New
Bookmarks
Year 2010 Quarter 2: April 1 - June 30 Additions to
Bob Jensen's Bookmarks
Bob Jensen at
Trinity University
For
earlier editions of New Bookmarks go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Tidbits Directory ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have
key words to enter --- Search Site.
For example if you want to know what Jensen documents have the term "Enron"
enter the phrase Jensen AND Enron. Another search engine that covers Trinity and
other universities is at
http://www.searchedu.com/.

Choose a
Date Below for Additions to the Bookmarks File
2010
April 30. 2010
May 31, 2010
June 30, 2010

June 30, 2010
Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on
June 30, 2010
Bob Jensen at
Trinity University
For
earlier editions of Fraud Updates go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
For earlier editions of Tidbits go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
For earlier editions of New Bookmarks go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter ---
Search Box in Upper Right Corner.
For example if you want to know what Jensen documents have the term "Enron"
enter the phrase Jensen AND Enron. Another search engine that covers Trinity and
other universities is at
http://www.searchedu.com/
Bob
Jensen's Blogs ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JensenBlogs.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
New Bookmarks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Tidbits ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Accountancy, Tax, IFRS, XBRL, and Accounting History News Sites
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Accounting
Professors Who Blog ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Cool
Search Engines That Are Not Google ---
http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/06/coolsearchengines
Accounting
program news items for colleges are posted at
http://www.accountingweb.com/news/college_news.html
Sometimes the news items provide links to teaching resources for accounting
educators.
Any college may post a news item.
How to
author books and other materials for online delivery
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
How Web
Pages Work ---
http://computer.howstuffworks.com/web-page.htm
Bob
Jensen's essay on the financial crisis bailout's aftermath and an alphabet soup
of appendices can be found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm
Federal
Revenue and Spending Book of Charts (Great Charts on Bad Budgeting)
---
http://www.heritage.org/research/features/BudgetChartBook/index.html
The Master
List of Free
Online College Courses
---
http://universitiesandcolleges.org/
Free
Online Textbooks, Videos, and Tutorials ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
Free Tutorials in Various Disciplines ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob2.htm#Tutorials
Edutainment and Learning Games ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Edutainment
Open Sharing Courses ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#OKI
The Master List of Free
Online College Courses ---
http://universitiesandcolleges.org/
Bob
Jensen's threads for online worldwide education and training alternatives ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Crossborder.htm
"U. of
Manitoba Researchers Publish Open-Source Handbook on Educational Technology," by
Steve Kolowich, Chronicle of Higher Education, March 19, 2009 ---
http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/index.php?id=3671&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
Social
Networking for Education: The Beautiful and the Ugly
(including Google's Wave and Orcut for Social Networking and some education uses
of Twitter)
Updates will be at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Pete Wilson provides some great videos on how to make accounting judgments ---
http://www.navigatingaccounting.com/
FEI Second
Life Video (thank you Edith) ---
If I Were an Auditor ---
http://www.youtube.com/user/feiblog#p/a/u/0/Q-FR_fkTFKY
Teaching History With Technology ---
http://www.thwt.org/
Some these ideas apply to accounting history and accounting education in general
"U. of Manitoba
Researchers Publish Open-Source Handbook on Educational Technology,"
by Steve Kolowich, Chronicle of Higher Education, March 19, 2009 ---
http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/index.php?id=3671&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
Bob
Jensen's threads on accounting novels, plays, and movies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNovels.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on tricks and tools of the trade ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on education technology ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
"College Groups Share Health Care Worries With White House,"
Inside Higher Ed, June 3, 2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/06/03/qt#229052
Supporters of
student health insurance plans who saw provisions of the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act threatening the plans were
reassured Wednesday in a meeting with President Obama’s chief health care
deputy. Representatives of the American College Health Association, the
National Association of College and University Business Officers, College
and University Professional Association for Human Resources and the six
presidential higher education associations met Wednesday with Nancy-Ann
DeParle, director of the White House Office of Health Reform, to share their
concerns. They worry that student plans -- currently defined as "limited
duration," a category that exempts the plans from being part of the
individual market -- would under the new law become too expensive for
colleges and universities to offer.
One person in the room for the meeting, Steven
Bloom, assistant director of government and public affairs at the American
Council on Education, said that DeParle assured the group that the absence
of language making clear that the plans could continue to operate just as
they do today was "not intentional." The Obama administration has emphasized
that "if you like the insurance you have, you get to keep it," Bloom said,
"and they view student insurance as part of that.... It's just fallen
through the cracks."
College health advocates
first met with Congressional aides last fall to
discuss this same concern, but language supporting student health insurance
plans never made it into the final bill. Now that the bill has been passed
and legislation is all but frozen on Capitol Hill, Bloom and his peers
expect that a fix will come through regulations
Bob Jensen's threads on healthcare in the U.S. are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Health.htm
Video on IOUSA
Bipartisan Solutions to Saving the USA
If you missed CNN’s two-hour IOUSA Solutions broadcast, you can watch a 30-minute
version at
http://www.pgpf.org/newsroom/press/IOUSA-Solutions-Premiers-on-CNN/
(Scroll Down a bit)
Note that great efforts were made to keep this a bipartisan panel along with the
occasional video clips of President Obama discussing the debt crisis. The
problem is a build up over spending for most of our nation’s history, It landed
at the feet of President Obama, but he’s certainly not the cause nor is his the
recent expansion of health care coverage the real cause.
One take home from
the CNN show was that over 60% of the booked National Debt increases are funded
off shore (largely in Asia and the Middle East).
This going to greatly constrain the global influence and economic choices of the
United States.
By 2016 the interest
payments on the National Debt will be the biggest single item in the Federal
Budget, more than national defense or social security. And an enormous portion
of this interest cash flow will be flowing to foreign nations that may begin to
put all sorts of strings on their decisions to roll over funding our National
Debt.
The unbooked entitlement obligations that are not part of the National Debt are
over $60 trillion and exploding exponentially. The Medicare D entitlements to
retirees like me added over $8 trillion of entitlements under the Bush
Presidency.
Most of the problems
are solvable except for the Number 1 entitlements problem --- Medicare.
Drastic measures must be taken to keep Medicare sustainable.
I thought the show
was pretty balanced from a bipartisan standpoint and from the standpoint of
possible solutions.
Many of the possible
“solutions” are really too small to really make a dent in the problem. For
example, medical costs can be reduced by one of my favorite solutions of
limiting (like they do in Texas) punitive damage recoveries in malpractice
lawsuits. However, the cost savings are a mere drop in the bucket. Another drop
in the bucket will be the achievable increased savings from decreasing medical
and disability-claim frauds. These are is important solutions, but they are not
solutions that will save the USA.
The big possible
solutions to save the USA are as follows (you and I won’t particularly like
these solutions):
-
Extend retirement age significantly
(75 years maybe?).
When Social Security was enacted, life expectancy was slightly over 65 years
of age.
Now it is well over 75 years of age.
-
Hit Medicare retirees like me with
higher fees for physicians, hospital services, and Medicare D drug payments.
Perhaps this should be on a scale based upon wealth/income levels such that
people, like me, who can afford to pay more must pay more.
-
Greatly curb the biggest cost of
Medicare --- keeping dying people alive in expensive hospitals for a few
weeks or maybe even a few months. Sometimes dying people must be kept alive
in ICU units costing over $10,000 per day when there is no hope of recovery.
There was not any hint of suggesting euthanasia as an alternative. But dying
people can be allowed to die more naturally and pain free.
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5737437n&tag=mncol;lst;3
(wait for the commercials to play out)
-
Limit the National Debt is some way.
It’s now more common in Europe to limit national debt to 60% of GDP. Various
other means of constraining our National Debt were discussed in the CNN
longer version of the IOUSA Solutions video.
Watch for
the other possible solutions in the 30-minute summary video ---
http://www.pgpf.org/newsroom/press/IOUSA-Solutions-Premiers-on-CNN/
(Scroll Down a bit)
Here is the original (and somewhat dated video
that does not delve into solutions very much)
IOUSA (the most frightening movie in American history) ---
(see a 30-minute version of the documentary at
www.iousathemovie.com )
Now the IOUSA Bipartisan Solutions
I suggest that as many people as possible divert their attention from the Tiger
Woods at the Masters Tournament today (April 11) to watch bipartisan proposals
(‘Solutions”) on how to delay the Fall of the United States Empire. By the way,
Bill Bradley was one of the most liberal Democratic senators in the History of
the United States Senate.
Watch the World Premiere
of I.O.U.S.A.: Solutions on CNN
Saturday, April 10, 1:00-3:00 p.m. EST or Sunday, April 11, 3:00-5:00 p.m. EST
 |
Featured Panelists
Include:
-
Peter G. Peterson, Founder and Chairman, Peter G. Peterson
Foundation
-
David Walker, President & CEO, Peter G. Peterson Foundation
-
Sen. Bill Bradley
-
Maya MacGuineas, President of the Committee for a Responsible
Federal Budget
-
Amy Holmes, political contributor for CNN
-
Joe Johns, CNN Congressional Correspondent
-
Diane Lim Rodgers, Chief Economist, Concord Coalition
-
Jeanne Sahadi, senior writer and columnist for CNNMoney.com
|
Watch for
the other possible solutions in the 30-minute summary video ---
http://www.pgpf.org/newsroom/press/IOUSA-Solutions-Premiers-on-CNN/
(Scroll Down a bit)
CBS
Sixty minutes has a great video on the enormous cost of keeping dying people
artificially alive:
High Cost of Dying ---
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5737437n&tag=mncol;lst;3
(wait for the commercials to play out)
No sugar coating from this Wharton professor
"National Retirement Expert: 75 needs to be the new 62," by Carla Fried,
CBS Moneywatch, June 2010 ---
http://moneywatch.bnet.com/retirement-planning/blog/retirement-beat/national-retirement-expert-75-needs-to-be-the-new-62/644/
Olivia Mitchell is one of the
nation’s foremost retirement experts, having spent an impressive career
studying the evolving nature of retirement planning issues for individuals,
corporations and government. The short version of Mitchell’s resume is that
she is a professor at the Wharton School at the University of
Pennsylvania and executive director of the Pension Research
Council. I’ll let you peruse
Mitchell’s full 23-page CV at your own leisure.
