values
the closely held Chinese company at about $400 million. As with all such
deals, this one could still fall apart.
Buying TJOY, which offers men's and women's skin
care products, would give Coty access to an array of well-known brands and
distribution in the fast-growing Chinese market. Although the deal is small
by Western standards, it will be a relatively large deal in China, which has
proven challenging for many Western companies to penetrate.
Mr. Beetz, a 60-year-old German native who has led
Coty since 2001, is rapidly expanding into skin care and makeup as the
fragrance industry continues to struggle. Last year, global sales of premium
fragrances totaled $20.3 billion, down 6.5% from the year before, according
to market-research firm Euromonitor International Inc.
Heading into the crucial holiday season, when the
majority of fragrance sales happen each year, Mr. Beetz is betting that an
emphasis on new celebrity fragrances and some classics will win over
hesitant shoppers.
Coty, which makes fragrances under celebrity names
including Jennifer Lopez and David Beckham and designer labels such as
Calvin Klein, as well as Sally Hansen nail polish and N.Y.C. New York Color
cosmetics, posted sales of $3.6 billion in its fiscal year that ended June
30. Mr. Beetz recently spoke with The Wall Street Journal.
Excerpts:
WSJ: You've been a busy deal-maker. What's
motivating your shopping spree?
Mr. Beetz: We're doing very well right now, so I
think it's a good time to use the momentum to further execute our strategy.
We always said we wanted three pillars: fragrances, color cosmetics and skin
care.
WSJ: Rumors of Coty doing an IPO have circled for
years. Do you want to go public?
Mr. Beetz: We have no immediate plans but we'd
never exclude that.
WSJ: What's your strategy for navigating the
holiday season?
Mr. Beetz: I sense less uncertainty. I expect
shoppers to buy at least what they did last year, though I think it's going
to be better.
WSJ: How has the mindset of the luxury consumer
changed during the recession?
Mr. Beetz: I don't think the basic mindset has
changed. There is a certain compromising during the crisis, so there is some
trading down or pausing with purchases, but the basic attitude hasn't
changed. This consumer wants to indulge themselves and reward themselves
with a piece of luxury. It can be a handbag or a nice lipstick or a perfume.
We benefit from it right now.
WSJ: In recent years fragrance has been among the
worst performing categories in beauty. Can manufacturers do something
differently to boost the business?
Mr. Beetz: Not fundamentally. I think it is a
business very much driven by trends, so you have to be even closer than ever
before to the marketplace. It's also helpful to have bigger projects with a
bigger focus and fewer launches. Big blockbusters also help the business.
You have to keep entertaining the consumer.
WSJ: You had mapped 2010 to be the year you hit $5
billion in sales. That didn't happen. What's your outlook now?
Mr. Beetz: We would have been there without the big
global crisis. Overall, we have a big sense of accomplishment, because all
the key measurements we put in place worked out.
We have a new roadmap to 2015. We have grown in the
last nine years, with average revenue growth of 15%. It's true that the
crisis was a bit of a pause, but we overcame that and are back on track.
WSJ: Where do you see sales potential for Coty?
Mr. Beetz: We see growth opportunities in
established markets and in emerging markets. There are still major
opportunities in developed markets, for example central Europe is doing very
well right now. Eastern Europe is back. We have major upside in Asia. We
also see major growth opportunities in the U.S. in department stores,
especially with our prestige fragrance portfolio. I think we can gain even
more market share there.
WSJ: Naysayers say the popularity of celebrity
fragrances is waning. What do you think?
Mr. Beetz: I never shared this point of view. Right
now I am particularly encouraged with the success we are having with Beyoncé
and Halle Berry, and I think we'll have a major success with Lady Gaga next
year. The category is very much alive with the right project.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on mergers ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#Pooling
Comparisons
of IFRS with Domestic Standards of Many Nations
http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm
More Detailed
Differences
(Comparisons) between FASB and IASB Accounting Standards
2011 Update
"IFRS and US GAAP: Similarities and Differences" according to PwC
(2011 Edition)
http://www.pwc.com/us/en/issues/ifrs-reporting/publications/ifrs-and-us-gaap-similarities-and-differences.jhtml
Note the Download button!
Note that warnings are given throughout the document that the similarities and
differences mentioned in the booklet are not comprehensive of all similarities
and differences. The document is, however, a valuable addition to students of
FASB versus IASB standard differences and similarities.
It's not easy keeping track of what's changing and
how, but this publication can help. Changes for 2011 include:
- Revised introduction reflecting the current
status, likely next steps, and what companies should be doing now
(see page 2);
- Updated convergence timeline, including
current proposed timing of exposure drafts, deliberations, comment
periods, and final standards
(see page 7);
- More current analysis of the differences
between IFRS and US GAAP -- including an assessment of the impact
embodied within the differences
(starting on page 17); and
- Details incorporating authoritative standards
and interpretive guidance issued through July 31, 2011
(throughout).
This continues to be one of PwC's most-read
publications, and we are confident the 2011 edition will further your
understanding of these issues and potential next steps.
For further exploration of the similarities and
differences between IFRS and US GAAP, please also visit our
IFRS Video Learning Center.
To request a hard copy of this publication, please contact your PwC
engagement team or
contact us.
Jensen Comment
My favorite comparison topics (Derivatives and Hedging) begin on Page 158
The booklet does a good job listing differences but, in my opinion, overly
downplays the importance of these differences. It may well be that IFRS is more
restrictive in some areas and less restrictive in other areas to a fault. This
is one topical area where IFRS becomes much too subjective such that comparisons
of derivatives and hedging activities under IFRS can defeat the main purpose of
"standards." The main purpose of an "accounting standard" is to lead to greater
comparability of inter-company financial statements. Boo on IFRS in this topical
area, especially when it comes to testing hedge effectiveness!
One key quotation is on Page 165
IFRS does not specifically discuss the methodology
of applying a critical-terms match in the level of detail included within
U.S. GAAP.
Then it goes yatta, yatta, yatta.
Jensen Comment
This is so typical of when IFRS fails to present the "same level of detail" and
more importantly fails to provide "implementation guidance" comparable with the
FASB's DIG implementation topics and illustrations.
I have a
huge beef with the lack of illustrations in IFRS versus the many illustrations
in U.S. GAAP.
I have a
huge beef with the lack of illustrations in IFRS versus the many illustrations
in U.S. GAAP.
I have a huge beef with the lack of illustrations in
IFRS versus the many illustrations in U.S. GAAP.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standards setting controversies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Comparisons
of IFRS with Domestic Standards of Many Nations
http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm
"Canadian regulator decides against allowing early adoption of recent
IFRSs by certain entities," IAS Plus, November 1, 2011 ---
http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
. . .
In making its decision, the OSFI considered a
number of factors such as industry
consistency, OSFI policy positions on
accounting and capital, operational capacity and resource constraints of
Federally Regulated Entities (FREs), the ability to benefit from improved
standards arising from the financial crisis and the
notion of a level playing field with other Canadian
and international financial institutions.
OSFI concluded that FREs should not early adopt the following new or amended
IFRSs, but instead should adhere to their mandatory effective dates:
Continued
Jensen Comment
The clients, auditors, and the AICPA clamoring that U.S. firms should be able to
voluntarily choose IFRS instead of U.S. GAAP even before it has not been decided
that IFRS will ever replace FASB standards seem to ignore the problems that
voluntary choice of IFRS might cause for investors and analysts. The above
reasoning by the OSFI makes sense to me.
But then outfits like the AICPA have a self-serving interest in earning
millions of dollars selling IFRS training courses and materials.
November 2, 2011 reply from Patricia Walters
Does that mean you oppose options to early adopt standards in general,
not just IFRSs?
Pat
November 2, 2011 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Pat,
It's hard to say regarding early adoption of a particular national or
international standard, because there can be unique circumstances. For
example, FAS 123R simply altered how to make disclosures rather than alter
the disclosures themselves since employee option expenses had to be
disclosed before the FAS 123R adoption date. But even here early adoption of
FAS 123R by Company A versus late adoption by Company B made simple
comparisons of eps and P/E ratios between these companies less easy.
There's a huge difference between early adoption of a particular standard
and early adoption of an entire system of standards like switching from FASB
accounting standards to IFRS.
I think the Canadian position of early adoption of IFRS is probably correct
because of the mess early adoption of IFRS makes with comparisons of
companies using different accounting standards and the added costs of
regulation of more than one set of standards. Also think of the added burden
placed upon the courts to adjudicate disputes when differing sets of
standards are being used.
Even though we allow IFRS for SEC registered foreign companies, I think it
would be a total mess for the SEC, the PCAOB, investors, analysts,
educators, trainers, auditing, and even the IRS (where tax and reporting
treatments must sometimes be reconciled) if our domestic corporations could
choose between FASB versus IASB standards.
There are hundreds of differences between FASB and IASB standards. Allowing
companies domestic companies to cherry pick which system they choose before
it is even known if there will ever be official replacement of FASB
standards by IASB standards would be very, very confusing. What if there
never is a decision to replace FASB standards? Do want to simply allow
companies to choose to bypass FASB standards at their own discretion?
Of course, if information were costless it might be ideal to require
financial reporting where FASB and IASB outcomes are reconciled. But clients
and auditors generally contend that the cost of doing this greatly exceeds
benefits. And teaching financial accounting would become exceedingly
complicated if we had to teach two sets of standards on an equal basis.
I would certainly hate to face a CPA examination that had nearly equal
coverage of both FASB and IASB standards simultaneously. I say this
especially after viewing the hundreds of pages of complicated differences
between the two standards systems.
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standard setting controversies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
"General Mills Nears $1.1 Billion Deal to Buy Half of Yoplait," by Chris V.
Nicholson, The New York Times, March 18, 2011 ---
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/03/18/general-mills-set-to-buy-yoplait-stake-for-1-1-billion/?nl=business&emc=dlbka9
"AT&T to Buy T-Mobile: Here’s Why," by Shira Ovide, The Wall Street
Journal, March 20, 2011 ---
http://blogs.wsj.com/deals/2011/03/20/att-buys-t-mobile-heres-why/
For his students, Jim Mahar contrasts these two current illustrations as
vertical versus horizontal mergers (March 22, 2011)---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/2011/03/vertical-and-horizontal-deals.html
Teaching Case on Microsoft's Purchase of Skype
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on May 13,
2011
Microsoft Dials Up Change
by: Nick Wingfield
May 11, 2011
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
Click here to view the video on WSJ.com ![WSJ Video]()
TOPICS: Mergers and
Acquisitions
SUMMARY: "Microsoft made an
unsolicited bid for the Internet company last month and clinched its deal
late Monday...." The price, including taking responsibility for Skype's
outstanding debt, totals $8.4 billion.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article is useful for introducing business combinations but also includes
discussion of EBITDA and operating profit versus net income as well as the
fact that the cash Microsoft will use otherwise might stay overseas and be
unavailable for investment. Microsoft has most of its huge cash balance held
in overseas locations and would be subject to repatriated earnings tax in
order to get access to it.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) What was the Microsoft stock price reaction to
this announcement that it will buy Skype?
2. (Introductory) What are two questions about the value of this
investment to Microsoft? In your answer, address the question of how
Microsoft can justify a purchase price of $8.5 billion when the company is
not making a profit.
3. (Advanced) Skype is "EBITDA positive but doesn't have net
income," says Nick Wingfield, a WSJ Reporter, on the related video. What
does this statement mean?
4. (Advanced) Why might Skype have operating profit but not net
income? In your answer, define these two financial terms.
5. (Advanced) Skype's previous owner, EBay Inc., "...bought Skype
in 2005 for around $3.1 billion but took a $1.4 billion charge for the
transaction in 2007 after it failed to produce hoped-for synergies." What
type of a write down do you think this was? Why does this write down have
implications for the current Microsoft purchase?
6. (Introductory) Where is the cash that Microsoft will use to make
this purchase? Why is the cash not available to Microsoft in the U.S.? How
might the tax implication of using that cash impact the price Microsoft
would be willing to pay for Skype?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
Microsoft's Pricey Call on Skype
by Martin Peers
May 11, 2011
Page: C20
"Microsoft Dials Up Change,"
by: Nick Wingfield, The Wall Street Journal, May 13, 2011 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703730804576314854222820260.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
Microsoft Corp. racked up a whopping $8.5 billion
phone bill to buy Skype SARL even though there were no signs of other
serious bidders for the provider of free online video and voice chats, as
the software giant moved aggressively to ramp up its growth.
Microsoft made an unsolicited bid for the Internet
company last month and clinched its deal late Monday, nixing a planned Skype
public offering and short-circuiting any talks with competitors such as
Google Inc. and Facebook Inc.
Steve Ballmer, Microsoft's chief executive,
defended the price in an interview, saying the deal—the biggest in his
company's 36-year history—will let Microsoft "be more ambitious, do more
things."
While Facebook, Google and Cisco Systems Inc. had
shown interest in Skype, Microsoft was by far the most determined buyer,
people familiar with the matter said.
The price tag—three times what Skype fetched 18
months ago—is a sign of just how hungry Microsoft is for growth
opportunities—especially in the mobile-phone and Internet markets. Those
missed opportunities are increasingly worrisome to Microsoft investors as
traditional profit engines, like its Windows software, are showing signs of
slowing.
The Skype deal is a gamble by Mr. Ballmer that he
can succeed where those that have gone before him have failed: using the
phone-and-video-calling service to make money. Microsoft's ambitious goal is
to integrate Skype into everything from its Xbox videogame console to its
Office software suite for businesses.
Microsoft also hopes Skype can jump-start its
effort to turn around its fortunes in the mobile-phone market, an area where
it has lagged far behind Apple Inc. and Google. Phones running Microsoft
software were just 7.5% of the smartphone market last quarter, according to
Comscore Inc.
he Skype purchase comes as the technology
industry's momentum is increasingly being fueled by consumers, with the
explosive rise of social network Facebook, now at more than 600 million
global members, and devices such as Apple's iPad and iPhone reshaping the
cellphone and computer markets.
That has pushed many big tech companies that had
largely relied on businesses for growth—from Dell Inc. to Cisco—to seek ways
into consumer technologies.
Some of those moves haven't paid off, however.
Cisco, for example, recently shut down the division that made its Flip video
cameras, just two years after acquiring the business.
Whether Microsoft can make a Skype acquisition
work—especially at such a rich price—is a question mark. EBay Inc. bought
Skype in 2005 for around $3.1 billion but took a $1.4 billion charge for the
transaction in 2007 after it failed to produce hoped-for synergies.
EBay decided to shed the business, and sold a 70%
stake in Skype to a group of investors led by private-equity firm Silver
Lake Partners about 18 months ago. The deal valued all of Skype at a $2.75
billion.
Mr. Ballmer said Microsoft and Skype have far more
in common than Skype had with eBay since both companies are in the
"communications business." He said communications technologies have been
"the backbone" of Microsoft's growth in recent years and that Skype has
"built a real business," with more than $860 million in 2010 revenue.
"I think our case for why to bring this together
comes from a very different place," he said.
Overall, Skype has more than 170 million active
users and 207 billion minutes of voice and video conservations flowing
through its service. But despite its widespread use, it has been slow to
convert users into paying customers and generate meaningful profits. It had
a net loss of $7 million last year.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on mergers and acquisitions are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory02.htm#Pooling
Two Mergers and Acquisitions Cases
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on February 18,
2011
Investors Warm to Big Deals
by: Anupreeta Das and Gina Chon
Feb 11, 2011
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Mergers and Acquisitions, Stock Price Effects
SUMMARY: Worldwide mergers & acquisition activity totals $338 billion so
far in 2011, "...a rate 25% higher than in the same period last year.
And in the U.S., deal volume is more than double last year's rate, which
makes 2011 the most active since 2008." M&A deals this year also are
larger--with 12 deals worldwide, 8 in the U.S., above $5 billion-and are
focused on consolidation "mostly in coal-mining, utilities and exchange
companies." One unusual factor this year: not only are target firm share
prices reacting positively to the transactions, but so are acquiring
firms' share prices. Acquirers usually see their share prices fall as
shareholders expect virtually all of the gains from business
combinations to be paid out to target firm shareholders.
CLASSROOM
APPLICATION: The article is useful to introduce general topics related
to mergers and acquisitions, typically done in an Advanced Accounting
class prior to teaching consolidation accounting.The general tone of the
article also makes it useful for an MBA class.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) Summarize the current state of mergers and
acquisitions activity in 2011 compared to recent years.
2. (Introductory) What does this M&A activity indicate about
corporate CEO confidence in the overall U.S./North American economy?
Hint: you may also refer to discussion in the related video to answer
this question.
3. (Advanced) "...The deals have had little sizzle, serving to
consolidate mostly coal-mining, utilities and exchange companies." What
does the term "consolidate" mean in this context?
4. (Advanced) How to acquiring firm and target firm share
prices typically react to merger and acquisition announcements? How is
that reaction measured? What is different about shareholder reaction to
2011 M&A activity?
5. (Advanced) How do "low interest rates" lead companies "back
in the M&A game"?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
Sanofi, Genzyme May Announce Deal Wednesday
by:
Gina Chon and Jonathan D. Rockoff
Feb 16, 2011
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Mergers and Acquisitions
SUMMARY: On
Wednesday, February 17, 2011, Sanofi-Aventis and Genzyme announced that
they had reached a deal for acquisition of Genzyme. The companies'
boards agreed to a cash deal of about $19 billion plus contingent
payments, leading the total to over $20 billion. "Now comes the hard
part: making the marriage work."
CLASSROOM
APPLICATION: The primary and related articles list factors to be
considered that may inhibit success of an acquisition useful in
introducing business combinations in an advanced financial accounting
class or an MBA class.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) Summarize this acquisition transaction. What
is the strategic purpose behind the transaction? What is the
consideration being paid, and to whom is it being paid?
2. (Advanced) Describe the process of negotiations culminating
in the deal announcement described in this article. In your answer,
define the phrase hostile takeover.
3. (Advanced) Categorize this acquisition as either vertical,
horizontal, or conglomerate. Support your assessment.
4. (Introductory) What pitfalls have beset acquisitions in the
pharmaceutical industry? What factors indicate whether or not this
business combination might face similar difficulties?
5. (Introductory) What are contingent payments in an
acquisition? What purpose do they serve in this deal for Sanofi-Aventis
to acquire Genzyme?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"Investors Warm to Big Deals," by: Anupreeta Das and Gina Chon,
The Wall Street Journal, February 11, 2011 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704132204576136553233927870.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
The big takeover deal has come back, reflecting
increased corporate confidence and economic recovery. What should hearten
prospective deal makers is how the stock market has reacted to the
transactions: It has loved them.
Across the globe, deal volume stands at $338
billion so far this year, a rate 25% higher than in the same period last
year. And in the U.S., deal volume is more than double last year's rate,
which makes 2011 the most active since 2008.
The deals are getting bigger, too. In 2011, there
have been 12 deals valued above $5 billion, eight of them in the U.S.,
according to Dealogic. There were only two such deals in the U.S. at the
same time last year.
For all their size, the deals have had little
sizzle, serving to consolidate mostly coal-mining, utilities and exchange
companies. There was Alpha Natural Resources Inc.'s $7.1 billion deal to buy
Massey Energy Co., a $13.7 billion merger of utility companies Duke Energy
Corp. and Progress Energy Inc., and this week, the planned deal between
London Stock Exchange Group PLC and Canada's TMX Group Inc., the company
that owns the Toronto and Montreal exchanges.
One of the big differences from past merger
run-ups: Investors are sending the acquirers' stock prices up, not down,
after the deals are made public.
Shares of iron-ore producer Cliffs Natural
Resources Inc. rose nearly 3% on Jan. 11 after it announced a deal for rival
iron-ore producer Consolidated Thompson Iron Mines Ltd. for about $5
billion.
On Monday, Danaher Corp. agreed to pay $5.87
billion for Beckman Coulter Inc., which makes diagnostic equipment used in
medical testing. Danaher is paying a 45% premium on Beckman shares, usually
a sum that sparks acquiring-company shareholders to fear the company is
spending too much. But Danaher stock rose on the news, as investors cheered
the industrial conglomerate's move into a new, high-growth sector of life
sciences. Swelling middle-class populations in emerging markets such as
China and India are expected to drive demand for preventive medical care, of
which clinical testing is a central feature.
Deutsche Bank analyst Nigel Coe called the deal
"strategically coherent" and said the low cost of financing the deal, given
the state of credit markets right now, will add more to Danaher's earnings.
Wall Street has welcomed these deals because many
of these industries were ripe for consolidation before the recession, but
deal-making was put on hold as the debt markets shut down and companies
preferred to hold on to their cash.
For instance, Deutsche Börse AG and NYSE Euronext
talked seriously about a deal in 2008 and 2009, but the fragile global
economy discouraged a cross-border merger. The two are now close to a tie-up
to form a company with a putative market value of $25 billion, and a deal
could be sealed next week. The Big Board's stock shot up as much as 18% on
news of the latest talks, which followed Tuesday's merger news between the
owners of the London and Toronto exchanges. Shares of those companies
climbed 9% and 4%, respectively.
"We saw a time period in 2009 and even in early
2010 when CEOs were primarily focused on tactical opportunities, but today
they're focused more on strategic opportunities," said Jack MacDonald,
co-head of Americas M&A at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
Danaher, for instance, has had its eye on
diagnostics companies for years. It was a confluence of factors, including
the improving economy, with "headwinds dissipating, tailwinds getting
stronger," that helped it seal a deal for Beckman, Danaher Chief Executive
Lawrence Culp said in an interview Monday.
Low interest rates, strong corporate performance in
2010 and a sense that the global economy is moving forward have put
companies "back in the M&A game," he added.
Continued in article
"Sanofi, Genzyme May Announce Deal Wednesday,"
by: Gina Chon and Jonathan D. Rockoff, The Wall Street Journal,
February 16, 2011 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704409004576146350470325700.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
Sanofi-Aventis SA is expected to acquire Genzyme
Corp. for about $19 billion in cash, plus possible additional payments in
the future, in a deal that could be announced as soon as Wednesday, people
familiar with the matter said.
After Sanofi initially considered trying to obtain
a slightly lower price, the parties largely agreed to the broad terms that
they originally negotiated when Sanofi was given access to Genzyme's
financial books on Jan. 31, these people said.
Talks are continuing and final details are still
being worked out, these people added. The boards of both companies were
meeting Tuesday and an announcement could come in the morning European time,
ahead of Genzyme's earnings announcement.
As part of that broad agreement, Sanofi agreed to
raise its offer from $69 a share to about $74 a share in cash, or about $19
billion, people familiar with the matter said.
Genzyme investors also would receive a so-called
contingent value right, or CVR, that would entitle them to additional
payments if the company meets certain sales goals. The CVR, which investors
would be able to trade on a stock exchange, would have an initial trading
value of at least $2 a share, people familiar with the matter said.
After Sanofi finished its due diligence on Genzyme,
Sanofi executives pushed to change some of the original terms, and therefore
some of the criteria for the CVR have been adjusted, these people added.
Details of the terms of the CVR are still being finalized, they said.
The CVR would have an eventual value of between $5
and $6 a share if Genzyme meets sales targets for a drug used to treat
leukemia, which is also being tested against multiple sclerosis. The future
payments could be worth as much as $14 a share over the long term in the
best-case scenario for sales of the drug to multiple-sclerosis patients,
according to people familiar with the matter.
Sanofi didn't find any major issues in its
examination of Genzyme's financial books and manufacturing facilities. There
was a risk for Genzyme that Sanofi could discover some problems, given that
the Cambridge, Mass., biotechnology firm is still recovering from
manufacturing issues that temporarily shut down a Genzyme production
facility in 2009.
A CVR is often used when parties can't agree on
price. One of the issues between Sanofi and Genzyme is their differing
predictions on the sale of the multiple-sclerosis drug. Genzyme has
predicted those sales could reach $3.5 billion in 2017, a projection Sanofi
has said is too optimistic.
Sanofi has been pursuing Genzyme for months, but
the biotechnology firm had refused to talk to Sanofi because of its $69 a
share offer, which Genzyme said was too low. In August, Sanofi made an
unsolicited bid for Genzyme, and went hostile with its offer in October.
Some of Sanofi's biggest products, including the
cancer drug Taxotere and the blood-thinner Lovenox, have lost sales to
generic rivals, while another big drug, the blood thinner Plavix, is
expected to confront generic competition in 2012. Plavix accounted for about
9% of Sanofi's $40 billion sales last year. Sanofi also suffered a research
setback last month, when a breast-cancer drug it was testing didn't work as
expected in a late-stage study.
Continued in article
Wasted Taxpayer Money: Purchase
Accounting Rule Will Enable Banks to Report Billions in TARP Profits
"Banks Stand to Reap Billions From Purchased Bad Loans," by Julie Crawshaw,
NewsMax, May 27, 2009 ---
http://moneynews.newsmax.com/financenews/purchase_accounting_rule/2009/05/27/218542.html
An accounting rule that governs how banks book
acquired loans is making it possible for banks that purchased bad loans to
reap billions.
Applying this regulation — known as the purchase
accounting rule — to mortgages and commercial loans that lost value during
the credit crisis gives acquiring banks an incentive to mark down loans they
acquire as aggressively as possible, says RBC Capital Markets analyst Gerard
Cassidy.
"One of the beauties of purchase accounting is
after you mark down your assets, you accrete them back in," Cassidy told
Bloomberg. "Those transactions should be favorable over the long run."
Here’s how it works: When JPMorgan bought WaMu out
of receivership last September, it used the purchase accounting rule to
record impaired loans at fair value, marking down $118.2 billion of assets
by 25 percent.
Now, JPMorgan says that first-quarter gains from
the WaMu loans resulted in $1.26 billion in interest income and left the
bank with an accretable-yield balance that could result in additional income
of $29.1 billion.
So JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and PNC
Financial Services all stand to make big bucks on bad loans they bought from
Washington Mutual, Wachovia, Countrywide and National City.
Their combined deals provide a $56 billion in
accretable yields, which is the difference between the value of the loans on
the banks’ balance sheets and the cash flow they’re expected to produce.
However, it’s tough to tell how much the yield will
increase the acquiring banks’ total revenues because banks don’t disclose
all their expenses and book the additional revenues over the lives of the
loans.
May 28, 2009 reply from Tom Selling
[tom.selling@GROVESITE.COM]
Thanks for providing fodder for what I hope will be
a "fun" blog post. Under APB 16, you had to evaluate the adequacy of the
allowance for bad debts in an acquisition. With the objective of curbing
this particular abuse, the SEC issued a Staff Accounting Bulletin (SAB
Codification Topic 2.B.5) that constrained the acquiror from changing the
allowance for bad debts, unless the plans for collection was fundamentally
different.
The new problem arises, because when the loans were
held by the acquiree, they were measured at contractual amount less the
allowance for bad debts. Upon acquisition, they now have to be measured at
fair value. If the acquirer wants to maximize future profits, it will
maximize the difference between the old and new carrying value, subject to
the following considerations: (1) auditor and/or SEC push back; (2) future
goodwill impairment charges, and (3) capital adequacy regulations.
As to Denny's comment about ultimate collectibility,
current managers may not care if the loans go further south some years from
now. This generation will be compensated based on accounting profits over
the next 2-3 years -- and will be long gone before the proverbial stuff hits
the fan.
The more things change, the more they remain the
same. I think that the biggest lesson here, Bob, and something I expect you
will react to, is that multi-attribute accounting standards don't work.
Best,
Tom
May 29, 2009 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Tom,
When I first learned about how
business firms were exploiting derivative financial instruments contracts in
large measure to avoid accounting rules, and before FAS 119/133 issuance, I
attended a workshop in Orlando back in the 1980s conducted by Deloitte's
derivatives accounting expert John Smith (who later did a lot of IAS 39 work
for the IASB).
John told us about a Deloitte client
in L.A. that was behaving so strangely that the auditor in charge brought it
to John's attention (John was the top research partner in Deloitte at the
time). Bank X was repeatedly taking reversing positions on an interest rate
swap in a manner such that each time a reversing position was taken there
was an ultimate cash flow loss. It seemed that Bank X was making a terrible
mistake. John Smith posed this problem as a case to us derivatives
accounting neophyte professors in the audience in Orlando.
I recall that the first professor to
shout out the answer from the audience was Hugo Nurnberg. Hugo was the first
among us neophytes to recognize that, prior to FAS 133 rules, Bank X was
making harmful economic decisions just to "frontload income" as Hugo put it.
By frontloading income, the CEO got bigger bonuses in what was a bit like
Ponzi damage to shareholders. Each year frontloaded income in similar
contracting grows by enough to cover tailing cash flow losses. Bonuses and
share prices accordingly grow and grow until, dah, frontloaded income is no
longer sufficient to cover the tailing cash flow losses. I wonder if a
California relative of Bernie Madoff was running Bank X. By the time
the Ponzi exploded the Bank X CEO was probably living in luxury in Hawaii.
This was one of the first times I
became aware of how executives are willing to maximize personal gains at the
ultimate expense of the shareholders for whom they are acting as agents.
Since the roaring derivatives fraud days of the 1990s such behavior became
the rule rather than the exception, which is why we're in such a dire
economic crisis today. Alan Greenspan and Chris Cox belatedly admitted that
they "made mistakes" by assuming bankers would put shareholder interests
above their own personal greed ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#SEC
I wonder if this current TARP poison
plan is a bit of a Ponzi scheme to inflate banking share prices in what will
once again be a royal screwing of investors?
My timeline on the massive derivative
financial instruments frauds is at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds
Bob Jensen
June 1, 2009 rely from The Accounting Onion
[tom.selling@grovesite.com]
From a MoneyNews.com
story published this Wednesday headlined
"Banks
Stand to Reap Billions from Purchased Bad Loans,"
came an account of a jaw-dropping transaction. It was spawned by FAS 141(R),
the latest and greatest standard on accounting for business combinations:
"When
JPMorgan bought WaMu out of receivership last September, it used the
purchase accounting rule [FAS 141(R)] to record impaired loans at fair
value, marking down 118.2 billion of assets by 25 percent.
Now,
JPMorgan says its first-quarter gains from the WaMu loans resulted in $1.26
billion in interest income and left the bank within an accretable-yield
balance that could result in additional income of $29.1 billion."
Business
combination accounting has forever been fertile ground for earnings and
balance sheet management for one simple reason: the opportunity to tweak the
amounts reported for the assets acquired and liabilities assumed, with the
ultimate objective of brightening post-acquisition earnings reports. But, as
tiresome as that old game might be, the kind of maneuver that JPMorgan's
management has engineered is a novel twist on an old loophole that had once
been closed pretty tightly by the SEC.
The
Closed Loophole that Would Be Re-Opened by the FASB
Once the
"pooling of interests" method of business combination accounting of APB 16
was abolished with the advent of FAS 141 (not to be confused with FAS
141(R)),
the most basic surviving principle of business combination accounting became
thus: the acquisition of a business should always be reflected on the
financial statements of the acquiror by assigning a new carrying amount to
each of the acquired company's assets and liabilities. This new carrying
amount would be updated, based on current assumptions and estimates
regarding the future role of the acquired assets and liabilities in the
combined entity. The implementation of this principle had long been known as
the "purchase accounting" method for business combinations.
With
certain important exceptions, SFAS 141 mandated that new carrying amounts
for assets acquired in a business combinations would be based on their fair
values. The exception that is germane to the JPMorgan story pertains to
loans (i.e., trade receivables, interest-bearing loans and marketable debt
securities classified as held-to-maturity). The measurement bases for these
items were carried forward from APB 16's version of the purchase accounting
method: a gross amount reduced by an appropriate allowance for uncollectible
accounts. This exception to loan measurement was important, because it also
meant that a 1986 SEC staff position would still be applicable to purchase
accounting.
At that
time, the SEC saw fit to put a stop to unwarranted increases in the
allowance for loan losses as part of the business combination transaction.
Increases to loan loss allowances would mathematically transfer future loan
losses to goodwill, where they would be deferred indefinitely, with the
effect of reporting inflated earnings in future periods as the loans were
eventually settled for more than their understated carrying amounts. Staff
Accounting Bulletin 61 (Topic 2-A(5)) states that the SEC would not permit
any adjustments of the acquiree's estimate
of loan loss reserves, unless the acquiror's plans for ultimate recovery of
the loans were demonstrably different from the plans that had served as the
basis for the acquiree's estimates of the loss reserves.
FASB
Amnesia?
FAS
141(R) did away with the "purchase method" and established the "acquisition
method" of accounting for business combinations. It apparently did so out of
a belief that measurements of assets and liabilities that are based on the
most current information available are usually, if not always, preferable to
valuations based on less-current information. The JPMorgan case glaringly
points to a significant flaw in that belief: inconsistent
application of fair value could be more harmful than consistent
application of a less desirable attribute. As to the case at hand:
§
WaMu, as is quite common, accounted for its loans based on a
held-to-maturity model. That is, except for recognizing declines in
creditworthiness, the loan carrying amount is based on the original
contractual terms; interest is accrued by multiplying the net carrying
amount by the yield to maturity as of the date the loan was
originated/acquired.
§
Even though the market value of these loans had declined
significantly as they turned toxic, WaMu apparently was not required to
record losses to bring the loans down to their fair values.
§
JPMorgan, when acquiring WaMu, was required by FAS 141(R) to mark the
loans to market. Subsequent accounting by JPMorgan will continue the
WaMu the held-to-maturity model.
It would
be a pretty safe bet that JPMorgan was very 'conservative' in their
estimates of fair value for the loans; that's because the lower the fair
value, the higher the yield to maturity, and the higher the amount of
reported future earnings. Of course, there are some limits to JPMorgan's
estimate of fair value: auditor pushback, SEC review, increased risk of
goodwill impairment charges, and capital adequacy regulations. But, at least
in this case, it is possible to become rich without being greedy.
Where is
the SEC!?
Maybe
there has been more coverage of this issue, but I haven't seen it; kudos to
its author, Julie Crawshaw of Newsmax. If we are concerned that bank
executives are being overcompensated, especially on the taxpayers' dime,
here is a prime example of where insufficient oversight has spawned a new
source of moral hazard.
For
starters, the SEC should put a stop to this obvious and blatant abuse,
immediately.
They should issue another SAB, carving out the offending provision of FAS
141(R) and restoring the long-established and functioning status quo. Every
company that benefitted from the ill-conceived accounting rule should be
forced to retroactively restate their earnings – especially any financial
institution on the government dole.
Perhaps
the lack of permanent leadership in the Commission's Office of the Chief
Accountant is contributing to a lack of attention to this obvious problem,
but it is in no way an excuse. Also, this is a problem created by the FASB.
Let's be charitable and call it an unintended consequence, but whatever the
cause, the FASB should move to fix it forthwith. I'm suggesting that the SEC
should act first, solely because they have the demonstrated capability of
being able to move the fastest. That's because a SAB doesn't have to be
exposed for comment before it can be issued.
But,
lacking any actions by either the FASB or SEC to put the cat back in the
bag, auditors (perhaps via the PCAOB), and boards should be put on notice of
a new potential scheme to inflate executive compensation in the absence of
actual value creation for stakeholders. If a single dime of executive
compensation comes out of accreted excess earnings from these business
combination games, I hope that private securities lawyers will round up the
proxies and the lawsuits, settling for nothing less than "a pound of flesh."