So I was interested to read a recent PRC paper
Mitchell penned that digs into some of the most pressing
retirement security issues in the wake of the financial crisis.
Sugarcoating is not her way.
My message is straightforward and, I fear, not
particularly upbeat: current and future generations of managers and
employees will not be able to use the ‘old fashioned’ model of
provisioning for retirement. Instead, the 21st century economy will
require an entirely new perspective on retirement risk management.
From there Mitchell ticks off the big risks
weighing on the current model: We’re not saving enough, we don’t have a clue
how to deal with longevity risk — in fact, we don’t have a clue about basic
financial concepts — traditional pensions are in major trouble, the PBGC is
not exactly rock solid, and then there’s the little issue of Social
Security, a topic near and dear to her heart, having served on the 2001
bipartisan presidential
Commission to Strengthen Social Security
The Retirement Fix
Mitchell concludes the report with a perfectly
serviceable call to action:
Part of the task is to enhance financial
literacy and political responsibility. We will also need to save more,
invest smarter, and insure better against longevity. Another task will
be to develop new products which can be used to hedge longevity and
better protect against very long term risks including inflation.
What struck me in her report was this final
thought:
But when all is said and done, most of us will
simply have to work longer to preserve some flexibility against shocks
in the long run.
And there it is: one of the nation’s foremost
retirement thinkers concludes that at the end of the day, it’s working
longer that is going to be our ticket out of any shortfalls and “shocks.”
Retire Early….at 75
Mitchell points out that working two to four more
years can go a long way to closing a retirement funding gap. But that’s
directed at Baby Boomers. Given ever-expanding longevity forecasts for
younger generations she has this bit of advice for Gen X and Gen Y:
For the younger generation, age 75 might be a
good target for early retirement, and later if possible!
Confirmation, from one of the country’s leading
retirement thinkers, that 75 may indeed be the new 55.
Jensen Comment
At the moment we're between a rock and a hard place apart from each person's
private problem concerning retirement. The global problem is that extending
retirement age to 75 contributes significantly to decline of employment
opportunities for younger people versus the need to extend retirement age to 75
to save the U.S. Social Security and Medicare entitlement programs.
Video on IOUSA
Bipartisan Solutions to Saving the USA
If you missed Sunday
afternoon CNN’s two-hour IOUSA Solutions broadcast, you can watch a 30-minute
version at
http://www.pgpf.org/newsroom/press/IOUSA-Solutions-Premiers-on-CNN/
(Scroll Down a bit)
Note that great efforts were made to keep this a bipartisan panel along with the
occasional video clips of President Obama discussing the debt crisis. The
problem is a build up over spending for most of our nation’s history, It landed
at the feet of President Obama, but he’s certainly not the cause nor is his the
recent expansion of health care coverage the real cause.
One take home from
the CNN show was that over 60% of the booked National Debt increases are funded
off shore (largely in Asia and the Middle East).
This going to greatly constrain the global influence and economic choices of the
United States.
By 2016 the interest
payments on the National Debt will be the biggest single item in the Federal
Budget, more than national defense or social security. And an enormous portion
of this interest cash flow will be flowing to foreign nations that may begin to
put all sorts of strings on their decisions to roll over funding our National
Debt.
The unbooked entitlement obligations that are not part of the National Debt are
over $60 trillion and exploding exponentially. The Medicare D entitlements to
retirees like me added over $8 trillion of entitlements under the Bush
Presidency.
Most of the problems
are solvable except for the Number 1 entitlements problem --- Medicare.
Drastic measures must be taken to keep Medicare sustainable.
I thought the show
was pretty balanced from a bipartisan standpoint and from the standpoint of
possible solutions.
Many of the possible
“solutions” are really too small to really make a dent in the problem. For
example, medical costs can be reduced by one of my favorite solutions of
limiting (like they do in Texas) punitive damage recoveries in malpractice
lawsuits. However, the cost savings are a mere drop in the bucket. Another drop
in the bucket will be the achievable increased savings from decreasing medical
and disability-claim frauds. These are important solutions, but they are not
solutions that will save the USA.
The big possible
solutions to save the USA are as follows (you and I won’t particularly like
these solutions):
-
Extend retirement age significantly
(75 years maybe?).
When Social Security was enacted, life expectancy was slightly over 65 years
of age.
Now it is well over 75 years of age.
-
Hit Medicare retirees like me with
higher fees for physicians, hospital services, and Medicare D drug payments.
Perhaps this should be on a scale based upon wealth/income levels such that
people, like me, who can afford to pay more must pay more.
-
Greatly curb the biggest cost of
Medicare --- keeping dying people alive in expensive hospitals for a few
weeks or maybe even a few months. Sometimes dying people must be kept alive
in ICU units costing over $10,000 per day when there is no hope of recovery.
There was not any hint of suggesting euthanasia as an alternative. But dying
people can be allowed to die more naturally and pain free.
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5737437n&tag=mncol;lst;3
(wait for the commercials to play out)
-
Limit the National Debt is some way.
It’s now more common in Europe to limit national debt to 60% of GDP. Various
other means of constraining our National Debt were discussed in the CNN
longer version of the IOUSA Solutions video.
Watch for
the other possible solutions in the 30-minute summary video ---
http://www.pgpf.org/newsroom/press/IOUSA-Solutions-Premiers-on-CNN/
(Scroll Down a bit)
Humor Between June 1 and June 30, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q2.htm#Humor063010
Humor Between
May 1 and May 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q2.htm#Humor053110
Humor Between April 1 and April 30, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q2.htm#Humor043010
Humor Between March 1 and March 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q1.htm#Humor033110
Humor Between February 1 and February 28, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q1.htm#Humor022810
Humor Between January 1 and January 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book09q1.htm#Humor013110
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting humor ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#Humor
Fraud
Updates have been posted up to December 31, 2009 ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Also see
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm
574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in Plato's Cave
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
- With a Rejoinder from the 2010 Senior Editor of The Accounting
Review (TAR), Steven J. Kachelmeier
- With Replies in Appendix 4 to Professor Kachemeier by Professors
Jagdish Gangolly and Paul Williams
- With Added Conjectures in Appendix 1 as to Why the Profession of
Accountancy Ignores TAR
- With Suggestions in Appendix 2 for Incorporating Accounting Research
into Undergraduate Accounting Courses
"Amazing Disgrace," by Scott McLemee, Inside Higher Ed, May 19,
2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/mclemee/mclemee290
"The Absence of Dissent," by Joni J. Young,
Accounting and the Public Interest 9 (1), 1 (2009); doi:
10.2308/api.2009.9.1.1 ---
Click Here
ABSTRACT:
The persistent malaise in accounting research continues to resist remedy.
Hopwood (2007) argues that revitalizing academic accounting cannot be
accomplished by simply working more diligently within current paradigms.
Based on an analysis of articles published in Auditing: A Journal of
Practice & Theory, I show that this paradigm block is not confined to
financial accounting research but extends beyond the work appearing in the
so-called premier U.S. journals. Based on this demonstration I argue that
accounting academics must tolerate (and even encourage) dissent for
accounting to enjoy a vital research academy. ©2009 American Accounting
Association
June 15, 2010 reply from Paul Williams
[Paul_Williams@NCSU.EDU]
Bob,
Thank you advertising the availability of this paper in API, the on line
journal of the AAA Public Interest Section (which I just stepped down
from editing after my 3+ years stint). Joni is one of the most
(incisively) thoughtful people in our discipline (her paper in AOS,
"Making Up Users" is a must read). The absence of dissent is evident
from even casual perusal of the so-called premier journals. Every paper
is erected on the same premises -- assumptions about human decision
making (i.e., rational decision theory), "free markets," economic
naturalism, etc. There is a metronomic repetition of the same
meta-narrative about the "way the world is" buttressed by exercises in
statistical causal analysis (the method of agricultural research, but
without any of the controls). There is a growing body of evidence that
these premises are myths -- the so-called rigorous research valorized in
the "top" journals is built on an ideological foundation of sand.
Paul Williams
paul_williams@ncsu.edu
(919)515-4436
Gaming for Tenure as an Accounting Professor
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTenure.htm
(with a reply about tenure publication point systems from Linda Kidwell)
"So you want to get a Ph.D.?" by David Wood, BYU ---
http://www.byuaccounting.net/mediawiki/index.php?title=So_you_want_to_get_a_Ph.D.%3F
Do You Want to Teach? ---
http://financialexecutives.blogspot.com/2009/05/do-you-want-to-teach.html
Jensen Comment
Here are some added positives and negatives to consider, especially if you are
currently a practicing accountant considering becoming a professor.
Accountancy Doctoral Program Information from Jim Hasselback ---
http://www.jrhasselback.com/AtgDoctInfo.html
Why must all accounting doctoral programs be social science
(particularly econometrics) "accountics" doctoral programs?