A larger
lesson is important to briefly discuss in order to understand how this kind
of loophole can occur: in accounting for financial assets, the only workable
system is comprehensive mark-to-market, all of the time. The current
situation is a consequence (intended or otherwise) of the piecemeal approach
pursued by the FASB (and IASB) towards fair value accounting.
This teaching case should be of special interest to Tom Selling and other
advocates of fair value accounting for all bank loan assets and debt.
The case deals with the traditional and now renewed issue of whether a company
can avoid short-term fair value adjustments by declaring a financial instrument
asset or debt to be a long-term (e.g. loan investments to be held-to-maturity
rather than being held as available-for-sale). With great reluctance the IASB
caved in EU banker political pressures to allow historical cost accounting for
long-term financial instruments. Similarly, the FASB changed loan impairment
accounting for long-term receivables.
Personally I never have liked short-term fair value adjustments to very
long-term financial instruments (asset and debt financial instruments). The
reason is that I place primary importance on accounting for the bottom line (net
earnings) that becomes too volatile by the fictional unrealized gains and losses
of fair value accounting for very long-term financial instruments like mortgages
payable or mortgage loans receivable. Until political pressures were applied,
the IASB and FASB placed primary emphasis on balance sheet values even though
fair value adjustment fictions of long-term financial assets and debt made it
impossible to define net earnings ---
http://www.fasri.net/index.php/2009/10/the-asset-liability-approach-primacy-does-not-mean-priority/
Most long-term receivables will be settled for contracted maturity value and
are not doubtful accountants. However, at any point where it appears that full
collection of maturity value is in doubt (such as defaulted monthly payments on
a mortgage loan), the the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts must be adjusted for
the best possible estimate of ultimate loan losses just as Sears and other big
companies adjust the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts for estimated receivables
bad debt losses. Often estimations of such losses for bank loans are more
complicated when loan collateral is involved as in the case of mortgage loans
where new government regulations make foreclosure litigation more complicated
and costly.
From The Wall Street Journal Weekly Accounting Review on November 8,
2013
Fifth Third Moves CFO in SEC Accounting Pact
by: Andrew R. Johnson
Nov 06, 2013
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Accounting For
Investments, Banking, Fair Value Accounting
SUMMARY: In the third
quarter of 2008, says the SEC, Fifth Third Bancorp of Cincinnati, OH, should
have classified certain of its loans as held for sale. The loans were
reclassified in the fourth quarter. The SEC's filing related to this agreement
is available at
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/35527/000119312513427656/d622749dex991.htm
For quick reference, the bank's 10-Q filing for the quarter ended September 30,
2008 is available at
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/35527/000119312508229815/d10q.htm#tx44301_17
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article may be used to introduce fair value accounting for investments versus
historical cost accounting for loans receivable. Questions also ask students to
understand the CFO's personal responsibility for integrity in financial
statement filings and systems of internal control.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
Of what wrongdoing has the SEC accused Fifth Third Bancorp of Cincinnati?
2. (Advanced)
What is the importance of classifying loans as held for sale rather than
classifying them as long-term receivables?
3. (Advanced)
Chief Financial Officer Daniel Poston certainly wasn't the only one directly
responsible for the bank's accounting in the third quarter of 2008. Why then is
he the one who is losing his position and facing a one-year ban practicing
before the SEC?
4. (Advanced)
Do you think that Mr. Poston will return to his position as CFO after his one
year ban on practicing in front of the SEC is completed? Explain your answer
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"Fifth Third Moves CFO in SEC Accounting Pact,"
by Andrew R. Johnson, The Wall Street Journal, November 6, 2013 ---
http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303936904579180252046068872?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
Fifth Third Bancorp FITB
-0.24% has moved its finance chief to a different post in connection with a
tentative agreement it reached with the staff of the Securities and Exchange
Commission regarding the lender's accounting.
The Cincinnati bank said
Daniel Poston will vacate the chief financial officer's and become chief
strategy and administrative officer. Fifth Third appointed Tayfun Tuzun, its
treasurer, to the role of finance chief.
The SEC is seeking a
one-year ban on Mr. Poston's ability to practice before the agency under
separate negotiations with the executive, the bank said.
Fifth Third said its
agreement in principle stems from an investigation into how Fifth Third
accounted for a portion of its commercial-real-estate portfolio in a regulatory
filing for the third quarter of 2008. The dispute focuses on whether the bank
should have classified certain loans as being "held for sale" in the third
quarter of that year rather than in the fourth quarter.
Fifth Third said it will
agree to an SEC order finding that the company failed to properly account for a
portion of the portfolio but will not admit or deny wrongdoing. The bank will
also pay a civil penalty under the agreement, the amount of which wasn't
disclosed.
The agreement requires
the approval of the SEC commissioners.
A spokeswoman for the SEC
and a spokesman for Fifth Third declined to comment.
Mr. Poston, who was
serving as Fifth Third's interim finance chief at the time of the activities, is
in separate settlement discussions with the SEC under which he would agree to
similar charges, a civil penalty and the one-year ban the agency is seeking, the
bank said.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on fair value accounting are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#FairValue
FAS 141 and the Question of Value By
PricewaterhouseCoopers CFOdirect Network Newsdesk, January 16, 2003 --- http://www.cfodirect.com/cfopublic.nsf/vContentPrint/CA13B226B214A04085256CB000512D34?OpenDocument
Just as early reactions
to FAS 142 seemed to have overlooked the complexities in reviewing and testing
goodwill for impairment, so too have reactions to complying with the Financial
Accounting Standards Board's Statement No. 141 – Business Combinations.
Adopted and issued at the same time as Statement No. 142 in the summer of
2001, the headline news about FAS 141 was the elimination of the Pooling-of-Interest
accounting method in mergers and acquisitions. Going forward from June 30,
2001, all acquisitions are to be accounted for using one method only – Purchase
Accounting.
This change is significant and one particular aspect of it – the
identification and measurement of intangible assets outside of goodwill
– seems to be somewhat under-appreciated.
Stephen C. Gerard, Managing Director at Standard & Poor's Corporate Value
Consulting, says that there is "general conceptual understanding of
Statement 141 by corporate management and finance teams. But the real impact
will not be felt until the next deal is done." And that deal in FAS 141
parlance will be a "purchase" since "poolings" are no
longer recognized.
Consistent M&A Accounting
The FASB, in issuing Statement No. 141, concluded that "virtually all
business combinations are acquisitions and, thus, all business combinations
should be accounted for in the same way that other asset acquisitions are
accounted for – based on the values exchanged."
In defining how business combinations are to be accounted for, FAS 141
supersedes parts of APB Opinion No. 16. That Opinion allowed companies
involved in a merger or acquisition to use either pooling-of-interest
or purchase accounting. The choice hinged on whether the deal met 12 specified
criteria. If so, pooling-of-interest was required.
Over time, "pooling" became the accounting method of choice,
especially in "mega-deal" transactions. That, in the words of the
FASB, resulted in "…similar business combinations being accounted for
using different methods that produced dramatically different financial
statement results."
FAS 141 seeks to level that playing field and improve M&A financial
reporting by:
- Better
reflecting the investment made in an acquired entity based on the values
exchanged.
- Improving the
comparability of reported financial information on an apples-to-apples
basis.
- Providing more
complete financial information about the assets acquired and liabilities
assumed in business combinations.
- Requiring
disclosure of information on the business strategy and reasons for the
acquisition.
When announcing FAS 141, the FASB wrote: "This Statement requires those
(intangible assets) be recognized as assets apart from goodwill if they meet
one of two criteria – the contractual-legal criterion or the separability
criterion."
Unchanged by the new rule are the fundamentals of purchase accounting and the
purchase price allocation methodology for measuring goodwill: that is,
goodwill represents the amount remaining after allocating the purchase price
to the fair market values of the acquired assets, including recognized
intangibles, and assumed liabilities at the date of the acquisition.
"What has changed," says Steve Gerard, "is the rigor companies
must apply in determining what assets to break out of goodwill and separately
recognize and amortize."
Thus, in an unheralded way, FAS 141 introduces a process of identifying and
placing value on intangible assets that could prove to be a new experience for
many in corporate finance, as well as a costly and time-consuming exercise.
Nonetheless, an exercise critical to compliance with the new rule.
Continued at http://www.cfodirect.com/cfopublic.nsf/vContentPrint/CA13B226B214A04085256CB000512D34?OpenDocument
From The Wall Street Journal's Accounting Weekly Review on May 7, 2010
SEC Examines Berkshire's Disclosure on Burlington
by: Dennis
K. Berman
May 06, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Disclosure,
Disclosure Requirements, Mergers and Acquisitions, SEC, Securities and
Exchange Commission
SUMMARY: The
article discusses the SEC's investigation into when Berkshire Hathaway
disclosed its intentions regarding the railroad Burlington Northern. In
question 2, a direct link is provided to the merger press release on Form
8-K made on November 3, 2009.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article is useful for introducing required disclosures, negotiation and
potential bidding wars in business combinations. It also highlights the
issue of timeliness in defining information usefulness.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
According to the article, when did Berkshire Hathaway first announce its
intention to buy the railroad company Burlington Northern Sante Fe Corp.?
2. (Advanced)
Access the SEC filing on Form 8-K made on November 3, 2009 containing the
M&A agreement and joint press release by Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp.
(BNSF) and Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. available at (note that the filing is
located with BNSF filings):
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/934612/000095015709000805/form8k.htm
To whom is this notice given-other shareholders or someone else? Given that
both companies made this join press release, at what stage of negotiations
was this announcement made?
3. (Introductory)
What is the question with the timing of the disclosure made by Berkshire
Hathaway?
4. (Advanced)
Define the concept of timeliness in the conceptual framework for financial
reporting, citing either the source of the definition in U.S. GAAP or IFRS.
How does this concept interact with the primary qualities of financial
information? In your answer, define these primary qualities as well.
5. (Introductory)
Why does early disclosure "help company officers by limiting shareholders'
ability to make a surprise takeover offer"?
6. (Introductory)
How does early disclosure lead to potential problems in merger and
acquisition negotiations? According to the article, how does it work against
Warren Buffett's style of acquisition in particular?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"SEC Examines Berkshire's Disclosure on Burlington: Issue Is How Other
Railroad Shareholders Were Informed Before Deal in 2009," by Dennis K. Berman,
The Wall Street Journal, May 4, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703322204575226723062858044.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
The Securities and Exchange Commission is examining
the disclosures Berkshire Hathaway Inc. made about its $26 billion purchase
of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. railroad, said people familiar with
the matter.
For a number of weeks, the SEC has been looking at
how Berkshire, helmed by billionaire investor Warren Buffett, informed other
Burlington shareholders about its offer to buy the company in late October
2009, these people said.
At the time, Berkshire was already a 22.6% holder
of Burlington stock. Under a section of securities law generally known as
"13D," large holders must promptly alert other stockholders of any "plans or
proposals" to control a company. Technically the disclosure, which must be
filed with the SEC, should happen within a few business days after an offer,
say some securities lawyers. But the matter has long been open to
interpretation.
Mr. Buffett declined to comment. The SEC also
declined to comment.
Mr. Buffett amended his securities holdings on Nov.
3, 2009, the day the acquisition was announced. Securities filings show that
he first indicated he could pay $100 for each Burlington share to company
chief executive Matthew K. Rose on the evening of Oct. 23.
The transaction was a highlight of Mr. Buffett's
career, and represented his largest-ever deal. Mr. Buffett saw rail
transportation as a growing industry over a coming period of higher energy
costs. Mr. Buffett declared it an "all-in wager on the economic future of
the United States."
The reporting law is intended to help company
officers by limiting shareholders' ability to make a surprise takeover
offer. But the adherence to and enforcement of this standard has long fallen
in a gray area. Potential buyers are loath to disclose a potential deal,
fearing that it could upset their ability to complete the transaction. The
SEC, meanwhile, has shown only spotty attention to this area of the law over
the years, say securities attorneys.
The SEC's corporation-finance division is handling
the matter, and is so far just examining the facts of the transaction. The
results of that analysis will determine whether SEC's enforcement unit would
open an inquiry. Even if the SEC did decide to take action against
Berkshire, the penalties would likely be minor, experts say.
Still, the agency has shown a new focus on the law.
It recently published some loose guidelines about when potential acquirers
are expected to report their interest. At last month's Tulane University
Corporate Law Institute, the SEC's mergers and acquisitions chief, Michele
Anderson, made remarks about the topic. Acquirers that already hold big
stakes are expected to report "not necessarily as late as when they enter a
merger agreement," Ms. Anderson said. "The more it becomes probable from the
merely possible, there is a need to disclose."
The SEC's move highlights Mr. Buffett's style of
deal-making, which has stood apart from other corporate buyers. Eschewing
bankers and drawn-out negotiations, Mr. Buffett has instead used a personal
appeal, directly building relationships with top company managers and
directors, while often signing deals in a matter of days.
This has given him an advantage in buying
companies, helping lock out any potential rivals from lobbing in competing
bids.
To avoid losing a company to a competitor or
driving up the target stock price, deal lawyers say, buyers often interpret
the early-reporting requirements broadly, saying that offers aren't
"proposals" until they have guaranteed financing, for instance.
"Normally public disclosure of such transactions is
made once the parties reach agreement," said Doron Lipschitz, a partner at
O'Melveny & Myers LLP, speaking generally about the rule. "The target
company and investor usually make their announcement in filing at the same
time."
Other lawyers take a harder view, including Stephen
Bainbridge, a professor at the UCLA School of Law. "Once the large
shareholder decides that it plans to make an offer, that is a material
change," said Mr. Bainbridge. "You have a duty to amend your 13D filing
promptly. There is no real dispute on this."
One recent legal case touched, at least partially,
on the timing of disclosure of merger talks. In a shareholder lawsuit
involving the 2004 takeover of Sears Roebuck by Kmart to form Sears
Holdings, a U.S. District Court in Chicago found that the companies didn't
have to release any information ahead of their transaction, despite
shareholder claims that the information should have been disclosed earlier.
A Little Like Dirty Pooling Accounting
Tyco Undervalues Acquired Assets and Overvalues Acquired Liabilities:
Tyco International Ltd. said Monday it has agreed to
pay the Securities and Exchange Commission $50 million to settle charges related
to allegations of accounting fraud by the high-tech conglomerate's prior
management. The regulatory agency had accused Tyco of inflating operating
earnings, undervaluing acquired assets, overvaluing acquired liabilities and
using improper accounting rules, company spokeswoman Sheri Woodruff said. 'The
accounting practices violated federal securities laws,'' she said.
"Tyco to Pay S.E.C. $50 Million on Accounting Charges," The New York Times,
April 17, 2006 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-Tyco-SEC-Fine.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
April 17, 2006 reply from Saeed Roohani
Bob,
Assuming improper accounting practices by Tyco
negatively impacted investors and creditors in the capital markets, why
SEC gets the $50 M? Shouldn't SEC give at least some of it back to the
people potentially hurt by such practices? Or damage to investors should
only come from auditors' pocket?
Saeed Roohani
April 18, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Saeed,
In a case like this it is difficult to identify particular victims
and the extent of the damage of this one small set of accounting
misdeeds in the complex and interactive multivariate world of
information.
The damage is also highly dispersed even if you confine the scope to
just existing shareholders in Tyco at the particular time of the
financial reports.
One has to look at motives. I'm guessing that one motive was to
provide overstated future ROIs from acquisitions in order to justify the
huge compensation packages that the CEO (Kozlowski) and the CFO
(Schwarz) were requesting from Tyco's Board of Directors for superior
acquisition performance. Suppose that they got $125 million extra in
compensation. The amount of damage for to each shareholder for each
share of stock is rather minor since there were so many shares
outstanding.
Also, in spite of the illegal accounting, Kozlowski's acquisitions
were and still are darn profitable for Tyco. I have a close friend (and
neighbor) in New Hampshire, a former NH State Trooper, who became
Koslowski's personal body guard. To this day my friend, Jack, swears
that Kozlowski did a great job for Tyco in spite of possibly "stealing"
some of Tyco's money. Many shareholders wish Kozlowski was still in
command even if he did steal a small portion of the huge amount he made
for Tyco. He had a skill at negotiating some great acquisition deals in
spite of trying to take a bit more credit for the future ROIs than was
justified under purchase accounting instead of virtual pooling
accounting.
I actually think Dennis Kozlowski was simply trying to get a bit
larger commission (than authorized by the Board) for some of his good
acquisition deals.
Would you rather have a smart crook or an unimaginative bean counter
managing your company? (Just kidding)
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on the Tyco scandals are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#PwC
April 18, 2006 message reply Gregg Wilson
Hi Bob Jensen
From Forbes:
<<But Briloff says what's particularly egregious is
the fact that Tyco did not file with the SEC disclosure forms (known as 8K
filings), which would have carried the exhibits setting forth the balance
sheets and income statements of the acquired companies.
"This is an even worse situation than under the old
pooling accounting, " Briloff says, "because under that now vestigial
method, investors and analysts could dig out the historical balance sheet
and income statement for the acquired companies." >>
Ah yes, the good old days, when accountants
understood what mattered.
Gregg
April 18, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Interesting but still does not mean Abe wanted to pool those statements.
Abe fought poolings like a tiger. He never said that accounting information
before an acquisition is totally useless. He did say it could be misleading
when pooled, especially in relation to terms of the acquisition.
Bob Jensen
Purchase Versus Pooling: The Never Ending Debate
March 29, 2006 message from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hope you don't mind another question.
I worked on Wall Street during the other tech mania
(late 60's) which included the conglomerate craze. I know
pooling-of-interest accounting was kind of tarred and feathered in the
ensuing meltdown, but I was never too clear why that was so. I am still
wondering why bogus goodwill is preferable to retaining the financial track
record of the combined companies. Are you aware of what the actual
objections to p-o-i are?
Gregg Wilson
March 29, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Some investors are impressed by high ROI or ROE
numbers. Keeping the denominator low with old historical cost numbers and
the numerator high with future earnings numbers "inflated" ROI and ROE and
made the mergers appear more successful than was actually the case.
There are other problems with "dirty pooling."
One of the best-known articles (from Barrons) was
written by Professor Abe Briloff about "Dirty Pooling at McDonalds."
McDonald's shares plummeted significantly the day that Briloff exposed dirty
pooling by McDonald's ---
http://www.jstor.org/view/00014826/ap010167/01a00060/0
Actually, one of the arguments in favor of purchase
accounting rather than pooling of interests is that in an arm's length
transaction goodwill can actually be measured, unlike the pie-in-the sky
valuations in a hypothetical world.
Bob Jensen
March 29, 2006 message from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Bob Jensen
Well I wasn't able to find a site where I could access Abe's article.
The "old numbers" are worth a lot to this user of financial statements,
and I would much rather have the combined track record of the two companies
than its obliteration. I am not sure why accountants feel that there is a
problem revealing what the past and current combined ROE has been. The
pooling-of-interest doesn't create that number, it only preserves it for
those who want to use it.
If you mean that the value of the exchanged stock is an actual
measurement of goodwill then I would take very serious issue. There is no
economic meaning to that number. Companies negotiate an exchange ratio. The
relative value of the two stocks may matter, but the value of the exchanged
stock has no relevance to the negotiation, so how could it be a measure of
anything economic? All you have to do is look at the real cases of stock
acquisitions that were made during the market boom to see how true that is
and how spurious the numbers became. I always assumed that the amortization
rules were changed because of the charade of company after company being
forced to report pro forma earnings due to the ludicrous mountains of
mythical goodwill.
But even if the goodwill number were determinable why would you want to
use it. The point isn't to have accurate values on the balance sheet. The
point is retaining the historical relationships of the earnings model.
Deferred costs are not assets that you want to value but the merely costs
that are going to be expensed and the historical relationship of those costs
to the resulting earnings is what tells you what the capital efficiency of
the company is. I want that information. Why obliterate it?
Gregg Wilson
March 29, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Generally there are market values of the stocks at the date of the
acquisition. These give some evidence of value at the time of the merger,
although there are blockage factor considerations.
In any case there is a long history of abuses of pooling to mislead
investors. In some cases that was the main purpose such that without being
able to use pooling accounting, acquisitions did not take place. In other
words the main purpose was to deceive.
A summary of FAS 141 is given at
http://www.fasb.org/st/summary/stsum141.shtml
The standard itself discusses a lot of both theory and abuses. In
general, academics fought against pooling. About the only parties in favor
of pooling were the corporations themselves.
Read the standard itself and you will learn a lot.
Bob Jensen
March 30, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Bob Jensen
Well I would call that entire FAS 141 a lot of
sophistries. Apples and oranges indeed. This is a case of trying to make an
apple into an orange and getting a rotten banana.
In the above example, if a company bought another
company for more than its net worth, the excess price paid was attributable
to goodwill and would have to be written off over a period of years. The
problem is that the writing off goodwill creates an expense that lowers
earnings. To get around this, companies use an accounting technique called
pooling of interest. This practice allows the acquiring company to buy other
companies at inflated prices and keep the goodwill charges off the company's
books. This strategy has resulted in merger mania. It enables a corporation
to buy another company at an inflated price using its own highly priced
stock as currency. In honest times, this process would create huge amounts
of goodwill that normally would have to be written off against future
earnings. Today, companies avoid this detriment to their bottom line by
pooling. The Merger Wave
These accounting abuses can be credited to what is
behind the current merger wave on Wall Street. Companies are using their
inflated stock prices to buy other companies. The result of buying more
companies brings in more sales and more profits, which Wall Street loves.
Using the pooling method of accounting, companies can acquire other
companies at high prices without the consequences of depressing future
earnings through the amortization of goodwill.
I was trying to find example of the abuses you were
talking about. I thought this was a terrific one. What fantastic
misinformation!
The thing that's so laughable about these arguments
is that they take investors for fools. In a stock acquisition not a nickel
of cash has been expended, so everyone understands that the purchase
goodwill is just a little paper farce that the accountants make us go
through. The amortization thing doesn't effect the price of the stock
because it has no e ffect whatsoever on the company's actual profitability
or cash flow. Have you read about the efficient market? I was really struck
in this last go around at the willingness of companies to take on billions
of dollars in goodwill that literally dwarfed everything else on their
balance sheets and caused their GAP earnings to be huge losses. They
reported their pro forma earnings and everyone understood that they hadn't
really paid 10 billion dollars for a company that was worth 100 million. I
looked at a couple of the deals and the share exchange ratios were really
very fair relative to the fundamentals (not the share prices). They were
good solid deals, between smallish tech companies that were very profitable
in the capex bubble and so were richly priced as one would expect. So the
accountants caved and changed the rule, and this little pint sized company
took some astounding goodwill writeoff the next year and the stock did
nothing. Did the guy who wrote 141 really think that phony made up good will
is the same thing as actual paid for with cash good will? I always get the
feeling that the companies relented on this one so they could fight their
battles on the ones that really matter. An orange is an orange, and an apple
is an apple.
I think accountants have really misunderstood the
whole abuse issue. I worked on Wall Street during the conglomerate fad and
spent hours analyzing stock acquisitions. There were some accounting abuses
but they were really not about pooling-of-interest. The people that really
got hurt were not the investors so much as the entrepreneurs who sold their
companies. Textron started the whole conglomerate thing and the business
schools wet their pants over the idea and pretty soon you could call
yourself a congolmerate and get a high stock price. I can't tell you how
tired I got of hearing the word "synergy". What was basically happening was
that the companies were making really good deals and getting a lot of value
for the stock they were giving up, partly because of the whole aura of the
thing. When you get a really good share exchange it makes your earnings
higher than they would be otherwise. Of course there is nothing abusive
about this. It's just the reality of doing a good deal. The real earnings
and cash flow are indeed and in fact actually higher per share for the
acquiring company. But of course that meant it took on the qualities of a
self-fullfilling prophecy. Investors were not fools then and they're not
fools now. They understood perfectly what was going on and hopped on for the
ride. It was the entrepreneurs that were selling their companies that were
duped. They were the ones that ended up with most of the stock when the
bubble burst.
I remember going out to talk to Henry Singleton at
Teledyne. What a brilliant man. He was telling me a story about a guy who
was peddling his company and wanted a certain price which he was evaluating
purely in terms of the value of the stock he was going to receive in the
exchange. Henry said that he sent him off to one of the schlock companies
that he knew would "pay" him what he wanted. We had our little moment of
bemusement, because even though it was early in the melt down stage, the guy
was obviously going to come up short. He just wasn't willing to look at what
he was getting a whole bunch of shares in, and he wasn't going to be able to
sell it for a while. So what do you think? Is it the accountants job to
protect that guy from his own greed?
By the way, Henry was playing his own games, and
they weren't really about pooling of interest. He was making literally
hundreds of stock acquisitions most of which were not really growth
companies but good solid little cash cows, and then he would slip in a nice
medium sized cash acquisitions once a quarter to make his "internal growth"
target. He would say that he was doing 15% external growth (the deal value
factor) and 15% internal growth. The thing about pooling was that you could
really see what the year-to-year growth of the combined companies was, so
Henry had to do his fix. Then after the stock tanked with the other
congomerates he was in great shape with all his cash flow so he started
doing debt swaps for the depressed stock. I was really sad when I heard he
had died prematurely. It would have been fun to see what his next move would
have been. The company languished without him.
Anyway I think the whole thing got interpreted as a
pooling-of-interest abuse, but as far as I'm concerned it really didn't have
anything to do with the accounting treatment. It's not the accountants
business to police the markets. In a stock deal the goodwill is all funny
money anyways, so the way I see it we are mucking up the balance sheet for
no good reason. You can amortize til you're blue in the face but it's not
really going to have any affect on anything real. It's not cash and it never
was. But you can pretend.
Gregg Wilson
March 30, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
FASB rules now require writing off goodwill only to the extent it is deemed impaired.
If you want to publish on such issues you have to provide something other
than off the top-of-your-head evidence. Do you have any evidence that
companies tend to buy other companies at inflated prices above what
companies are actually worth in terms of synergy and possibly oligopoly
benefits (such as when AT&T bought Bell South). You need to define "inflated
prices." About the only good examples I found of this on a large scale was
during the S&L bubble of the 1980s and the technology bubble of the 1990s
when almost everything was inflated in value. But at the time, who could've
predicted if and when the bubble would burst? It's always easier to assess
value in hindsight.
In general, it's very hard to define "inflated value" since the worth of
Company B to Company A may be far different than the worth of Company B to
Company C. You can always make an assumption that CEOs acquiring companies
are all stupid and/or crooks, but this assumption is just plain idiotic.
Many acquisitions pay off very nicely such as when Tyco bought most of its
acquisitions. Even crooks like Dennis Koswalski often make good acquisitions
for their companies. Koswalski simply thought he should get a bigger piece
of the action from his good deals.
Of course there are obvious isolated cases such as when Time Warner
bought AOL, but in this case AOL used fraudulent accounting that was not
detected.
I'm a little curious about what you would recommend for a balance sheet
of the merged AB Company when Company A buys Company B having the following
balance sheets:
Company A
Cash $200
Land $100 having a current exit value of $200
Equity ($300)
Company B
Land $10 having a current exit value of $100
Equity ($10)
Company A buys all Company B shares for $120 million in cash and merges
the accounts. Company A and B business operations are all merged such that
maintaining Company B as a subsidiary makes no sense. Employees of Company B
are highly skilled real estate investors who now work for Company AB. The
extra $20 million paid above the land current values of Company B was paid
mainly to acquire the highly skilled employees of Company B.
Company AB
Cash $ 80
Land ?
Equity ($ ?)
Why would a pooling be better than purchase accounting in the above
instance? I think not.
Bob Jensen
March 30, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
I certainly didn't mean to imply that cash
acquisitions should be treated as pooling-of-interest. On the contrary I was
trying to make the point that they are totally different situations, and
can't be treated effectively by the same accounting rule. The cash is the
whole point.
Gregg Wilson
March 30, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
I guess I still don't see a convincing argument why pooling is better for
non-cash deals since you still have the same problem as with cash deals.
That problem is badly out of date historical cost accounts on the books that
are totally meaningless in the acquisition negotiations. If they are totally
meaningless in negotiations, why should historical costs be pooled into the
acquiring firm's book instead of more relevant numbers reflecting the fair
values of the tangible assets at the time of the acquisition?
Of course there are many issues that your raise below, but I don't think
they argue for pooling.
Bob Jensen
March 30, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Bob Jensen
Because historical costs are the historical record
of the company's capital efficiency. As my old accounting teacher pointed
out, the earnings model is a gross approximation at best, but if persued
with consistency and conservativeness it can be a good indicator of the
capital efficiency of the firm and it's ability to generate a stream of
future cash returns. For me the killer argument in that regard is this. The
reality of a company is the stream of cash returns itself, dividends if you
will, and that's what the stock is worth. It makes no difference whether the
company has liberal accounting policies or conservative accounting policies.
If applied consistently then that rate of return on equity will define the
stream of future cash returns. It can be liberal accounting with a low ROE
and high E and a high reinvestment rate, or conservative accounting with a
high ROE and low E and a low reinvestment rate, but the resulting stream of
dividends is the same. The historical deferred costs and historical ROE are
the evidence of value, but they depend on consistent application of some
kind of accounting standards and rules whether they be liberal or
conservative (conservative has its advantages). I would rather have that
evidence than know what the current "fair value" of the assets is. Those
values don't help me determine the value of the stock. Pooling of interest
is terrific, because it recreates that earnings model history for the
combined companies. The historical costs are not meaningless to the
negotiations but rather are the basis for the negotiations, for they are the
evidence that the companies are using to determine the share exchange ratio
that they will accept. A low ROE company will have less to bargain with than
a high ROE company, all else being equal. There are potentials for abuse in
the differing accounting standards of the two entities, but if major changes
in the accounting standards of one of the companies occur, then the
accountants should disclose that material fact.
Gregg Wilson
March 30, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Hardly a measure of capital efficiency. I have the 1981 U.S. Steel Annual
Report back when FAS 33 was still in force. U.S. Steel had to report under
both historical cost and current cost bases.
Under historical cost, U.S. Steel reported over $1 billion in net
earnings. On a current cost basis, all earnings disappeared and a net loss
of over $300 million was reported.
I consider the $1 billion net income reported under historical cost to be
a misleading figure of capital efficiency.
I think you should first read the FASB's standard on pooling versus
purchase accounting in detail. Then see if you still prefer pooling. Also
study
http://www.jstor.org/view/00014826/ap010167/01a00060/0
You might want to compare your analysis below with what Fama states at
http://library.dfaus.com/reprints/interview_fama_tanous/
Bob Jensen
March 31, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Gregg,
The law views this in reverse. Equity is a residual claim on assets under
securities laws. But the claim itself has no bearing on the historical
(deferred) cost amount since, in liquidation, the historical cost is
irrelevant. And in negotiating acquisition deals historical cost is
irrelevant. I have trouble imagining acquisitions where it would be relevant
since asset appraisals are essential in acquisitions.
Deferred cost such as book value of buildings and equipment is also
rendered meaningless by entirely arbitrary accumulated depreciation contra
accounts. Your argument does not convince me that pooling is better than
purchase accounting in acquisitions.
Since you feel so strongly about this, I suggest that you expose your
theories to the academic accounting world. Consider subscribing (free) to
the AECM at
http://pacioli.loyola.edu/aecm/ (Don't be mislead by the
technology description of this listserv. It has become the discussion forum
for all matters of accounting theory.)
Then carefully summarize your argument for pooling and see how accounting
professors respond to your arguments.
See if you can convince some accounting professors. You've not yet
convinced me that pooling is better.
Bob Jensen
April 5, 2006 message from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
I have been having an e-mail discussion with Bob
Jensen about accounting of stock acquisitions, and he kindly suggested that
I post my thoughts on the matter in this forum. I am not an academic and I
am here only because, as a user of financial statements, I find purchase
accounting of stock acquisitions puzzling.
(1) To me, the value of the exchanged shares is not
an economically relevant amount and is certainly not a purchase price. The
price of a stock acquisition is the share exchange ratio and what is
negotiated is the equity participation of the two groups of stockholders in
the combined companies. In the latest boom period purchase accounting often
produced extreme purchase prices many times what any cash buyer would have
paid and, when amortization was employed, large losses for the acquiror
which prompted pro forma reporting. If there was any economic reality to the
accounting treatment, why did those managements not lose their jobs? They
didn't "pay" the value of the exchanged shares. On the contrary, the share
exchange ratio that they negotiated was perfectly reasonable and beneficial.
(2) The exchanged stock value as purchase price is
a non-cash paper value which, regardless of the amortization or impairment
treatment, is ignored by this investor and, from what I have seen, investors
in general. It has no relevance to determining the discounted value of the
future cash returns, simply because the acquisition was in fact a
combination of equity interests and not a cash purchase and there was never
an economically relevant cash cost.
(3) Pooling-of-interest is good because it
preserves the historical profitability history of the combined companies and
accurately reflects the merger of equity interests which has in fact taken
place.
(4) There is nothing deceptive or abusive about
pooling accounting. If the ROE is higher it's because that's the right ROE.
It will result in a more accurate, and not a less accurate, projection of
future cash returns.
If company A and company B are very similar
fundamentally and both stocks are selling at 20 and they are negotiating a
share for share exchange and interest rates drop suddenly and both stocks go
to 25, then A isn't going to think oh-my-gosh we are "paying" 25% more for B
and drop out of the negotiations. On the contrary they will take the market
action as validation of the negotiated exchange ratio which is the price.
The stocks could go to 90 and it still wouldn't change anything except the
size of the goodwill on the balance sheet of the combined companies that I
have to back out of my analysis.
Gregg Wilson
April 5, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
--- Gregg Wilson wrote: I have been having an
e-mail discussion with Bob Jensen about accounting of stock acquisitions,
and he kindly suggested that I post my thoughts on the matter in this forum.
(snip) --- end of quote ---
Consider the following two sets of transactions:
1. P Corporation (P is for purchaser) raises $100
by issuing ten new shares to the capital market. It uses the $100 cash to
purchase 100% of the outstanding stock of T (as in Target) Corporation.
2. P issues ten new shares to the stockholders of T
in exchange for 100% of the outstanding stock of T.
Questions:
1. Should the accounting for the assets of T in the
consolidated financial statements of P differ between these two
transactions?
2. The crux of your critique of purchase accounting
seems to your assertion: "To me, the value of the exchanged shares is not an
economically relevant amount and is certainly not a purchase price."
a. Is the $100 cash raised by P in transaction #1
above an economically relevant amount?
b. Is the $100 cash transferred by P to the
shareholders of T in transaction #1 above a purchase price?
Richard C. Sansing
Associate Professor of Business Administration
Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth
100 Tuck Hall Hanover, NH 03755
April 5, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Richard Sansing
I would say the two transactions are not
equivalent.
In 1. the stockholders of T end out with $100. In
2. the stockholders of T end out with shares of stock in P.
1. is still a cash purchase and
2. is still an exchange of shares.
Say that P has 100 shares outstanding. In 2. what P
and T have negotiated is that in combining the two companies the
shareholders of T will end up with 10 shares in the combined companies and P
will end up with 100. That is obviously based on an assessment that the
value of P is 10 times the value of T based on their relative fundamentals
and ability to produce future cash returns. The price at which P can sell
it's stock to some third party is not relevant.
Gregg Wilson
April 6, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
--- Gregg Wilson wrote:
I would say the two transactions are not
equivalent.
In 1. the stockholders of T end out with $100. In
2. the stockholders of T end out with shares of stock in P.
1. is still a cash purchase and 2. is still an
exchange of shares.
--- end of quote ---
That the former shareholders of T wind up with
different assets in the two settings is not in dispute. Let's try this once
more.
In response to your original post, I posed three
questions. They were:
1. Should the accounting for the assets of T in the
consolidated financial statements of P differ between these two
transactions?
2. a. Is the $100 cash raised by P in transaction
#1 above an economically relevant amount?
b. Is the $100 cash transferred by P to the
shareholders of T in transaction #1 above a purchase price?
You answered none of them. You did remark:
"The price at which P can sell it's stock to some
third party is not relevant."
but I did not pose a question to which that is a
plausible answer. I have stipulated a transaction, that P sells--not could
sell, did sell--ten new shares of P stock in exchange for $100 cash as part
of transaction #1. Question 2a is a simple one. Is the $100 cash that P
received for its stock in the stipulated transaction an economically
relevant amount? If later in the discussion you want to dispute a premise in
an argument I advance, you are of course free to do so. But I have not yet
advanced an argument. I have simply posed some questions.
You have chosen to enter a community in which
abstract reasoning involving hypothetical examples the norm. You can
participate in this community, or not. If you answer the three questions, we
can proceed, because then I think I can understand what it is about the
purchase method of accounting that you find objectionable. But right now I
am unsure how you are thinking about the problem.
Richard C. Sansing
Associate Professor of Business Administration
Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth
100 Tuck Hall Hanover, NH 03755
April 6, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Richard Sansing
Maybe I should qualify my "Yes" answer. Answers 2
and 3 are yes to the extent they are economically relevant within
transaction set 1. They are not economically relevant to transaction set 2.
Gregg Wilson
April 6, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
---Gregg Wilson wrote:
Answer to all questions is yes.
Maybe I should qualify that. Answers 2 and 3 are
yes to the extent they are economically relevant within transaction set 1.
They are not economically relevant to transaction set 2.
--- end of quote ---
Okay, that helps. Given your answers, I think I can
put forward the case for purchase accounting. Transaction set #1 is recorded
in the following manner.
Sale of new equity for cash:
Cash 100
Stockholder equity 100
Purchase of T's assets for cash:
Assets 100
Cash 100
When the smoke clears, P has recorded assets with a
book value of 100 and stockholder equity of 100.
Purchase accounting takes the view that P's
acquisition of T's assets for stock essentially collapses these two
transactions into one, recording the value of the T assets at the market
price of the P stock. In contrast, if T's assets had a book value of 60,
pooling of interest would record assets of 60 and equity of 60.
The issue is whether this "collapsing" is
appropriate. P and T certainly wind up in the same position under both
transactions. Whether the shareholders of P and T are in the same position
depends on their portfolio choices.
Suppose first that I behave in accordance with the
principles of Capital Markets 101, in which I hold the market portfolio plus
the risk-free asset. Before either transaction #1 or #2, I hold (say) 10 P
shares (out of 100 outstanding) and 1 T share (out of 10 outstanding).
After either transaction, I own 11 P shares (out of
110
outstanding.) If all shareholders behave as I do,
then every party associated with the transaction is in the same position
under both sets of transactions. The burden seems to be on those advocating
the pooling method to explain why the accounting should differ when the
results to every party are the same.
Now suppose instead that shareholders, for whatever
reason, do not behave in this manner, and the two transactions lead to
substantive differences at the shareholder level (but not at the corporate
level). Should differences between the two transactions at the shareholder
level dictate different accounting treatments at the corporate level? Why?
Finally, let's consider the assertions you made in
your original post.
"To me, the value of the exchanged shares is not an
economically relevant amount and is certainly not a purchase price. (snip)
In the latest boom period purchase accounting often produced extreme
purchase prices many times what any cash buyer would have paid..."
When the stock was issued for cash, you considered
the cash price paid economically relevant (my question 2a); and when the
assets were sold for cash, you considered it a purchase price (my question
2b.) Yet when the transaction is collapsed, you
consider the market value of shares an not economically relevant amount and
not a purchase price. So if transaction were arranged as a stock deal, are
you arguing that P would issue more than ten shares to the shareholders of T
in exchange for their T stock? Why?
Richard Sansing
April 7, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Richard Sansing
I was going to followup this morning, and noticed
that you had already responded.
On the details of your case... What I didn't
understand was the equivalence of the subscribers to the P stock, and the T
shareholders. Why would we presume that they are one in the same? The
hypothetical subscribers to the P stock obviously would view the price of P
as economically relevant. But the T shareholders are only interested in the
shares of P that they end up with. From their point of view the collapsible
transaction could be executed at any price and it would still bear the same
result for them. It's a wash with regard to price. That is why I qualified
my response to question 2 by indicating that it was not economically
relevant to transaction 2. The price of P is an economic reality, but not
one which consititutes a purchase price of T.
I wouldn't say that pooling looks to the book value
as a value of the combined companies, any more than book value is the value
of any other company. What pooling does is reflect the merging of the two
historical earnings and financial records of the two companies to reflect
that the nature of the transaction as a merging of equity interests with an
indeterminate "purchase price".
I had never thought about the compensation issue.
I'll get back to you if I can figure something out.
Gregg
April 7, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
---Gregg Wilson wrote:
P and T have negotiated that P should issue ten shares in exchange for T
stock. That is the economic reality. (snip) And there is no economic reason
that we should pick the one that happens to coincide with the actual current
price of P's stock, because that was not an input of determining the
exchange ratio. The problem is that there is no determinant value for a
share exchange acquisition. Using the current P stock price is merely an
arbitrary convention (snip)
--- end of quote ---
The current market price of P is part of the
economic reality, as is the current book value of T. Purchase accounting
looks to the former to record the assets of T on the books of P; pooling
looks to the latter.
Okay, time for a new thought experiment. The CEO of
P corporation receives a salary of $400K plus 1,000 shares of P stock on
July 1. These are shares, not options, and they are not restricted. On July
1, when the shares were delivered to the CEO, the stock had a market value
of $60 per share, a book value of $40 per share, and a par value of $1 per
share. Note that the amount of shares delivered is not a function of the
stock price.
Record the entry for compensation expense for the
year. The accounts are provided below.
Compensation expense
Cash Stockholder's equity
Richard C. Sansing
Associate Professor of Business Administration
Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth
100 Tuck Hall Hanover, NH 03755
April 6, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Richard Sansing
I was going to follow up this morning, and noticed
that you had already responded.
On the details of your case... What I didn't
understand was the equivalence of the subscribers to the P stock, and the T
shareholders. Why would we presume that they are one in the same? The
hypothetical subscribers to the P stock obviously would view the price of P
as economically relevant. But the T shareholders are only interested in the
shares of P that they end up with. From their point of view the collapsible
transaction could be executed at any price and it would still bear the same
result for them. It's a wash with regard to price. That is why I qualified
my response to question 2 by indicating that it was not economically
relevant to transaction 2. The price of P is an economic reality, but not
one which consititutes a purchase price of T.
I wouldn't say that pooling looks to the book value
as a value of the combined companies, any more than book value is the value
of any other company. What pooling does is reflect the merging of the two
historical earnings and financial records of the two companies to reflect
that the nature of the transaction as a merging of equity interests with an
indeterminate "purchase price".
I had never thought about the compensation issue.
I'll get back to you if I can figure something out.
Gregg
April 7, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
--- Gregg Wilson wrote:
On the details of your case... What I didn't
understand was the equivalence of the subscribers to the P stock, and the T
shareholders. Why would we presume that they are one in the same? The
hypothetical subscribers to the P stock obviously would view the price of P
as economically relevant. But the T shareholders are only interested in the
shares of P that they end up with. From their point of view the collapsible
transaction could be executed at any price and it would still bear the same
result for them. (snip)
I had never thought about the compensation issue.
I'll get back to you if I can figure something out.
--- end of quote ---
The setting in which P and T shareholders are the
same is an interesting special case in which the distinction you regard as
crucial--the difference in what the T shareholders hold after transaction #1
and transaction #2--vanishes. And it is not a unreasonable case to consider,
as it is consistent with finance portfolio theory in which all investors
hold the market portfolio.
Let me restate what I hear you saying to see if I
understand. Investors that receive P stock for cash care about the price of
P stock. Investors that receive P stock in a merger care only about the
number of shares they receive, but do not care about the price of those
shares. Do I have that right?
Your answer to the compensation question will, I
think, help me understand how you are framing these issues.
Richard Sansing
April 7, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Richard Sansing
I am afraid I am not well-versed in the
compensation/option issues though I probably should do better. So without
the benefit of prior knowledge...
I guess if there is a compensation expense, it is
not necessarily one that is determinable. If there were 100,000 shares
outstanding, then from the owners point of view they expect that the
incremental net cash returns produced by the extra efforts of the CEO
motivated by the stock grant can be valued at a minimum of 1/100 of the
value of the company's future cash returns without the CEO's extra effort.
But relative values aren't costs and it's unclear to me whether the owners
care what the current price of the stock is. Maybe not since the grant is
not a function of the stock price. That's as far as I've gotten. I need to
get some other things done. I'll keep thinking on it, but I seem to be
stumped for now.
Gregg Wilson
April 7, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
Hi Gregg Wilson,
I think I am starting to understand your
perspective, but I need a little more input from you. First, here are some
excerpts from your recent contributions to this thread.
---Gregg Wilson wrote: I guess if there is a
compensation expense, it is not necessarily one that is determinable. (Note:
The compensation consisted of $400K cash and 1,000 shares of stock with a
market price of $60 per share--RS)
...it's unclear to me whether the owners care what
the current price of the stock is.
And there is no economic reason that we should pick
the one that happens to coincide with the actual current price of P's stock.
Using the current P stock price is merely an
arbitrary convention.
The price at which P can sell it's stock to some
third party is not relevant.
The price of P is relevant not as an absolute
number, but only in terms of its ratio to the real or imputed price of T.
---end of quotations
In the compensation issue that I posed, I
stipulated that the market value of the stock was $60 per share. Tell me
what that number means to you. At the most fundamental level, why do you
think the price might be $60 instead of $6 or $600? I'm not looking for a
"because that's where the market cleared that day" answer, but something
that gets at the most primitive, fundamental reasons stock prices are what
they are. And when they change, why do they change?
Richard Sansing
April 8, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Richard Sansing
That's easy. I subcribe to the
dividend-discount-model view of stock prices. Stock prices are basically a
function of interest rates and expected sustainable future profitability
(ROE; the best estimator we have (with reinvestment rate) for those future
cash returns).
In fact I use my own DDM to convert stock prices to
expectational ROEs. Such a DDM is a complete model of stock valuation, and
can fully explain stock price levels from the 10-12% ROE low reinvestment
low interest rate period of the late 30s, to the 12-15% ROE high interest
rate period of the 70s, to the 25% cap-weighted ROE and low interest rates
of the capex peak in 2000. Stock prices are extremely volatile because they
are a point-in-time market consensus of the future sustainable profitability
of the company. A decline in profitabliity expectations will typically
produce a price change of two or three times the magnitude, while a change
in discount rate will have a more subdued impact.
Gregg Wilson
April 8, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
--- Gregg Wilson wrote: I subscribe to the
dividend-discount-model view of stock prices. (snip) --- end of quote ---
Understood. The theme that has emerged in this
thread is that you are uncomfortable in situations in which GAAP would use
the current market price of the firm's stock as an input when determining an
accounting entry.
Let's put aside the purchase/pooling dispute to
look at the compensation question. Under the set of facts that I stipulated,
I don't think there is any controversy regarding the appropriate accounting
treatment. It would be:
Compensation expense $460K Cash $400K Equity $60K
A rationale for this treatment is to decompose the
equity transfer into two components. First, suppose the firm sells 1,000
shares of new equity to the CEO at the market price of $60 per share (debit
cash, credit equity); second, suppose the firm pays the CEO a cash salary of
$460K (credit cash, debit compensation expense.) Collapsing these two
transactions into one (transfer of $400K cash plus equity worth $60K in
exchange for services) doesn't change the accounting treatment.
Now change some of the numbers and labels around
and let the firm issue new P equity to T in exchange for all of its equity.
The purchase method uses the value of the P stock issued to record the
assets and liabilities of T.
Which brings us full circle to your original post.
You wrote:
"To me, the value of the exchanged shares is not an
economically relevant amount and is certainly not a purchase price."
I argue that the value of P stock is relevant and
is a purchase price, in both the compensation case and P's acquisition of T.
Richard Sansing
April 9, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Richard Sansing
I trust you are having a pleasant weekend. Before
tackling the compensation case etc, can you tell me how we account for open
market share repurchases.
Gregg Wilson
April 10, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
--- You wrote: Before tackling the compensation
case etc, can you tell me how we account for open market share repurchases.
--- end of quote ---
Credit cash, debit equity; details can vary
depending on whether the repurchase is a major retirement or acquiring the
shares to distribute as part of compensation. If the latter, the debit is to
Treasury Stock.
Richard Sansing
April 11, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Richard Sansing
Well I'm still in the same place. It seems to me
that when a company pays an employee $60,000 in cash they are compensating
them for services rendered in that value. When a company grants stock to an
employee they are diluting the interests of the current equity participants
in the expectation that the employee will be motivated to more than
compensate them by an improved stream of cash returns in the future; the
point of making the employee an equity participant in the first place,
rather than an immediately richer individual. So I don't see the relevance
of the price of the shares to the trans 2 again. Except in this case the use
of the market share price seems even more suspect in the collapsible
transaction, since the company and the CEO could execute the wash
transactions between themselves at any price. Also the dilution is the cost,
so adding an additional phantom non-cash cost seems to me to be a double
counting. It also has the same characteristics as the pooling transaction
where very bizarre results could be possible. If a company had a 50 PE then
a 2% dilution would erase the company's entire earnings for the period while
if the company had a 10 PE a 2% dilution would erase 20% of the earnings.
It's the same 2% dilution.
So is that it Richard? Am I a hopeless dolt? I'm
sorry but I can't get there on the collapsible transaction. Nor do I
understand why the lack of rational result doesn't matter to anyone. I don't
want to go look up the data again, but I know when JDS Uniphase bought E-tek
the share exchange was quite reasonable but the value of the exchanged stock
was in the multi billions and was probably like 500 times the eanrings of E-tek.
So when this pipsqueek company goes to raise billions of dollars at their
current market price, it's not just whether they could sell that much stock,
but rather how they would justify it to the buyers. "Use of Proceeds: we are
going to go out and make a cash acquisition of a company called E-tek and we
are going to pay billions of dollars and 500 times E-teks's earnings and
many many multiples of book value and sales." So what would their real
chances be of getting away with that, and why doesn't that seem like a
phoney number to anyone? Why doesn't it seem funny that the "prices" of
stock purchase acquisitions are basically randomly distributed from the
reasonable to the ludicrous to the sublime? Isn't that evidence that the
price is uneconomic? Is this really the basic justification for the economic
relevance of the purchase number, or is there something more?
Gregg Wilson
April 11, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
--- Gregg Wilson wrote:
It seems to me that when a company pays an employee
$60,000 in cash they are compensating them for services rendered in that
value. When a company grants stock to an employee they are diluting the
interests of the current equity participants in the expectation that the
employee will be motivated to more than compensate them by an improved
stream of cash returns in the future; the point of making the employee an
equity participant in the first place, rather than an immediately richer
individual. (snip) Why doesn't it seem funny that the "prices" of stock
purchase acquisitions are basically randomly distributed from the reasonable
to the ludicrous to the sublime? Isn't that evidence that the price is
uneconomic?
--- end of quote ---
I did not stipulate an assumption that the employee
had to hold the 1,000 shares granted.
The interests of the current stockholders are not
diluted in the specified transaction ($400K cash plus stock worth $60K)
relative to an alternative cash compensation arrangement of equal value
($460K cash.)
You had earlier indicated a belief that stock
prices are best explain by a dividend discount model. Now you suggest that
they are random. If you think they are random, of course, I quite understand
your discomfort using stock price as an input to the accounting system; but
GAAP can use stock price as an input in many transactions, and it is that,
not the purchase method per se, that appears to trouble you.
Anecdotes regarding one firm "over-paying" for
another in a stock deal don't add much to our understanding, and in any case
the issues involving merger premiums and acquisition method may be unrelated
to the financial accounting treatment of the acquisition. There is a large
and growing literature on this topic; see for example:
Shleifer, A., and R. Vishny. 2003. Stock market
driven acquisitions. Journal of Financial Economics 70 (December): 295-311.
Richard Sansing
April 11, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
--- Gregg Wilson wrote:
<<> The interests of the current stockholders are
not diluted in the specified > transaction ($400K cash plus stock worth
$60K) relative to an > alternative cash compensation arrangement of equal
value ($460K > cash.)>>
I'm confused. Aren't there 1,000 more shares
outstanding?
--- end of quote ---
Yes. Suppose before any compensation is paid, 100K
shares are outstanding and the firm is worth $6,460,000. After we pay $460K
compensation, the firm is worth $6,000,000, or $60 per share.
If instead we compensate the CEO with $400K and
1,000 shares, after compensating the CEO the firm is worth $6,460,000 -
$400,000 =$6,060,000 and 101K shares are outstanding, still with a value of
$60 per share (because $6,060,000/101,000 = $60).
With regard to the rest of the thread, I think we
are going around in circles. Purchase accounting uses the price of P shares
to record the assets of T on P's financial statements. If that price is
meaningful, goodwill is meaningful; if the price is random, goodwill is too.
Richard Sansing
April 11, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Richard Sansing
If I spend $460,000 I certainly hope that my
company isn't worth $460,000 less or I certainly wouldn't spend the money.
Hopefully the present value of the impact of the $460,000 on future net cash
returns will at least exceed the cash expenditure. The same could be said
for the 1,000 shares, although they are not a book cost but merely a
redistribution of equity participation.
But by your logic I should point out that the
company was worth $60.60 per share after the $400,000 total loss
expenditure. Now by issuing 1,000 shares the company is only worth $60.00
per share. Dilution?
Well it has certainly been an interesting
conversation, and I do thank you for your time and interest. I have learned
a great deal. I would agree that we are at an impasse. All my best to you
and yours.
Gregg Wilson
April 11, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Richard Sansing
Sorry for the confusion. I was referring to the
value of the exchanged shares of stock in the purchase acquisitions, the
"price" that purchase accounting puts on the deal which becomes in fact
random because it bears no relationship to the economic basis of the
negotiation.
<<> The interests of the current stockholders are
not diluted in the specified > transaction ($400K cash plus stock worth
$60K) relative to an > alternative cash compensation arrangement of equal
value ($460K > cash.)>>
I'm confused. Aren't there 1,000 more shares
outstanding?
> Anecdotes regarding one firm "over-paying" for
another in a stock > deal don't add much to our understanding,>>
Apparently not, but it should. We should be asking
why any of those managements still have a job. The point is they didn't
overpay. The share exchange ratio in the JDS/E-tek deal was quite reasonable
and resulting in a fair allocation of equity ownership between the two
groups of shareholders. It just had nothing to do with the market value of
the JDS stock that was exchanged. The monstrocity of the goodwill is a tip
off that something is wrong about the treatment, not that the buyer
overpaid.
<<> merger premiums and acquisition method may be
unrelated to the financial > accounting treatment of the acquisition.>>
I think that's right. Management has caught on that
the market doesn't care about the phony goodwill and they just do what's
right for the company. There's always pro forma reporting if the GAAP
reporting gets too messed up.
Gregg Wilson
April 12, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Gregg,
You wrote: "There's always pro forma reporting if
the GAAP reporting gets too messed up." End Quote
I hardly think pro forma does a whole lot for
investors when "GAAP gets messed up." The problem is that you can't compare
pro forma, anything-goes, reports with any benchmarks at all ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#ProForma
Appealing to pro forma reporting only weakens your
case for an already defenseless case for pooling.
Bob Jensen
April 11, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Bob Jensen
I think you misunderstand my point. I am surely not
defending pro forma reporting. I would assume that one reason goodwill
amortization was suspended was that it left companies with no other option.
Management rightly assumes that investors want to know what the company is
actually earning. If goodwill amortization was suspended for some other
reason, what might it have been?
Gregg Wilson
April 13, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Richard Sansing and anyone who would care to
reply.
We have come to an impasse on purchase accounting,
but I did have a question on pooling that I wanted to ask you about.
I am old enough to have been hanging around Wall
Street research departments in my misspent youth, and was there for the
conglomerate craze in the late sixties, and these are the things I remember.
After the Harvard B School did there endorsement of Textron, all you had to
do was call yourself a conglomerate and talk about synergy and you'd have an
immediate following for your stock. Not only that, but you seemed to be able
to make share exchange acquisitions on favorable terms which were accretive
to your earnings, and pretty soon you had a kind of self-fullfilling
prophecy going on. I did some work on Teledyne and even went out to
California and met Henry Singleton. He used to talk about 15% internal
growth, and 15% external growth. The external part was the accretion to
earnings from stock acquisitions. Well we know that the whole thing ended
badly, although Henry was nobody's fool and had been buying little cash-cow
companies all along despite the sales pitch, so he was in far better shape
than some.
Now for years afterwards you keep hearing this idea
that pooling is abusive because companies can use their "high priced" stock
to make acquisitions, especially in periods of market enthusiasm like the
late sixties. I guess what is really being said is that companies stand a
better chance of making accretive acquisitions when times are good and the
stock is selling at a high price, and the whole thing is in danger of
becoming another ponzi scheme like the conglomerate fad all over again,
because the accretion to earnings will then reinforce the high price of the
stock. There is a perception that the price of the stock matters and because
it matters we have to somehow account for that mattering in the accounting
treatment of the acquisition.
My biggest concern with this conclusion is that the
problem is not the accounting treatment. If a company makes a favorable
share exchange acquisition which is accretive to earnings, then that is what
has happened. That is an accurate portrayal of economic reality. There is no
denying that the company made a GOOD DEAL. They ended up with a share of the
combined companies that is quite favorable to their interests. The second
problem is that in many circumstances the value of the exchanged shares is
much less of a factor than we fear. If the acquired company has publically
traded shares, then the price of those shares will be reflecting the current
market expectations as well. There is little motivation on the part of the
seller to consider the deal in terms of the putative purchase value of the
exchanged shares, because they can already cash in at a "high price". It is
the relative values of the two share prices that will be the consideration.
JDS Uniphase negotiates a share exchange acquisition with E-tek. The share
exchange ratio is pretty fair to both companies, and is not really
particularly accretive or advantageous to JDS, despite the fact that the
value of the exchanged shares is in the multi billions of dollars and many
many times what any reasonable cash buyer would pay. E-tek has a "high
price" stock already. They don't need JDS to cash in on the market's current
enthusiasm for net stocks. Would there be anything abusive or deceptive
about accounting for this deal as a pooling-of-interest?
Now I won't deny the fact that the price of the
acquirors stock can influence the deal. Henry himself told me a story about
a seller that came to him and was looking for a certain "price" expressed in
terms of the value of the exchanged shares that he expected to get. The
seller was a private company owned by a single entrepreneur, not untypical
of the sellers at that time. Henry couldn't give him that many shares for
his company because it wouldn't have met his accretion requirments, but he
sent him to another conglomerator who he knew would, because that company's
stock was flying high relative to it's underlying profitability which didn't
compare to Teledyne's. The seller got his deal, but by the time the sellers
shares came out of lockup that company was almost bankrupt. Though we think
of the crash in conglomerate stocks in terms of the poor investors, it was
really the sellers who were the biggest victims of the conglomerate fad,
because they were left holding a much bigger proportion of the bag. And the
investors weren't really investors. They were speculators and knew perfetly
well they were playing a musical chairs game. There are two points (1) the
sellers may consider the deal in terms of the value of the exchanged shares,
particularly if they are non-publically-traded sellers, but they would
probably be well advised to also consider that the shares they receive
represent an equity interest in the combined companies, and (2) whatever the
seller's motivation, the buyer will always be looking at the deal in terms
of their equity share of the combined companies and whether the deal will be
accretive or dilutive to their interests.
When we say that pooling is abusive and deceptive
what are we really talking about? Is it pooling itself, or is it the fear
that rollup companies can make those self-fullfilling accretive acquisitions
because of the desire of sellers to cash in on the market value of that
stock, and that is somehow an evil thing? Is it really our responsibility as
accountants to police the market and try to keep that from happening? Is an
accretive acquistion really deceptive? Didn't the company actually make a
good deal? Whom are we really protecting from whom?
Gregg Wilson
April 13, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
-- end of quote ---
-
-- Gregg Wilson wrote:
Hi Richard Sansing and anyone who would care to
reply.
When we say that pooling is abusive and deceptive
what are we really talking about?
--- end of quote ---
I will pass on continuing this thread, except to
reiterate that your unhappiness with GAAP extends well beyond the purchase
method. If we can't agree that the transfer of $60K of a publicly traded
company's own stock, unrestricted, to an employee in exchanges for services
should be accounted for as an expense of $60K, I doubt we can come to
agreement on accounting for more complicated transactions that involve the
transfer of a company's stock for anything other than cash.
Richard Sansing
April 13, 2006 reply from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Richard Sansing
Interesting argument. Sort of a combination of all
or none and falling back on good authority. Well you did better than Bob
Jensen's suggested reading approach, and for that I am grateful. My wife
once opined that we should be happy to have heretics for they help us test
the veracity of our faith. Still I better leave before I get burned at the
stake.
Regards,
Gregg Wilson
April 14, 2006 message from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
GAAP espouses the economic entity assumption. In
what way does transferring stock to an employee represent a cost to the
company? Is there any tangible evidence that the company is worse off? Does
it have less cash, dimmer prospects, damaged intangible assets? It is a cost
to the shareholders. According to GAAP they are distinct from the company.
Regards,
Gregg Wilson
April 15, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Gregg,
Following your logic to its conclusion, firms need not pay employees in
anything other than paper. Why bother giving them assets? Just print stock
certificates and have them toil for 60 years for 100 shares of stock per
week.
This is tantamount to what the Germans did after World War I. Rather than
have the banks create marks, the German government just printed millions of
marks that soon became worth less than the paper they were printed on. It
eventually took a wheel barrow full of marks to buy a slice of bread
(literally).
Suppose a firm pays $120 in cash to an employee and the employee pays $20
in income taxes and invests $40 in the open market for 40 shares of his
employer's common shares. What is different about this if the company pays
him $80 in cash and issues him 40 shares of treasury stock? The employee
ends up in the same situation under either alternative. And he or she owes
$20 in taxes in either case. Stock must often be issued from the treasury of
shares purchased by the company on the open market since new shares have
pre-emptive rights that make it difficult to pay employees in new shares.
If employees instead are given stock options or restricted stock, the
situation is more complicated but the principle is the same. The stock or
the options must be valued and taxes must eventually be paid on the value
received for his or her services.
As far as what is wrong with pooling, I told you before your exchanges
with Professor Sansing that the main problem with pooling is the reason
firms want pooling. They like to keep acquired net assets on the books at
very old and outdated historical costs so that future revenues divided by
outdated book values show high rates of return (ROIs) and make managers who
acquired the old assets look brilliant.
Other abuses are described in the paper by Abe Briloff on "Dirty Pooling"
that I sent to you --- Briloff, AJ 1967. Dirty pooling. The Accounting
Review (July): 489-496 ---
http://www.jstor.org/view/00014826/ap010167/01a00060/0
I hope you will read Abe's paper carefully before continuing this thread.
Bob Jensen
April 15, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
-- end of quote ---
These issues are covered Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 123, which you can find on the FASB website,
http://www.fasb.org .
The excerpt that follows states the general rule.
This Statement requires a public entity to measure
the cost of employee services received in exchange for an award of equity
instruments based on the grant-date fair value of the award.
Richard Sansing
April 15, 2006 message from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Bob Jensen,
Hope all is well with you.
I am not arguing from the employee's point of view.
What I am arguing is that the company can pay the employee cash, but if the
employee is being paid stock it is not the company but the shareholders who
are doing the paying, so it cannot be a cost to the company. The employee is
being paid something that belongs to the shareholders, and does not belong
to the company. The ownership interest is distinct from the company
according to the economic entity assumption.
<<As far as what is wrong with pooling, I told
you before your exchanges with Professor Sansing that the main problem
with pooling is the reason firms want pooling. They like to keep
acquired net assets on the books at very old and outdated historical
costs so that future revenues divided by outdated book values show high
rates of return (ROIs) and make managers who acquired the old assets
look brilliant.>>
I would argue that the costs of the acquired firm
are no more old and outdated than any other company that follows GAAP
accounting procedures. There is no such thing as an "outdated" book value.
The earnings model matches costs and revenues consistently and
conservatively over time and that is what makes the return on equity number
meaningful. Adjusting those costs to some other random value at a random
point in time makes the return on equity number NOT meaningful. The return
on equity of the combined companies under pooling is not an inflated return
on equity that is meant to make the management look brilliant. It is merely
the correct return on equity, and the correct measure of the capital
efficiency of the combined companies. It is the return on equity that should
be used to project future cash returns in order to determine the value of
the company as an ongoing enterprise.
Suppose there are two companies that are both
highly profitable and both have 30% ROEs. Is there something misleading
about a pooling acquisition where the combined ROE of the two companies is
pro forma'ed at a 30% ROE? Is it more meaningul to write up the assets of
the acquired company by some phoney goodwill amount so that the combined
number will now be 15% ROE? Which number is going to produce a more accurate
assessment of the value of the combined companies going forward? For a cash
acquisition there has been an additional economic cash cost and the ROE is
rightfully lower. But there is no such cost, cash or otherwise, when the
equity interests are combined through a share exchange.
Gregg Wilson
April 15, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Sorry Greg,
You show no evidence of countering Abe Briloff’s real contention that
pooling is likely to be “dirty.” It has little to do with stock valuation
since the same “cost” has been incurred for an acquisition irrespective of
whether the bean counters book it as a purchase or a pooling. The pooling
alternative has everything to do with manipulation of accounting numbers to
make managers look like they increased the ROI because of their clever
acquisition even if the acquisition is a bad deal in terms of underlying
economics.
Briloff, AJ 1967. Dirty pooling. The Accounting Review (July):
489-496 ---
http://www.jstor.org/view/00014826/ap010167/01a00060/0
I doubt that you’ve convinced a single professor around the world that
pooling provides better information to investors. Pooling was banned years
ago because of widespread opinion that pooling has a greater potential of
misleading investors than purchase accounting. If the historical cost net
book value of the acquired firm is only half of the current value relevant
to the acquisition price, there is no way that future ROIs under pooling and
purchasing can be the same. You’ve set up a straw man.
Please don’t bring stock dividends into this debate. Stock dividends and
stock splits only confuse the issue. Stock dividends must be distributed to
all shareholders and are merely a means, like stock splits, of lowering
share prices without changing the value of any shareholder’s investment.
Certainly stock dividends cannot be issued selectively to employees and not
outside investors. The main argument for large stock dividends/splits is to
lower share prices to attract smaller investors into buying blocks of shares
without having to pay odd-lot commissions in the market. The only argument
for small stock dividends is to mislead shareholders into thinking they are
getting something when they are not getting anything at all. Studies show
the market is very efficient in adjusting prices to stock dividends and
splits.
Certainly not a single professor around the world has come to your
defense. It’s time to come up with a new argument Gregg. You must counter
Abe’s arguments to convince us otherwise. The only valid argument for
pooling is that markets are perfectly efficient irrespective of bean counter
reporting. That argument holds some water but it is a leaky bucket according
to many studies in recent years. If that argument was really true,
management and shareholders would not care what bean counters do. Managers
are in reality very concerned about bean counting rules. Corporations
actually fought tooth and nail for pooling, but their arguments were not
convincing from the standpoint for shareholder interests.
If ABC Company is contemplating buying anything for $40 cash (wheat,
corn, Microsoft Shares, or ABC treasury shares) and making this part of a
future compensation payment in kind, it’s irrelevant how that $40 is paid to
an employee because the net cost to ABC Company is $40 in cash. As the
proportionate share of ABC Company has not been changed for remaining
shareholders whether the payment is salary cash or in treasury shares (which
need not be purchased if the salary is to be $40 in cash), the cash cost is
the same for the employment services as far as shareholders and the ABC
Company are concerned.
ABC Company might feel that payment in ABC’s treasury shares increases
the employee’s motivation level. The employee, however, may not view the two
alternatives as equivalent since he or she must incur an added transactions
cost to convert most any in-kind item into cash.
Your argument would make a little more sense if ABC Company could issue
new shares instead of paying $40 in cash. But in most states this is not
allowed without shareholder approval due to preemptive anti-dilution
protections for existing shareholders that prevent companies from acting
like the German government in the wake of World War I (when Germany started
printing Deutsch marks that weren’t worth the cost of the paper they were
printed on).
It’s very risky to buy shares of corporations that do not have preemptive
rights. I think you’ve ignored preemptive rights from get go on this thread.
Bob Jensen
April 17, 2006 message from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Bob Jensen
Maybe you could produce an example of how pooling
is "dirty in practice", OTHER THAN the fact that it produces a higher ROI.
Gregg Wilson
April 18, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Gregg,
High ROIs are the main reason pooling becomes dirty. It is “dirty” because
it is intended to deceive the public and distort future performance measures
relative to the underlying economics of the acquisition.
As
to other examples, I think Abe gives you ample illustrations of how
management tries to take credit (“feathers in their cap” on Page 494) for
“something shareholders are paying dearly for.” Also note his Case II where
“A Piddle Makes a Pool.” Briloff, AJ 1967. "Dirty pooling." The
Accounting Review (July): 489-496 ---
http://www.jstor.org/view/00014826/ap010167/01a00060/0
Additional examples have been provided over the years by Abe. The
following is Table 1 from a paper entitled "Briloff and the Capital Markets"
by George Foster, Journal of Accounting Research, Volume 17, Spring
1979 ---
http://www.jstor.org/view/00218456/di008014/00p0266h/0
As George Foster points out, what makes Briloff unique in academe are the
detailed real-world examples he provides. Briloff became so important that
stock prices reacted instantly to his publications, particularly those in
Barron's. George formally studied market reactions to Briloff articles.
Companies Professor Briloff criticized for misleading accounting reports
experienced an average drop in share prices of 8%.
TABLE 1
Articles of Briloff Examined
|
Article |
Journal/Publication Date |
Companies Cited That Are Examined
in This Note |
1. |
"Dirty Pooling" |
Barron's (July 15, 1968) |
Gulf and Wesern: Ling-Temco-Vought (LTV) |
2. |
"All a Fandangle?" |
Barron's (December 2, 1968) |
Leasco Data Processing: Levin-Townsend |
3. |
"Much-Abused Goodwill" |
Barron's (April 28, 1969) |
Levin-Townsend; National General Corp. |
4. |
"Out of Focus" |
Barron's (July 28, 1969) |
Perfect Film & Chemical Corp. |
5. |
"Castles of Sand?"
|
Barron's (February 2, 1970)
|
Amrep Corp.; Canaveral International; Deltona Corp.;
General Development Corp.; Great Southwest Corp.; Great Western
United, Major Realty; Penn Central |
6. |
"Tomorrow's Profits?" |
Barron's (May 11, 1970) |
Telex |
7. |
"Six Flags at Half-Mast?" |
Barron's (January 11, 1971) |
Great Southwest Corp.; Penn Central |
8. |
"Gimme Shelter"
|
Barron's (October 25, 1971)
|
Kaufman & Broad Inc.; U.S. Home Corp.; U.S.