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
What went wrong in accounting/accountics research?
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
AN ANALYSIS OF THE EVOLUTION OF RESEARCH
CONTRIBUTIONS BY THE ACCOUNTING REVIEW: 1926-2005 ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm#_msocom_1
Systemic problems of accountancy (especially the
vegetable nutrition paradox) that probably will never be solved ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#BadNews
"The
Accounting Doctoral Shortage: Time for a New Model,"
by Neal Mero, Jan R. Williams and George W. Krull, Jr. .
Issues in Accounting Education 24 (4)
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=IAEXXX000024000004000427000001&idtype=cvips&gifs=Yes&ref=no
ABSTRACT:
The crisis in supply versus demand for doctorally qualified faculty members in
accounting is well documented (Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of
Business [AACSB] 2003a, 2003b; Plumlee et al. 2005; Leslie 2008). Little
progress has been made in addressing this serious challenge facing the
accounting academic community and the accounting profession. Faculty time,
institutional incentives, the doctoral model itself, and research diversity are
noted as major challenges to making progress on this issue. The authors propose
six recommendations, including a new, extramurally funded research program aimed
at supporting doctoral students that functions similar to research programs
supported by such organizations as the National Science Foundation and other
science-based funding sources. The goal is to create capacity, improve
structures for doctoral programs, and provide incentives to enhance doctoral
enrollments. This should lead to an increased supply of graduates while also
enhancing and supporting broad-based research outcomes across the accounting
landscape, including auditing and tax. ©2009 American Accounting Association
Bob
Jensen's threads on accountancy doctoral programs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
Bad
Role Models for Our Children
"How Many Times Did Sen. Levin Say 'Sh**ty Deal'? by Cindy Perman,
CNBC, April 28. 2010 ---
How Many Times Did Sen. Levin Say 'Sh**ty Deal'?
No matter how you feel about Goldman's behavior, use of uncouth and filthy
language by government leaders and our media sets a low bar for decency.
Goldman's defender, Warren Buffet, thinks the Goldman deal does not even smell.
Boo to Warren on this one! Personally I don't think that Goldman's swap
construction on this one passes the smell test.
Bob Jensen's threads on the latest Goldman scandal are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Malware Detection, Removal, and Protection
From:
AECM, Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia [mailto:AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of AMY HAAS
Sent: Saturday, June 26, 2010 4:08 PM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Help my computer has a security alert virus
How do I get rid of this one? A
danger symbol appears in my task bar and I keep getting pop-ups warning me
about virus. A program called defense center now appears in my program list
and I can't seem to delete it using the remove software in the control
panel. My symantec program has not eliminated it!
Amy Haas
From:
AECM, Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia [mailto:AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Jensen, Robert
Sent: Sunday, June 27, 2010 6:48 AM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: Help my computer has a security alert virus
Hi
Amy,
You might
first get a free scan from Microsoft ---
http://onecare.live.com/site/en-US/center/howsafe.htm?s_cid=mscom_msrt
We should thank John (below) for
this testimony as a user of Stopzilla ---
http://www.stopzilla.com/products/stopzilla/home.do
Stopzilla is
outstanding spyware/adware software but probably should not be used in place
of a hardware firewall or more general cyber attack software like Symantec.
Good spyware/adware software alternatives might work better than Symantec
for spyware and adware, but they are not as broad based as Symantec and
Norton Anti-virus ---
http://www.pcmag.com/category2/0,2806,4796,00.asp
There is no single best alternative, and you cannot always trust the media
that is dependent upon advertising revenues.
There are of course arguments
about what is the best spyware/adware protection ---
http://www.pctools.com/
Microsoft is in the game with
what I think is a very good malware protection alternative ---
http://www.microsoft.com/security/malwareremove/default.aspx
Most of
these alternatives offer free and fee alternatives. The typical free version
is a bit of a come on in that it will scan your computer for infections and
possibly quarantine the culprits, but for removal you must buy the removal
software. And there is always the possibility that code for removing the
newer infections has not yet been written by anybody other than the
criminals that created the infections.
I still
think the best general advice I can give is to communicate with the Help
Desk of your college.
Bob Jensen
Bob
Jensen’s threads on computer and networking security are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
From:
AECM, Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia [mailto:AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of John Anderson
Sent: Sunday, June 27, 2010 1:55 AM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: Help my computer has a security alert virus
Amy,
Stopzilla is an anti-spyware and anti-adware defense program which has
always been the top rated such product since people have started surfing the
web. It essentially gives you real-time control of your computer and will
fight anything that tries to take away this control and download without
your permission!
McAfee used to have a product called “Stinger” or “Striker,” but hard to
believe they just gave it away. For some reason most of the commercial
products out there are all focused on virus profiles only. They will do an
excellent job of telling you what has got you … and how bad it is … but I
prefer preventative medicine … not an autopsy! iS3 created Stopzilla. They
are out of Palm Beach County Florida and will provide a support window for
you on the phone for probably 15 hours a day.
http://www.is3.com/home.do
I
now have lifetime licensing on all machines we own.
If the machine is badly compromised it may take Stopzilla a week to
stabilize the situation, but it will do this by preventing rogue processes
and websites from downloading to your machine without your permission or
writing to your computer’s registry without permission. (It is quite
surprising to look at the logging of the stuff it stops! You would never
know!)
I
also still run anti-virus, but it picks up very little after-the-fact … and
nothing serious!
I
can’t recommend Stopzilla enough!
Best Regards!
John
John Anderson, CPA,
CISA, CISM, CGEIT, CITP
Financial & IT
Business Consultant
14
Tanglewood Road
Boxford, MA
01921
jcanderson27@comcast.net
978-887-0623 Office
978-837-0092 Cell
Bob Jensen’s
threads on computer and networking security are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
How will IFRS affect the 2011 CPA Examinations?
If I Pass CPA Exam Parts in 2010, Will I Have to Pass Them Again in 2011?
Click Here
http://goingconcern.com/2010/06/if-i-pass-cpa-exam-parts-in-2010-will-i-have-to-pass-them-again-in-2011/#more-12870
Bob Jensen's threads on the CPA examination are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob1.htm#010303CPAExam
Bob Jensen's threads on accountancy careers
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob1.htm#careers
My Life Beyond the Numbers by James Don Edwards
On June 14, 2010 (today) I opened an unexpected package from James Don
Edwards that totally surprised me.
The book inside the package was entitled My Life Beyond the Numbers (ISBN
978-0-615-36164-2, March 2010)
James Don is the best "boss" I ever had --- while I was a newly minted
assistant professor at Michigan State University. In spite of my youth and
inexperience he gave me two doctoral seminars to teach, possibly because I was
an accountics researcher in those days when accountics research was being
revived after over 60 years of dormancy. James Don was never an accountics
professor, but he anticipated how accountics would become dominant in academic
accountancy henceforth and perhaps forever more ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm
You can read the Hall of Fame entry for James Don Edwards at
Click Here
http://fisher.osu.edu/departments/accounting-and-mis/the-accounting-hall-of-fame/membership-in-hall/james-don-edwards/
His many honors and awards include an honorary doctorate from the University
of Paris.
In 1998, he was invited to the Georgia House of Representatives to hear a
resolution honoring him and recognizing his contributions to the field of
accounting and the State of Georgia. The University of Georgia Foundation
recently established a Chair of Corporate Accounting Policy in his honor ---
http://www.legis.state.ga.us/legis/1997_98/fulltext/hr738.htm
One of his areas of expertise is the history of the accounting profession in
the United States.
I've not yet read his latest book I just received, but I'm looking forward to
chapters like "Oxford and Sir Edward Heath."
Don was on a first name basis with some of the most powerful people in the
world.
He also served tirelessly for the American Accounting Association, including
serving as its President 1970-71.
During a period when the University of Michigan (in the shadows of Bill
Paton) totally dominated Michigan State University in doctoral programs
and faculty research in accountancy, James Don raised the money and recruited
some the outstanding doctoral students in our history. To name a few who joined
the Academy at MSU we have Roger Hermanson, Gene Comiskey, Paul Pacter, Bill
Kinney, Bob May, Jim McKeown, Barry Cushing, and others too numerous to mention
here. And there were of course other outstanding faculty and doctoral students
he recruited for the University of Georgia.
I am proud to consider James Don Edwards one of my very best friends. I wish
he and Clara an long and happy life, and I especially wish Clara a total
successful recovery from her new total hip. Her lovely picture is on the cover
of the book alongside her partner in life. Clara is an original Iron Magnolia.
June 15, Message from Bob Jensen
HI David,
The publisher is listed in the book as Terrill Publishing, but I cannot
find this company’s Web page. Don owns the copyright. The name Terrill
appears in his genealogy, which makes me suspicious.
I’ve contacted Don for more details. This is a very, very personal book
(in most ways a scrap book) that he might’ve paid to have published with
only a very limited number of copies for friends. I really do not know at
this point and will wait for his reply.
The book has quite a bit about Don’s international travels from going to
China as a Marine in WW II to visiting scholar lecturing sabbaticals in
Italy and Oxford plus shorter stints all over the world. Don had a bold way
of working his way into private and public sector executive suites,
including a major stint on Andersen’s Board that oversaw the acrimonious
split of Andersen into Andersen Consulting and Andersen’s mainline
accounting division.
Don is a powerful man with an equally powerful ego. He’s a wealthy man
who invested well and enjoyed dining in world palaces yet has always lived
in humble houses well below what he could afford. He dominates conversations
and yet remembers every word you squeeze into the conversation. He has a
dominant presence whenever he’s interacting with people. If he’d been a
literature professor he would’ve become a university president.