Financial Inc. |
9. |
"SEC Questions Accounting"
|
Commercial and Financial Chronicle (November
2, 1972) |
Penn Central
|
10. |
"$200 Million Question" |
Barron's (December 18, 1972) |
Leasco Corp. |
11. |
"Sunrise, Sunset" |
Barron's (May 14, 1973) |
Kaufman & Broad |
12. |
"Kaufman & Broad--More Questions? |
Commercial and Financial Chronicle (July 12,
1973) |
Kaufman & Broad
|
13. |
"You Deserve a Break..." |
Barron's (July 8, 1974) |
McDonald's |
14. |
"The Bottom Line: What's Going on at I.T.T."
(Interview with Briloff) |
New York Magazine (August 12, 1974)
|
I.T.T.
|
15. |
"Whose Deep Pocket?" |
Barron's (July 19, 1976) |
Reliance Group Inc. |
Not all of the above illustrations are focused on pooling accounting,
but some of them provide real-world examples that you are looking for,
particularly dirty pooling at McDonalds Corporation.
It would would help your case if you followed Briloff’s example by
getting out of hypothetical (nonexistent?) examples and give us some real
world examples from your consulting. I don’t buy into any illustrations that
merely criticize goodwill accounting. What you need to demonstrate how
accounting for goodwill under purchase accounting was more misleading than
pooling accounting for at least one real-world acquisition. I realize,
however, that this may be difficult since the SEC will sue companies who use
pooling accounting illegally these days. Did you ever wonder why the SEC
made pooling illegal?
Perhaps for your clients you have prepared statements contrasting
purchase versus pooling in acquisitions. It would be nice if you could share
those (with names disguised).
Bob Jensen
April 17, 2006 reply from Paul Polinski [pwp3@CASE.EDU]
Gregg:
Please let me use a slightly different example to look at your views in the
purchase/pooling debate, and invite anyone else to contribute or to improve
the example.
Let's say you own and run several bed-and-breakfast
inns. About 20 years ago, you received as a gift an authentic Normal
Rockwell painting, which you put behind a false wall in your house to
protect your investment. You recently brought it back out, and several
reputable appraisers have put its value at $255,000.
You want to invest in an inn, and its lot, that the
current owner is selling. The current owner bought the inn and lot many
years ago for $100,000; the inn's $60,000 gross book value is fully
depreciated, while the lot (as land) is still recorded on current owner's
books at $40,000. You and another party agree to jointly purchase the inn
from the current owner; you exchange your Normal Rockwell painting for 51%
ownership in the inn/lot, and the other party pays $245,000 in cash for his
or her 49% ownership. You and the other party have rights and
responsibilities proportional to your ownership percentages in all aspects
under the joint ownership agreement.
To simplify matters, at my own risk, I'll say
"ignore tax treatments for now."
My questions to you are:
(1) For performance evaluation purposes, when you
and the other party are computing the returns on your respective investments
in this inn, what are your relevant investment amounts?
(2) (I'm wandering out on a limb here, so I'll
invite anyone who wants to improve or correct this to do so...)
Now let's say that all the other facts are the
same, except that:
- The other party pays $122,500 for 49% ownership
of the inn/lot;
- You get 51% ownership in the inn/lot in exchange
for giving the current owner a 50% transferable ownership interest in your
Norman Rockwell.
What are your relevant investment amounts in this
case?
Paul
April 18, 2006 message from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Paul Polinski
So what's the point? Your example is clearly a cash
acquisition. Pooling is appropriate only in the case of a share exchange
acquisition, and I would say pooling should only be used in the case of two
ongoing enterprise. The point is that a share exchange acquisition is a
combining of equity interests and there is no purchase price beyond the
exchange ratio. Say you had two inns and both are ongoing businesses so they
not only have real estate assets but furniture and equipment and supplies
and payables and receivables etc. Lets say they each have book assets of
$40,000 and they decide to combine their two enterprises on a share for
share basis. The owner of each inn ends up with half the equity in the
combined enterprise. Has a new value been placed on the assets by the share
exchange? Would the owners want to restate the assets to some different
value just because they have merged? Or would they prefer to retain the
combined financial statements as they are? Doesn't the meaningfulness of the
earnings model depend on following consistent rules of matching costs and
revenues over a period of time, and wouldn't revaluing those costs merely
represent an obliteration of the earnings model and the information it
imparts? Is not a share exchange acquisition a totally different animal from
a cash purchase, and shouldn't it be recorded in the financial statements in
a way that reflects that economic reality?
Gregg Wilson
April 19, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Sorry Gregg,
You’re too hung up on cash basis accounting. You only think transactions
can be valued if and when they are paid in cash. This is clearly absurd
since there are many purchase transactions that are not cash deals and
require value estimation on the part of both the buyer and the seller. We
use value estimates in countless transactions, and accounting would really
revert to the dark ages if we were forced to trace value of each item back
to some ancient surrogate cash transaction value years ago. Cash accounting
can badly mislead investors about risk, such as when interest rate swaps
were not even disclosed on financial statements until cash flowed. Our
estimates of current values and obligations may be imperfect, but they beat
non-estimation.
With respect to business combinations/acquisitions, GAAP requires that
the accounting come as close as possible to the value estimations upon which
the deal was actually transacted. I don’t know how many times we have to
tell you that the valuation estimation process is not perfect, but trying to
come as close to economic reality at the time of the current transaction is
our goal, not pulling values from transactions from olden times and ancient
history circumstances.
Be careful what you declare on this forum, because some students are also
in the forum and they may believe such declaratives as “Pooling is
appropriate only in the case of a share exchange acquisition.” Pooling is
not only a violation of FASB standards, it is against SEC law. Please do not
encourage students to break the law.
And there are good reasons for bans on pooling. You’ve not been able to
convince a single professor in this forum that pooling is better accounting
for stock trades. You’ve ranted against estimates of value and how these
estimates may become impaired shortly after deals go down, but GAAP says to
do the best job possible in booking the values that were in effect at the
time the deals actually went down. If values become impaired later on, GAAP
says to adjust the values.
You’ve not convinced a single one of us who watched pooling accounting
become dirty time and time again when it was legal. We don’t want to revert
to those days of allowing managers to repeatedly report inflated ROIs on
acquired companies.
I
think Richard Sansing is right. You’re beating a dead horse. Future
communications that only repeat prior rants are becoming time wasters in
this forum.
Forum members interested in our long and tedious exchange on this topic
can go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#Pooling
Bob Jensen
April 18, 2006 message from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Again Bob Jensen
Let's put it this way. If we want to value the
acquisition at a non-cost current value, then we should use a fair appraisal
like something akin to what a cash buyer would be willing to pay, and not
the phoney share exchange value. Then we could actually have goodwill
numbers that made some sense and would avoid all those embarassing
impairment writedowns a year after the acquisition. I prefer pooling, but if
you insist on revaluing, then use an economic value. The value of the
exchanged shares is not, I repeat, not an economic value.
Gregg
April 20, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Sorry Gregg,
GAAP states that all tangible assets should be valued at what cash
purchasers would pay for them, so we have no argument.
Intangibles such as knowledge capital are more difficult to value, but
the ideal is to value them for what cash purchasers would pay for such
things as a skilled work force, customers, name recognition, etc.
The problem with using a cash price surrogate lies in situations where
there is really valuable synergy that is unique to the acquiring company.
For example, there is probably considerable synergy value (actually
monopoly) value when SBC acquired AT&T that probably made it much more
valuable to SBC than to any other buyer whether the deal would be done in
cash or stock.
Auditors are supposed to attest to the value at the time the acquisition
deal goes down. Not long afterwards it may be found that the best estimate
at the time the deal went down was either in error or it was reasonable at
the time but the value changed afterwards, possible because of the market
impact of the “new” company operating after the acquisition. For example,
when Time Warner acquired AOL it appears that Time Warner and its auditors
gave up way to much value to AOL in the deal, in part due to accounting
fraud in AOL.
Problems of valuation in purchase accounting should not, and cannot under
current law, be used as an excuse to use historical cost values that
typically have far greater deviation from accurate values at the time the
acquisition deal is consummated.
I think you made your points Gregg. Please stop repeating arguments that
you have hammered repeatedly at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#Pooling
Bob Jensen
April 20, 2006 message reply Gregg Wilson
Hi Bob Jensen
You have masterfully skirted the issue as usual. Do
you believe that the value of the exchanged shares is either a "fair value"
and/or an "economic value"? If we are attesting to the value at the time of
the deal as the share exchange value then I would say we are attesting
badly. Use whatever fair value you want. The value of the exchanged shares
isn't one.
By the way. AOL purchased Time Warner, not the
other way around. From the 10K:
April 20, 2006 Reply from Bob Jensen
Sorry Gregg
I think you're wasting our time and embarrassing yourself until you can
back your wild claims with convincing research. Your wild speculations
appear to run counter to serious research.
If you are really convinced of evidence to the contrary, please go out
and conduct some rigorous research testing your hypotheses. Please don't
continue making wild claims in an academic forum until you've got some
convincing evidence.
Or as Richard Sansing would say, we seldom accept anecdotal evidence that
can be selectively cherry picked to show most any wild speculation.
If you bothered to do research rather than wildly speculate, you would
find that serious academic research points to the conclusions opposite to
your wild
speculations about revaluations and goodwill write-offs.
First consider the Steven L. Henning, Wayne H. Shaw, and Toby Stock
(2004) study:
This paper investigates criticisms that U.S.
GAAP had given firms too much discretion in determining the amount and
timing of goodwill write-offs. Using 1,576 U.S. and 563 U.K.
acquisitions, we find little evidence that U.S. firms managed the amount
of goodwill write-off or that U.K. firms managed the amount of
revaluations (write-ups of intangible assets). However, our results are
consistent with U.S. firms delaying goodwill write-offs and U.K. firms
timing revaluations strategically to avoid shareholder approval linked
to certain financial ratios.
Steven L. Henning, Wayne H. Shaw, and Toby Stock, "The Amount and Timing
of Goodwill Write-Offs and Revaluations: Evidence from U.S. and U.K.
Firms," Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting, Volume 23,
Number 2, September 2004 Pages: 99 - 121
Also consider the Ayers, Lefanowicz, and Robinson (2002a) conclusions
below:
We investigate two related questions. What
factors influence firms' use of acquisition accounting method, and are
firms willing to pay higher acquisition premiums to use the
pooling-of-interests accounting method? We analyze a comprehensive
sample of nontaxable corporate stock-for-stock acquisitions from 1990
through 1996. We use a two-stage, instrumental variables estimation
method that explicitly allows for simultaneity in the choice of
accounting method and acquisition premiums. After controlling for
economic differences across pooling and purchase transactions, our
evidence indicates that financial reporting incentives influence how
acquiring firms structure stock-for-stock acquisitions.
In addition, our two-stage analysis indicates that
higher acquisition premiums are associated with the pooling method. In
sum, our evidence suggests that acquiring firms structure acquisitions
and expend significant resources to secure preferential accounting
treatment in stock-for-stock acquisitions.
Benjamin C. Ayers , Craig E. Lefanowicz and John R. Robinson, "Do
Firms Purchase the Pooling Method?" Review of Accounting Studies
Volume 7, Number 1, March 2002 Pages: 5 - 32.
You apparently have evidence to contradict the Ayers, Lefanowicz, and
Robinson (2002a) study. Would you please enlighten us with some convincing
evidence.
Consider the Patrick E. Hopkins, Richard W. Houston, and Michael F.
Peters (2000) research:
We provide evidence that analysts' stock-price
judgments depend on (1) the method of accounting for a business
combination and (2) the number of years that have elapsed since the
business combination. Consistent with business-press reports of
managers' concerns, analysts' stock-price judgments are lowest when a
company applies the purchase method of accounting and ratably amortizes
the acquisition premium. The number of years since the business
combination affects analysts' price estimates only when the company
applies the purchase method and ratably amortizes goodwill—analysts'
price estimates are lower when the business-combination transaction is
further in the past. However, this joint effect of accounting method and
timing is mitigated by the Financial Accounting Standards Board's
proposed income-statement format requiring companies to report separate
line items for after-tax income before goodwill charges and net-of-tax
goodwill charges. When a company uses the purchase method of accounting
and writes off the acquisition premium as in-process research and
development, analysts' stock price judgments are not statistically
different from their judgments when a company applies
pooling-of-interest accounting.
Patrick E. Hopkins, Richard W. Houston, and Michael F. Peters,
"Purchase, Pooling, and Equity Analysts' Valuation Judgments," The
Accounting Review, Vol. 75, 2000, 257-281.
You seem to think that acquisition goodwill is based upon wild
speculation. Research studies discover rather sophisticated valuation
approaches that distinguish core from synergy goodwill components. See
Henning, Lewis, and Shaw, "Valuation of Components of Purchased Goodwill,"
The Journal of Accounting Research, Vol. 38, Autumn 2000.
Also consider the Ayers, Lefanowicz, and Robinson (2002b) study:
Accounting standard setters have become
increasingly concerned with the perceived manipulation of financial
statements afforded by the pooling-of-interests (pooling) method of
accounting for corporate acquisitions. While different restrictions have
been discussed, in September 1999 the Financial Accounting Standards
Board (FASB) issued an Exposure Draft to eliminate the pooling method.
This study provides a basis for evaluating restrictions on the pooling
method by analyzing the financial statement effects on pooling
acquisitions made by public corporations over the period 1992 through
1997. Using these acquisitions we (1) quantify the scope of the pooling
problem, (2) estimate the financial statement repercussions of
eliminating the pooling method, and (3) examine the effects of
restricting pooling accounting to business combinations meeting various
merger of equals restrictions.
While our analysis does not address whether
restrictions on the pooling method will influence the nature or level of
acquisition activity, the results indicate that the pooling method
generates enormous amounts of unrecognized assets, across individual
acquisitions, and in aggregate. In addition, our results suggest that
recording and amortizing these assets generate significant balance sheet
and income statement effects that vary with industry. Regarding
restrictions on the pooling method, our analysis indicates that size
restrictions would significantly reduce the number and value of pooling
acquisitions and unrecognized assets generated by these acquisitions.
. . .
Accounting standard setters have become
increasingly concerned with the perceived manipulation of financial
statements and the lack of comparability across firms financial
statements that have resulted from having two acquisition accounting
methods. Consistent with these concerns, the FASB issued an Exposure
Draft in September 1999 to eliminate the pooling-of-interests method.
Using a comprehensive set of pooling acquisitions by public corporations
over the period 1992 through 1997, this study analyzes the financial
statement effects of eliminating or severely restricting the pooling
method of accounting for business combinations. Although we make no
assumptions regarding the effects of pooling restrictions on either
acquisition activity or acquisition price, this study provides a useful
starting point for assessing the effects of different pooling
restrictions. Our evidence suggests that firms avoid recognition of
significant amounts of target firms purchase prices, both in aggregate
and per acquisition, via the pooling method. Further, we document that
these unrecognized assets are significant relative to the bidders book
value and that the quantity and dollar magnitude of pooling acquisitions
have increased dramatically in recent years. With respect to
industry-specific analyses, we find that the financial services industry
accounts for approximately one-third of all pooling acquisitions in
number and value.
The effects on bidder financial-reporting
ratios of precluding use of the pooling method for a typical acquisition
are substantial, though varying widely across industries. Decreases in
return on equity, assuming a ten-year amortization period for
unrecognized assets, range from a 65 percent decline for the hotel and
services industry to a13 percent decline for the financial services
industry.15For earnings per share, the effects are more moderate than
are those on return on equity. Decreases, assuming a ten-year
amortization period, range from a 42 percent decrease for the food,
textile, and chemicals industry to an 8 percent decrease for the
financial services industry. For market-to-book ratios, four industries
(the metal and mining industry; the food, textile, and chemicals
industry; the hotel and other services industry; and the health and
engineering industry) have decreases in bidder market-to-book ratio in
excess of 30 percent, whereas the financial services industry has only a
6 percent decrease. The relatively small effects for the financial
services industry suggests that the industry�s opposition to eliminating
the pooling method may be more driven by the quantity and aggregate
magnitude of pooling acquisitions than per-acquisition effects. Overall,
we find that eliminating the pooling method affects firm profitability
and capitalization ratios in all industries, but there is a wide
dispersion of the magnitude of these effects across industry.
Finally, we document that restricting pooling
treatment via a relative size criterion significantly decreases the
number and value of pooling acquisitions as well as the unrecognized
assets generated by these acquisitions. Nevertheless, we find that a
size restriction, depending on its exact implementation, can
simultaneously allow a number of acquisitions to be accounted for under
the pooling method. Regardless of the type of restriction, the magnitude
of past pooling transactions, both in total dollars and relative to the
individual bidder's financial condition, lends credibility to the
contention that the imposition of pooling restrictions has the potential
to seriously impact firm financial statements and related
financial-reporting ratios. These effects, of course, decrease with a
longer amortization period for unrecognized assets.
Benjamin C. Ayers , Craig E. Lefanowicz and John R. Robinson,
"The Financial Statement Effects of Eliminating the Pooling-of-Interests
Method of Acquisition," Accounting Horizons, Vol 14, March 2000.
There are many, many more such studies. If you are really convinced of
evidence to the contrary, please go out and conduct some rigorous research
testing your hypotheses. Please don't continue this until you've got some
convincing evidence.
Or as Richard Sansing would say, we seldom accept anecdotal evidence that
can be selectively cherry picked to show most any wild conclusion.
Nobody argues that the present system of accounting for acquisitions and
goodwill is perfect. Various alternatives have been proposed in the research
literature. But none to my knowledge support your advocacy of a return to
pooling-of-interests accounting.
Bob Jensen
PS
You are correct about the AOL purchase of Time Warner. I forgot this since
Time Warner runs the household. Later on it was Time Warner that tried to sell AOL (to Google). It's a
little like husband buys wife and later on wife puts husband for sale.
April 18, 2006 message from Gregg Wilson
greggwil@optonline.net
Hi Bob Jensen
I was really trying to go one step at a time, and
establish that the value of the exchanged shares is not an economic value or
a "fair appraisal" of the value of the acquired company. I am certainly not
a researcher, and as you know I do not have access to the fine studies that
you have referenced. I am not even sure what would qualify as evidence of
the point.
I was thinking one could send the following
questionnaire to companies that had made share exchange acquistions....
""""""""""" You recently made a share exchange for
XYZ company. After you determined the value of the target company to you,
[Target value], which of the following do you feel best describes the
decision process by which you arrived at the number of shares to offer the
target company:
(1) [Target value] / [Price of your stock]
(2) [Your shares outstanding] * ([Target value] /
[Your value]) where [Your value] is the value of your own company arrived at
by a similar valuation standard as [Target value].
(3) Some combination of the above, or other
decision process. Please explain________________________________.
""""""""""""""""
If the response came back overwhelmingly (2), then
would that be conclusive evidence that the value of the exchanged shares is
not an economic value or the price paid? I really wouldn't want to go to the
trouble, if the result wouldn't demonstrate what I am trying to demonstrate.
Gregg Wilson
April 23, 2006 reply from Bob Jensen
Sorry Gregg,
If you want
to communicate with the academy you must play by the academy’s rules. The
number one rule is that a hypothesis must be supported by irrefutable
(normative) arguments or convincing empirical evidence. We do accept idle
speculation but only for purposes of forming interesting hypotheses to be
tested later on.
In my
communications with you regarding pooling-of-interests accounting, I've
always focused on what I will term your Pooling-Preferred Hypothesis or PP
Hypothesis for short. Your hypothesis may be implied from a collection of
your earlier quotations from
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#Pooling
Well I would call that entire FAS
141 a lot of sophistries. This is a case of trying to make an apple into
an orange and getting a rotten banana.
Gregg Wilson, March 30, 2006
I certainly didn't mean to
imply that cash acquisitions should be treated as pooling-of-interest.
On the contrary I was trying to make the point that they are totally
different situations, and can't be treated effectively by the same
accounting rule. The cash is the whole
point.
Gregg Wilson, March 30, 2006
Pooling of interest is
terrific, because it recreates that earnings model history for the
combined companies. The historical costs are not meaningless to the
negotiations but rather are the basis for the negotiations, for they are
the evidence that the companies are using to determine the share
exchange ratio that they will accept.
Gregg Wilson, March
30, 2006
Pooling is appropriate
only in the case of a share exchange acquisition, and I would say
pooling should only be used in the case of two ongoing enterprise(s).
Gregg Wilson, March
30, 2006
There's a bit of inconsistency in your quotations,
because in one case you say pooling is "terrific" for combined companies and
in the other quotation you claim pooling should only when the acquired
company carries on by itself. I will state your Pooling-Preferred (PP)
Hypothesis as follows:
Pooling-Preferred (PP) Hypothesis
FAS 141 is based upon sophistry.
Pooling-of--interest accounting is the best accounting approach when a
company is acquired in a stock-for-stock (non-cash) acquisition.
Purchase accounting required under FAS 141 is a
"case of trying to make an apple
into an orange and getting a rotten banana. "
What I've
tried to point out all along is that FAS 141 is not based upon sophistry. It
rests on the foundation of countless normative and empirical studies that
refute your PP Hypothesis.
Your only
support of the PP Hypothesis is another hypothesis that is stated by you
over and over ad nausea for two months as follows:
Exchanged Shares Non-Value (ESNV) Hypothesis
The
value of the exchanged shares is not an economic value or a "fair
appraisal" of the value of the acquired company.
Gregg Wilson,
April 22, 2006
In the academy we cannot accept an
untested hypothesis as a legitimate test of another hypothesis. Even if we
speculate that the ESNV Hypothesis is true, it does not support your PP
Hypothesis because it is totally disconnected to the real reason that
standard setters and the academic academy no longer want pooling accounting.
The "real reason" is that corporations are motivated to want pooling
accounting so they can inflate future ROIs and make most all acquisitions
look like great deals even though some of them are bad deals from an
economic perspective (to say nothing about wanting inflated ROIs to support
larger bonuses and sweetened future compensation plans for executives).
The preponderance of academic research
refutes the PP Hypothesis. One of the highlight studies in fact shows that
managers may enter into worse deals (in the past when it was legal) just to
get pooling accounting.
Some of the Ayers, Lefanowicz, and Robinson (2002a) conclusions are as
follows:
We investigate two related questions. What
factors influence firms' use of acquisition accounting method, and are
firms willing to pay higher acquisition premiums to use the
pooling-of-interests accounting method? We analyze a comprehensive
sample of nontaxable corporate stock-for-stock acquisitions from 1990
through 1996. We use a two-stage, instrumental variables estimation
method that explicitly allows for simultaneity in the choice of
accounting method and acquisition premiums. After controlling for
economic differences across pooling and purchase transactions, our
evidence indicates that financial reporting incentives influence how
acquiring firms structure stock-for-stock acquisitions.
In addition, our two-stage analysis indicates that
higher acquisition premiums are associated with the pooling method. In
sum, our evidence suggests that acquiring firms structure acquisitions
and expend significant resources to secure preferential accounting
treatment in stock-for-stock acquisitions.
Benjamin C. Ayers , Craig E. Lefanowicz and John R. Robinson, "Do
Firms Purchase the Pooling Method?" Review of Accounting Studies
Volume 7, Number 1, March 2002 Pages: 5 - 32.
In fact the above study suggests that
pooling accounting creates a worse situation that you speculate in your ESNV
Hypothesis. My conclusion is that if we accept your ESNV hypothesis we most
certainly would not want pooling accounting due to the above findings of
Ayers, Lefanowicz, and Robinson.
Your alleged
support of the PP Hypothesis is your
untested ESNV Hypothesis. As
mentioned above, you cannot support a hypothesis with an untested
hypothesis. Certainly the academy to date has not accepted your ESNV
Hypothesis. And even if it did, this hypothesis alone is disconnected to the
academic research pointing to why pooling accounting deceives investors.
Your only support of the ESNV
Hypothesis lies in conclusions drawn based upon your own anecdotal
experiences. Anecdotal experience is not an acceptable means of hypothesis
testing in the academy. Anecdotal evidence can be cherry picked to support
most any wild speculation.
As a result, I recommend the
following"
-
Admit that you do not have
sufficient evidence to support your PP Hypothesis. You must otherwise
refute a mountain of prior academic evidence that runs counter to the PP
Hypothesis.
-
Admit that you do not have
sufficient evidence in the academic world to support your ESNV
hypothesis. Certainly you've not convinced, to my knowledge, any members
of this academic (AECM) forum that virtually all managers are so
ignorant of values when putting together stock-for-stock acquisitions.
-
Stop hawking and repeating
your anecdotal speculations that are already documented on the Web at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#Pooling
Come back to us only when you have sufficient academic evidence to
support your hypotheses.
April 22, 2006 reply from Henry Collier
[henrycollier@aapt.net.au]
You have been very gentle with Gregg Wilson … I
would suggest that we send him to Singapore and subject him to the cane that
is so liberally used there to the recalcitrant. He has ‘convinced’ not one
it seems. Many of us ‘old timers’ agree with you … perhaps Wilson just
doesn’t get it … or perhaps it’s his Warhol’s 15 minutes of fame (or infamy
in this case).
One comment that has always struck me as relevant
in business combinations … well perhaps 2 … (1) why would we revalue only
the acquired company’s assets to FMV in the combination and (2) why would we
bother to recognize ‘goodwill’ at all? In the recognition it seems as though
we’ve just ‘paid’ too much for the FMV of the assets … why wouldn’t we just
reduce the ‘retained earnings’ of the combination?
Just my old management accountant’s rant I suppose.
Over the years with my approach to the share markets, I’ve found ‘income
statements’ and ‘balance sheets’ somewhat less than useful … seems to me
that particularly in high risk companies, like pink sheet things being
offered / touted on certain websites and through phishing mails, one can
obtain both historical and pro-forma I/S and B/S, but seldom any real or
projected cash flow information.
With regards from the land down under …
Enjoy retirement, I’ve found it very rewarding …
thanks for all you’ve done for the profession …
Henry Collier
April 23, 2006 reply from
[Richard.C.Sansing@DARTMOUTH.EDU]
--
Bob,
---Bob Jensen wrote:
In my communications with you (Gregg Wilson)
regarding pooling-of-interests accounting, I've always focused on what I
will term your Pooling-Preferred Hypothesis or PP Hypothesis for short.
---
My exchanges with Gregg Wilson suggests that his
discomfort with GAAP goes well beyond the pooling vs. purchase debate. He
does not care for the GAAP treatment of simple transactions such as the
transfer of shares to employees in lieu of cash compensation. Why argue
about (relatively) complicated transactions with someone who does not
understand simple ones?
Richard Sansing
Strange as it may seem a losing company may have more value to someone
else than itself
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on April 27,
2006
TITLE: Alcatel Stands to Reap Tax Benefit on Merger
REPORTER: Jesse Drucker and Sara Silver
DATE: Apr 26, 2006
PAGE: C3
LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114601908332236130.html
TOPICS: Accounting, International Accounting, Net Operating Losses, Taxation
SUMMARY: "Lucent's operating losses in [the] wake of [the] tech bubble may
allow big deductions" for the merged firm's U.S. operations.
QUESTIONS:
1.) What is the purpose of allowing net operating losses (NOLs) to be deducted
against other years' income amounts?
2.) Summarize the U.S. tax law provisions regarding NOLs. Why has Lucent been
unable to use up all of its NOL carryforwards since the tech bubble burst in
2000-2001?
3.) Define the term deferred tax assets. Describe how NOLs fit the definition
you provide. What other types of deferred tax assets do you think that Lucent
has available and wants to take advantage of?
4.) How is it possible that the "federal, state and local deductions" from
the deferred tax assets described in answer to question #3 "will nearly double
the U.S. net income that the combined company [of Alcatel and Lucent
Technologies] will be able to report"?
5.) How does the availability of NOL carryforwards, and the expected timing
of their deductions based on an acquirer's earnings or the recent tax law change
referred to in the article, impact the price an acquirer is willing to pay in a
merger or acquisition transaction?
6.) How did the availability of deferred tax asset deductions drive Alcatel's
choice of its location for its headquarters? What other factors do you think
drive such a choice?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
From The Wall Street Journal Weekly Accounting Review on April 7, 2006
TITLE: Takeover of VNU to Begin with Explanation of Price
REPORTER: Jason Singer
DATE: Apr 03, 2006
PAGE: A2
LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114405567166415142.html
TOPICS: Accounting, Mergers and Acquisitions
SUMMARY: The article offers an excellent description of the process
undertaken by VNU's Board of Directors in deciding to put the company "on the
auction block", consider alternative strategies, and finally accept an offer
price.
QUESTIONS:
1.) Describe the transaction agreed to by the Board of VNU NV and its acquirer,
AlpInvest Partners.
2.) What does the current stock price of VNU imply about the takeover
transaction? Why do you think that VNU is distributing the 210 page document
explaining the transaction and the Board's decision process?
3.) Connect to the press release dated March 8 through the on-line version of
the article. Scroll down to the section covering the "background of the offer."
Draw a timeline of the events, using abbreviations that are succinct but
understandable.
4.) What other alternatives did the VNU Board consider rather than selling
the company? Why did they decide against each of these alternatives?
5.) Based on the information in the article and the press releases, do you
think the acquirers will obtain value from the investment they are making?
Support your answer, including refuting possible arguments against your
position.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"Takeover of VNU to Begin With Explanation of Price," by Jason Singer, The
Wall Street Journal, April 3, 2006 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114405567166415142.html
A group of private-equity funds is beginning a $9
billion takeover of Dutch media giant VNU NV with the release of documents
that explain for the first time how VNU's board determined the purchase
price was high enough.
In the four weeks since VNU announced it would
recommend the private-equity group's offer, many shareholders have accused
the company of rushing to sell itself after being forced by investors to
abandon a big acquisition last year.
These critics said that the sale process was
halfhearted and that the agreed-upon price too low. Some have said they
preferred VNU to break itself up and separately sell the pieces.
At least two VNU shareholders, including
mutual-fund giant Fidelity Investments, have said publicly they are unlikely
to support the takeover; many others have said so privately.
VNU shares have traded far below the agreed
per-share offer price of €28.75 ($34.85) since the deal was announced,
suggesting the market expects the takeover bid to fail.
VNU – based in Haarlem, Netherlands, and the
world's largest market-research firm by sales – addresses these concerns in
the 210-page offer document to be sent to shareholders and outlines in
detail the steps it took to ensure the highest value.
Materials include two fairness opinions written by
VNU's financial advisers, one by Credit Suisse Group and the other by NM
Rothschild & Sons, evaluating the offer and concluding the price is
attractive for shareholders.
"This was a fully open auction," said Roger Altman,
chairman of Evercore Partners, another VNU financial adviser. The company's
board fully vetted all options, including a breakup of the business,
restructuring opportunities or proceeding with the status quo, he said.
"None provided a value as high as €28.75 [a share]. None of them."
Mr. Altman said that after being contacted by
private-equity funds interested in buying VNU after its failed attempt last
year to acquire IMS Health Inc., of Fairfield, Conn., VNU auctioned itself,
including seeking other strategic or private-equity bidders.
A second group of private-equity funds explored a
possible bid but dropped out when it concluded it couldn't pay as much as
the first group said it was prepared to offer. Another potential bidder, a
company, withdrew after refusing to sign a confidentiality agreement, VNU's
offer document says.
The initial group, which submitted the only firm
bid, consists of AlpInvest Partners of the Netherlands, and Blackstone
Group, Carlyle Group, Hellman & Friedman, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. and
Thomas H. Lee Partners, all of the U.S. The group formed Valcon Acquisition
BV to make the bid.
Some of the calculations provided in the offer
document suggest the company might be valued higher than the Valcon bid
price in certain circumstances. The Credit Suisse letter indicates the
company could be valued at as much as €29.60 a share based on prices paid
for businesses similar to VNU's in the past. It says a "sum of the parts
breakup analysis" indicates a range of €25.90 to €29.35.
The Rothschild letter also shows certain methods of
valuing the company reaching as high as €35.80 a share. But both advisers
said that when weighed against the many risks in VNU's future, the cash
payment being offered now by the Valcon group is the most attractive option
for shareholders.
COMPANIES
Dow Jon
|
PRICE
CHANGE
|
27.49
0.06
8:25a.m. |
|
PRICE
CHANGE
|
40.10
0.07
4/6 |
|
PRICE
CHANGE
|
25.99
0.02
4/6 |
From The Wall Street Journal Weekly Accounting Review on April 7, 2006
TITLE: Sign of the Times: A Deal for GMAC by Investor Group
REPORTER: Dennis K. Berman and Monica Langley
DATE: Apr 04, 2006
PAGE: A1 LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114406446238015171.html
TOPICS: Accounting, Advanced Financial Accounting, Banking, Bankruptcy, Board of
Directors, Financial Accounting, Investments, Mergers and Acquisitions, Spinoffs
SUMMARY: Cerberus Capital Management LP has led the group who will acquire
control of General Motors Acceptance Corp. (GMAC) from GM for $7.4 billion (plus
an additional payment from GMAC to GM of $2.7 billion). GM had expected to
receive offers for GMAC from big banks. Instead, they received offers from
private-equity and hedge funds, like the one from Cerberus. This article follows
up on last week's coverage of this topic; the related article identifies how CEO
Rick Wagoner is working with his Board to extend time for evaluating his own
performance there.
QUESTIONS:
1.) Describe the transaction GM is undertaking to sell control in GMAC.
Specifically, who owns the 51% ownership of GMAC that is being sold? What will
happen to the 49% ownership in GMAC following this transaction? To answer the
question, you may also refer to the GM statement available through the on-line
article link at
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114406559238215183.html
2.) Again refer to the GM statement on the GMAC deal. In addition to the
purchase price, what other cash flows will accrue to GM from this transaction?
How do you think these items relate to the fact that GM is selling a 51%
interest in GMAC?
3.) What is the nature of GMAC's business? Specifically describe its
"portfolio of loans and lease receivables."
4.) Why do you think GM expected "...be courted by big banks..." to negotiate
a purchase of GMAC? Why do you think that expectation proved wrong, that other
entities ended up bidding for GMAC? To answer, consider the point made in the
article that even Citigroup, GM's primary bank and a significant player in the
ultimate deal, had decided that it couldn't structure a deal that GM wanted from
big banks.
5.) What are the risks associated with the acquisition of GMAC? In
particular, comment on the risk associated with GM's possible bankruptcy and its
relation to GMAC's business operations.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
--- RELATED ARTICLES ---
TITLE: GM's Wagoner Gains Some Time for Turnaround
REPORTER: Lee Hawkins, Jr., Monica Langley, and Joseph B. White
PAGE: A1
ISSUE: Apr 04, 2006
LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114411090537615994.html
Advanced
Accounting
How should a 34% equity interest be reported?
Coke Near Deal for Bottler
by: Dana Cimilluca, Betsy McKay and Jeffrey McCracken
Feb 25, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
Click here to view the video on WSJ.com 
TOPICS: Advanced
Financial Accounting, Consolidations, Investments, Mergers and Acquisitions
SUMMARY: "In
a strategic about-face driven by big changes in consumer tastes, Coca-Cola Co.
was nearing a deal late Wednesday to buy the bulk of its largest bottler,
according to people familiar with the matter." The companies reached agreement
on the transaction and by Friday the WSJ reported a fall in Coke share prices
and a gain on the share values of its bottler, Coca-Cola Enterprises (CCE).
CLASSROOM
APPLICATION: The
article is useful to discuss corporate strategy leading to equity method
investments versus ownership and control.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) What was the reasoning that Coca-Cola's strategic
organization for decades was based on "setting up large, independent bottlers
run separately from Atlanta-based Coke itself"? What does Coke itself now sell?
2. (Advanced) How did Coke resolve concerns about losing control over its
bottling companies even as it kept "the bottlers' assets off its books"? Why is
this desirable for Coke?
3. (Advanced)
How do you think that Coke accounts for its "34% stake as of the end of last
year" in its largest bottler, Coca-Cola Enterprises (CCE)?
4. (Advanced)
What are the strategic reasons that Coke is now reacquiring its North American
bottling operations? How is the transaction being structured?
5. (Introductory)
Refer to the related article. How did markets react to the closure of this deal?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED
ARTICLES:
Coca-Cola Fizzles, But Dr. Pepper Pops
by Kristina Peterson
Feb 26, 2010
Page: C5
News Hub: Coke's New Deal
by
Feb 25, 2010
Online Exclusive
Minority Interests: Lambs being led to slaughter?
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on June 11, 2009
Investors Missing the Jewel
in Crown
by Martin
Peers
The Wall Street Journal
Jun 06, 2009
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124425049774290141.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC
TOPICS: Advanced
Financial Accounting, Consolidations, Debt, Financial Accounting, Financial
Analysis
SUMMARY: The
article assesses the situation of two companies associated with financial
difficulties: Crown Media, 67% owned by Hallmark Cards, and Clear Channel
Outdoor, 89% owned by Clear Channel Media. In the latter case, the entity in
financial difficulty is the owner company. Questions ask students to look at
a quarterly filing by Crown Media, to consider the situation facing
noncontrolling interest shareholders, and to understand the use of earnings
multiplier analysis for pricing a security.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article is good for introducing the interrelationships between affiliated
entities when covering consolidations. It also covers alternative
calculations of, and analytical use of, a P/E ratio.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
Access the Crown Media 10-Q filing for the quarter ended March 31, 2009 at
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1103837/000110383709000008/mainform5709.htm
Alternatively, click on the live link to Crown Media in the WSJ article,
click on SEC Filings in the left hand column, then choose the 10-Q filing
made on May 7, 2009. Describe the company's financial position and results
of operations.
2. (Advanced)
Crown Media's majority shareholder is Hallmark Cards "which also happens to
be its primary lender to the tune of a billion dollars...." Where is this
debt shown in the balance sheet? How is it described in the footnotes? When
is it coming due?
3. (Advanced)
What has Hallmark Cards proposed to do about the debt owed by Crown Media?
What impact will this transaction have on the minority Crown Shareholders?
4. (Advanced)
Do you think the noncontrolling interest shareholders in Crown Media can do
anything to stop Hallmark Cards from unilaterally implementing whatever
changes it desires? Support your answer.
5. (Introductory)
Refer to the description of Clear Channel Outdoor. How is the company's
share price assessed? In your answer, define the term "price-earnings ratio"
or P/E ratio and explain the two ways in which this is measured.
6. (Advanced)
What does the author mean when he writes that "anyone buying Outdoor stock
should remember that" the existence of a majority shareholder with
significant debt holdings also could pose problems for an investment?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"Investors Missing the Jewel in Crown," by Martin Peers, The Wall Street
Journal, June 5, 2009 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124425049774290141.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC
Investing in a company controlled by its primary
lender can be hazardous. Just ask shareholders in Crown Media.
Owner of the Hallmark TV channel, Crown is
67%-owned by Hallmark Cards, which also happens to be its primary lender to
the tune of a billion dollars. With the debt due next year, Hallmark on May
28 proposed swapping about half of its debt for equity, which would
massively dilute the public shareholders. Crown's stock, long supported by
hope that the channel would get scooped up by a big media company, is down
36% since then.
Helping feed outrage among some shareholders was
the fact that the swap proposal comes as the Hallmark Channel was making
inroads with advertisers. Profits were on the horizon.
Clear Channel Outdoor holds parallels. The
billboard company owes $2.5 billion to Clear Channel Media, its 89%
shareholder, a fraught situation for Outdoor's public holders.
In this case, of course, the parent is in financial
distress. Hence the significance of Outdoor's contemplation of refinancing
options, which could lead to the loan being repaid. The hope among some
investors is that events conspire to prevent that, forcing the parent into
bankruptcy and putting Outdoor up for auction.
That could bail out shareholders. At $6.36 a share
at Friday's close, Outdoor's enterprise value is roughly 9.8 times projected
2009 earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, below
Lamar Advertising's 10.9 times multiple. Using 2010 projections and an
equivalent multiple implies a share price above $10.
But as Crown showed, the interests of a majority
shareholder who doubles as a lender don't necessarily coincide with minority
holders. Anyone buying Outdoor stock should remember that.
Bob Jensen's threads on corporate governance are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Governance
Bob Jensen's Rotten to the Core threads
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm
Event Study ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_study
From The Wall Street Journal Weekly Accounting Review on May 11, 2012
Earnings Surprises Lose Punch
by:
Spencer Jakab
May 07, 2012
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
Click here to view the video on WSJ.com ![WSJ Video]()
TOPICS: Earning Announcements, Earnings Forecasts, Earnings
Management, Regulation
SUMMARY: "Companies and the analysts who cover them typically set
the [earnings expectations] bar low enough that a 'beat' has to be
substantial, and not marred by unpleasant news about the outlook, to really
have an impact." The article shows that the 20 year average proportion of
firms beating the consensus of analysts' estimates is 58% each quarter,
while the proportion for firms reporting their calendar first quarter of
2012 is 70%. From 1993 through 2001, about half of companies had positive
earnings surprises, "which seems natural."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The article is useful to introduce earnings
forecasts in any financial accounting class.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Advanced) What does it mean to say that a company may "meet or
beat" earning expectations? In your answer, define who sets these
expectations.
2. (Introductory) What was the average proportion of firms who met
or beat the consensus forecasts of analysts following their firms for the
first calendar quarter of 2012?
3. (Advanced) What was the percentage of firms who beat earnings
forecasts from 1993 to 2001? Why should that result "seem natural"?
4. (Advanced) What is the overall pattern of analysts' estimates?
Why do you think this pattern emerges? How does it lead to the conclusion
that "the important statistic is actual corporate profits"?
5. (Introductory) What is the SEC's Regulation Fair Disclosure?
(Hint; you may search on the SEC's web site at
www.sec.gov to investigate
this question.) According to the article, how does the implementation of
Regulation FD impact the earnings forecasting process?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"Earnings Surprises Lose Punch," by Spencer Jakab, The Wall Street
Journal, May 7, 2012 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304020104577384304200945934.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
Gomer Pyle might have been about as competent an
equity strategist as he was a marine. While the knee-jerk reaction to a
positive earnings surprise is often, well, positive, gains can be fleeting.
The reason is that companies and the analysts who cover them typically set
the bar low enough that a "beat" has to be substantial, and not marred by
unpleasant news about the outlook, to really have an impact.
Take the current earnings season. Now that a little
over four-fifths of S&P 500 companies by market value have reported, Brown
Brothers Harriman says 70% of those have beaten estimates. But since
Alcoa Inc. informally kicked off the current
reporting season April 10, the S&P 500 is down slightly.
While this "positive surprise ratio" of 70% is
above the 20 year average of 58% and also higher than last quarter's tally,
it is just middling since the current bull market began in 2009. In the past
decade, the ratio only dipped below 60% during the financial crisis. Look
before 2002, though, and 70% would have been literally off the chart. From
1993 through 2001, about half of companies had positive surprises, which
seems natural.
What changed? One potential reason is the
tightening of rules governing analyst contacts with management. Analysts now
must rely on publicly available guidance or, gasp, figure things out by
themselves. That puts companies, with an incentive to set the bar low so
that earnings are received positively, in the driver's seat. While that
makes managers look good short-term, there is no lasting benefit for
buy-and-hold investors. In fact, an October study by CXO Advisory Group
found that the average weekly index return during earnings season has been
slightly negative since 2000, while it has been positive for the rest of the
year.
The important statistic is actual corporate
profits. BBH estimates the S&P 500 recorded operating earnings of $25.31 a
share last quarter. That is about $1.50 higher than analyst consensus
estimates a month ago but around $1.00 below last July's estimate. That is a
typical pattern as expectations start out too optimistic and, by the time
actual earnings approach, are too low. When the ink is dry, though, actual
profits rarely make it to where expectations first began.
As Gomer would exclaim: "Well gaw-lee."
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on September 3,
2010
The Decline of the P/E Ratio
by: Ben
Levisohn
Aug 30, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
Click here to view the video on WSJ.com 
TOPICS: Analysts'
Forecasts, Financial Statement Analysis, Forecasting
SUMMARY: "While
U.S. companies announced record profits during the second quarter, and beat
forecasts by a comfortable 10% margin, on average, the stock market has
dropped 5%. Based on trailing 12-month earnings, the average price earnings
(P/E) ratio in the overall market is about 14.9 compared to 23.1 in
September 2009; "based on profit expectations over the next 12 months, the
P/E ratio has fallen to 12.2 from about 14.5 in May, 2010." The reason for
this divergence is, of course, economic uncertainty that is not evident in
the (average) point estimates of earnings nor in the relatively good
earnings numbers of both the first and second calendar quarters of 2010. The
related article is a WSJ graphic of earnings per share actual compared to
average analyst estimates, by industry and by week.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article is useful to show the need for understanding context of ratios in
undertaking financial statement analysis. It also demonstrates that ratios
can be measured in more than one way, such as the use of past earnings or
analysts' average forecasts. The related article can be used to introduce
students to analysts' earnings forecasts.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
Define the price earnings ratio (P/E) and explain its meaning.
2. (Introductory)
What two methods of measuring P/E are described in the article? Why do you
think both are used?
3. (Introductory)
Refer to the related article. How are analysts' estimates used in this WSJ
graphic analysis? In your answer, also describe who are the analysts
producing these estimates.
4. (Advanced)
How did companies perform relative to analysts' estimates in the second
calendar quarter of 2010?
5. (Advanced)
What has happened to the P/E ratio? Why does the author say the P/E has
fallen in relevance? Do you agree with that assessment?
6. (Introductory)
What other evidence in the article corroborates the issues in the recent
fall in the average P/E ratio?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
Now Reporting: Earnings
by
Aug 01, 2010
Online Exclusive
"The Decline of the P/E Ratio," by: Ben Levisohn, The Wall Street Journal,
August 30, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703618504575459583913373278.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
As investors fixate on the global forces whipsawing
the markets, one fundamental measure of stock-market value, the
price/earnings ratio, is shrinking in size and importance.
And the diminution might not stop for a while.
The P/E ratio, thrust into prominence during the
1930s by value investors Benjamin Graham and David Dodd, measures the amount
of money investors are paying for a company's earnings. Typically, companies
that post strong earnings growth enjoy richer stock prices and fatter P/E
ratios than those that don't.
But while U.S. companies announced record profits
during the second quarter, and beat forecasts by a comfortable 10% margin,
on average, the stock market has dropped 5% this month.
The stock market's average price/earnings ratio,
meanwhile, is in free fall, having plunged about 36% during the past year,
the largest 12-month decline since 2003. It now stands at about 14.9,
compared with 23.1 last September, based on trailing 12-month earnings
results. Based on profit expectations over the next 12 months, the P/E ratio
has fallen to 12.2 from about 14.5 in May.
So what explains the contraction? In short,
economic uncertainty. A steady procession of bad news, from the European
financial crisis to fears of deflation in the U.S., has prompted analysts to
cut profit forecasts for 2011.
"The market is worrying not just about a slowdown,
but worse," said Tobias Levkovich, chief U.S. equity strategist at Citigroup
Global Markets in New York. "People want clarity before they make a decision
with their money."
Three months ago, analysts expected the companies
in the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index to boost profits 18% in 2011. Now,
they predict 15%. Mutual-fund, hedge-fund and other money managers put the
increase at closer to 9%, according to a recent Citigroup survey, while Mr.
Levkovich's estimate is for 7% growth.
"The sustainability of earnings is in doubt," said
Howard Silverblatt, an index analyst at S&P in New York. "Estimates are
still optimistic."
Equally troublesome, analysts' forecasts are
becoming scattered. In May, the range between the highest and lowest analyst
forecasts of S&P 500 earnings per share in 2011 was $12. Morgan Stanley
predicted $85 per share, while UBS predicted $97 per share. Now, the spread
is $15. Barclays said $80 per share; Deutsche Bank predicts $95.
When profit forecasts are tightly clustered, it
signals to investors that there is consensus among prognosticators; when
they diverge wildly, it shows a lack of clarity. The P/E ratio tends to fall
as uncertainty rises, and vice versa.
"A stock is worth its future earnings, but that
involves uncertainty," said Jeremy Siegel, professor of finance at the
University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. "The more uncertainty there is,
the lower the P/E will be."
Not only is the P/E ratio dropping, it also is in
danger of losing some of its prominence as a market gauge.
That is because, with profit and economic forecasts
becoming less reliable, investors are focusing more on global economic
events as they make trading decisions, parsing everything from Japanese
government-debt statistics to shipping patterns in the Baltic region.
To some extent this is in keeping with historical
patterns. P/E ratios often shrink in size and significance during periods of
uncertainty as investors focus on broader economic themes.
P/E ratios fell sharply during the Depression of
the 1930s and again after World War II, bottoming at 5.90 in 1949. They
plunged again during the 1970s, touching 6.97 in 1974 and 6.68 in 1980.
During those periods, global events sometimes took precedence over
company-specific valuation considerations in the minds of investors.
There have been periods when the P/E ratio was much
more in vogue. A century ago, the buying and selling of stocks was widely
considered to be a form of gambling. P/E ratios came about as a way to
quantify the true value of a company's shares. The creation of the
Securities and Exchange Commission during the 1930s made financial
information more available to investors, and P/E ratios gained widespread
acceptance in the decades that followed.
But thanks to the recent shift toward rapid-fire
stock trading, the P/E ratio may be losing its relevance. The emergence of
exchange-traded funds in the past 10 years has allowed investors to make
broad bets on entire baskets of stocks. And the ascendance of
computer-driven trading is making macroeconomic data and trading patterns
more important drivers of market action than fundamental analysis of
individual companies, even during periods of relative calm.
So where is the P/E ratio headed in the short term?
A few optimists think it could rise from here. If corporate borrowing costs
remain at record lows and stock prices remain depressed, companies will
start issuing debt to buy back shares, said David Bianco, chief U.S. equity
strategist for Bank of America Merrill Lynch. As a result, earnings per
share would increase, he said, even if profit growth remains sluggish, and
P/E ratios could jump with them.
But today's economic uncertainty argues against
that scenario. Consider that while P/E ratios dropped during the
inflationary 1970s, they also fell during the deflationary 1930s. The one
common thread tying those two eras of falling P/E ratios: unpredictable
economic performance.
"We're looking at a more volatile U.S. economy than
we experienced in the last 30 years," said Doug Cliggott, U.S. equity
strategist at Credit Suisse in Boston. "The pressure on multiples may be
with us for quite some time."
September 8, 2010 reply from John Briggs, John
[briggsjw@JMU.EDU]
I saw this
article and didn't quite "get" it...the title at least.
Of course the P/E
ratio is still relevant.
My favorite site for this is
www.multpl.com,
where a guy provides a daily look
at the Shiller ("Irrational Exuberance") 10-year P/E...10 years of data
instead of 1. It's currently 20. It used to be 45. Indeed, 45 was a
bubble.
Right now, you
would think 16 would be appropriate, but extremely low interest rates argue
for higher (in comparison to investing in bonds), but economic uncertainly
argues for lower.
So I'd make the
case that this metric should be around 16 right now...20 indicates to me
that stocks are slightly overvalued.
The only time the
P/E ratio really was ignored was in 2000, it seems to me. I'm glad I had no
money then.
Bob
Jensen's bookmarks for financial ratios ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob1.htm#010303FinancialRatios
Also see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_ratios
Bob Jensen's threads on valuation are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
Treasury Stock ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treasury_stock
A Teaching Case About Treasury Stock
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on March 2, 2012
The Pros and Cons of Stock Buybacks
by:
Maxwell Murphy
Feb 27, 2012
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Earnings Management, Earnings Per Share, Financial
Accounting, Stock Price Effects
SUMMARY: This is the third of three articles in the WSJ's Section
on Leadership in Corporate Finance published on Monday, February 27, 2012.
This article is useful to introduce the economic reasoning behind treasury
stock purchases prior to presenting the accounting for these transactions.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The article may be used in any financial
accounting class covering treasury stock purchases.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Advanced) What is a stock buyback? What term do we use in
accounting for this transaction?
2. (Advanced) Summarize the accounting for stock buybacks.
3. (Introductory) What reason does Mr. Milano give for his opinion
that "buybacks are...often a bad idea"?
4. (Introductory) What evidence does Mr. Milano give to support his
view?
5. (Advanced) One of the reasons Mr. Tilson acknowledges that
buybacks are often poorly considered by the managements who conduct them is
that they focus on "propping up share price." Mr. Milano notes that stock
buybacks increase earnings per share. How do stock buybacks have these
effects? Do the share price effects stem from increasing earnings per share?
Support your answer.
6. (Advanced) List the other two of Mr. Tilson three examples of
"the wrong reasons" to conduct a stock buyback and explain how buybacks
produce these two effects.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"The Pros and Cons of Stock Buybacks," by Maxwell Murphy, The Wall Street
Journal, February 27, 2012 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203824904577213891035614390.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
As share buybacks climb toward record, prerecession
levels, the debate over the tactic is heating up.
Companies sitting on piles of cash are under
increasing pressure to return that value to shareholders, but are buybacks
the best way to do that? Or should companies raise dividends, use the money
for acquisitions or invest it in their business instead?
We invited two Wall Street personalities with
strong views on the issue to participate in an email discussion of the
merits and drawbacks of stock buybacks.
Whitney R. Tilson is the founder and managing
partner of T2 Partners LLC, a New York hedge fund, and an outspoken
proponent of share repurchases.
Gregory V. Milano is the co-founder and chief
executive of Fortuna Advisors LLC, a corporate-finance consulting firm based
in New York, who rarely encounters a buyback he considers the best use of a
company's cash.
Here are edited excerpts of their discussion.
Crowding Out
WSJ: Mr. Milano, why you do think buybacks are so
often a bad idea?
MR. MILANO: Though some are successful with share
repurchases, the evidence overwhelmingly shows that heavy buyback companies
usually create less value for shareholders over time.
Many managements have become so infatuated with how
buybacks increase earnings per share that these distributions are crowding
out sound business investments that create more value over time.
In one study, those that reinvested a higher
percentage of their cash generation into capital expenditures, research and
development, cash acquisitions and working capital delivered substantially
higher total shareholder return than those that reinvested less.
The problem with buybacks is considerably
compounded by poor timing: the propensity to buy when the price is high and
not when it's low. A measure called buyback effectiveness compares the
buyback return on investment to total shareholder return, and indicates
whether the company buys low or high relative to the share price trend. From
2008 through mid 2011, nearly two out of three companies in the S&P 500 had
negative buyback effectiveness.
Most academic research shows that share prices
typically increase when buybacks are announced, which benefits short-term
owners. For those interested in long-term value creation, which should be
the focus of managements and boards, the evidence convincingly shows that
buybacks usually do not help.
WSJ: Mr. Tilson, what makes buybacks work for
investors, rather than against them?
MR. TILSON: I agree with Greg that most companies
do not think or act sensibly regarding share repurchases and therefore end
up destroying value.
It never ceases to amaze me—and, when a company we
own does the wrong thing, infuriate me—how few companies think sensibly
about this topic and thus buy back stock for all the wrong reasons: to prop
up the price, signal "confidence," offset options dilution, etc.
But the same could be said of acquisitions, and
does anyone believe that all acquisitions are bad? Share repurchases, like
acquisitions, can create enormous long-term shareholder value if done
properly.
Warren Buffett, in his 1999 letter to Berkshire
Hathaway shareholders, perfectly captures the key elements of a smart share
repurchase program:
"There is only one combination of facts that makes
it advisable for a company to repurchase its shares: First, the company has
available funds—cash plus sensible borrowing capacity—beyond the near-term
needs of the business and, second, finds its stock selling in the market
below its intrinsic value, conservatively calculated."
In other words, once a business has a strong
balance sheet, then it should first take its excess cash/cash flow and
reinvest in its own business—if (and only if) it can generate high rates of
return on such investment.
Then, if it still has cash/cash flow left over, it
should return it to shareholders, who are, after all, the owners of the
business—it's their cash. But this raises the question of whether cash
should be returned via dividends or share repurchases.
That depends on the price of the stock versus its
intrinsic value.
My rule of thumb is that if the stock is trading
within 20% of fair value, then the company should use dividends; if it's
trading at greater than a 20% discount, buybacks. If it's trading at a big
premium to fair value, then the company should issue stock, via compensation
to employees, a secondary offering and/or as an acquisition currency.
Getting It Wrong
MR. MILANO: I agree with the Warren Buffett quote
completely, and Whitney's view on how often managements get it wrong is
really one of my main principles.
As an investment banker at Credit Suisse in 2007 I
visited scores of companies to explain that their share prices were so high
that the expectations they needed to achieve just to justify their price,
let alone grow it, were unrealistic in a world where we experience the ups
and downs of business cycles. I suggested they use convertible-debt
financing to fund their growth.
Continued in article
Question
There are various reasons for buying back common shares (e.g., to have shares
available for employee compensation). How many of you also teach that one
purpose may be to buy back your company's earnings growth?
Teaching Case
From The Wall Street Journal's Accounting Weekly Review on September 20,
2013
Microsoft Buys Back Earnings Growth
by: Rolfe Winkler
Sep 17, 2013
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Dividends, Earnings Per Share, Financial Analysis
SUMMARY: The article clearly shows the impact of stock repurchases
on EPS growth for large technology firms that have matured: Cisco,
Microsoft, IBM, and Oracle.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The article may be used when covering
stockholders' equity in a financial accounting class.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) What has Microsoft announced about its stock
repurchases?
2. (Introductory) Provide the journal entry to record a stock
repurchase transaction.
3. (Advanced) What did Microsoft also announce at the same time as
the share repurchase announcement? How do both of these actions mean that
Microsoft will "keep kicking cash" to shareholders?
4. (Advanced) Explain the contents of the graphic entitled "Backstory."
Specifically explain how earnings-per-share growth absent the stock buybacks
is calculated.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"Microsoft Buys Back Earnings Growth," by Rolfe Winkler, The Wall Street
Journal, September 17, 2013 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323342404579081362742746426.html
It's good news for Microsoft MSFT +0.05%
shareholders that the company will keep kicking back cash their way. It will
also help the software giant juice earnings growth, like so many of its big
tech brethren.
Microsoft's new $40 billion share-repurchase plan
doesn't mark a sea change. The company is essentially replacing its last,
almost-exhausted $40 billion buyback plan launched in 2008. Boosting the
dividend 22%, which implies a yield of 3.4%, may have a bigger impact as it
makes shares notably more attractive to income-hungry investors.
But buying back shares at such a rapid clip has led
to a big decline in shares outstanding and, consequently, a sizable increase
in earnings per share. In total, Microsoft has repurchased $110 billion of
its own shares over its past nine fiscal years, says CapitalIQ, reducing its
share count 22%. Thanks to such buybacks, the company's average annual
earnings growth rate of 11% was 46% higher than it would have been holding
the share count constant.
he company is hardly alone. International Business
Machines IBM +0.69% has bought back $100 billion of stock over its past nine
fiscal years, reducing its share count by a third and boosting its average
earnings growth rate 53%, to 16%. Cisco Systems CSCO -1.26% has purchased
$63 billion of stock, reducing its share count 19% and increasing average
earnings growth 40%, to 10%.
Oracle ORCL -0.56% stands out not just for faster
earnings growth but for far less reliance on buybacks. Earnings-per-share
growth has averaged 19% a year the past nine fiscal years, just slightly
higher than the 18% growth rate had its share count been unchanged. That
said, even Oracle has significantly increased its share repurchases the past
two years.
Higher earnings-growth rates are good news for
shareholders. Still, the way tech giants manufacture that growth is a
reminder that they are more about past glory than future promise.
OBSF: Off Balance Sheet Financing
Off-Balance-Sheet Financing ---
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/o/obsf.asp
A form of financing in which large capital
expenditures are kept off of a company's balance sheet through various
classification methods. Companies will often use off-balance-sheet financing
to keep their debt to equity (D/E) and leverage ratios low, especially if
the inclusion of a large expenditure would break negative debt covenants.
Contrast to loans, debt and equity, which do appear
on the balance sheet. Examples of off-balance-sheet financing include joint
ventures, research and development partnerships, and operating leases
(rather than purchases of capital equipment).
Operating leases are one of the most common forms
of off-balance-sheet financing. In these cases, the asset itself is kept on
the lessor's balance sheet, and the lessee reports only the required rental
expense for use of the asset. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles in
the U.S. have set numerous rules for companies to follow in determining
whether a lease should be capitalized (included on the balance sheet) or
expensed.
This term came into popular use during the Enron
bankruptcy. Many of the energy traders' problems stemmed from setting up
inappropriate off-balance-sheet entities.
"The State of the Federal Budget Is Opaque," by Ryan Alexander,
U.S. News, January 28, 2014 ---
http://www.usnews.com/opinion/blogs/economic-intelligence/2014/01/28/the-governments-accounting-practices-makes-budget-debates-worse
For budget nerds, tonight's
State of the Union speech is a prelude to the
president's budget, which will be introduced a little over a month from now.
The State of the Union usually presents a broad vision of goals and
priorities, but the budget gives us details about where the administration
would direct dollars to see those priorities implemented.
But even when we see the president's budget next
month, we still won't have a true picture of where we stand financially and
where we are going because we use a set of accounting principles that makes
it hard to get a clear picture of what our obligations are. That is because
the United States Government uses a cash based accounting system instead of
accrual accounting, the standard accounting practice for large, complex
entities.
What is the difference and why does it matter? The
short version is this: Cash accounting simply tracks money in and money out,
while accrual accounting takes into account all outstanding obligations.
This difference matters because, under cash accounting, it is possible to
ignore or underplay outstanding obligations the government must pay under
existing contracts and laws. Moreover, cash accounting makes it more
difficult to plan and budget for infrastructure upgrades and other major
investments.
[See
a collection of political cartoons on the budget and deficit.]
For decades, accounting professionals, presidential
commissions and the Congressional Budget Office alike have
recommended changing to accrual accounting as a
means to make the federal budget more transparent and to encourage fiscal
responsibility. The Securities and Exchange Commission requires that
publically traded companies use accrual accounting and otherwise follow the
so-called Generally Accepted Accounting Practices. The reason accrual
accounting is favored is simple: It encourages large entities to reflect and
plan for long-term fiscal health rather than simply looking at today's cash
flow, which is the accounting principle version of living
paycheck-to-paycheck.
Moving all federal budgeting and accounting to
accrual standards seems like an obvious step. It will increase our
understanding of our true deficits and debts and improve transparency and
accountability across the government. So why, despite recommendations to
make this change, starting as far back as the first Hoover Commission in
1949, hasn't the U.S. adopted this standard? The short answer is that making
this change requires political will. And as we have seen for decades,
politicians love to skew numbers to support their own positions instead of
relying on vetted, neutral numbers.
Lawmakers are able to game the Congressional Budget
Office scoring rules to hide long-term costs outside the 10-year budget
window. Shifting to accrual accounting would shift debates about the
long-term liabilities and benefits of different government actions out of
the realm of political arguments and into the realm of agreed upon facts.
Continued in article
Over 75% Off-Balance-Sheet Financing by Federal and State Governments
"Hiding the Financial State of the Union -- and the States," State
Data Lab, January 24, 2014 ---
http://www.statedatalab.org/
Next Tuesday, President Barack Obama will give the
annual “State of the Union” address. One of the most important issues is the
Financial State of the Union. But what about the Financial State of the
States?
Truth in Accounting has found that the lack of
truth and transparency in governmental budgeting and financial reporting
enables our federal and state governments to not tell us what they really
owe. Obscure accounting rules allow governments to hide trillions of dollars
of debt from citizens and legislators.
The President and many governmental officials tell
us the national debt is $17 trillion, but that does not include more than
$58 trillion of retirement benefits that have been promised to our veterans
and seniors. In addition, state officials do not report more than $948
billion of retirement liabilities.
The charts above show 77% of the federal
government's true debt is hidden and 75% of state government debt is hidden.
Total hidden federal and state debt amounts to more than $59 trillion, or
roughly $625,000 per U.S. taxpayer.
The five states with the greatest hidden debt
include Texas ($66 billion), Michigan ($67 billion), New York ($75 billion),
Illinois ($106 billion), and California ($112 billion).
Truth in Accounting promotes truthful, transparent
and timely financial information from our governments, because citizens
deserve to know the amount of debt they and their children will be
responsible for paying in the future.
Bob Jensen's threads on the sad state of governmental accounting ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory02.htm#GovernmentalAccounting
Bob Jensen's Document on How to Avoid Booking
Leases Under FAS 13 and the New 2012 Dual Model ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/LeaseAccounting.htm
Comparisons
of IFRS with Domestic Standards of Many Nations
http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm
More Detailed
Differences
(Comparisons) between FASB and IASB Accounting Standards
2011 Update
"IFRS and US GAAP: Similarities and Differences" according to PwC
(2011 Edition)
http://www.pwc.com/us/en/issues/ifrs-reporting/publications/ifrs-and-us-gaap-similarities-and-differences.jhtml
Note the Download button!
Note that warnings are given throughout the document that the similarities and
differences mentioned in the booklet are not comprehensive of all similarities
and differences. The document is, however, a valuable addition to students of
FASB versus IASB standard differences and similarities.
It's not easy keeping track of what's changing and
how, but this publication can help. Changes for 2011 include:
- Revised introduction reflecting the current
status, likely next steps, and what companies should be doing now
(see page 2);
- Updated convergence timeline, including
current proposed timing of exposure drafts, deliberations, comment
periods, and final standards
(see page 7);
- More current analysis of the differences
between IFRS and US GAAP -- including an assessment of the impact
embodied within the differences
(starting on page 17); and
- Details incorporating authoritative standards
and interpretive guidance issued through July 31, 2011
(throughout).
This continues to be one of PwC's most-read
publications, and we are confident the 2011 edition will further your
understanding of these issues and potential next steps.
For further exploration of the similarities and
differences between IFRS and US GAAP, please also visit our
IFRS Video Learning Center.
To request a hard copy of this publication, please contact your PwC
engagement team or
contact us.
Jensen Comment
My favorite comparison topics (Derivatives and Hedging) begin on Page 158
The booklet does a good job listing differences but, in my opinion, overly
downplays the importance of these differences. It may well be that IFRS is more
restrictive in some areas and less restrictive in other areas to a fault. This
is one topical area where IFRS becomes much too subjective such that comparisons
of derivatives and hedging activities under IFRS can defeat the main purpose of
"standards." The main purpose of an "accounting standard" is to lead to greater
comparability of inter-company financial statements. Boo on IFRS in this topical
area, especially when it comes to testing hedge effectiveness!
One key quotation is on Page 165
IFRS does not specifically discuss the methodology
of applying a critical-terms match in the level of detail included within
U.S. GAAP.
Then it goes yatta, yatta, yatta.
Jensen Comment
This is so typical of when IFRS fails to present the "same level of detail" and
more importantly fails to provide "implementation guidance" comparable with the
FASB's DIG implementation topics and illustrations.
I have a
huge beef with the lack of illustrations in IFRS versus the many illustrations
in U.S. GAAP.
I have a
huge beef with the lack of illustrations in IFRS versus the many illustrations
in U.S. GAAP.
I have a huge beef with the lack of illustrations in
IFRS versus the many illustrations in U.S. GAAP.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standards setting controversies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Comparisons
of IFRS with Domestic Standards of Many Nations
http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm
"Canadian regulator decides against allowing early adoption of recent
IFRSs by certain entities," IAS Plus, November 1, 2011 ---
http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
. . .
In making its decision, the OSFI considered a
number of factors such as industry
consistency, OSFI policy positions on
accounting and capital, operational capacity and resource constraints of
Federally Regulated Entities (FREs), the ability to benefit from improved
standards arising from the financial crisis and the
notion of a level playing field with other Canadian
and international financial institutions.
OSFI concluded that FREs should not early adopt the following new or amended
IFRSs, but instead should adhere to their mandatory effective dates:
Continued
Jensen Comment
The clients, auditors, and the AICPA clamoring that U.S. firms should be able to
voluntarily choose IFRS instead of U.S. GAAP even before it has not been decided
that IFRS will ever replace FASB standards seem to ignore the problems that
voluntary choice of IFRS might cause for investors and analysts. The above
reasoning by the OSFI makes sense to me.
But then outfits like the AICPA have a self-serving interest in earning
millions of dollars selling IFRS training courses and materials.
November 2, 2011 reply from Patricia Walters
Does that mean you oppose options to early adopt standards in general,
not just IFRSs?
Pat
November 2, 2011 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Pat,
It's hard to say regarding early adoption of a particular national or
international standard, because there can be unique circumstances. For
example, FAS 123R simply altered how to make disclosures rather than alter
the disclosures themselves since employee option expenses had to be
disclosed before the FAS 123R adoption date. But even here early adoption of
FAS 123R by Company A versus late adoption by Company B made simple
comparisons of eps and P/E ratios between these companies less easy.
There's a huge difference between early adoption of a particular standard
and early adoption of an entire system of standards like switching from FASB
accounting standards to IFRS.
I think the Canadian position of early adoption of IFRS is probably correct
because of the mess early adoption of IFRS makes with comparisons of
companies using different accounting standards and the added costs of
regulation of more than one set of standards. Also think of the added burden
placed upon the courts to adjudicate disputes when differing sets of
standards are being used.
Even though we allow IFRS for SEC registered foreign companies, I think it
would be a total mess for the SEC, the PCAOB, investors, analysts,
educators, trainers, auditing, and even the IRS (where tax and reporting
treatments must sometimes be reconciled) if our domestic corporations could
choose between FASB versus IASB standards.
There are hundreds of differences between FASB and IASB standards. Allowing
companies domestic companies to cherry pick which system they choose before
it is even known if there will ever be official replacement of FASB
standards by IASB standards would be very, very confusing. What if there
never is a decision to replace FASB standards? Do want to simply allow
companies to choose to bypass FASB standards at their own discretion?
Of course, if information were costless it might be ideal to require
financial reporting where FASB and IASB outcomes are reconciled. But clients
and auditors generally contend that the cost of doing this greatly exceeds
benefits. And teaching financial accounting would become exceedingly
complicated if we had to teach two sets of standards on an equal basis.
I would certainly hate to face a CPA examination that had nearly equal
coverage of both FASB and IASB standards simultaneously. I say this
especially after viewing the hundreds of pages of complicated differences
between the two standards systems.
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standard setting controversies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
"Hidden Numbers Make Banks Even Bigger," by Floyd Norris, The New
York Times, March 14, 2013 ---
Click Here
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/15/business/new-rules-will-give-a-truer-picture-of-banks-size.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20130315&_r=2&pagewanted=all&#h
It sounds like a simple question. How big is that
bank?
But it is not.
Under American accounting rules, banks that trade a
lot of derivatives can keep literally trillions of dollars in assets and
liabilities off their balance sheets. Since 2009, they have at least been
required to make disclosures about how large those amounts are, but the
disclosures leave out some things and — amazingly enough — in some cases do
not seem to add up.