Don is neither a typical scholar nor researcher, but he’s worked very
well in joint projects (books and papers and services) with people who
respected the skills he brought to the table, especially leadership skills
and fund raising skills.
One thing I always admired about Don and Clara is that their friends were
and still are always welcome at their home and at their table. When I first
started working at MSU, we often made random and unannounced visits to their
home and felt genuinely welcome on each and every visit. They’re the type of
people who will beg you to stay for dinner.
Don is one of those people who, when the time comes for his funeral,
hundreds upon hundreds of former students, former colleagues, former working
partners, and many, many friends will show up from all over the world.
Fortunately Don and Clara are still in very good health and will probably
attend many more AAA annual meetings for years to come, I don’t think he and
Clara have ever missed one AAA annual meeting in over five decades.
Don himself really reads like the personal scrapbook he’s written. He was
a born leader who perhaps missed his calling to be a university president.
But he succeeded greatly in promoting accountancy in the world’s Academy.
He’s also a religious man who prefers ice cream to the demon rum.
Generally you can’t take the Baptist upbringing out of the boy or man. In
his book Don relates about the exceptional wines offered in the home
(palace) of Baron Edmund Rothschild in Switzerland. But you know that down
deep James Don Edwards and Clara would’ve preferred being offered homemade
ice cream from a Louisiana bayou.
Don is still active in a golf foursome that still includes Accounting
Hall of Famers Herb Miller and Denny Beresford, both of whom became
affiliated with the University of Georgia because of abiding friendships
with their leader Don Edwards.
Bob Jensen
June 15, Reply from Bob Jensen
Hi David,
Don Edwards just telephoned me and told me a bit about the history of
this book. It was a book that his grandchildren begged him to write. He
privately published enough copies to send to some friends and family.
But in this telephone call I persuaded him to contact a Web specialist at
the University of Georgia (where he still goes into the office three times a
week). I suggested that the book be saved in as a PDF file and then served
up by the University of Georgia.
Don is now thinking about having the book served up on a Web site. He’s
taking time to think about it since it was not meant to be available to
anybody other than friends and family. However, knowing Don like I do, I
think he will follow up on my suggestion.
I, of course, will broadcast the link to the world once there is a link,
because I respect Don both as a friend and as a leader of our craft.
Bob Jensen
Amazing Disgrace
I have written repeatedly about the virtual lack of validity checking of
research published in the academy's leading accounting research journals ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
Validity checking is probably highest for articles published in physical
science research journals and is improving for social science research journals.
There also is aggressive validity checking in some areas of humanities, notably
history.
"Amazing Disgrace," by Scott McLemee, Inside Higher Ed, May 19,
2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/mclemee/mclemee290
Publish Poop or Perish
"We Must Stop the Avalanche of Low-Quality Research," by Mark Bauerlein,
Mohamed Gad-el-Hak, Wayne Grody, Bill McKelvey, and Stanley W. Trimble,
Chronicle of Higher Education, June 13, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/article/We-Must-Stop-the-Avalanche-of/65890/
Everybody agrees that scientific research is
indispensable to the nation's health, prosperity, and security. In the many
discussions of the value of research, however, one rarely hears any mention
of how much publication of the results is best. Indeed, for all the regrets
one hears in these hard times of research suffering from financing problems,
we shouldn't forget the fact that the last few decades have seen astounding
growth in the sheer output of research findings and conclusions. Just
consider the raw increase in the number of journals. Using Ulrich's
Periodicals Directory, Michael Mabe shows that the number of "refereed
academic/scholarly" publications grows at a rate of 3.26 percent per year
(i.e., doubles about every 20 years). The main cause: the growth in the
number of researchers.
Many people regard this upsurge as a sign of
health. They emphasize the remarkable discoveries and breakthroughs of
scientific research over the years; they note that in the Times Higher
Education's ranking of research universities around the world, campuses in
the United States fill six of the top 10 spots. More published output means
more discovery, more knowledge, ever-improving enterprise.
If only that were true.
While brilliant and progressive research continues
apace here and there, the amount of redundant, inconsequential, and outright
poor research has swelled in recent decades, filling countless pages in
journals and monographs. Consider this tally from Science two decades ago:
Only 45 percent of the articles published in the 4,500 top scientific
journals were cited within the first five years after publication. In recent
years, the figure seems to have dropped further. In a 2009 article in Online
Information Review, Péter Jacsó found that 40.6 percent of the articles
published in the top science and social-science journals (the figures do not
include the humanities) were cited in the period 2002 to 2006.
As a result, instead of contributing to knowledge
in various disciplines, the increasing number of low-cited publications only
adds to the bulk of words and numbers to be reviewed. Even if read, many
articles that are not cited by anyone would seem to contain little useful
information. The avalanche of ignored research has a profoundly damaging
effect on the enterprise as a whole. Not only does the uncited work itself
require years of field and library or laboratory research. It also requires
colleagues to read it and provide feedback, as well as reviewers to evaluate
it formally for publication. Then, once it is published, it joins the
multitudes of other, related publications that researchers must read and
evaluate for relevance to their own work. Reviewer time and energy
requirements multiply by the year. The impact strikes at the heart of
academe.
Among the primary effects:
Too much publication raises the refereeing load on
leading practitioners—often beyond their capacity to cope. Recognized
figures are besieged by journal and press editors who need authoritative
judgments to take to their editorial boards. Foundations and government
agencies need more and more people to serve on panels to review grant
applications whose cumulative page counts keep rising. Departments need
distinguished figures in a field to evaluate candidates for promotion whose
research files have likewise swelled.
The productivity climate raises the demand on
younger researchers. Once one graduate student in the sciences publishes
three first-author papers before filing a dissertation, the bar rises for
all the other graduate students.
The pace of publication accelerates, encouraging
projects that don't require extensive, time-consuming inquiry and evidence
gathering. For example, instead of efficiently combining multiple results
into one paper, professors often put all their students' names on multiple
papers, each of which contains part of the findings of just one of the
students. One famous physicist has some 450 articles using such a strategy.
In addition, as more and more journals are
initiated, especially the many new "international" journals created to serve
the rapidly increasing number of English-language articles produced by
academics in China, India, and Eastern Europe, libraries struggle to pay the
notoriously high subscription costs. The financial strain has reached a
critical point. From 1978 to 2001, libraries at the University of California
at Los Angeles, for example, saw their subscription costs alone climb by
1,300 percent.
The amount of material one must read to conduct a
reasonable review of a topic keeps growing. Younger scholars can't ignore
any of it—they never know when a reviewer or an interviewer might have
written something disregarded—and so they waste precious months reviewing a
pool of articles that may lead nowhere.
Finally, the output of hard copy, not only print
journals but also articles in electronic format downloaded and printed,
requires enormous amounts of paper, energy, and space to produce, transport,
handle, and store—an environmentally irresponsible practice.
Let us go on.
Experts asked to evaluate manuscripts, results, and
promotion files give them less-careful scrutiny or pass the burden along to
other, less-competent peers. We all know busy professors who ask Ph.D.
students to do their reviewing for them. Questionable work finds its way
more easily through the review process and enters into the domain of
knowledge. Because of the accelerated pace, the impression spreads that
anything more than a few years old is obsolete. Older literature isn't
properly appreciated, or is needlessly rehashed in a newer, publishable
version. Aspiring researchers are turned into publish-or-perish
entrepreneurs, often becoming more or less cynical about the higher ideals
of the pursuit of knowledge. They fashion pathways to speedier publication,
cutting corners on methodology and turning to politicking and fawning
strategies for acceptance.
Such outcomes run squarely against the goals of
scientific inquiry. The surest guarantee of integrity, peer review, falls
under a debilitating crush of findings, for peer review can handle only so
much material without breaking down. More isn't better. At some point,
quality gives way to quantity.
Academic publication has passed that point in most,
if not all, disciplines—in some fields by a long shot. For example, Physica
A publishes some 3,000 pages each year. Why? Senior physics professors have
well-financed labs with five to 10 Ph.D.-student researchers. Since the
latter increasingly need more publications to compete for academic jobs, the
number of published pages keeps climbing. While publication rates are going
up throughout academe, with unfortunate consequences, the productivity
mandate hits especially hard in the sciences.
Only if the system of rewards is changed will the
avalanche stop. We need policy makers and grant makers to focus not on money
for current levels of publication, but rather on finding ways to increase
high-quality work and curtail publication of low-quality work. If only some
forward-looking university administrators initiated changes in hiring and
promotion criteria and ordered their libraries to stop paying for low-cited
journals, they would perform a national service. We need to get rid of
administrators who reward faculty members on printed pages and downloads
alone, deans and provosts "who can't read but can count," as the saying
goes. Most of all, we need to understand that there is such a thing as
overpublication, and that pushing thousands of researchers to issue
mediocre, forgettable arguments and findings is a terrible misuse of human,
as well as fiscal, capital.
Several fixes come to mind:
First, limit the number of papers to the best
three, four, or five that a job or promotion candidate can submit. That
would encourage more comprehensive and focused publishing.
Second, make more use of citation and journal
"impact factors," from Thomson ISI. The scores measure the citation
visibility of established journals and of researchers who publish in them.
By that index, Nature and Science score about 30. Most major disciplinary
journals, though, score 1 to 2, the vast majority score below 1, and some
are hardly visible at all. If we add those scores to a researcher's
publication record, the publications on a CV might look considerably
different than a mere list does.