The international accounting rules are different.
They also allow some assets to vanish, but not nearly as many. As a result,
it is virtually impossible to confidently declare how a particular European
bank compares in size with an American bank.
Much of that will change when first-quarter
financial statements start coming off the printing presses in a few weeks.
For the first time, European and American banks are supposed to have
comparable disclosures regarding assets. Their balance sheets will still be
radically different, but for those who care, the comparison will be
possible.
This comes to mind because these days it seems that
big banks do not much want to be thought of that way. A rather angry
argument has broken out regarding whether “too big to fail” institutions get
what amounts to a subsidy from investor confidence that no matter what else
happens, they would not be allowed to fail. The banks deny it all. Subsidy?
Penalty is more like it, they say.
We’ll get back to that argument in a moment. But
first, there is some evidence that the big American banks may have scaled
back their derivatives positions last year. At five of six major financial
institutions, the amount of assets kept off the balance sheet appears to be
lower at the end of 2012 than it was a year earlier.
Still, the numbers are big. JPMorgan Chase, the
biggest American institution, had $2.4 trillion in assets on its balance
sheet at the end of 2012. But it has derivatives with a market value of an
additional $1.5 trillion that it does not show on its balance sheet, down
from $1.7 trillion a year earlier.
So is JPMorgan getting bigger? Measured by assets
on the balance sheet, the answer is yes. That total was up $93 billion from
2011. But after adjusting for the hidden assets, the bank appears to have
shrunk by $109 billion last year. If the bank used international accounting
rules, it appears it would be getting smaller.
Not having those assets on the balance sheet makes
the bank look less leveraged than it might otherwise appear to be. If you
simply compare the book value of the bank with its assets, it appears it has
$11.56 in assets for every dollar in equity. Add in those derivatives, and
the figure leaps to $18.95.
It is not as if those assets are not real, or that
they are perfectly offset by liabilities also kept off the balance sheet.
There is a similar amount of liabilities that are not shown, but there is no
way to know just how they match up with the assets in terms of riskiness.
The nature of derivatives makes it hard to assess aggregate totals.
If a bank has a $1 million loan to someone, that is
an asset that would go on the balance sheet at $1 million. Presumably the
worst that could happen is that the bank would lose the entire amount. But a
large derivative position might currently have a market value of $1 million,
and thus would be shown as being worth the same amount, whether on or off
the balance sheet. But if the market moves sharply, the profit or loss could
be many multiples of that figure.
Under American accounting rules, banks that deal in
derivatives can net out most of their exposure by offsetting the assets
against the liabilities. They do this based not on the nature of the asset
or liability, but on the identity of the institution on the other side of
the trade — the counterparty, in market lingo.
The logic of this has to do with what would happen
in a bankruptcy. What are called “netting agreements” allow only the net
value to be claimed in case of a failure. So the bank shows the sum of those
net positions with each party.
But those positions are not offsetting in terms of
risk, or at least there is no way to know if they are. The figures shown in
the financial statements and footnotes simply describe market values on the
day of the balance sheet. If prices move the wrong way, as asset can turn
into a liability, or a liability can become much larger. And both can happen
at the same time. The asset might be an interest rate swap, while the
liability is a wheat future. Obviously, they are not particularly likely to
move in tandem.
To return to JPMorgan, on its balance sheet are
derivative assets of $75 billion, and derivative liabilities of $71 billion.
Neither number is very large relative to the size of the bank, and you might
think that swings in values would be unlikely to be very large.
But those numbers are $1.5 trillion smaller than
the actual totals. Obviously, the swings on a portfolio of that size could
be much larger.
A few years ago, the accounting rule makers set out
to get rid of the netting, and make balance sheets more accurate. But there
were complaints from banks and others, and the American rule makers at the
Financial Accounting Standards Board concluded that was not a good idea. So
there is still netting in the United States. Some of it, involving repos and
reverse repos, is not disclosed at all now, but will be when the new rules
kick in.
The sort-of invisible derivative assets and
liabilities are only part of the reason that it is so hard to really get a
handle on just how risky any given bank is.
Continued in article
I never could understand the reasons for this amendment to FAS 133 that
originally did not allow such offsetting. At the time I blamed it on the zeal
for convergence with the IASB and political pressures that seemed to be even
greater in Europe than the U.S. Perhaps I was wrong in this.
I'm beginning to think that when something smells fishy there probably are
some rancid fish hiding somewhere
I've never been in favor of what I think is one of the worst decisions ever
made by the FASB that runs counter to the original FAS 133 requirements.
"Clarifying the Scope of Disclosures about Offsetting Assets and Liabilities,"
ASU No. 2011-08, FASB ---
Click Here
http://www.fasb.org/cs/BlobServer?blobkey=id&blobwhere=1175825893217&blobheader=application%2Fpdf&blobcol=urldata&blobtable=MungoBlobs
Why Is the FASB Issuing
This Accounting Standards Update (Update) ? The main objective in developing
this Update is to address implementation issues about the scope of
Accounting Standards Update No. 2011 - 11, Balance Sheet (Topic 210) :
Disclosures about Offsetting Assets and Liabilities . Stakeholders have told
the Board that because the scope in Update 2011 - 11 is unclear, diversity
in practice may result . Recent feedback from stakeholders is that standard
commercial provisions of many contracts would equate to a master netting
arrangement . Stakeholders questioned whether it was the Board’s intent to
require disclosures for such a broad scope, which would significantly
increase the cost of compliance . The objective of this Update is to clarify
the scope of the offsetting disclosures and address any unintended
consequences.
What Are the Main Provisions?
The amendments clarify that the scope of Update 2011 - 11 applies to
derivatives accounted for in accordance with Topic 815, Derivatives and
Hedging, including bifurcated embedded derivatives , repurchase agreements
and reverse repurchase agreements, and securities borrowing and securities
lending transactions that are either offset in accordance with Section 210 -
20 - 45 or Section 815 - 10 - 45 or subject to an enforceable master netting
arrangement or similar agreement .
Who Is Affected by the Amendments in This
Update?
The amendments in this Update affect entities that have derivatives
accounted for in accordance with Topic 815, including bifurcated embedded
derivatives , repurchase agreements and reverse repurchase agreements, and
securities borrowing and securities lending transactions that are either
offset in accordance with Section 210 - 20 - 45 or Section 815 - 10 - 45 or
subject to an enforceable master netting arrangement or similar agreement .
Entities with other types of financial a ssets and financial liabilities
subject to a master netting arrangement or similar agreement also are
affected because these amendments make them no longer subject to the
disclosure requirements in Update 2011 - 11.
How Do the Main Provisions?
Differ from Cur rent U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles ( GAAP )
and Why Would They Be an Improvement? The amendments clarify the intended
scope of the disclosures required by Section 210 - 20 - 50 . The Board
concluded that the clarified scope will reduce significant ly the
operability concerns expressed by preparers while still providing decision -
useful information about certain transactions involving master netting
arrangements . The amendments provide a user of financial statements with
comparable information as it r elates to certain reconciling differences
between financial statements prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP and those
financial statements prepared in accordance with International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRS).
When W ill the Amendments Be Effective?
An entity is required to apply the amendments for fiscal years beginning on
or after January 1, 2013, and interim periods within those annual periods .
An entity should provide the required disclosures retrospectively for all
comparative periods presented . The effective date is the same as the
effective date of Update 2011 - 11.
How Do the Provisions Compare with International
Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)?
The disclosures required by the amendments in Update 2011 - 11 are the
result of a joint project between the FASB and the International Accounting
Standards Board (IASB), which was intended to provide comparable information
about balance sheet offsetting between those entities that prepare their
financial statements on the basis of U.S. GAAP and those entities that
prepare their financial statements on the basis of IFRS . The amendments in
this Update clarify that the scope of the disclosures under U.S. GAAP is
limited to include derivatives accounted for in accordance with Topic 815 ,
including bifurcated embedded derivatives, repurchase agreements and reverse
repurchase agreements, and securities borrowing and securities lending
transactions that are either offset in accordance with Section 210 - 20 - 45
or Section 815 - 10 - 45 or subject to a n enforceable master netting
arrangement or similar agreement.
Continued in article
I personally was more concerned about how banks changed income smoothing
practices.
"The Impact of SFAS 133 on Income Smoothing by Banks through Loan Loss
Provisions," by Emre Kilic Gerald J. Lobo, Tharindra Ranasinghe, and K.
Sivaramakrishnan Rice University, The Accounting Review, Vol. 88, No. 1,
2013, pp. 233-260 ---
http://aaajournals.org/doi/pdf/10.2308/accr-50264
We examine the impact of SFAS 133, Accounting for
Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities , on the reporting behavior of
commercial banks and the informativeness of their financial statements. We
argue that, because mandatory recognition of hedge ineffectiveness under
SFAS 133 reduced banks’ ability to smooth income through derivatives, banks
that are more affected by SFAS 133 rely more on loan loss provisions to
smooth income. We find evidence consistent with this argument. We also find
that the increased reliance on loan loss provisions for smoothing income has
impaired the informativeness of loan loss provisions for future loan
defaults and bank stock returns.
Executory Contracts: The Root of Most
Off-Balance-Sheet-Financing Evils
Here's another Onion post from Tom.
In FAS 133 there's a big deal distinction between forecasted transactions (no
signed executory contracts) versus firm commitments (signed executory
contracts). Both types of "commitments" are are frequently hedged such that the
"big deal" is not so much whether a contract has been signed as it is the type
of hedge accounting that's called for such as a cash flow hedge versus a fair
value hedge versus a FX hedge.
Since we're virtually certain that Southwest Airlines is going to need to
purchase jet fuel over the next five years, it hardly matters much in theory
whether there is an unsigned forecasted transaction or a signed executory
contract other than if one of the counterparties breaches the contract the
signed contract may lead to some damage settlement.
When you drill down to the issue of whether an executory contract should be
booked as a liability, one issue is the estimation of damages if the contract is
breached. One reason we do not book long-term purchase contracts is that the
damages from breach of contract are often a miniscule portion of the notionals
times the underlyings.
My favorite example is a contract many years back signed by Dow Jones to buy
newsprint (reels of paper) from St. Regis Paper Company for something like 50
years worth of paper upon which such things as The Wall Street Journal
would be printed. Some of the trees needed for that paper had not even been
planted yet in the timberlands when the contract was signed.
The present value of executory contract is massive in terms of discounted cash
flow liability for the entire purchase. But if one of the counterparties to the
contract breaks the contract the estimated damages most likely are only be a
miniscule portion of the "gross" present value of the liability.
Hence booking such long-term purchase contracts at "gross" present values can be
more misleading than not booking them at all. And estimation of the "damages"
at any point in time is extremely difficult and probably should not be attested
to by auditors.
With that introduction I will turn the floor over to Tom. I don't think the
issue has so much to do with "politics" as it has to do with economic realism in
many instances.
By the way, I've been told by several business law professors that the term "executory
contract" is probably overused by accountants since the "executory" adjective is
not considered such an important term in law schools. However, I've never really
looked into this matter.
"Executory Contracts: The Root of Most Off-Balance-Sheet-Financing Evils,"
by Tom Selling, The Accounting Onion, January 23, 2011 ---
Click Here
http://accountingonion.typepad.com/theaccountingonion/2011/01/executory-contracts-the-root-of-most-off-balance-sheet-financing-evils.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+typepad%2Ftheaccountingonion+%28The+Accounting+Onion%29
Bob Jensen's threads on OBSF ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory02.htm#OBSF2
October 7, 2010 IFRS Update on OBSF and Repo Sales Ploys to Hide Debt
"Accounting rules get tough on ‘window dressing’," by Jennifer Hughes,
Financial Times, October 7, 2010 ---
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/0e8f2954-d236-11df-8fbe-00144feabdc0.html
Banks will have to disclose in detail ‘window
dressing’ tricks such as Lehman Brothers’ infamous “Repo 105” deals under
new international accounting rules.
The International Accounting Standards Board on
Thursday published final rules that also require greater disclosure of
off-balance sheet entities where the bank or company still has some ties,
such as the buyer having a right to sell them back, or the bank itself
having a right to repurchase the assets.
Window dressing became a contentious issue this
year when it emerged that Lehman Brothers had shifted up to $49bn off its
books at the end of each quarter to reduce closely watched financial
leverage ratios. The trades were specifically designed to flatter the
reported accounts and had no economic rationale.
The bank used short-term repurchase, or “repo”,
deals and provided extra collateral – at least 105 per cent of the value of
the loan – to allow it to account for the deal, under US rules, as a true
sale, which removed the asset from its books until the trade was unwound
after the reporting period had ended.
While international rules would not have allowed
Repo 105s to be taken off the books (because they are based on a different
concept to the US standards), the new rules will force banks to disclose any
“disproportionate amount of transfer transactions”, such as other repo
deals, that are undertaken around the end of a reporting period.
More than 100 countries follow, or are adopting,
international accounting standards, including all European Union members,
Japan, Canada, Australia and South Korea.
Sir David Tweedie, chairman of the IASB, said the
new rules were important.
“They will help investors to better understand
off-balance sheet risks, and to alert them to the possibility of so-called
window dressing transactions occurring at the end of a reporting period,” he
added.
Last month, the US Securities and Exchange
Commission attacked the use of repo trades for window dressing, proposing
that
companies must disclose average and maximum short-term borrowings
and explain any significant discrepancy between the
two.
It also backed immediate guidance to make clear
that regardless of the letter of the rules, it did not consider any company
was allowed to use deals, such as Repo 105s, that were designed to mask its
reported financial condition.
Although the IASB has stopped short of requiring
banks to produce the disclosures in a specified format, it will require them
to be in one place, rather than scatter through the accounts. It has also
suggested various formats. This is still a step-up in the prescriptiveness
of its standards, which it had been trying to base around broad principles
to avoid it having to follow the US where rulemakers tend to draft detailed
rules to cover each separate situation.
The State of New York's filing against Ernst & Young ---
http://goingconcern.com/2010/12/lunchtime-reading-the-complaint-against-ernst-young/#more-23070
Bob Jensen's threads on Lehman's Repo 105/108 transactions are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Ernst
"Balance Sheets Are Busting Out All Over: About $1.2 trillion in
off-balance-sheet assets could end up on the balance sheets of banks that have
yet to claim them, or "on no one's balance sheet," a new report claims," by
Marie Leone, CFO.com, April 23, 2010 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14492562/c_14492952?f=home_todayinfinance
New accounting rules governing off-balance-sheet
transactions went into effect for most companies in January. As a result, 53
large companies have already estimated that they will have put back an
aggregate $515 billion in assets to their balance sheets during the first
quarter, according to a new study of S&P 500 companies released by Credit
Suisse.
But the future state of the companies' balance
sheets remains unclear, since they only consolidated 9% of the $5.7 trillion
in off-balance sheet assets they reported in the fourth quarter of last
year. About $4 trillion of the remaining assets will be taken up on the
balance sheets of mortgage companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which
guaranteed many of the subprime residential mortgages. The rest of the
assets — about $1.2 trillion worth — could find their way to the balance
sheets of companies that have yet to claim them, or "on no one's balance
sheet," assert report authors David Zion, Amit Varshney, and Christopher
Cornett.
Because some assets are lingering in accounting
limbo or hidden by murky disclosures, gauging their final effect on company
financials could be akin to hitting "a moving target," says the report.
Indeed, Credit Suisse notes that it's unclear whether all reported estimates
issued during the first quarter included deferred taxes, loan loss
provisioning, and such off-balance-sheets assets as mortgage-servicing
rights. (Selling mortgage servicing rights is a multi-billion dollar
industry.)
The rules that force companies to put such assets
back on their balance sheets were issued in 2008 and went into effect at the
beginning of this year. They are Topic 860 (formerly FAS 166), which deals
with transfers and servicing of financial assets and liabilities, and Topic
810 (formerly FAS 167), the rule governing the consolidation of
off-balance-sheet entities in their controlling companies' financial
reports.
In reviewing the results and disclosures as of
March 11, the study's authors found that only 183 companies in the S&P 500
reported the balance-sheet effects of FAS 166 in their financial results,
with 24 providing an estimated impact and 117 reporting either no impact or
an immaterial one. Forty-two companies are still evaluating the effects of
the new rules, while 317 made no mention of the rules at all. In contrast,
342 companies disclosed the effects of FAS 167, with 29 providing estimates
and 214 registering no impact or an immaterial one. That leaves 99 companies
still evaluating the FAS 167 impact, and 158 making no mention of the
financial statement effects.
Predictably, most of the asset increases belong to
companies in the financial sector, where off-balance-sheet transactions like
securitization, factoring, and repurchase agreements are popular. As of Q4
2009, financial services companies in the S&P 500 had stashed $5.5 trillion,
and $1.6 trillion, respectively, in variable-interest entities (VIEs) and
the now-defunct qualified special-purporse entities (QSPEs). That left a
mere $110 billion in assets spread among the QSPEs and VIEs associated with
companies in nine other industries.
Assets are returning to balance sheets for several
reasons, most notably the Financial Accounting Standards Board's elimination
if QSPEs, or "Qs," in 2008, when it became apparent that the structures were
being abused. Indeed, Qs were permitted to remain off bank balance sheets if
they took a "passive" role in managing the structures' finances. But when
the subprime crisis hit, and the mortgages being held in Qs began to fail,
banks — with the blessing of regulators — took a more active role, reworking
the terms of the entities' mortgage investments. At the time, FASB Chairman
Robert Herz called Qs "ticking time bombs" that started to "explode" during
the credit crunch.
VIEs, on the other hand, are still used. These
vehicles are thinly capitalized business structures in which investors can
hold controlling interests without having to hold voting majorities. As of
the fourth quarter last year, S&P 500 companies parked $1.7 trillion worth
of assets in VIEs.
The revised standards were supposed to wreak havoc
on bank balance sheets because, among other things, the rules for keeping
loan-related assets off the books would be rewritten. At the time, bankers
expected the rewrite would force them to consolidate big swaths of assets
that were being held in VIEs and QSPEs. And consolidating the assets from
the entities would have required them to increase the amount of regulatory
capital they kept on hand — a charge to cash — and thereby reduce the amount
of lending they could do. Dampening lending during a credit crisis, argued
bankers, would hurt the recovery.
Since their enactment, the accounting rules have
affected their industry big-time. Of the companies reporting an impact, nine
purely financial-sector outfits plus General Electric account for 96% of the
$515 billion being consolidated during the first quarter, says Credit
Suisse. Of that group, which includes Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, and
Capital One, Citigroup tops the list with an estimated $129 billion in
assets being brought back on the books in the first quarter — which
represents 7% of its existing total assets. The newly-consolidated assets
come in all shapes and sizes, says the report: $86.3 billion in credit card
loans, $28.3 billion in asset-backed commercial paper, $13.6 billion in
student loans, and $4.4 billion in consumer mortgages, for example. ($5
trillion or the $ $5.7 trillion held in VIEs and QSPEs are mortgage
related.) Citigroup also disclosed a $13.4 billion charge for setting up
additional loan loss reserves and eliminating interest lost from
consolidating the assets.
Of the companies that disclosed the
financial-statement impact, only eight estimated the increase to be more
than 5% of total assets, says Credit Suisse. Invesco was the hardest hit,
reporting the highest percentage at 55%, bringing back $6 billion worth of
assets during the first quarter. Invesco's assets are parked in
collateralized loan obligations and collateralized debt obligations.
Non-financial companies, like Harley-Davidson and
Marriott International also reported relatively big percentage jumps
compared to existing assets. Harley's additional assets represent 18% of
existing assets, or $1.6 billion. Meanwhile, Marriott's consolidation
represents 13% of its assets, or $1 billion.
Jensen Comment
It's about time. Bank financial statements have been "fiction" for way to long.
But the accounting and auditing rules have a long way to go for banks. A huge
problem is the way auditing firms have allowed banks to underestimate loan loss
reserves. A more recent problem with FAS 140 was uncovered by Lehman's use of
Repo 105 contracts for debt masking.
Fighting the Battle Against Off-Balance-Sheet Financing" Winning a Battle
Does Not Mean Winning a War
But it's better than losing the battle
"FASB Issues New Standards for Securitizations and Special Purpose
Entities," SmartPros, June 15, 2009 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x66815.xml
Frank Partnoy and Lynn Turner contend that Wall Street bank accounting is an
exercise in writing fiction:
Watch the video! (a bit slow loading)
Lynn Turner is Partnoy's co-author of the white paper."Make Markets Be Markets"
"Bring Transparency to Off-Balance Sheet Accounting," by Frank Partnoy,
Roosevelt Institute, March 2010 ---
http://www.rooseveltinstitute.org/policy-and-ideas/ideas-database/bring-transparency-balance-sheet-accounting
Watch the video!
More Than Half of Bank America's Book Value is Bogus
"Curse the Geniuses Who Gave Us Bank of America:," by Jonathan Weil,
Bloomberg, July 21, 2011 ---
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-07-21/curse-the-geniuses-who-built-bank-of-america-jonathan-weil-1-.html
Ask anyone what the most immediate threats to the
global financial system are, and the obvious answers would be the European
sovereign-debt crisis and the off chance that the U.S. won’t raise its debt
ceiling in time to avoid a default. Here’s one to add to the list: the
frightening plunge in
Bank of America Corp. (BAC)’s stock price.
At $9.85 a share, down 26 percent this year, Bank
of America finished yesterday with a market capitalization of $99.8 billion.
That’s an astonishingly low 49 percent of the company’s $205.6 billion book
value, or common shareholder equity, as of June 30. As far as the market is
concerned, more than half of the company’s book value is bogus, due to
overstated assets, understated liabilities, or some combination of the two.
That perception presents a dangerous situation for
the world at large, not just the company’s direct stakeholders. The risk is
that with the stock price this low, a further decline could feed on itself
and spread contagion to other companies, regardless of the bank’s statement
this week that it is “creating a fortress balance sheet.”
It isn’t only the company’s intangible assets, such
as goodwill, that investors are discounting. (Goodwill is the ledger entry a
company records when it pays a premium to buy another.) Consider Bank of
America’s
calculations of tangible common equity, a
bare-bones capital measure showing its ability to absorb future losses. The
company said it ended the second quarter with tangible common equity of
$128.2 billion, or 5.87 percent of tangible assets.
Investor Doubts
That’s about $28 billion more than the
Charlotte, North Carolina-based company’s market
cap. Put another way, investors doubt Bank of America’s loan values and
other numbers, too, not just its intangibles, the vast majority of which the
company doesn’t count toward regulatory capital or tangible common equity
anyway.
So here we have the largest
U.S. bank by assets, fresh off an $8.8 billion
quarterly loss, which was its biggest ever. And
the people in charge of running it have a monstrous credibility gap, largely
of their own making. Once again, we’re all on the hook.
As recently as late 2010, Bank of America still
clung to the position that none of the $4.4 billion of goodwill from its
2008 purchase of Countrywide Financial Corp. had lost a dollar of value.
Chief Executive Officer Brian Moynihan also was telling investors the bank
would boost its penny-a-share quarterly dividend “as fast as we can” and
that he didn’t “see anything that would stop us.” Both notions proved to be
nonsense.
Acquisition Disaster
The goodwill from Countrywide, one of the most
disastrous corporate acquisitions in U.S. history, now has been written off
entirely, via impairment
charges that were
long overdue. And, thankfully, Bank of America’s regulators in March
rejected the company’s dividend plans, in an outburst of common sense.
Last fall, Bank of America also was telling
investors it probably would incur $4.4 billion of costs from repurchasing
defective mortgages that were sold to investors, though it did say more were
possible. Since then the company has recognized an additional $19.2 billion
of such expenses, with
no end in sight.
The crucial question today is whether Bank of
America needs fresh capital to strengthen its balance sheet. Moynihan
emphatically says it doesn’t, pointing to regulatory-capital measures that
would have us believe it’s doing fine. The market is screaming otherwise,
judging by the mammoth discount to book value. Then again, for all we know,
the equity markets might not be receptive to a massive offering of new
shares anyway, even if the bank’s executives were inclined to try for one.
No Worries
We can only hope Bank of America’s regulators are
tracking the market’s fears closely, and have contingency plans in place
should matters get worse. Yet to believe Moynihan, there’s nary a worry from
them. When asked by one analyst during the company’s earnings conference
call this week whether there was any “pressure to raise capital from a
regulatory side of things,” Moynihan replied, simply, “no.”
Continued in artocle
Jensen Comment
This reminds me of the great, great video of Frank Portnoy's explanation of how
CitiBank's financial statements were bogus before the Government had to bail out
Citi.
Watch the video! (a bit slow loading)
Lynn Turner is Partnoy's co-author of the white paper."Make Markets Be Markets"
"Bring Transparency to Off-Balance Sheet Accounting," by Frank Partnoy,
Roosevelt Institute, March 2010 ---
http://www.rooseveltinstitute.org/policy-and-ideas/ideas-database/bring-transparency-balance-sheet-accounting
Watch the video!
Abusive off-balance sheet accounting was a major
cause of the financial crisis. These abuses triggered a daisy chain of
dysfunctional decision-making by removing transparency from investors,
markets, and regulators. Off-balance sheet accounting facilitating the
spread of the bad loans, securitizations, and derivative transactions that
brought the financial system to the brink of collapse.
As in the 1920s, the balance sheets of major
corporations recently failed to provide a clear picture of the financial
health of those entities. Banks in particular have become predisposed to
narrow the size of their balance sheets, because investors and regulators
use the balance sheet as an anchor in their assessment of risk. Banks use
financial engineering to make it appear that they are better capitalized and
less risky than they really are. Most people and businesses include all of
their assets and liabilities on their balance sheets. But large financial
institutions do not.
Click here to read the full chapter.---
http://www.rooseveltinstitute.org/sites/all/files/Off-Balance Sheet
Transactions.pdf
Frank Partnoy is the George E.
Barnett Professor of Law and Finance and is the director of the Center on
Coporate and Securities Law at the University of San Diego. He worked as a
derivatives structurer at Morgan Stanley and CS First Boston during the
mid-1990s and wrote F.I.A.S.C.O.:
Blook in the Water on Wall Street, a
best-selling book about his experiences there. His other books include
Infectious Greed: How Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets
and
The Match King: Ivar Kreuger, The Financial Genius Behind a Century of Wall
Street Scandals.
Lynn Turner has the unique
perspective of having been the Chief Accountant of the Securities and
Exchange Commission, a member of boards of public companies, a trustee of a
mutual fund and a public pension fund, a professor of accounting, a partner
in one of the major international auditing firms, the managing director of a
research firm and a chief financial officers and an executive in industry.
In 2007, Treasury Secretary Paulson appointed him to the Treasury Committee
on the Auditing Profession. He currently serves as a senior advisor to LECG,
an international forensics and economic consulting firm.
The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not
necessarily reflect the positions of the Roosevelt Institute, its officers,
or its directors.
Bob Jensen's threads on OBSF are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#OBSF2
For over 15 years Frank Partnoy has been appealing in vain for financial
reform. My timeline of history of the scandals, the new accounting standards,
and the new ploys at OBSF and earnings management is at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds
Bob Jensen's threads on misleading financial statements are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
Also see
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory02.htm
"Twitter's Recent 8-K Begs for More Transparency," by Anthony H.
Catanach, Jr., Grumpy Old Accountants Blog, February 16, 2014 ---
http://grumpyoldaccountants.com/blog/2014/2/16/twitters-recent-8-k-begs-for-more-transparency
With all
of the bad weather here in the East, this aging number cruncher has had his
hands full with scraping and shoveling. But I just had to take a break and
comment on Twitter’s recent Form 8-K (February 5, 2014), particularly given
the Company CEO’s comments last Fall on the importance of transparency to
being a good leader.
According to
Kurt Wagner of Mashable, CEO Dick Costolo said the
following about transparency at a TechCrunch Disrupt event last September:
The way you build trust
with your people is by being forthright and clear with them from day
one. You may think people are fooled when you tell them what they want
to hear. They are not fooled. As a leader, people are always looking at
you. Don't lose their trust by failing to provide transparency in your
decisions and critiques.
Well, when you go “on the record” about one
of my favorite themes, I just had to give Twitter’s 8-K a look. And what did
I find? Apparently, Twitter’s CFO does not share the same
transparency philosophy as his boss.
But before I
begin, I thought it useful to report on the accuracy of some predictions
that I made about Twitter’s financial performance before the Company’s IPO.
In “What
Will Twitter’s Financials Really Tell Us?”,
I took a shot at forecasting the Company’s post-IPO balance sheet using a
comp group consisting of Facebook, Sina Corp, Yelp Inc., and Meetme Inc. And
while the average revenue to assets percentage for this comp group (46.84%)
yielded total assets of only $1.3 billion instead of $3.4 billion, the
forecasted balance sheet category percentages were quite close as
illustrated in the following table:
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on SPEs, VIEs, SPVs, and synthetic leasing are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/speOverview.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on off-balance-sheet financing are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#OBSF2
Teaching Case
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on April 5, 2013
Regulators Let Big Banks Look Safer Than They Are
by:
Sheila Bair
Apr 02, 2013
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Banking, Derivatives, Fair-Value Accounting Rules,
Investments, Regulation
SUMMARY: The point of this opinion page piece by the former
chairman of the FDIC is that "capital-ratio rules...[lead to the view that]
fully collateralized loans are considered riskier than derivatives
positions.... The recent Senate report on the J.P. Morgan Chase 'London
Whale' trading debacle revealed emails, telephone conversations and other
evidence of how Chase managers manipulated their internal risk models to
boost the bank's regulatory capital ratios.... [B]ecause regulators allow
banks to use a process called 'risk weighting,' [banks] raise their capital
ratios by characterizing the assets they hold as 'low risk.'" Ms. Bair goes
on to describe the process of asset measurement by comparing risk-weighted
to "accounting-based" assets.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The article may be used in a class when
introducing fair value disclosures, accounting for derivatives, financial
statement analysis for banking, or just the various asset valuation methods
that may be used as identified in the U.S. FASB's or IASB's Conceptual
Framework.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory) Who is Sheila Bair? What is Ms. Bair's concern
with bank regulation and banks' capital ratios? In your answer, define the
latter term.
2. (Advanced) Define the contents of a bank's balance sheet:
identify major assets, major liabilities, and the types of capital, or
shareholders' equity you expect to see on a bank balance sheet.
3. (Advanced) "On average, the three big universal banking
companies (J.P. Morgan Chase, Bank of America and Citigroup) risk-weight
their assets at only 55% of their total assets. For every trillion dollars
in accounting assets, these megabanks calculate their capital ratio as if
the assets represented only $550 billion of risk." How is it possible that
total assets as reported in a bank balance sheet only contain risk
representing a little more than half of their reported amounts?
4. (Advanced) What are the different valuation methods that may be
used for a bank's assets-in fact, for any company's assets? Cite
authoritative literature from a conceptual framework discussing the use of
these valuation methods and the types of assets for which they should be
used.
5. (Advanced) What are the three levels of determining fair values
for which accounting standards require different types of disclosure? For
which of these categories of assets is Ms. Bair concerned about bank's risk
assessment? (Note that the bank regulatory capital requirements are
different from the accounting disclosure requirements for assets reported at
fair values.)
6. (Advanced) Refer to the related article. Who was the London
Whale and how did his and his manager's actions show that valuation models
can be manipulated?
7. (Advanced) Refer again to the London Whale. How do "capital
regulations create incentives for even legitimate models to be manipulated,"
as stated by Ms. Bair?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
JP Morgan 'Whale' Report Signals Deeper Problem
by Dan Fitzpatrick and Gregory Zuckerman
Jul 14, 2012
Online Exclusive
"Regulators Let Big Banks Look Safer Than They Are," by Sheila Bair, The
Wall Street Journal, April 2, 2013 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323415304578370703145206368.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
The recent Senate report on the J.P. Morgan Chase
JPM +0.21% "London Whale" trading debacle revealed emails, telephone
conversations and other evidence of how Chase managers manipulated their
internal risk models to boost the bank's regulatory capital ratios. Risk
models are common and certainly not illegal. Nevertheless, their use in
bolstering a bank's capital ratios can give the public a false sense of
security about the stability of the nation's largest financial institutions.
Capital ratios (also called capital adequacy
ratios) reflect the percentage of a bank's assets that are funded with
equity and are a key barometer of the institution's financial strength—they
measure the bank's ability to absorb losses and still remain solvent. This
should be a simple measure, but it isn't. That's because regulators allow
banks to use a process called "risk weighting," which allows them to raise
their capital ratios by characterizing the assets they hold as "low risk."
For instance, as part of the Federal Reserve's
recent stress test, the Bank of America BAC +0.33% reported to the Federal
Reserve that its capital ratio is 11.4%. But that was a measure of the
bank's common equity as a percentage of the assets it holds as weighted by
their risk—which is much less than the value of these assets according to
accounting rules. Take out the risk-weighting adjustment, and its capital
ratio falls to 7.8%.
On average, the three big universal banking
companies (J.P. Morgan Chase, Bank of America and Citigroup C +0.75% )
risk-weight their assets at only 55% of their total assets. For every
trillion dollars in accounting assets, these megabanks calculate their
capital ratio as if the assets represented only $550 billion of risk.
As we learned during the 2008 financial crisis,
financial models can be unreliable. Their assumptions about the risk of
steep declines in housing prices were fatally flawed, causing catastrophic
drops in the value of mortgage-backed securities. And now the London Whale
episode has shown how capital regulations create incentives for even
legitimate models to be manipulated.
According to the evidence compiled by the Senate
Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, the Chase staff was able to
magically cut the risks of the Whale's trades in half. Of course, they also
camouflaged the true dangers in those trades.
The ease with which models can be manipulated
results in wildly divergent risk-weightings among banks with similar
portfolios. Ironically, the government permits a bank to use its own
internal models to help determine the riskiness of assets, such as
securities and derivatives, which are held for trading—but not to determine
the riskiness of good old-fashioned loans. The risk weights of loans are
determined by regulation and generally subject to tougher capital treatment.
As a result, financial institutions with large trading books can have less
capital and still report higher capital ratios than traditional banks whose
portfolios consist primarily of loans.
Compare, for instance, the risk-based ratios of
Morgan Stanley, MS 0.00% an investment bank that has struggled since the
crisis, and U.S. Bancorp, USB 0.00% a traditional commercial lender that has
been one of the industry's best performers. According to the Fed's latest
stress test, Morgan Stanley reported a risk-based capital ratio of nearly
14%; take out the risk weighting and its ratio drops to 7%. USB has a
risk-based ratio of about 9%, virtually the same as its ratio on a non-risk
weighted basis.
In the U.S. and most other countries, banks can
also load up on their own country's government-backed debt and treat it as
having zero risk. Many banks in distressed European nations have
aggressively purchased their country's government debt to enhance their
risk-based capital ratios.
In addition, if a bank buys the debt of another
bank, it only needs to include 20% of the accounting value of those holdings
for determining its capital requirements—but it must include 100% of the
value of bonds of a commercial issuer. The rules governing capital ratios
treat Citibank's debt as having one-fifth the risk of IBM IBM -0.05% 's. In
a financial system that is already far too interconnected, it defies reason
that regulators give banks such strong capital incentives to invest in each
other.
Regulators need to use a simple, effective ratio as
the main determinant of a bank's capital strength and go back to the drawing
board on risk-weighting assets. It does make sense to look at the riskiness
of banks' assets in determining the adequacy of its capital. But the current
rules are upside down, providing more generous treatment of derivatives
trading than fully collateralized small-business lending.