Third, change the length of papers published in
print: Limit manuscripts to five to six journal-length pages, as Nature and
Science do, and put a longer version up on a journal's Web site. The two
versions would work as a package. That approach could be enhanced if
university and other research libraries formed buying consortia, which would
pressure publishers of journals more quickly and aggressively to pursue this
third route. Some are already beginning to do so, but a nationally
coordinated effort is needed.
Continued in article
Gaming for Tenure as an Accounting Professor ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTenure.htm
574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in Plato's Cave ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
- With a Rejoinder from the 2010 Senior Editor of The Accounting Review
(TAR), Steven J. Kachelmeier
- With Replies in Appendix 4 to Professor Kachemeier by Professors Jagdish
Gangolly and Paul Williams
- With Added Conjectures in Appendix 1 as to Why the Profession of
Accountancy Ignores TAR
- With Suggestions in Appendix 2 for Incorporating Accounting Research
into Undergraduate Accounting Courses
What went wrong in accounting/accountics research?
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
How to Learn Accounting On Your Own
June 19, 2010 message from Tom Hood
[tom@MACPA.ORG]
Greetings Colleagues,
I have two sons home for the summer asking if I
know of any great resources to help them get ahead of Intermediate
Accounting as they approach the fall semester. I figured I would go to the
best source I know of to help them out – these two listservs.
So can you direct me to any on-line and other
resources that may get them studying for Intermediate Accounting I and
Intermediate Accounting II?
Also, what advice would you give them on how to
approach these courses (one is in I and the older in II)?
I will also be sharing this on our student site…
On another note – we are working in an
International Pavilion on CPA Island in Second Life and our Accounting
Eductaion Pavilion (see details at
www.cpaisland.com
and
www.slacpa.org ).
We continue to offer free kiosks with links to your
colleges and universities and free areas to meet as classes. We have an
interne working this summer who can give you a demo and show you around –
just send an e-mail to my attention ad mention the CPA Island.
Thanks,
Warmest regards,
Tom
Tom Hood, CPA.CITP CEO & Executive Director
Maryland Association of CPAs Business Learning Institute
www.macpa.org
www.bizlearning.net
June 20, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Tom,
First of all consider video alternatives. More than 100 universities have
set up channels on YouTube ---
http://www.youtube.com/education?b=400
Next take a topic list from a typical intermediate accounting textbook,
some of which are free (not necessarily completely up to date for rapidly
changing standards) at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
Then search for the term "accounting" at
http://www.youtube.com/education?b=400
Scroll down to find videos that might be relevant to intermediate accounting
topics. Some of these videos are more up to date than even the latest
textbooks.
Some of these videos are from the top teachers or top CPA firm leaders (like
Jim Turley's videos) in the world.
Also note that if you search out the instructor (usually found at her/his
university) you will often find more course materials available for
downloading. Also email messages to these instructors may result in more
shared learning materials.
But more importantly, Tom, consider the goals of your two sons in
studying for intermediate accounting. The overriding goal of an intermediate
accounting student is to eventually pass the CPA examination. For studying
intermediate accounting I would have your sons dig directly into a CPA
examination review course and focus on the answers to CPA examination
questions in the topical areas identified above in intermediate accounting
textbooks. They have to pick and chose topics found in an intermediate
accounting textbook, because many CPA examination questions come from other
courses such as advanced accounting and governmental accounting and tax
accounting and managerial accounting.
A free CPA examination review package, complete with practice questions,
answers, and examinations, is available at
http://cpareviewforfree.com/
If you want more video review modules for the CPA examination, then a
commercial package is probably better ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob1.htm#010303CPAExam
There are some topics that are probably not totally up to date in even
the latest available intermediate accounting textbooks. One is IFRS
although, unless your sons will be taking intermediate accounting from an
IFRS nut, I would probably not worry too much about technical IFRS problems
on the CPA examination in the near future. However, great free materials for
learning IFRS are available at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#IFRSlearning
In a typical intermediate accounting two semester sequence, much of the
first semester is spent reviewing basic accounting (especially in
universities that receive a large number of community college transfer
students). If your sons need video reviews of basic accounting, I highly
recommend Susan Crosson's video lectures. The links are at the bottom of the
page at
http://www.youtube.com/SusanCrosson
Look for "Financial Videos Organized by Topic."
Members of the American Accounting Association, including student
members, can find some instructional helper materials at the AAA Commons ---
http://commons.aaahq.org/pages/home
Click on the menu choice "Teaching" and then "Browse resources."
Implied in all the above recommendations is a learning pedagogy that
pretty much entails memory aiding and abetting in a traditional manner
(study the problems and then study the textbook answers). At the other
extreme there is better and longer-lasting metacognitive learning such as
the award-winning BAM pedagogy (for an intermediate accounting two-course
sequence) invented by Catanach, Croll, and Grinacker ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/265wp.htm
This pedagogy is more like the real world where your supervisor gives you a
problem to solve and you go out and solve it any way you can. You can study
BAM's problems, but there are no answers provided to study. Students have to
teach themselves by seeking out the answers from anywhere in the world.
Although the BAM pedagogy would be much more time consuming for your
sons, you can probably get the Hydromate Case and some of the instructional
support materials from Tony Catanach ---
anthony.catanach@villanova.edu
If Tony is not available, Noah Barsky can help ---
noah.barsky@villanova.edu
By the way, at the University of Virginia, where the BAM pedagogy was
born, the passage rate on the CPA examination rose dramatically after
switching to the BAM pedagogy in intermediate accounting, This is not
surprising since you remember best those things you had to learn on your
own. Of course many students looking for an easy way out hate the BAM
pedagogy.
Bob Jensen
June 20, 2010 reply from
AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
I don't teach Intermediate (have done, but my
involvement now is in managerial). However, I am the advisor for our
accounting concentrators, and have quite a lot of contact with faculty who
DO teach Intermediate, and the students who are taking it. I think that the
primary problem I see (and hear from students) is the fact that most take
Intermediate after a "hiatus" from the first Financial Accounting (or
Principles) course. Typically of students, they've forgotten a lot of what
they learned. Although Intermediate does some "reviewing" it really expects
preparation and "remembering" from the students. The pace is pretty fast,
and the demands are heavy. It is not for the faint of heart. I tell the
students that in my opinion the two Intermediate courses are the hardest AC
courses they'll take. After those, I found Advanced, or Audit, to be far
less demanding.
I suggest two resources to them to "brush up" on
the basics. First is the ALEKS software. Our students buy it for the
Financial course to review the accounting cycle and basic concepts. So they
have it already. They can dig it out of the back of that drawer and use it
to review for Intermediate (or buy it again - it isn't that expensive).
Another resource I recommend (and I have been using this in various courses
for probably more than 20 years) is the latest edition of Anthony & Breitner
"Essentials of Accounting." In this electronic age, I still recommend the
luddite's favorite "programmed textbook" version. It's a workbook - actually
pretty thin, less than half an inch, not like one of these massive CPA
review "workbooks" - where the students read a few lines, answer a question,
check their answer, go back if they missed it, move forward if they got it.
I believe it is designed so that they can go thru the entire thing in
something like 25 hours. It reviews everything through the Statement of Cash
Flows - basic cycle, sales and receivables, inventory, debt, etc. If they go
thru the entire workbook they'll be up to speed to handle the Intermediate
work. They can carry it with them on the train or bus when they're going to
work during the summer and study in half-hour bits.
It's the catch-up that really staggers a lot of
students at the beginning. They'll talk about feeling overwhelmed at the
mountain of material they're covering - like the two-year-old trotting along
at top speed trying to keep up with a hurrying adult at the shopping mall.
"Hey, wait for me!"
p The essence of wisdom ... is to avoid acting
rashly, in the belief that you are running out of time. You are not. David
Ignatius, "The Increment"
Patricia A. Doherty
Department of Accounting
Boston University School of Management
595 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, MA 02215
Bob Jensen's threads on online training and education alternatives are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Crossborder.htm
Requiring four "A-Level" accountics journal
publications for tenure puts a small college well ahead of the the leading
research universities, virtually none of whom require four such hits at
the A-Level (see Table 1 below).
Accountics is the mathematical
science of values.
Charles Sprague [1887] as quoted by McMillan [1998, p. 1]
You can read about how "accountics" was dormant between 1887 and 1958. A perfect
storm revived accountics to where it quickly came to dominate the leading
academic accounting research journals, doctoral programs, and publication
requirements for promotion, performance evaluation, and tenure after 1958 ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm
(Accounting
Historians Journal)
Question that I posed on the AECM Listserv of
international accounting educators and researchers:
Do you really, really want to become a non-tenured accounting professor?
Others on the AECM might be interested in your
answers to the two questions stated below.
But if you prefer, please send your answers to
me privately. I will respect the confidential nature of your reply unless you
give me permission to share the name of your college or university in terms of
these tenure criteria for accounting programs ---
rjensen@trinity.edu
A College President Changes the Tenure Rules
of the Road
Tenure Decisions: Does your college have a minimum quota for publication
in the Top Ten Academic research journals?
There are various published rankings of academic
accounting research journals, most of which are "accountics" journals that
require accepted articles to be rooted in mathematics and statistics. Some
rankings and references to rankings are provided at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#JournalRankings
David Wood and his BYU colleagues also rank
accounting research programs based upon publication records of those programs in
leading accounting research journals ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1337755
This study makes novel contributions to ranking accounting research programs
constructed from publication counts in top journals ("AOS, Auditing, BRIA, CAR,
JAE, JAR, JATA, JIS, JMAR, RAST, and TAR").