The main argument megabanks advance against a tough
capital ratio is that it would force them to raise more capital and hurt the
economic recovery. But the megabanks aren't doing much new lending. Since
the crisis, they have piled up excess reserves and expanded their securities
and derivatives positions—where they get a capital break—while loans, which
are subject to tougher capital rules, have remained nearly flat.
Continued in article
After the Bailout the Banks are Still Hiding Debt and the
Auditors Acquiesce
"Major Banks Said to Cover Up Debt Levels," The New York Times via The
Wall Street Journal, April 9, 2010 ---
http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/09/major-banks-said-to-cover-debt-levels/?dlbk&emc=dlbk
Goldman Sachs,
Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan
Chase, Bank of America and
Citigroup are the big names among
18 banks revealed by data from the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York to be hiding their risk levels in
the past five quarters by lowering the amount of
leverage on the balance sheet before making it
available to the public, The Wall Street Journal
reported.
The Federal
Reserve’s data shows that, in the middle of
successive quarters, when debt levels are not in the
public domain, that banks would acknowledge debt
levels higher by an average of 42 percent, The
Journal says.
“You want your leverage to
look better at quarter-end than it actually was
during the quarter, to suggest that you’re taking
less risk,” William Tanona, a former Goldman analyst
and head of financial research in the United States
at Collins Stewart, told The
Journal.
The newspaper suggests this
practice is a symptom of the 2008 crisis in which
banks were harmed by their high levels of debt and
risk. The worry is that a bank displaying too much
risk might see its stocks and credit ratings suffer.
There is nothing illegal
about the practice, though it means that much of the
time investors can have little idea of the risks the
any bank is really taking.
Lehman/Ernst Teaching Case on the Largest Bankruptcy in History
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on March 19, 2010
Examiner: Lehman Torpedoed Lehman
by: Mike
Spector, Susanne Craig, Peter Lattman
Mar 11, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Advanced
Financial Accounting, Debt, Degree of Operating Leverage, Disclosure,
Revenue Recognition
SUMMARY: "A
federal judge released a scathing report on the collapse of Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc. that singles out senior executives, auditor Ernst & Young and
other investment banks for serious lapses that led to the largest bankruptcy
in U.S. history...." The report focuses on the use of "repos" to improve the
appearance of Lehman's financial condition as it worsened with the market
declines beginning in 2007. "Mr Valukus, chairman of law firm Jenner &
Block, devotes more than 300 pages alone to balance sheet manipulation..."
through repo transactions. As explained more fully in the related articles,
repurchase agreements are transactions in which assets are sold under the
agreement that they will be repurchased within days. Yet, when Lehman
exchanged assets with a value greater than 105% of the cash received for
them, the company would report it as an outright sale of the asset, not a
loan, thus reducing the firms apparent leverage. These transactions were
based on a legal opinion of the propriety of this treatment made for their
European operations, but the company never received such an opinion letter
in the U.S., so Lehman transferred assets to Europe in order to execute the
trades. The second related article clarifies these issues. Of course, this
was but one significant problem; other forces helped to "tip Leham over the
brink" into bankruptcy including J.P. Morgan Chases' "demands for collateral
and modifications to agreements...that hurt Lehman's liquidity...."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
questions ask students to understand repurchase agreements and cases in
which financing (borrowing) transactions might alternatively be treated as
sales. The role of the auditor, in this case Ernst & Young, also is
highlighted in the article and in the questions in this review.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
What report was issued in March 2010 regarding Lehman Brothers? Summarize
some main points about the report.
2. (Advanced)
Based on the discussion in the main and first related articles, describe the
"repo market'. What is the business purpose of these transactions?
3. (Advanced)
How did Lehman Brothers use repo transactions to improve its balance sheet?
Note: be sure to refer to the related articles as some points in the main
article emphasize the impact of removing the assets that are subject to the
repo agreements from the balance sheet. The main point of your discussion
should focus on what else might have been credited in the entries to record
these transactions.
4. (Introductory)
Refer to the second related article. What was the role of Lehman's auditor
in assessing the repo transactions? What questions have been asked of this
firm and how has E&Y responded?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
Lehman Maneuver Raises Accounting Question.
by David Reilly
Mar 13, 2010
Online Exclusive
"Examiner: Lehman Torpedoed Lehman," by: Mike Spector, Susanne Craig, Peter
Lattman, The Wall Street Journal, Mar 11, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703625304575115963009594440.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
A scathing report by a U.S. bankruptcy-court
examiner investigating the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. blames
senior executives and auditor Ernst & Young for serious lapses that led to
the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history and the worst financial crisis since
the Great Depression.
In the works for more than a year, and costing more
than $30 million, the report by court-appointed examiner Anton Valukas
paints the most complete picture yet of the free-wheeling culture inside the
158 year-old firm, whose chief executive Richard S. Fuld Jr. prided himself
on his ability to manage market risk.
The document runs thousands of pages and contains
fresh allegations. In particular, it alleges that Lehman executives
manipulated its balance sheet, withheld information from the board, and
inflated the value of toxic real estate assets.
Lehman chose to "disregard or overrule the firm's
risk controls on a regular basis,'' even as the credit and real-estate
markets were showing signs of strain, the report said.
In one instance from May 2008, a Lehman senior vice
president alerted management to potential accounting irregularities, a
warning the report says was ignored by Lehman auditors Ernst & Young and
never raised with the firm's board.
The allegations of accounting manipulation and
risk-control abuses potentially could influence pending criminal and civil
investigations into Lehman and its executives. The Manhattan and Brooklyn
U.S. attorney's offices are investigating, among other things, whether
former Lehman executives misled investors about the firm's financial picture
before it filed for bankruptcy protection, and whether Lehman improperly
valued its real-estate assets, people familiar with the matter have said.
The examiner said in the report that throughout the
investigation it conducted regular weekly calls with the Securities and
Exchange Commission and Department of Justice. There have been no
prosecutions of Lehman executives to date.
Several factors helped to tip Lehman over the brink
in its final days, Mr. Valukas wrote. Investment banks, including J.P.
Morgan Chase & Co., made demands for collateral and modified agreements with
Lehman that hurt Lehman's liquidity and pushed it into bankruptcy.
Lehman's own global financial controller, Martin
Kelly, told the examiner that "the only purpose or motive for the
transactions was reduction in balance sheet" and "there was no substance to
the transactions." Mr. Kelly said he warned former Lehman finance chiefs
Erin Callan and Ian Lowitt about the maneuver, saying the transactions posed
"reputational risk" to Lehman if their use became publicly known.
In an interview with the examiner, senior Lehman
Chief Operating Officer Bart McDade said he had detailed discussions with
Mr. Fuld about the transactions and that Mr. Fuld knew about the accounting
treatment.
In an April 2008 email, Mr. McDade called such
accounting maneuvers "another drug we r on." Mr. McDade, then Lehman's
equities chief, says he sought to limit such maneuvers, according to the
report. Mr. McDade couldn't be reached to comment.
In a November 2009 interview with the examiner, Mr.
Fuld said he had no recollection of Lehman's use of Repo 105 transactions
but that if he had known about them he would have been concerned, according
to the report.
Mr. Valukas's report is among the largest
undertaking of its kind. Those singled out in the report won't face
immediate repercussions. Rather, the report provides a type of road map for
Lehman's bankruptcy estate, creditors and other authorities to pursue
possible actions against former Lehman executives, the bank's auditors and
others involved in the financial titan's collapse.
One party singled out in the report is Lehman's
audit firm, Ernst & Young, which allegedly didn't raise concerns with
Lehman's board about the frequent use of the repo transactions. E&Y met with
Lehman's Board Audit Committee on June 13, one day after Lehman senior vice
president Matthew Lee raised questions about the frequent use of the
transactions.
"Ernst & Young took no steps to question or
challenge the nondisclosure by Lehman of its use of $50 billion of
temporary, off-balance sheet transactions," Mr. Valukas wrote.
In a statement, Mr. Fuld's lawyer, Patricia Hynes,
said, "Mr. Fuld did not know what those transactions were—he didn't
structure or negotiate them, nor was he aware of their accounting
treatment."
An Ernst & Young statement Thursday said Lehman's
collapse was caused by "a series of unprecedented adverse events in the
financial markets." It said Lehman's leverage ratios "were the
responsibility of management, not the auditor."
Ms. Callan didn't respond to a request for comment.
An attorney for Mr. Lowitt said any suggestion he breached his duties was
"baseless." Mr. Kelly couldn't be reached Thursday evening.
As Lehman began to unravel in mid-2008, investors
began to focus their attention on the billions of dollars in commercial real
estate and private-equity loans on Lehman's books.
The report said that while Lehman was required to
report its inventory "at fair value," a price it would receive if the asset
were hypothetically sold, Lehman "progressively relied on its judgment to
determine the fair value of such assets."
Between December 2006 and December 2007, Lehman
tripled its firmwide risk appetite.
But its risk exposure was even larger, according to
the report, considering that Lehman omitted "some of its largest risks from
its risk usage calculations" including the $2.3 billion bridge equity loan
it provided for Tishman Speyer's $22.2 billion take over of apartment
company Archstone Smith Trust. The late 2007 deal, which occurred as the
commercial-property market was cresting, led to big losses for Lehman.
Lehman eventually added the Archstone loan to its
risk usage profile. But rather than reducing its balance sheet to compensate
for the additional risk, it simply raised its risk limit again, the report
said.
Where Were the Auditors? ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#AuditFirms
Bob Jensen's threads on off-balance-sheet financing (OBSF) ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#OBSF2
A Teaching Case on How Regulators Are Targeting Financial Statement
"Window Dressing"
From The Wall Street Accounting Weekly Review on September 24, 2010
Regulators to Target 'Window Dressing'
by: Michael
Rapoport
Sep 16, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Banking,
Debt, Disclosure, Disclosure Requirements, SEC, Securities and Exchange
Commission
SUMMARY: Federal
regulators are poised to propose new disclosure rules targeting "window
dressing...." The SEC "...is expected to issue proposal for public comment.
The action follows a Wall Street Journal investigation...of financial data
fro 18 large banks...[which] showed that, as a group, they have consistently
lowered debt at the end of each of the past six quarters, reducing it on
average by 42% from quarterly peaks."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article can be used to discuss window dressing beyond the banking sector, to
discuss current reactions to the financial crisis, and to discuss leverage
and debt levels.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Advanced)
Define window dressing, going beyond what is offered in this article. Is
this issue found in other industries beyond banking?
2. (Advanced)
What has been the nature of the window dressing issue in the banking
industry? Include in your answer an explanation of the chart "Masking Risk"
associated with the article.
3. (Introductory)
According to the article, what prompted banks to undertake these window
dressing activities?
4. (Introductory)
How have banks reacted to this WSJ report on window dressing?
5. (Introductory)
What is the SEC proposing to do to improve financial reporting in order to
address this issue?
6. (Advanced)
Do you think the SEC's plan is adequate to address this issue? In your
answer, comment on the nature of items included on the face of the balance
sheet versus those disclosed in the financial statement footnotes.
7. (Advanced)
Describe a transaction that will help "window dress" financial statements
for quarter end or year end reporting.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"Regulators to Target 'Window Dressing'," by: Michael Rapoport. The Wall
Street Journal, September 16, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703743504575494144270313302.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
Federal regulators are poised to propose new
disclosure rules targeting "window dressing," a practice undertaken by some
large banks to temporarily lower their debt levels before reporting finances
to the public.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is scheduled
to take up the matter at a meeting Friday and is expected to issue proposals
for public comment. The action follows a Wall Street Journal investigation
into the practice, which isn't illegal but masks banks' true levels of
borrowing and risk-taking.
A Journal analysis of financial data from 18 large
banks known as primary dealers showed that as a group, they have
consistently lowered debt at the end of each of the past six quarters,
reducing it on average by 42% from quarterly peaks.
The practice suggests the banks are carrying more
risk than is apparent to their investors or customers, who only see the
levels recorded on the companies' quarterly balance sheets.
The SEC focus comes two years after the peak of the
financial panic, which was exacerbated by high levels of borrowing by the
nation's banks.
Since then, heightened scrutiny from regulators and
investors has prompted banks to be more sensitive about showing high debt
levels.
The SEC is expected to propose rules requiring
greater disclosure from banks and other companies about their short-term
borrowings.
The agency's staff has been considering whether
banks should be required to provide more frequent disclosure of their
average borrowings, which would give a better picture of their debt
throughout a quarterly period than do period-end figures.
An SEC spokesman declined to comment.
Short-term borrowing pumps up risk-taking by banks,
allowing them to make bigger trading bets.
Currently, banks are required to disclose their
average borrowings only annually, and nonfinancial companies aren't required
to disclose their average borrowings at all.
Last month, Sen. Robert Menendez, a New Jersey
Democrat, and five other senators urged the agency to require more
disclosure so the public could see if a company tried to dress up its
quarterly borrowings.
"Rather than relying on carefully staged quarterly
and annual snapshots, investors and creditors should have access to a
complete real-life picture of a company's financial situation," the senators
wrote to SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro, citing the Journal articles, among
other things.
Ms. Schapiro, through a spokesman, declined to
comment. Mr. Menendez's office didn't return a call.
Some large banks, including Bank of America Corp.
and Citigroup Inc., frequently have lowered their levels of repurchase
agreements, a key type of short-term borrowing, at the ends of fiscal
quarters, then boosted those "repo" levels again after the next quarter
began.
The banks have said they are doing nothing wrong,
and that the fluctuations in their balance sheets reflect the needs of their
clients and market conditions.
But the practices suggest the banks are more
leveraged and carry more risk during periods when that information isn't
disclosed to the public.
At Friday's meeting, the SEC also will consider
additional guidance for companies about what they should disclose about
borrowing practices in the "Management's Discussion and Analysis" sections
of their securities filings.
In the wake of the financial crisis, the SEC's
staff has been taking a fresh look at companies' disclosures in these "MD&A"
sections about liquidity and capital resources.
In the SEC staff's view, balance-sheet fluctuations
can happen for legitimate reasons, and the important thing is disclosing
them to investors when they are material.
Concern about hidden risk-taking by banks was
heightened after a March report about the collapse of Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc.
A bankruptcy-court examiner said Lehman had used a
repo-accounting strategy dubbed "Repo 105" to take $50 billion in assets off
its balance sheet and make its finances look healthier than they were.
The SEC later asked major banks for data about
their repo accounting. SEC Chief Accountant James Kroeker said in May that
the commission's effort hadn't uncovered widespread inappropriate practices.
Still, both Bank of America and Citigroup found
errors in their repo accounting that amounted to billions of dollars, though
these were relatively small in the context of their giant balance sheets.
An investigation by the SEC's enforcement division
into Lehman's collapse is zeroing in on this Repo 105 accounting maneuver,
according to people familiar with the situation.
In an April congressional hearing, Rep. Gregory W.
Meeks, a New York Democrat, asked Ms. Schapiro about the Journal's findings
regarding banks' end-of-quarter debt reductions.
"It appears investment banks are temporarily
lowering risk when they have to report results, [then] they're leveraging up
with additional risk right after," Mr. Meeks said. "So my question is: Is
that still being tolerated today by regulators, especially in light of what
took place with reference to Lehman?"
Ms. Schapiro said the commission is gathering
detailed information from large banks, "so that we don't just have them
dress up the balance sheet for quarter end and then have dramatic increases
during the course of the quarter."
Jensen Comment
One of my heroes is former Coopers partner and SEC Chief Accountant Lynn Turner.
My two heroes, Turner and Partnoy, write about how bank financial statements
should be classified under "Fiction."
Frank
Partnoy and Lynn Turner contend that bank accounting is an exercise in writing
fiction:
Watch the video! (a bit slow loading)
Lynn Turner is Partnoy's co-author of the white paper "Make Markets Be Markets"
"Bring Transparency to Off-Balance Sheet Accounting," by Frank Partnoy,
Roosevelt Institute, March 2010 ---
http://www.rooseveltinstitute.org/policy-and-ideas/ideas-database/bring-transparency-balance-sheet-accounting
Watch the great video!
Great Speeches About the State of Accountancy
"20th Century Myths," by Lynn Turner when he was still Chief Accountant at the
SEC in 1999 ---
http://www.sec.gov/news/speech/speecharchive/1999/spch323.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm
Lehman/Ernst Teaching Case on the Largest Bankruptcy in History
March 18, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Dear Jim,
The Repo 105 issue was more like having a poisoned CDO bond worth $1 that
you sell for $1,000 with a guaranteed buyback in a week for $1,005. That way
you report a sale for $1,000, an asset of $0 in the balance sheet for a
“sold investment,” and $0 for the liability to buy it back. Sounds like a
bad economic deal and a great OBSF ploy. Of course it’s not necessarily
boosting earnings if you paid more than $1,000 for the CDO cookie crumbles
in the first place in the first place.
But it sure beats writing investments down from $1,000 to a $1.
Ernst and Young claims using these contracts to keep billions of dollars
of poison investments and unbooked debt out of the financial statements
result fairly present the financial status of sales and liabilities in the
financial statements.
Do our Accounting 101 and Auditing 101 students concur?
God help this profession if our students side with Ernst & Young!
Frank Partnoy and Lynn Turner contend that Wall Street bank accounting is
an exercise in writing fiction:
Watch the video! (a bit slow loading)
Lynn Turner is Partnoy's co-author of the white paper."Make Markets Be Markets"
"Bring Transparency to Off-Balance Sheet Accounting," by Frank Partnoy,
Roosevelt Institute, March 2010 ---
http://www.rooseveltinstitute.org/policy-and-ideas/ideas-database/bring-transparency-balance-sheet-accounting
Watch the video!
Bob Jensen
Lehman/Ernst Teaching Case on the Largest Bankruptcy in History
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on March 19, 2010
Examiner: Lehman Torpedoed Lehman
by: Mike
Spector, Susanne Craig, Peter Lattman
Mar 11, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Advanced
Financial Accounting, Debt, Degree of Operating Leverage, Disclosure,
Revenue Recognition
SUMMARY: "A
federal judge released a scathing report on the collapse of Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc. that singles out senior executives, auditor Ernst & Young and
other investment banks for serious lapses that led to the largest bankruptcy
in U.S. history...." The report focuses on the use of "repos" to improve the
appearance of Lehman's financial condition as it worsened with the market
declines beginning in 2007. "Mr Valukus, chairman of law firm Jenner &
Block, devotes more than 300 pages alone to balance sheet manipulation..."
through repo transactions. As explained more fully in the related articles,
repurchase agreements are transactions in which assets are sold under the
agreement that they will be repurchased within days. Yet, when Lehman
exchanged assets with a value greater than 105% of the cash received for
them, the company would report it as an outright sale of the asset, not a
loan, thus reducing the firms apparent leverage. These transactions were
based on a legal opinion of the propriety of this treatment made for their
European operations, but the company never received such an opinion letter
in the U.S., so Lehman transferred assets to Europe in order to execute the
trades. The second related article clarifies these issues. Of course, this
was but one significant problem; other forces helped to "tip Leham over the
brink" into bankruptcy including J.P. Morgan Chases' "demands for collateral
and modifications to agreements...that hurt Lehman's liquidity...."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
questions ask students to understand repurchase agreements and cases in
which financing (borrowing) transactions might alternatively be treated as
sales. The role of the auditor, in this case Ernst & Young, also is
highlighted in the article and in the questions in this review.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
What report was issued in March 2010 regarding Lehman Brothers? Summarize
some main points about the report.
2. (Advanced)
Based on the discussion in the main and first related articles, describe the
"repo market'. What is the business purpose of these transactions?
3. (Advanced)
How did Lehman Brothers use repo transactions to improve its balance sheet?
Note: be sure to refer to the related articles as some points in the main
article emphasize the impact of removing the assets that are subject to the
repo agreements from the balance sheet. The main point of your discussion
should focus on what else might have been credited in the entries to record
these transactions.
4. (Introductory)
Refer to the second related article. What was the role of Lehman's auditor
in assessing the repo transactions? What questions have been asked of this
firm and how has E&Y responded?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
Lehman Maneuver Raises Accounting Question.
by David Reilly
Mar 13, 2010
Online Exclusive
"Examiner: Lehman Torpedoed Lehman," by: Mike Spector, Susanne Craig, Peter
Lattman, The Wall Street Journal, Mar 11, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703625304575115963009594440.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
A scathing report by a U.S. bankruptcy-court
examiner investigating the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. blames
senior executives and auditor Ernst & Young for serious lapses that led to
the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history and the worst financial crisis since
the Great Depression.
In the works for more than a year, and costing more
than $30 million, the report by court-appointed examiner Anton Valukas
paints the most complete picture yet of the free-wheeling culture inside the
158 year-old firm, whose chief executive Richard S. Fuld Jr. prided himself
on his ability to manage market risk.
The document runs thousands of pages and contains
fresh allegations. In particular, it alleges that Lehman executives
manipulated its balance sheet, withheld information from the board, and
inflated the value of toxic real estate assets.
Lehman chose to "disregard or overrule the firm's
risk controls on a regular basis,'' even as the credit and real-estate
markets were showing signs of strain, the report said.
In one instance from May 2008, a Lehman senior vice
president alerted management to potential accounting irregularities, a
warning the report says was ignored by Lehman auditors Ernst & Young and
never raised with the firm's board.
The allegations of accounting manipulation and
risk-control abuses potentially could influence pending criminal and civil
investigations into Lehman and its executives. The Manhattan and Brooklyn
U.S. attorney's offices are investigating, among other things, whether
former Lehman executives misled investors about the firm's financial picture
before it filed for bankruptcy protection, and whether Lehman improperly
valued its real-estate assets, people familiar with the matter have said.
The examiner said in the report that throughout the
investigation it conducted regular weekly calls with the Securities and
Exchange Commission and Department of Justice. There have been no
prosecutions of Lehman executives to date.
Several factors helped to tip Lehman over the brink
in its final days, Mr. Valukas wrote. Investment banks, including J.P.
Morgan Chase & Co., made demands for collateral and modified agreements with
Lehman that hurt Lehman's liquidity and pushed it into bankruptcy.
Lehman's own global financial controller, Martin
Kelly, told the examiner that "the only purpose or motive for the
transactions was reduction in balance sheet" and "there was no substance to
the transactions." Mr. Kelly said he warned former Lehman finance chiefs
Erin Callan and Ian Lowitt about the maneuver, saying the transactions posed
"reputational risk" to Lehman if their use became publicly known.
In an interview with the examiner, senior Lehman
Chief Operating Officer Bart McDade said he had detailed discussions with
Mr. Fuld about the transactions and that Mr. Fuld knew about the accounting
treatment.
In an April 2008 email, Mr. McDade called such
accounting maneuvers "another drug we r on." Mr. McDade, then Lehman's
equities chief, says he sought to limit such maneuvers, according to the
report. Mr. McDade couldn't be reached to comment.
In a November 2009 interview with the examiner, Mr.
Fuld said he had no recollection of Lehman's use of Repo 105 transactions
but that if he had known about them he would have been concerned, according
to the report.
Mr. Valukas's report is among the largest
undertaking of its kind. Those singled out in the report won't face
immediate repercussions. Rather, the report provides a type of road map for
Lehman's bankruptcy estate, creditors and other authorities to pursue
possible actions against former Lehman executives, the bank's auditors and
others involved in the financial titan's collapse.
One party singled out in the report is Lehman's
audit firm, Ernst & Young, which allegedly didn't raise concerns with
Lehman's board about the frequent use of the repo transactions. E&Y met with
Lehman's Board Audit Committee on June 13, one day after Lehman senior vice
president Matthew Lee raised questions about the frequent use of the
transactions.
"Ernst & Young took no steps to question or
challenge the nondisclosure by Lehman of its use of $50 billion of
temporary, off-balance sheet transactions," Mr. Valukas wrote.
In a statement, Mr. Fuld's lawyer, Patricia Hynes,
said, "Mr. Fuld did not know what those transactions were—he didn't
structure or negotiate them, nor was he aware of their accounting
treatment."
An Ernst & Young statement Thursday said Lehman's
collapse was caused by "a series of unprecedented adverse events in the
financial markets." It said Lehman's leverage ratios "were the
responsibility of management, not the auditor."
Ms. Callan didn't respond to a request for comment.
An attorney for Mr. Lowitt said any suggestion he breached his duties was
"baseless." Mr. Kelly couldn't be reached Thursday evening.
As Lehman began to unravel in mid-2008, investors
began to focus their attention on the billions of dollars in commercial real
estate and private-equity loans on Lehman's books.
The report said that while Lehman was required to
report its inventory "at fair value," a price it would receive if the asset
were hypothetically sold, Lehman "progressively relied on its judgment to
determine the fair value of such assets."
Between December 2006 and December 2007, Lehman
tripled its firmwide risk appetite.
But its risk exposure was even larger, according to
the report, considering that Lehman omitted "some of its largest risks from
its risk usage calculations" including the $2.3 billion bridge equity loan
it provided for Tishman Speyer's $22.2 billion take over of apartment
company Archstone Smith Trust. The late 2007 deal, which occurred as the
commercial-property market was cresting, led to big losses for Lehman.
Lehman eventually added the Archstone loan to its
risk usage profile. But rather than reducing its balance sheet to compensate
for the additional risk, it simply raised its risk limit again, the report
said.
Bob Jensen's threads on the Lehman financial and accounting fraud are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
Where Were the Auditors?
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#AuditFirms
From the Free
Wall Street Journal Educators' Reviews for December 6, 2001
TITLE: Audits of Arthur
Andersen Become Further Focus of Investigation
SEC REPORTER: Jonathan Weil
DATE: Nov 30, 2001 PAGE: A3 LINK:
http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1007059096430725120.djm
TOPICS: Advanced Financial Accounting, Auditing
SUMMARY: This article
focuses on the issues facing Arthur Andersen now that their work on
the Enron audit has become the subject of an SEC investigation. The
on-line version of the article provides three questions that are
attributed to "some accounting professors." The questions in this
review expand on those three provided in the article.
QUESTIONS:
1.) The first question the SEC might ask of Enron's auditors is
"were financial statement disclosures regarding Enron's transactions
too opaque to understand?" Are financial statement disclosures
required to be understandable? To whom? Who is responsible for
ensuring a certain level of understandability?
2.) Another question that
the SEC could consider is whether Andersen auditors were aware that
certain off-balance-sheet partnerships should have been consolidated
into Enron's balance sheet, as they were in the company's recent
restatement. How could the auditors have been "unaware" that certain
entities should have been consolidated? What is the SEC's concern
with whether or not the auditors were aware of the need for
consolidation?
3.) A third question that
the SEC could ask is, "Did Andersen auditors knowingly sign off on
some 'immaterial' accounting violations, ignoring that they
collectively distorted Enron's results?" Again, what is the SEC's
concern with whether Andersen was aware of the collective impact of
the accounting errors? Should Andersen have been aware of the
collective amount of impact of these errors? What steps would you
suggest in order to assess this issue?
4.) The article finishes
with a discussion of expected Congressional hearings into Enron's
accounting practices and into the accounting and auditing standards
setting process in general. What concern is there that the FASB "has
been working on a project for more than a decade to tighten the
rules governing when companies must consolidate certain off-balance
sheet 'special purpose entities'"?
5.) In general, how
stringent are accounting and auditing requirements in the U.S.
relative to other countries' standards? Are accounting standards in
other countries set in the same way as in the U.S.? If not, who
establishes standards? What incentives would the U.S. Congress have
to establish a law-based system if they become convinced that our
private sector standards setting practices are inadequate? Are you
concerned about having accounting and reporting standards
established by law?
6.) The article describes
revenue recognition practices at Enron that were based on "noncash
unrealized gains." What standard allows, even requires, this
practice? Why does the author state, "to date, the accounting
standards board has given energy traders almost boundless latitude
to value their energy contracts as they see fit"?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman,
University of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
From the Free
Wall Street Journal Educators' Reviews for December 20, 2001
TITLE: Enron Debacle Spurs
Calls for Controls
REPORTER: Michael Schroeder
DATE: Dec 14, 2001
PAGE: A4
LINK:
http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1008282666768929080.djm
TOPICS: Accounting Fraud, Accounting, Accounting Irregularities,
Auditing, Auditing Services, Disclosure, Disclosure Requirements,
Fraudulent Financial Reporting, Securities and Exchange Commission
SUMMARY: In light of
Enron's financial reporting irregularities and subsequent bankruptcy
filing, Capitol Hill and the SEC are considering new measures aimed
at improving financial reporting and oversight of accounting firms.
Related articles discuss additional regulation that is being
considered as a result of this reporting debacle.
QUESTIONS:
1.) Briefly describe Enron's questionable accounting practices. What
accounting changes are being proposed in light of the Enron case?
Certainly this is not the first incidence of questionable financial
reporting. Why is the reaction to the Enron case so extreme?
2.) Discuss Representative
Paul Kanjorski's view of regulation of the accounting profession.
What system of accounting regulation is currently in place? Discuss
the advantages and disadvantages of both private-sector and
public-sector regulation.
3.) What changes are
proposed in the related article, "The Enron Debacle Spotlights Huge
Void in Financial Regulation?" Do these changes strictly relate to
financial reporting issues? Are operational decisions or financial
reporting decisions responsible for Enron's current financial
position?
4.) In the related article,
"Enron May Spur Attention to Accounting at Funds," it is argued that
fund managers will "start taking a more skeptical view of annual
reports or footnotes . . . they don't understand." Are you surprised
by this comment? Do you blame accounting for producing confusing
financial reports or the fund managers for investing in companies
with confusing financial reports?
TITLE: Double Enron Role
Played by Andersen Raises Questions
REPORTER: Michael Schroeder
DATE: Dec 14, 2001
PAGE: A4 LINK:
http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1008289729306300000.djm
TOPICS: Accounting, Auditing, Auditing Services, Auditor
Independence, Consulting, Internal Auditing
SUMMARY: In addition to
auditing Enron's financial statements, Arthur Andersen LLP also
provided internal-auditing and consulting services to Enron.
Providing additional services to Enron raises questions about
Andersen's independence.
QUESTIONS:
1.) What is independence-in-fact? What is
independence-in-appearance? Did Andersen violate either
independence-in-fact or independence-in-appearance? Why or why not?
2.) If Enron had made good
business decisions and had continued reporting positive financial
results, would we be discussing Andersen's independence with respect
to Enron? Why do we wait until something bad happens to become
concerned?
3.) Do you think providing
internal auditing and consulting services gave Andersen a better
understanding of Enron's business and operations? Should additional
understanding of the business and operations enable Andersen to
provide a "better" audit? What was wrong with Andersen providing
consulting and internal-audit services to Enron?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman,
University of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
--- RELATED ARTICLES ---
TITLE: The Enron Debacle Spotlights Huge Void in Financial
Regulation
REPORTERS: Michael Schroeder and Greg Ip
PAGE: A1
WSJ ISSUE: Dec 13, 2001
LINK:
http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1008202066979356000.djm
TITLE: When Bad Stocks
Happen to Good Mutual Funds: Enron Could Spark New Attention to
Accounting
REPORTER: Aaron Lucchetti
PAGE: C1
WSJ ISSUE: Dec 13, 2001
LINK:
http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1008196294985520800.djm |
Watch the video! (a bit slow loading)
Lynn Turner is Partnoy's co-author of the white paper."Make Markets Be Markets"
"Bring Transparency to Off-Balance Sheet Accounting," by Frank Partnoy,
Roosevelt Institute, March 2010 ---
http://www.rooseveltinstitute.org/policy-and-ideas/ideas-database/bring-transparency-balance-sheet-accounting
Watch the video!
Abusive off-balance sheet accounting was a major
cause of the financial crisis. These abuses triggered a daisy chain of
dysfunctional decision-making by removing transparency from investors,
markets, and regulators. Off-balance sheet accounting facilitating the
spread of the bad loans, securitizations, and derivative transactions that
brought the financial system to the brink of collapse.
As in the 1920s, the balance sheets of major
corporations recently failed to provide a clear picture of the financial
health of those entities. Banks in particular have become predisposed to
narrow the size of their balance sheets, because investors and regulators
use the balance sheet as an anchor in their assessment of risk. Banks use
financial engineering to make it appear that they are better capitalized and
less risky than they really are. Most people and businesses include all of
their assets and liabilities on their balance sheets. But large financial
institutions do not.
Click here to read the full chapter.---
http://www.rooseveltinstitute.org/sites/all/files/Off-Balance Sheet
Transactions.pdf
Frank Partnoy is the George E.
Barnett Professor of Law and Finance and is the director of the Center on
Coporate and Securities Law at the University of San Diego. He worked as a
derivatives structurer at Morgan Stanley and CS First Boston during the
mid-1990s and wrote F.I.A.S.C.O.:
Blook in the Water on Wall Street, a
best-selling book about his experiences there. His other books include
Infectious Greed: How Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets
and
The Match King: Ivar Kreuger, The Financial Genius Behind a Century of Wall
Street Scandals.
Lynn Turner has the unique
perspective of having been the Chief Accountant of the Securities and
Exchange Commission, a member of boards of public companies, a trustee of a
mutual fund and a public pension fund, a professor of accounting, a partner
in one of the major international auditing firms, the managing director of a
research firm and a chief financial officers and an executive in industry.
In 2007, Treasury Secretary Paulson appointed him to the Treasury Committee
on the Auditing Profession. He currently serves as a senior advisor to LECG,
an international forensics and economic consulting firm.
The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not
necessarily reflect the positions of the Roosevelt Institute, its officers,
or its directors.
Bob Jensen's threads on OBSF are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#OBSF2
For over 15 years Frank Partnoy has been appealing in vain for financial
reform. My timeline of history of the scandals, the new accounting standards,
and the new ploys at OBSF and earnings management is at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds
My Hero Lawyer, Professor, and Wall Street Financial Expert Weighs In
Question
In the bankruptcy court examiner's report on Lehman's downfall, is Volume 3 more
or less important than Volume 2?
Answer
For Ernst & Young it is probably Volume 3, but my true hero exposing Wall Street
scandals opts for Volume 2.
My favorite Wall Street books exposing the inside greed and fraud on Wall
Street are those written by Frank Partnoy. My timeline of his exposes can be
found at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds .
Professor Partnoy's Senate Testimony was among the first solid explanations
of how derivative financial instruments frauds took place at Enron. His entire
testimony can be found at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#FrankPartnoyTestimony
See his explanation of the infamous Footnote 16 of the Year 2000 Enron Annual
report ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#Senator
His books are among the funniest and best books I've ever read in my life,
even better than the books of Michael Lewis.
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds
They are the most dog-eared and scruffed up books in my entire library.
"Lehman Examiner Punted on Valuation,"
by Frank Partnoy, Professor of Law and Finance University of San Diego School of
Law and author of Fiasco, Infectious Greed, and
The Match King
Naked Capitalism, March 14, 2010 ---
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2010/03/frank-partnoy-lehman-examiner-punted-on-valuation.html
The buzz on the Lehman
bankruptcy examiner’s report has focused on Repo 105, for good reason. That
scheme is one powerful example of how the balance sheets of major Wall Street
banks are fiction. It also shows why Congress must include real accounting
reform in its financial legislation, or risk another collapse. (If you have 8
minutes to kill, here is my
recent talk on the off-balance sheet problem,
from the Roosevelt Institute financial conference.)