Other research publications in such journals as the
Accounting Historians Journal,
case research journals,
Critical Perspectives in Accounting,
Journal of
Accountancy,
Management
Accounting,
Issues in
Accounting Education, are excluded in the BYU study and hence did not
impact of the BYU rankings of top accounting research programs in the academy.
A College President Changes the Tenure Rules
of the Road
In the above context I received the following (slightly edited) disturbing
message from a good friend at a college that has a very small accounting
education program (less than 25 masters program graduates in accounting
annually). The college is not in the Top 50 business schools as ranked by
US News or Business Week or the WSJ. Nor does the program have
a doctoral program and is not even mentioned as having a an accounting research
program ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1337755
The message reads as follows (slightly edited):
Bob,
Our
College's President just contacted our non-tenured accounting faculty.
He gave them a short list of “Accountics” journals that they have to publish
in order to get tenure. The list consists of the usual (A-Level) suspects – JAR,
TAR, JAE, AOS, JATA, CAR, Auditing – A Journal of Practice and Theory,
and a handful more. He categorically told them that they need to have at
least 4 articles in those journals to be successful in getting tenure.
Just
thought you should know!
I hope
you and Erika are doing well. I always look forward to you Tidbits and
photos that accompany them. Of course, I also follow you on the AECM
listserve.
Best
Regards
XXXXX
Jensen Comment
I would not classify AOS as an accountics journal, although its future is
a bit uncertain following the recent death of its founder and long-time editor
Anthony Hopwood. I would classify it more as a societal/philosophical journal
for accountancy research as very broadly defined. However, the other "usual
suspects" are A"A-Level" accountics journals that virtually require sophisticated
mathematics and statistics applications in accounting research for publication
acceptance. On average these journals reject 80%-90% of the submissions.
Be that as it may, a follow up conversation with
Professor XXXXX reveals that this "four top accountics journal requirement" is
an abrupt change in tenure criteria at the college in question. Publication has
been required up to now, but there was no minimum number like four and
publications that counted could all be in journals like accounting history
journals, case research journals, applied research journals like Management
Accounting/Journal of Accountancy, and education research journals like
Issues in Accounting Education.
Requiring four "A-Level"
accountics journal publications for tenure puts a small college well ahead of
the the leading research universities, virtually none of whom require four such
hits at the A-Level (see Table 1 below).
Question 1
I'm interested in first of all finding out if your college has a minimum number,
for tenure, of "accounting research" publications even though it might not
require that these be the "Top 10" accountics research journals plus AOS?
It seems to be that a fixed minimum number is
absurd. It encourages an accounting researcher to split a really good research
paper artificially into parts for no purpose other than to increase the
publication count. It also discourages major research studies in favor of
quickies. It also seems to me that even the "Top 10" accounting research
universities would be better served with quality rather than quantity research
work. For example, suppose Eric Lie was a non-tenured research professor at the
University of Iowa. Eric wrote an award-winning research paper published in
Management Science (2005) that resulted in the 2007 American Accounting
Association Contribution to the Accounting Literature Award. It also landed him
among the 100 Most Influential People of the World Award by Time Magazine.
It would seem that this one research paper on options backdating is far more
significant than any four accountics research papers published in the same year
(2005). I doubt that any other accounting, finance, or business administration
professor in history has received this award from Time Magazine.
The policy also ignores how non-tenured faculty
can game the system by finding 12 or more co-authors who separately take charge
of one of the 12 studies. Then if four of the 12 studies make it into "Top 10"
accountics research journals, all 12 partners have better chances of obtaining
tenure in their respective universities. This is gaming the system if the
purpose of the partnering is only to increase the chances of getting at least
four of the "co-authored" papers into top accountics journals. This has been
popular among co-workers pooling lottery tickets, but it has dubious ethics for
research publication.
It would be funny if one of the 12 "co-authors"
was a family Chihuahua, Labrador or Golden Retriever.
Question 2
I am interested in secondly in finding out if your college allows, for tenure,
an unspecified number of "accounting research" publications other than the
"Top 10" accountics research journal publications plus AOS? Or could a
non-tenured accounting professor get tenure with only a "significant number" of
research publications in such journals as the
Accounting Historians Journal,
case research journals,
Critical Perspectives in Accounting,
Journal of
Accountancy,
Management
Accounting,
Issues in
Accounting Education, etc.?
Others on the AECM might be interested in your
answers to the above two questions.
But if you prefer, please send your answers to
me privately. I will respect the confidential nature of your reply unless you
give me permission to share the name of your college or university in terms of
these tenure criteria for accounting programs ---
rjensen@trinity.edu
Thanks in advance
PS
In general I oppose using the AECM for formal survey studies, because this type
of thing can get out of hand. However, this is a highly informal inquiry that
should be of interest to virtually all subscribers to the AECM. I encourage
subscribers to reply directly to the AECM.
June 2, 2010 reply from James R. Martin/University of South Florida
[jmartin@MAAW.INFO]
Bob, For another paper with lots of advice for
Ph.D. students and new faculty see Beyer, B., D. Herrmann, G. K. Meek and E.
T. Rapley. 2010. What it means to be an accounting professor: A concise
career guide for doctoral students in accounting. Issues In Accounting
Education (May): 227-244.
Jensen Comment
Here are some key quotations from the article
"What It Means to be an Accounting Professor:: A Concise Career Guide for
Doctoral Students in Accounting," by Brooke Beyer, Don Herrmann, Gary K.
Meek, and Eric T. Rapley, Issues in Accounting Education, May 2010 ---
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getpdf/servlet/GetPDFServlet?filetype=pdf&id=IAEXXX000025000002000227000001&idtype=cvips&prog=normal
ABSTRACT:
The purpose of this paper is to provide a concise career guide for current
and potential doctoral students in accounting and, in the process, help them
gain a greater awareness of what it means to be an accounting professor. The
guide can also be used by accounting faculty in doctoral programs as a
starting point in mentoring their doctoral students. We begin with
foundational guidance to help doctoral students better understand the “big
picture” surrounding the academic accounting environment. We then provide
specific research guidance and publishing guidance to help improve the
probability of publication success. Actions are suggested that doctoral
students and new faculty can take to help jump-start their academic careers.
We finish with guidance regarding some important acronyms of special
interest to doctoral students in accounting.
TABLE 1
Teaching and Research Expectations
of Faculty
Adopted from
Butler and Crack (2005)
Butler, A. W., and T. F. Crack. 2005. The
academic job market in finance: A rookie’s guide.
Financial Decisions
17
2:
1–17.

RESEARCH GUIDANCE
Research is the currency of academics. It is research,
not teaching, that drives the rewards for faculty at most universities
Hermanson 2008. This is the case not only for universities with doctoral
accounting programs, but also for many universities focusing solely on
undergraduate or master’s degrees in accounting. Hermanson 2008
provides
several reasons why this is the case including the scarcity of research
talent in comparison to teaching and that research is peer reviewed,
providing a better measure of quality. Regardless of the reasons,
doctoral students need to be aware of the importance of research and
place special emphasis in this area throughout their careers. In the
following section, we provide a summary of research advice commonly
provided to doctoral students through the mentoring process.
. . .
GMAT
GMAT scores are likely the single most important
admission criteria used by doctoral programs in selecting doctoral
candidates for admission. While selection committees carefully consider
other evidence including the applicant’s statement, work experience,
schools where the undergraduate and master’s degrees were received,
grade point average, and reference letters, the GMAT score provides a
consistent benchmark that many programs use as a starting point in their
decision process. Over half of the U.S. doctoral programs in accounting
have a stated minimum GMAT score of 650 or more. A score in the range of
700 or more (top 10 percent) is desirable to receive strong
consideration at many programs. The average GMAT score of the ADS
Scholars selected to begin their doctoral program in 2009 was 718 and
all of the candidates selected had a minimum GMAT score of 650.
Furthermore, some programs require a minimum quantitative score of 45 or
more (top 25 percent). Without strong quantitative skills, students can
struggle in graduate-level statistics and econometrics courses. While
the GMAT score is an important minimum benchmark in making initial
admissions decisions, it is less important as an indicator of overall
student success in a doctoral program. Doctoral program directors can
provide numerous examples of students with very high GMAT scores who
failed to complete the program. Likewise, some students with average
GMAT scores have gone on to be highly successful accounting researchers.
Similar to SAT/ACT scores for admission to college, the GMAT score is
important for admission into a doctoral accounting program, but becomes
progressively less important over one’s academic
career.
Jensen Comment
There are various published rankings of academic
accounting research journals, most of which are "accountics" journals that
require accepted articles to be rooted in mathematics and statistics. Some
rankings and references to rankings are provided at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#JournalRankings
David Wood and his BYU colleagues also rank
accounting research programs based upon publication records of those programs in
leading accounting research journals ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1337755
This study makes novel contributions to ranking accounting research programs
constructed from publication counts in top journals ("AOS, Auditing, BRIA, CAR,
JAE, JAR, JATA, JIS, JMAR, RAST, and TAR").
Other research publications in such journals as the
Accounting Historians Journal,
case research journals,
Critical Perspectives in Accounting,
Journal of
Accountancy,
Management
Accounting,
Issues in
Accounting Education, are excluded in the BYU study and hence did not
impact of the BYU rankings of top accounting research programs in the academy.