But an
even more troubling section of the Lehman report is not
Volume 3 on Repo 105. It is Volume 2, on
Valuation. The Valuation section is 500 pages of utterly terrifying reading. It
shows that, even eighteen months after Lehman’s collapse, no one – not the
bankruptcy examiner, not Lehman’s internal valuation experts, not Ernst and
Young, and certainly not the regulators – could figure out what many of Lehman’s
assets and liabilities were worth. It shows Lehman was too complex to do
anything but fail.
The report cites
extensive evidence of valuation problems. Check out page 577, where the report
concludes that Lehman’s high credit default swap valuations were reasonable
because Citigroup’s marks were ONLY 8% lower than Lehman’s. 8%? And since when
are Citigroup’s valuations the objective benchmark?
Or page 547, where the
report describes how Lehman’s so-called “Product Control Group” acted like
Keystone Kops: the group used third-party prices for only 10% of Lehman’s CDO
positions, and deferred to the traders’ models, saying “We’re not quants.” Here
are two money quotes:
While the function of the
Product Control Group was to serve as a check on the
desk marks set by Lehman’s traders, the CDO product controllers were hampered in
two respects. First, the Product Control Group did not appear to have sufficient
resources to price test Lehman’s CDO positions comprehensively. Second, while
the
CDO product controllers were able to effectively verify the prices of many
positions
using trade data and third‐party prices, they did not have
the same level of quantitative sophistication as many of the desk personnel who
developed models to price CDOs. (page 547)
Or this one:
However, approximately a
quarter of Lehman’s CDO positions were not affirmatively priced by the Product
Control Group, but simply noted as ‘OK’ because the desk had already written
down the position significantly. (page 548)
My favorite section
describes the valuation of Ceago, Lehman’s largest CDO position. My corporate
finance students at the University of San Diego School of Law understand that
you should use higher discount rates for riskier projects. But the Valuation
section of the report found that with respect to Ceago, Lehman used LOWER
discount rates for the riskier tranches than for the safer ones:
The discount rates used
by Lehman’s Product Controllers were significantly understated. As stated, swap
rates were used for the discount rate on the Ceago subordinate tranches.
However, the resulting rates (approximately 3% to 4%) were significantly lower
than the approximately 9% discount rate used to value the more senior S tranche.
It is inappropriate to use a discount rate on a subordinate tranche that is
lower than the rate used on a senior tranche. (page 556)
It’s one thing to have
product controllers who aren’t “quants”; it’s quite another to have people in
crucial risk management roles who don’t understand present value.
When the examiner
compared Lehman’s marks on these lower tranches to more reliable valuation
estimates, it found that “the prices estimated for the C and D tranches of Ceago
securities are approximately one‐thirtieth of the price reported
by Lehman. (pages 560-61) One thirtieth? These valuations weren’t even close.
Ultimately, the examiner
concluded that these problems related to only a small portion of Lehman’s
overall portfolio. But that conclusion was due in part to the fact that the
examiner did not have the time or resources to examine many of Lehman’s
positions in detail (Lehman had 900,000 derivative positions in 2008, and the
examiner did not even try to value Lehman’s numerous corporate debt and equity
holdings).
The bankruptcy examiner
didn’t see enough to bring lawsuits. But the valuation section of the report
raises some hot-button issues for private parties and prosecutors. As the report
put it, there are issues that “may warrant further review by parties in
interest.”
For example, parties in
interest might want to look at the report’s section on Archstone, a publicly
traded REIT Lehman acquired in October 2007. Much ink has been spilled
criticizing the valuation of Archstone. Here is the Report’s finding (at page
361):
… there is sufficient
evidence to support a finding that Lehman’s valuations for its Archstone equity
positions were unreasonable beginning as of the end of the first quarter of
2008, and continuing through the end of the third quarter of 2008.
And Archstone is just one
of many examples.
The Repo 105 section of
the Lehman report shows that Lehman’s balance sheet was fiction. That was bad.
The Valuation section shows that Lehman’s approach to valuing assets and
liabilities was seriously flawed. That is worse. For a levered trading firm, to
not understand your economic position is to sign your own death warrant.
|
Selected works of FRANK
PARTNOY
Bob Jensen at Trinity University
1. Who is Frank Partnoy?
Cheryl Dunn requested that I do a review of my favorites
among the “books that have influenced [my] work.”
Immediately the succession of FIASCO books by
Frank Partnoy came to mind. These particular books are
not the best among related books by Wall Street whistle
blowers such as Liar's Poker: Playing the Money
Markets by Michael Lewis in 1999 and Monkey Business:
Swinging Through the Wall Street Jungle by John
Rolfe and Peter Troob in 2002. But in1997. Frank
Partnoy was the first writer to open my eyes to the
enormous gap between our assumed efficient and fair
capital markets versus the “infectious greed” (Alan
Greenspan’s term) that had overtaken these markets.
Partnoy’s succession of FIASCO books, like those
of Lewis and Rolfe/Troob are reality books written from
the perspective of inside whistle blowers. They are
somewhat repetitive and anecdotal mainly from the
perspective of what each author saw and interpreted.
My
favorite among the capital market fraud books is Frank
Partnoy’s latest book Infectious Greed: How Deceit
and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets (Henry Holt
& Company, Incorporated, 2003, ISBN: 080507510-0- 477
pages). This is the most scholarly of the books
available on business and gatekeeper degeneracy. Rather
than relying mostly upon his own experiences, this book
drawn from Partnoy’s interviews of over 150 capital
markets insiders of one type or another. It is more
scholarly because it demonstrates Partnoy’s evolution of
learning about extremely complex structured financing
packages that were the instruments of crime by banks,
investment banks, brokers, and securities dealers in the
most venerable firms in the U.S. and other parts of the
world. The book is brilliant and has a detailed and
helpful index.
What
did I learn most from Partnoy?
I
learned about the failures and complicity of what he
terms “gatekeepers” whose fiduciary responsibility was
to inoculate against “infectious greed.” These
gatekeepers instead manipulated their professions and
their governments to aid and abet the criminals. On
Page 173 of Infectious Greed, he writes the
following:
Page #173
When
Republicans captured the House of Representatives in
November 1994--for the first time since the Eisenhower
era--securities-litigation reform was assured. In a
January 1995 speech, Levitt outlined the limits on
securities regulation that Congress later would support:
limiting the statute-of-limitations period for filing
lawsuits, restricting legal fees paid to lead
plaintiffs, eliminating punitive-damages provisions from
securities lawsuits, requiring plaintiffs to allege more
clearly that a defendant acted with reckless intent, and
exempting "forward looking statements"--essentially,
projections about a company's future--from legal
liability.
The Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 passed easily,
and Congress even overrode the veto of President
Clinton, who either had a fleeting change of heart about
financial markets or decided that trial lawyers were an
even more important constituency than Wall Street. In
any event, Clinton and Levitt disagreed about the issue,
although it wasn't fatal to Levitt, who would remain SEC
chair for another five years.
He
later introduces Chapter 7 of Infectious Greed as
follows:
Pages
187-188
The
regulatory changes of 1994-95 sent three messages to
corporate CEOs. First, you are not likely to be
punished for "massaging" your firm's accounting
numbers. Prosecutors rarely go after financial fraud
and, even when they do, the typical punishment is a
small fine; almost no one goes to prison. Moreover,
even a fraudulent scheme could be recast as mere
earnings management--the practice of smoothing a
company's earnings--which most executives did, and
regarded as perfectly legal.
Second, you
should use new financial instruments--including options,
swaps, and other derivatives--to increase your own pay
and to avoid costly regulation. If complex derivatives
are too much for you to handle--as they were for many
CEOs during the years immediately following the 1994
losses--you should at least pay yourself in stock
options, which don't need to be disclosed as an expense
and have a greater upside than cash bonuses or stock.
Third, you
don't need to worry about whether accountants or
securities analysts will tell investors about any hidden
losses or excessive options pay. Now that Congress and
the Supreme Court have insulated accounting firms and
investment banks from liability--with the Central Bank
decision and the Private Securities Litigation Reform
Act--they will be much more willing to look the other
way. If you pay them enough in fees, they might even be
willing to help.
Of course,
not every corporate executive heeded these messages.
For example, Warren Buffett argued that managers should
ensure that their companies' share prices were accurate,
not try to inflate prices artificially, and he
criticized the use of stock options as compensation.
Having been a major shareholder of Salomon Brothers,
Buffett also criticized accounting and securities firms
for conflicts of interest.
But for
every Warren Buffett, there were many less scrupulous
CEOs. This chapter considers four of them: Walter
Forbes of CUC International, Dean Buntrock of Waste
Management, Al Dunlap of Sunbeam, and Martin Grass of
Rite Aid. They are not all well-known among investors,
but their stories capture the changes in CEO behavior
during the mid-1990s. Unlike the "rocket scientists" at
Bankers Trust, First Boston, and Salomon Brothers, these
four had undistinguished backgrounds and little training
in mathematics or finance. Instead, they were
hardworking, hard-driving men who ran companies that met
basic consumer needs: they sold clothes, barbecue
grills, and prescription medicine, and cleaned up
garbage. They certainly didn't buy swaps linked to
LIBOR-squared.
The
book Infectious Greed has chapters on other
capital markets and corporate scandals. It is the best
account that I’ve ever read about Bankers Trust the
Bankers Trust scandals, including how one trader named
Andy Krieger almost destroyed the entire money supply of
New Zealand. Chapter 10 is devoted to Enron and follows
up on Frank Partnoy’s invited testimony before the
United States Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs,
January 24, 2002 ---
http://www.senate.gov/~gov_affairs/012402partnoy.htm
The
controversial writings of Frank Partnoy have had an
enormous impact on my teaching and my research.
Although subsequent writers wrote somewhat more
entertaining exposes, he was the one who first opened my
eyes to what goes on behind the scenes in capital
markets and investment banking. Through his early
writings, I discovered that there is an enormous gap
between the efficient financial world that we assume in
agency theory worshipped in academe versus the dark side
of modern reality where you find the cleverest crooks
out to steal money from widows and orphans in
sophisticated ways where it is virtually impossible to
get caught. Because I read his 1997 book early on, the
ensuing succession of enormous scandals in finance,
accounting, and corporate governance weren’t really much
of a surprise to me.
From
his insider perspective he reveals a world where our
most respected firms in banking, market exchanges, and
related financial institutions no longer care anything
about fiduciary responsibility and professionalism in
disgusting contrast to the honorable founders of those
same firms motivated to serve rather than steal.
Young men and women from top universities of the world
abandoned almost all ethical principles while working in
investment banks and other financial institutions in
order to become not only rich but filthy rich at the
expense of countless pension holders and small
investors. Partnoy opened my eyes to how easy it is to
get around auditors and corporate boards by creating
structured financial contracts that are incomprehensible
and serve virtually no purpose other than to steal
billions upon billions of dollars.
Most
importantly, Frank Partnoy opened my eyes to the
psychology of greed. Greed is rooted in opportunity and
cultural relativism. He graduated from college with a
high sense of right and wrong. But his standards and
values sank to the criminal level of those when he
entered the criminal world of investment banking. The
only difference between him and the crooks he worked
with is that he could not quell his conscience while
stealing from widows and orphans.
Frank Partnoy has a rare combination of scholarship and
experience in law, investment banking, and accounting.
He is sometimes criticized for not really understanding
the complexities of some of the deals he described, but
he rather freely admits that he was new to the game of
complex deceptions in international structured financing
crime.
2. What really happened at Enron? ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#FrankPartnoyTestimony
3. What are some of Frank Partnoy’s best-known works?
Frank Partnoy, FIASCO: Blood in the Water on Wall
Street (W. W. Norton & Company, 1997, ISBN
0393046222, 252 pages).
This is the first of a
somewhat repetitive succession of Partnoy’s “FIASCO”
books that influenced my life. The most important
revelation from his insider’s perspective is that the
most trusted firms on Wall Street and financial centers
in other major cities in the U.S., that were once highly
professional and trustworthy, excoriated the guts of
integrity leaving a façade behind which crooks less
violent than the Mafia but far more greedy took control
in the roaring 1990s.
After selling a
succession of phony derivatives deals while at Morgan
Stanley, Partnoy blew the whistle in this book about a
number of his employer’s shady and outright fraudulent
deals sold in rigged markets using bait and switch
tactics. Customers, many of them pension fund investors
for schools and municipal employees, were duped into
complex and enormously risky deals that were billed as
safe as the U.S. Treasury.
His books have received
mixed reviews, but I question some of the integrity of
the reviewers from the investment banking industry who
in some instances tried to whitewash some of the deals
described by Partnoy. His books have received a bit
less praise than the book Liars Poker by Michael
Lewis, but critics of Partnoy fail to give credit that
Partnoy’s exposes preceded those of Lewis.
Frank Partnoy, FIASCO: Guns, Booze and Bloodlust: the
Truth About High Finance (Profile Books, 1998, 305
Pages)
Like his earlier books,
some investment bankers and literary dilettantes who
reviewed this book were critical of Partnoy and claimed
that he misrepresented some legitimate structured
financings. However, my reading of the reviewers is
that they were trying to lend credence to highly
questionable offshore deals documented by Partnoy. Be
that as it may, it would have helped if Partnoy had been
a bit more explicit in some of his illustrations.
Frank Partnoy, FIASCO: The Inside Story of a Wall
Street Trader (Penguin, 1999, ISBN 0140278796, 283
pages).
This
is a blistering indictment of the unregulated OTC market
for derivative financial instruments and the million and
billion dollar deals conceived in investment banking.
Among other things, Partnoy describes Morgan Stanley’s
annual drunken skeet-shooting competition organized by a
“gun-toting strip-joint connoisseur” former combat
officer (fanatic) who loved the motto: “When
derivatives are outlawed only outlaws will have
derivatives.” At that event, derivatives salesmen were
forced to shoot entrapped bunnies between the eyes on
the pretense that the bunnies were just like
“defenseless animals” that were Morgan Stanley’s
customers to be shot down even if they might eventually
“lose a billion dollars on derivatives.”
This book has one of the best accounts of the “fiasco”
caused almost entirely by the duping of Orange County ’s
Treasurer (Robert Citron) by the unscrupulous Merrill
Lynch derivatives salesman named Michael
Stamenson. Orange County
eventually lost over a billion dollars and was forced
into bankruptcy. Much of this was later recovered in
court from Merrill Lynch. Partnoy
calls Citron and Stamenson
“The Odd Couple,” which is also the title of Chapter 8
in the book.Frank Partnoy, Infectious Greed: How
Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets
(Henry Holt & Company, Incorporated, 2003, ISBN:
080507510-0, 477 pages)Frank Partnoy, Infectious
Greed: How Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial
Markets (Henry Holt & Company, Incorporated, 2003,
ISBN: 080507510-0, 477 pages)
Partnoy shows how
corporations gradually increased financial risk and lost
control over overly complex structured financing deals
that obscured the losses and disguised frauds pushed
corporate officers and their boards into successive and
ingenious deceptions." Major corporations such as Enron,
Global Crossing, and WorldCom entered into enormous
illegal corporate finance and accounting. Partnoy
documents the spread of this epidemic stage and provides
some suggestions for restraining the disease.
"The
Siskel and Ebert of Financial Matters: Two Thumbs Down
for the Credit Reporting Agencies" by Frank Partnoy,
Washington University Law Quarterly, Volume 77, No. 3,
1999 ---
http://ls.wustl.edu/WULQ/
4. What are examples of related books that are somewhat
more entertaining than Partnoy’s early books?
Michael Lewis, Liar's Poker: Playing the Money
Markets (Coronet, 1999, ISBN 0340767006)
Lewis writes in Partnoy’s
earlier whistleblower style with somewhat more intense
and comic portrayals of the major players in describing
the double dealing and break down of integrity on the
trading floor of Salomon Brothers.
John
Rolfe and Peter Troob, Monkey Business: Swinging
Through the Wall Street Jungle (Warner Books,
Incorporated, 2002, ISBN: 0446676950, 288 Pages)
This is a hilarious
tongue-in-cheek account by Wharton and Harvard MBAs who
thought they were starting out as stock brokers for
$200,000 a year until they realized that they were on
the phones in a bucket shop selling sleazy IPOs to
unsuspecting institutional investors who in turn passed
them along to widows and orphans. They write. "It took
us another six months after that to realize that
we were, in fact, selling crappy public offerings to
investors."
There are other books
along a similar vein that may be more revealing and
entertaining than the early books of Frank Partnoy, but
he was one of the first, if not the first, in the
roaring 1990s to reveal the high crime taking place
behind the concrete and glass of Wall Street. He was
the first to anticipate many of the scandals that soon
followed. And his testimony before the U.S. Senate is
the best concise account of the crime that transpired at
Enron. He lays the blame clearly at the feet of
government officials (read that Wendy Gramm) who sold
the farm when they deregulated the energy markets and
opened the doors to unregulated OTC derivatives trading
in energy. That is when Enron really began bilking the
public.
Some of the many, many lawsuits settled by auditing
firms can be found at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
|
|
The
End of Wall Street?
Liars Poker II is called "The End"
The Not-Funny Punch Line is Not Until Page 9 of This Tongue in Cheek Explanation
of the Meltdown on Wall Street!
Now I asked
Gutfreund about his biggest decision.
“Yes,” he said. “They—the heads of the other Wall Street firms—all said what an
awful thing it was to go public (beg for a
government bailout) and how could you do
such a thing. But when the temptation arose, they all gave in to it.” He agreed
that the main effect of turning a partnership into a corporation was to transfer
the financial risk to the shareholders. “When things go wrong, it’s their
problem,” he said—and obviously not theirs alone. When a Wall Street investment
bank screwed up badly enough, its risks became the problem of the U.S.
government. “It’s laissez-faire until you get in deep shit,” he said, with a
half chuckle. He was out of the game.
This is a must read to understand what went wrong on Wall Street ---
especially the punch line!
"The End," by Michael Lewis December 2008 Issue The era that defined Wall Street
is finally, officially over. Michael Lewis, who chronicled its excess in Liar’s
Poker, returns to his old haunt to figure out what went wrong.
http://www.portfolio.com/news-markets/national-news/portfolio/2008/11/11/The-End-of-Wall-Streets-Boom?tid=true
To this day, the
willingness of a Wall Street investment bank to pay me hundreds of thousands of
dollars to dispense investment advice to grownups remains a mystery to me. I was
24 years old, with no experience of, or particular interest in, guessing which
stocks and bonds would rise and which would fall. The essential function of Wall
Street is to allocate capital—to decide who should get it and who should not.
Believe me when I tell you that I hadn’t the first clue.
I’d never taken an
accounting course, never run a business, never even had savings of my own to
manage. I stumbled into a job at Salomon Brothers in 1985 and stumbled out much
richer three years later, and even though I wrote a book about the experience,
the whole thing still strikes me as preposterous—which is one of the reasons the
money was so easy to walk away from. I figured the situation was unsustainable.
Sooner rather than later, someone was going to identify me, along with a lot of
people more or less like me, as a fraud. Sooner rather than later, there would
come a Great Reckoning when Wall Street would wake up and hundreds if not
thousands of young people like me, who had no business making huge bets with
other people’s money, would be expelled from finance.
When I sat down to write
my account of the experience in 1989—Liar’s Poker, it was called—it was in the
spirit of a young man who thought he was getting out while the getting was good.
I was merely scribbling down a message on my way out and stuffing it into a
bottle for those who would pass through these parts in the far distant future.
Unless some insider got
all of this down on paper, I figured, no future human would believe that it
happened.
I thought I was writing a
period piece about the 1980s in America. Not for a moment did I suspect that the
financial 1980s would last two full decades longer or that the difference in
degree between Wall Street and ordinary life would swell into a difference in
kind. I expected readers of the future to be outraged that back in 1986, the
C.E.O. of Salomon Brothers, John Gutfreund, was paid $3.1 million; I expected
them to gape in horror when I reported that one of our traders, Howie Rubin, had
moved to Merrill Lynch, where he lost $250 million; I assumed they’d be shocked
to learn that a Wall Street C.E.O. had only the vaguest idea of the risks his
traders were running. What I didn’t expect was that any future reader would look
on my experience and say, “How quaint.”
I had no great agenda,
apart from telling what I took to be a remarkable tale, but if you got a few
drinks in me and then asked what effect I thought my book would have on the
world, I might have said something like, “I hope that college students trying to
figure out what to do with their lives will read it and decide that it’s silly
to phony it up and abandon their passions to become financiers.” I hoped that
some bright kid at, say, Ohio State University who really wanted to be an
oceanographer would read my book, spurn the offer from Morgan Stanley, and set
out to sea.
Somehow that message
failed to come across. Six months after Liar’s Poker was published, I was
knee-deep in letters from students at Ohio State who wanted to know if I had any
other secrets to share about Wall Street. They’d read my book as a how-to
manual.
In the two decades since
then, I had been waiting for the end of Wall Street. The outrageous bonuses, the
slender returns to shareholders, the never-ending scandals, the bursting of the
internet bubble, the crisis following the collapse of Long-Term Capital
Management: Over and over again, the big Wall Street investment banks would be,
in some narrow way, discredited. Yet they just kept on growing, along with the
sums of money that they doled out to 26-year-olds to perform tasks of no obvious
social utility. The rebellion by American youth against the money culture never
happened. Why bother to overturn your parents’ world when you can buy it, slice
it up into tranches, and sell off the pieces?
At some point, I gave up
waiting for the end. There was no scandal or reversal, I assumed, that could
sink the system.
The New Order The crash
did more than wipe out money. It also reordered the power on Wall Street. What a
Swell Party A pictorial timeline of some Wall Street highs and lows from 1985 to
2007. Worst of Times Most economists predict a recovery late next year. Don’t
bet on it. Then came Meredith Whitney with news. Whitney was an obscure analyst
of financial firms for Oppenheimer Securities who, on October 31, 2007, ceased
to be obscure. On that day, she predicted that Citigroup had so mismanaged its
affairs that it would need to slash its dividend or go bust. It’s never entirely
clear on any given day what causes what in the stock market, but it was pretty
obvious that on October 31, Meredith Whitney caused the market in financial
stocks to crash. By the end of the trading day, a woman whom basically no one
had ever heard of had shaved $369 billion off the value of financial firms in
the market. Four days later, Citigroup’s C.E.O., Chuck Prince, resigned. In
January, Citigroup slashed its dividend.
From that moment, Whitney
became E.F. Hutton: When she spoke, people listened. Her message was clear. If
you want to know what these Wall Street firms are really worth, take a hard look
at the crappy assets they bought with huge sums of borrowed money, and imagine
what they’d fetch in a fire sale. The vast assemblages of highly paid people
inside the firms were essentially worth nothing. For better than a year now,
Whitney has responded to the claims by bankers and brokers that they had put
their problems behind them with this write-down or that capital raise with a
claim of her own: You’re wrong. You’re still not facing up to how badly you have
mismanaged your business.
Rivals accused Whitney of
being overrated; bloggers accused her of being lucky. What she was, mainly, was
right. But it’s true that she was, in part, guessing. There was no way she could
have known what was going to happen to these Wall Street firms. The C.E.O.’s
themselves didn’t know.
Now, obviously, Meredith
Whitney didn’t sink Wall Street. She just expressed most clearly and loudly a
view that was, in retrospect, far more seditious to the financial order than,
say, Eliot Spitzer’s campaign against Wall Street corruption. If mere scandal
could have destroyed the big Wall Street investment banks, they’d have vanished
long ago. This woman wasn’t saying that Wall Street bankers were corrupt. She
was saying they were stupid. These people whose job it was to allocate capital
apparently didn’t even know how to manage their own.
At some point, I could no
longer contain myself: I called Whitney. This was back in March, when Wall
Street’s fate still hung in the balance. I thought, If she’s right, then this
really could be the end of Wall Street as we’ve known it. I was curious to see
if she made sense but also to know where this young woman who was crashing the
stock market with her every utterance had come from.
It turned out that she
made a great deal of sense and that she’d arrived on Wall Street in 1993, from
the Brown University history department. “I got to New York, and I didn’t even
know research existed,” she says. She’d wound up at Oppenheimer and had the most
incredible piece of luck: to be trained by a man who helped her establish not
merely a career but a worldview. His name, she says, was Steve Eisman.
Eisman had moved on, but
they kept in touch. “After I made the Citi call,” she says, “one of the best
things that happened was when Steve called and told me how proud he was of me.”
Having never heard of
Eisman, I didn’t think anything of this. But a few months later, I called
Whitney again and asked her, as I was asking others, whom she knew who had
anticipated the cataclysm and set themselves up to make a fortune from it.
There’s a long list of people who now say they saw it coming all along but a far
shorter one of people who actually did. Of those, even fewer had the nerve to
bet on their vision. It’s not easy to stand apart from mass hysteria—to believe
that most of what’s in the financial news is wrong or distorted, to believe that
most important financial people are either lying or deluded—without actually
being insane. A handful of people had been inside the black box, understood how
it worked, and bet on it blowing up. Whitney rattled off a list with a
half-dozen names on it. At the top was Steve Eisman.
Steve Eisman entered
finance about the time I exited it. He’d grown up in New York City and gone to a
Jewish day school, the University of Pennsylvania, and Harvard Law School. In
1991, he was a 30-year-old corporate lawyer. “I hated it,” he says. “I hated
being a lawyer. My parents worked as brokers at Oppenheimer. They managed to
finagle me a job. It’s not pretty, but that’s what happened.”
He was hired as a junior
equity analyst, a helpmate who didn’t actually offer his opinions. That changed
in December 1991, less than a year into his new job, when a subprime mortgage
lender called Ames Financial went public and no one at Oppenheimer particularly
cared to express an opinion about it. One of Oppenheimer’s investment bankers
stomped around the research department looking for anyone who knew anything
about the mortgage business. Recalls Eisman: “I’m a junior analyst and just
trying to figure out which end is up, but I told him that as a lawyer I’d worked
on a deal for the Money Store.” He was promptly appointed the lead analyst for
Ames Financial. “What I didn’t tell him was that my job had been to proofread
the documents and that I hadn’t understood a word of the fucking things.”
Ames Financial belonged
to a category of firms known as nonbank financial institutions. The category
didn’t include J.P. Morgan, but it did encompass many little-known companies
that one way or another were involved in the early-1990s boom in subprime
mortgage lending—the lower class of American finance.
The second company for
which Eisman was given sole responsibility was Lomas Financial, which had just
emerged from bankruptcy. “I put a sell rating on the thing because it was a
piece of shit,” Eisman says. “I didn’t know that you weren’t supposed to put a
sell rating on companies. I thought there were three boxes—buy, hold, sell—and
you could pick the one you thought you should.” He was pressured generally to be
a bit more upbeat, but upbeat wasn’t Steve Eisman’s style. Upbeat and Eisman
didn’t occupy the same planet. A hedge fund manager who counts Eisman as a
friend set out to explain him to me but quit a minute into it. After describing
how Eisman exposed various important people as either liars or idiots, the hedge
fund manager started to laugh. “He’s sort of a prick in a way, but he’s smart
and honest and fearless.”
“A lot of people don’t
get Steve,” Whitney says. “But the people who get him love him.” Eisman stuck to
his sell rating on Lomas Financial, even after the company announced that
investors needn’t worry about its financial condition, as it had hedged its
market risk. “The single greatest line I ever wrote as an analyst,” says Eisman,
“was after Lomas said they were hedged.” He recited the line from memory: “ ‘The
Lomas Financial Corp. is a perfectly hedged financial institution: It loses
money in every conceivable interest-rate environment.’ I enjoyed writing that
sentence more than any sentence I ever wrote.” A few months after he’d delivered
that line in his report, Lomas Financial returned to bankruptcy.
Continued in article
Michael Lewis, Liar's Poker: Playing the Money Markets (Coronet, 1999, ISBN
0340767006)
Lewis writes in Partnoy’s
earlier whistleblower style with somewhat more intense and comic portrayals of
the major players in describing the double dealing and break down of integrity
on the trading floor of Salomon Brothers.
Continued at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm
"Public Pensions Cook the Books:
Some plans want to hide the truth from taxpayers," by Andrew Biggs, The
Wall Street Journal, July 6, 2009 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124683573382697889.html
Here's a dilemma: You manage a public employee
pension plan and your actuary tells you it is significantly underfunded. You
don't want to raise contributions. Cutting benefits is out of the question.
To be honest, you'd really rather not even admit there's a problem, lest
taxpayers get upset.
What to do? For the administrators of two Montana
pension plans, the answer is obvious: Get a new actuary. Or at least that's
the essence of the managers' recent solicitations for actuarial services,
which warn that actuaries who favor reporting the full market value of
pension liabilities probably shouldn't bother applying.
Public employee pension plans are plagued by
overgenerous benefits, chronic underfunding, and now trillion dollar
stock-market losses. Based on their preferred accounting methods -- which
discount future liabilities based on high but uncertain returns projected
for investments -- these plans are underfunded nationally by around $310
billion.
The numbers are worse using market valuation
methods (the methods private-sector plans must use), which discount benefit
liabilities at lower interest rates to reflect the chance that the expected
returns won't be realized. Using that method, University of Chicago
economists Robert Novy-Marx and Joshua Rauh calculate that, even prior to
the market collapse, public pensions were actually short by nearly $2
trillion. That's nearly $87,000 per plan participant. With employee benefits
guaranteed by law and sometimes even by state constitutions, it's likely
these gargantuan shortfalls will have to be borne by unsuspecting taxpayers.
Some public pension administrators have a strategy,
though: Keep taxpayers unsuspecting. The Montana Public Employees'
Retirement Board and the Montana Teachers' Retirement System declare in a
recent solicitation for actuarial services that "If the Primary Actuary or
the Actuarial Firm supports [market valuation] for public pension plans,
their proposal may be disqualified from further consideration."
Scott Miller, legal counsel of the Montana Public
Employees Board, was more straightforward: "The point is we aren't
interested in bringing in an actuary to pressure the board to adopt market
value of liabilities theory."
While corporate pension funds are required by law
to use low, risk-adjusted discount rates to calculate the market value of
their liabilities, public employee pensions are not. However, financial
economists are united in believing that market-based techniques for valuing
private sector investments should also be applied to public pensions.
Because the power of compound interest is so
strong, discounting future benefit costs using a pension plan's high
expected return rather than a low riskless return can significantly reduce
the plan's measured funding shortfall. But it does so only by ignoring risk.
The expected return implies only the "expectation" -- meaning, at least a
50% chance, not a guarantee -- that the plan's assets will be sufficient to
meet its liabilities. But when future benefits are considered to be riskless
by plan participants and have been ruled to be so by state courts, a 51%
chance that the returns will actually be there when they are needed hardly
constitutes full funding.
Public pension administrators argue that government
plans fundamentally differ from private sector pensions, since the
government cannot go out of business. Even so, the only true advantage
public pensions have over private plans is the ability to raise taxes. But
as the Congressional Budget Office has pointed out in 2004, "The government
does not have a capacity to bear risk on its own" -- rather, government
merely redistributes risk between taxpayers and beneficiaries, present and
future.
Market valuation makes the costs of these potential
tax increases explicit, while the public pension administrators' approach,
which obscures the possibility that the investment returns won't achieve
their goals, leaves taxpayers in the dark.
For these reasons, the Public Interest Committee of
the American Academy of Actuaries recently stated, "it is in the public
interest for retirement plans to disclose consistent measures of the
economic value of plan assets and liabilities in order to provide the
benefits promised by plan sponsors."
Nevertheless, the National Association of State
Retirement Administrators, an umbrella group representing government
employee pension funds, effectively wants other public plans to take the
same low road that the two Montana plans want to take. It argues against
reporting the market valuation of pension shortfalls. But the association's
objections seem less against market valuation itself than against the fact
that higher reported underfunding "could encourage public sector plan
sponsors to abandon their traditional pension plans in lieu of defined
contribution plans."
The Government Accounting Standards Board, which
sets guidelines for public pension reporting, does not currently call for
reporting the market value of public pension liabilities. The board
announced last year a review of its position regarding market valuation but
says the review may not be completed until 2013.
This is too long for state taxpayers to wait to
find out how many trillions they owe.
A Sickening Lobbying Effort for Off-Balance-Sheet Financing in IFRS
The International Accounting Standards Board is working
quickly to produce some updated and clarified guidance on how to account for
financial assets and liabilities. The financial meltdown renewed attention on
this matter, as well as the use of special-purpose entities to hold financial
assets, a device that generally gets them off balance sheets. There is still
disagreement on how big of a role off-balance-sheet accounting played in
starting the financial crisis, but banks appear to be against changes that would
bring about greater disclosure of assets and liabilities.
Peter Williams, "Peter Williams Accounting: Off balance – the future of
off-balance sheet transactions," Personal Computer World, July 3, 2009
---
http://www.pcw.co.uk/financial-director/comment/2245360/balance-4729409
Bob Jensen's threads about fraud in government are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#Lawmakers
Bob Jensen's threads about fraud in government are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#Lawmakers
"Dirty Secrets: Companies may be burying billions more in
environmental liabilities than their financial statements show," by Marie
Leone and Tim Reason, CFO.com, September 1, 2009 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14292477/c_14292723?f=magazine_featured
Even though the neutrality-believing FASB is in a state
of denial about the impact of FSB 115-4 on decision making in the real world,
financial analysts and the Director of Corporate Governance at the Harvard Law
School are in no such state of denial,
"The Fall of the Toxic-Assets Plan," The Wall Street Journal, July 9, 2009 ---
http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2009/07/09/guest-contribution-the-fall-of-the-toxic-assets-plan/
Examples of OBSF ploys in the past and some that still remain as
viable means of keeping debt off the balance sheets.
Whereas firms are increasingly pressured by the FASB and the IASB to maintain
financial assets at fair value, maintaining financial liabilities at fair values
is much more controversial since the future cash flows of fixed-rate debt may
depart greatly from current fair value. For cash flows of a fixed rate mortgage
are well defined whereas the fair value of those cash flows may fluctuate
day-to-day with interest rates. Fair value adjustments of debt that the firm
either cannot or does not intend to liquidate may be quite misleading regarding
financial risk.
The same cannot be said for derivative financial instruments where FAS 133
and IAS 39 require maintaining the current reported balances at fair value.
However, the FASB is proposing an amendment to IAS 39 that will give the
option to maintain financial instrument liabilities at fair value with gains and
losses going to AOCI instead of current earnings. However, this does not make
the fair value accounting totally consistent with fair value accounting for
derivative financial instruments where changes in fair value go to current
earnings except in qualified hedging transactions.
Unlike FAS 133, IAS 39 no longer requires bifurcation of embedded derivatives
that are not "clearly and closely related" to the host instrument.
SUMMARY: The Department of Transportation (DOT) has undertaken audit
procedures on airlines to review how they are "living up to their 1999 'Customer
Service Commitment.'" This document was written when "airlines were under
pressure from Congress and consumers for lousy service and long delays" in order
to "stave off new legislation regulating their business." The airlines also
report little about the frequent flier mile plans they offer, and particularly
focus only on the financial aspects of these plans in their annual reports and
SEC filings, rather than, say, information about ease of redeeming miles in
which customers may be particularly interested.
2.) Why is this information important for financial statement users? In your
answer, describe your understanding of the business model and accounting for
frequent flier miles, based on the description in the article.
3.) Why did the Department of Transportation (DOT) undertake a review of
airline practices? What type of audit would you say that the DOT performed?
4.) What audit procedures did the airlines abandon due to financial
exigencies? What was the result of abandoning these audit procedures? In your
answer, describe the incentives provided by the act of undertaking audit
procedures on operational efficiencies and effectiveness.