Opposition to Validity Questioning of Accountics Research ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on the sad state of accountancy doctoral programs in
North America ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
June 2, 2010 reply from Linda A Kidwell, University of Wyoming
[lkidwell@UWYO.EDU]
Back to your original questions, Bob, our
department has no set minimum number of hits in particular journals, but
rather a system of weighting journals. For example, the top tier journals
(the usual suspects) are worth more than sectional and other high quality
journals, which in turn are worth more than other journals and
presentations. The list and weightings were developed in a collaborative
process using various sources for rankings as well as our department mission
as guides. To be eligible for tenure, a candidate must have accrued a
certain number of points, so higher quality requires less quantity, though
we have to remind untenured faculty that hanging all their hopes on top tier
articles that may take 2 years to get accepted, if at all, is not likely to
do it alone if they have no lower tier articles to fill out their vitae.
They also can't earn it on low-quality alone: there must be at least some
high quality content. It's an imperfect system, but I think it strikes a
good balance between quality and quantity, doesn't set unrealistic
expectations, and allows those who don't do accountics research ample
opportunity for their work to be respected. Finally, it also helps at the
college T&P level, where we are the only non-doctoral department, and other
departments need some help seeing the role of practitioner articles in an
accounting vita.
June 21, 2010 message from accounting doctoral student Bergner, Jason M
[jason.bergner@uky.edu]
Bob,
I’ve just been turned on to your web site about
accounting, accountics, and teaching. I will continue to read but am very
interested so far. I recently had a piece published in Journal of
Accountancy on entering Ph.D. programs. I didn’t know if you knew of it
and/or would consider adding it to your site.
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Web/PursuingaPhDinAccounting
I just returned from the Tahoe conference where I
was besieged with “accountics” work and the pressure to get published in the
top journals. I’ve always been curious about the “other side” of this story.
I think your site is beginning to shed some light on this.
Thanks.
Jason
Jason Bergner
Doctoral Candidate
Office 355 MM
Douglas J. Von Allmen School of Accountancy
Gatton School of Business & Economics
University of Kentucky
June 21, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Jason,
Since the Journal of Accountancy article is free to the world, I don’t
see a need to copy parts of it into my Website. However, I will publish a
link to your fine work (somewhat of a tribute to Dan Stone as well) and
recommend that they carefully read the article at
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Web/PursuingaPhDinAccounting
The fact that you were a mathematics teacher probably gave you a leg up
in an accountics doctoral program.
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on accountancy doctoral programs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
Accounting Program Rankings in Academe
The top ranked accounting programs do not set a
four-hit minimum number of A-Level publications for tenure. In fact the rankings
below indicate that some things are more important to program quality,
especially in the eyes of firms that hire graduates, than research and
publication records of the faculty.
"While the World Implodes, Let’s Bicker About
Accounting Program Rankings," by Caleb Newquist, Going Concern, May
6, 2010 ---
http://goingconcern.com/2010/05/while-the-world-implodes-lets-bicker-about-accounting-program-rankings/
Despite
your 401k taking a
deuce and the entire continent of Europe about to
sink into the Atlantic, the Bloomberg Businessweek
Business School undergraduate speciality rankings
are out and the
accounting rankings are, shall we say,
interesting. Maybe no one is that worried about it but if sports play any
part in your like/dislike of a particular school, then there should be a few
words:
1 University of Notre Dame (Mendoza)
2 Brigham Young University (Marriott)
3 Emory University (Goizueta)
4 University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill (Kenan-Flagler)
5 Wake Forest University
6 Lehigh University
7 Boston College (Carroll)
8 University of California – Berkeley (Haas)
9 University of San Diego
10 Southern Methodist University (Cox)
11 Babson College
12 University of Washington (Foster)
13 University of Richmond (Robins)
14 Villanova University
15 Case Western Reserve University (Weatherhead)
16 University of Texas – Austin (McCombs)
17 University of Virginia (McIntire)
18 Cornell University
19 College of William & Mary (Mason)
20 New York University (Stern)
21 University of Southern California (Marshall)
22 Tulane University (Freeman)
23 Fordham University
24 Georgia Institute of Technology
25 Loyola University – Chicago
26 University of Illinois – Urbana Champaign
27 Ohio University
27 University of Denver (Daniels)
29 University of Texas – Dallas
30 University of South Carolina (Moore)
31 University of Connecticut
32 Boston University
33 Santa Clara University
34 University of Maryland (Smith)
35 Indiana University (Kelley)
36 Syracuse University (Whitman)
37 Washington University – St. Louis (Olin)
38 Binghamton University
39 University of Pennsylvania (Wharton)
40 Texas Christian University (Neeley)
41 University of Miami
42 University of Missouri – Columbia (Trulaske)
43 University of Michigan (Ross)
44 North Carolina State University
45 University of Wisconsin – Madison
46 Texas A&M University (Mays)
47 The College of New Jersey
48 University of Minnesota (Carlson)
49 Miami University (Farmer)
50 University of Georgia (Terry)
51 Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Sloan)
52 University of Delaware (Lerner)
53 Ohio Northern University (Dicke)
54 Seattle University (Albers)
55 Northern Illinois University
56 Michigan State University (Broad)
57 Georgetown University (McDonough)
58 California Polytechnic State University (Orfalea)
59 Loyola College in Maryland (Sellinger)
60 University at Buffalo
61 Bentley University
62 DePaul University
63 University of Iowa (Tippie)
64 Drexel University (LeBow)
65 Northeastern University
66 Marquette University
67 St. Joseph’s University (Haub)
68 University of Pittsburgh
69 University of Utah (Eccles)
70 University of Oregon (Lundquist)
71 Seton Hall University (Stillman)
72 Bowling Green State University
73 Kansas State University
74 Colorado State University
75 Louisiana State University (Ourso)
76 Baylor University (Hankamer)
77 University of Oklahoma (Price)
78 University of Colorado – Boulder (Leeds)
79 University of Massachusetts – Amherst (Isenberg)
80 James Madison University
81 George Washington University
82 University of Tennessee – Chattanooga
83 University of Houston (Bauer)
84 Xavier University (Williams)
85 Florida State University
86 John Carroll University (Boler)
87 University of Hawaii (Shidler)
88 Arizona State University (Carey)
89 Florida International University
90 University of Louisville
91 Bryant University
92 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (Lally)
93 Purdue University (Krannert)
94 Illinois State University
95 University of Arizona (Eller)
96 Texas Tech University (Rawls)
97 Hofstra University (Zarb)
98 Ohio State University (Fisher)
99 Clemson University
100 University of Florida (Warrington)
101 University of Akron
102 University of Arkansas – Fayetteville (Walton)
103 Butler University
104 University of Nebraska – Lincoln
105 University of Illinois – Chicago
106 University of Central Florida
107 Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University (Pamplin)
108 Carnegie Mellon University (Tepper)
109 Temple University (Fox)
110 Pennsylvania State University (Smeal)
111 Clarkson University
Jensen Comment
Although virtually all of the above universities have AACSB-accredited business
programs, many do not have the specialty AACSB-accredited accounting programs
---
https://www.aacsb.net/eweb/DynamicPage.aspx?Site=AACSB&WebKey=4BA8CA9A-7CE1-4E7A-9863-2F3D02F27D23
I've always had doubts whether AACSB accounting program accreditation benefits
exceed the costs.
"'U.S. News' May Shift Rankings Methodology," Inside Higher Ed,
June 7, 2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/06/07/qt#229379
U.S. News & World Report is considering several
changes in the methodology for its college rankings. Robert Morse, who
directs the rankings, discussed the possible changes and invited comment on
them
a blog post. . He said that the magazine may
combine a ranking by high school counselors with the peer ranking currently
done by college presidents -- one of the most controversial parts of the
rankings. He also wrote that the magazine may add yield -- the percentage of
accepted applicants who enroll -- to its formula, and may give more weight
to "predicted graduation rate," which gives credit to colleges that exceed
their expected rates.
Jensen Comment
Find a College
College Atlas ---
http://www.collegeatlas.org/
Among other things the above site provides acceptance rate percentages
Online Distance Education Training and Education ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Crossborder.htm
For-Profit Universities Operating in the Gray
Zone of Fraud (College, Inc.) ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm#ForProfitFraud
Bob Jensen's threads on ranking controversies
are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm#BusinessSchoolRankings
Video: Why Accountants Don't Run Startups ---
http://www.justin.tv/startuplessonslearned/b/262670582#r=zWvHyWU~&s=li
Seven-Course Certificate in Leadership Studies from the University of Iowa
"Teaching a Leader," by Jennifer Epstein, Inside Higher Ed, June
15, 2010
Career-minded college students (or their concerned
and hovering parents) are always in search of surefire ways to make their
résumés and transcripts stand out as they try to elbow out classmates for
full-time jobs after graduation.
Beyond the grades, internships, student
organizations, majors and minors that give employers a sense of what
students have learned and what they might be able to do, the University of
Iowa will this fall add a seven-course certificate in leadership studies,
aimed at making students more attractive to hiring managers in a down
“Leadership is one of the
top skills employers say they are looking for looking for,” said Kelley C.
Ashby, director of the Career Leadership Academy in the university’s
Pomerantz Career Center, which already offers four classes on leadership.
“We want students to have the academic component -- various theories of
leadership -- and we also want students to have practical experience to
apply what we’re teaching them.”
Though the university and
its College of Business had for years offered courses on leadership to
undergraduates, students and parents seemed to want more, “to know that
classes and experiences could translate into something tangible on their
transcript,” said David Baumgartner, assistant dean and director of the
career center.
Other institutions,
including
Northwestern University and
the
University of Wisconsin at Madison, have in the
last decade or so introduced leadership certificates open to undergraduates
in more than just their business schools.
At Iowa, the certificate
will consist of 21 credits -- the equivalent of seven standard Iowa courses.
All students will be required to take a core course, “Perspectives on
Leadership: Principles and Practices,” developed by faculty in the
university’s business, communication studies, education, political science
and philosophy departments, as well as by Ashby and a representative of the
university’s Office of Student Life. They will also have to choose one
pre-approved course from each of the following areas: self leadership, group
leadership, communication, cultural competency, and ethics and integrity.
After a student has taken
at least three courses, he or she can take on three credits of “experiential
course work” -- an internship, on-campus leadership position, or
service-learning course. The hope is that the theories of leadership that
students learn in the courses will be put into immediate use in leadership
positions.
While students generally
dive into internships, resident assistant positions or student group
presidencies without any specific knowledge on leadership, Ashby said, “we
want there to be more intention about why they do what they do when they’re
in those positions.”
Ashby said she anticipates
that about 50 students will sign up for the core course this fall, but
expects that, within a few years, as many as 300 undergraduates might be
pursuing the certificate at any one time. So far, she added, there’s no
clear pattern of who’s expressing the most interest -- no glut of liberal
arts majors hoping to make themselves more employable, and no onslaught of
hypercompetitive business majors.
“It’s for students where
it’s difficult to see, ‘Where’s my first job?’ and not just for the
management majors,” she said. “It’s for the nursing major trying to connect
the dots, the student interested in nonprofit management.” The program is
being housed in University College, which she described as Iowa’s “kind of
miscellaneous college,” rather than being pigeonholed into the College of
Business, where the career center is based.
Debra Humphreys, vice
president for communications and public affairs at the Association of
American Colleges and Universities, said that while “a lot of employers
aren’t going to know what this leadership certificate means, a student’s
ability to describe or demonstrate what they’ve learned and done could be
useful.” At the same time, she added, the certificate could “help the
student convey to the employer what they can do.”
But leadership isn’t
employers’ top priority in hiring recent graduates, said Ed Koc, director of
strategic and foundation research at the National Association of Colleges
and Employers. In his group’s latest survey of employers, leadership skills
ranked “about 10th on the list -- there are other things employers find more
important.”
While the certificate
could be “a good idea to the extent that employers looking for leadership
would point to the certificate on your resume to say that you ‘have it,’ ”
Koc said, “it doesn’t give you a big leg up unless it’s something you’re
able to leverage in your interview, if you get one.”
Jensen Comment One of the main complaints we hear from CPA firms and business
corporations that hire accounting graduates is that we're producing graduates
with little leadership aptitude and skills.
What future leaders need is increased communication skill and confidence in
relating with people. The old joke is that an extroverted accountant is one who
looks at your shoe laces rather than only his/her own shoe laces.
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies and innovations are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
Bill Pasewark asks and answers his own questions as the incoming editor of
the AAA's Issues in Accounting Education ---
Click Here
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getpdf/servlet/GetPDFServlet?filetype=pdf&id=IAEXXX000025000002000187000001&idtype=cvips&prog=normal&bypassSSO=1
Accounting Jobs Information (free site) ---
http://www.accountingjobshelp.com/
Thank you Kim Eaves for the heads up.
Bob Jensen's career helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob1.htm#careers
What's new on MAAW?
Multiple Choice Questions for Management Accounting
James Martin added a summary page of links to multiple choice questions for 14
management accounting topics at
http://maaw.info/ManagementAccountingMCQuestions.htm
"Rekindling the Debate: What’s Right and
What’sWrong with Masters of Accountancy Programs: The StaffAuditor’s Perspective,"
by Thomas J. Frecka and Philip M. J. Reckers, Issues in Accounting Education
, Vol. 25, 2010 pp. 215–226
Not available free
ABSTRACT:
Global commerce has undergone massive changes over the last two decades. No
less so has the worldwide public accounting profession. We have seen two
market crashes in the span of eight years, a host of financial reporting
fiascoes, and the demise of Arthur Andersen. Historical cost-based
accounting is giving way to fairvalue accounting, and International
Financial Reporting Standards are replacing national rules and regulations.
And, yet, not since the Accounting Education Change Commission 20 years ago
has there been a significant nationwide dialog regarding changing societal
needs and the adequacy of our collegiate accounting programs to meet those
needs. With this void in mind, the Education Committee of the American
Accounting Association launched in 2008 an initiative to ignite a nationwide
dialog of practitioners, academics, and other prominent stakeholders to
assess the quality and level of satisfaction with current Master’s of
Accountancy programs, the relevance of current coursework, and to identify
and prioritize future curriculum initiatives. The first phase of that
initiative was a survey conducted in the late spring of 2009 of more than
500 recent graduates of Master’s of Accountancy programs (auditors with two
to six years experience ); this article reports the findings of that survey.
In a nutshell, these young auditors were asked what was right and what was
wrong with Master’s of Accountancy programs from their perspective. This is
a first step in a larger effort to help give direction to program revisions
that would best serve the interests of students, the profession, and
society. The purpose of the survey is not to definitively resolve
outstanding controversies but rather to encourage further necessary debate.
Various interpretations of the findings of the survey are inevitable,
invited, and welcome. To that end, it is the authors’ intent to raise as
many questions in the following pages as those resolved. Over the last
decade academics have witnessed an endless litany of suggestions for
curriculum changes from individuals, committees, associations, and firms.
Unfortunately, those many recommendations have often been conflicting and
provide limited, if any, prioritization of what to add to existing curricula
and what to withdraw. Furthermore, we acknowledge that while this article
does not provide a substantive discussion of the necessarily complimentary
roles of university education, continuing professional education, and
on-the-job training, such issues must be included in future dialogs.
Thomas J. Frecka is a Professor at the University of Notre Dame, and
Philip M. J. Reckers is a Professor at Arizona State University.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory and education are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
Especially note
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#AcademicsVersusProfession
Congratulations to G. Peter Wilson
Pete Wilson of accounting at the Carroll School of Management at Boston College
is the 2010 recipient of the Distinguished Achievement in Accounting Education
Award from the AICPA ---
http://www.webcpa.com/news/Wilson-Earns-AICPA-Accounting-Education-Award-54319-1.html
Wilson received the award for his innovative
teaching practices, which have encouraged his students to pursue careers in
accounting. He is in the process of creating text and software targeted to
those new to accounting. When complete, the text/software will integrate
financial, managerial and tax reporting research, teaching and practice;
procedural and conceptual skills; and the interplay between a reporting
entity’s business and accounting decisions and decisions by users of its
accounting reports.
Tips about teaching, technology, and productivity
"You Can't Be Trusted If You're Trusted with Too Much," by Jason B. Jones,
Chronicle of Higher Education, June 2, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/You-Cant-Be-Trusted-If-Youre/24463/
The title of this post emerged at home a couple of
weeks ago: the
seven-year-old [YouTube] barked it at his mother
as she tried to juggle, simultaneously, helping him with a convoluted
craft/project and improving a policy that had been held up by the senate. He
complained that she was taking too long answering an e-mail; she responded
that he should trust that she was coming back; and he flipped the script:
"Mom, you can't be trusted if you're trusted with too much."
There's a tricky moment in any career: When you're
starting out, you want to be appreciated for your abilities, and are often
frustrated that you're not being asked to do certain things that you think
are within your skill set. Over time, you start to earn more respect from
your colleagues, and are given more responsibilities . . . until there comes
a time when you wake up in a panic every day about what you need to
accomplish vs. what can plausibly be done in the time that you have. (As my
wife said to my mother a few weeks ago: "I think there was a moment, back
when he was 4, when we got a little overconfident about what we could
plausibly do.")
I'm the last person in the world to dispense advice
about this--I have a shameful list of "stuff I should've finished more
quickly"--but I will risk three observations:
- An e-mail that says, "hey--I haven't forgotten
about X. Here's where things stand, and here's what I'm waiting on. Is
that ok?" is useful, especially for service/shared governance tasks.
Keeps people in the loop. (Obviously, you wouldn't want to overdo this,
either.)
- George wrote two posts about using your
calendar to stay on top of things: "Have
a life, with help from your calendar"
and
"Hit your deadlines, with help from your calendar".
Although they're pitched to the start of the year, the summer is an
excellent time to make sure your calendar accurately reflects the actual
commitments you've made.
- Donald E. Hall's
The Academic Self: An Owner's Manual
has a wealth of practical advice about how to translate academic
commitments--teaching, research, and service--into step-by-step projects
that can be captured on a calendar.
Nobody likes to say "no," especially to genuinely
cool things. But it's generally better to say no in advance, rather than to
say no by defaulting on things you care about.
How do you make decisions about choosing
projects?
"Lessons for New Professors," by Elizabeth Parfitt, Inside Higher
Ed, May 28, 2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2010/05/28/parfitt
Bob Jensen's Somewhat Dated Advice for New Faculty ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm
Higher Education Controversies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
"High-Profile Trader's Harsh Critique of For-Profit Colleges,"
Inside Higher Ed, May 27, 2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/05/27/qt#228602
Steven Eisman, the Wall Street trader who was
mythologized in Michael Lewis's
The Big Short as that rare person who saw the
subprime mortgage crisis coming and made a killing as a result, thinks he
has seen the next big explosive and exploitative financial industry --
for-profit higher education -- and he's making sure as many people as
possible know it. In
a speech Wednesday at the Ira Sohn Investment
Research Conference, an
exclusive
gathering at which financial analysts who rarely
share their insights publicly are encouraged to dish their "best investment
ideas," Eisman started off with a broadside against Wall Street's college
companies.
"Until recently, I thought that there would never
again be an opportunity to be involved with an industry as socially
destructive and morally bankrupt as the subprime mortgage industry," said
Eisman, of FrontPoint Financial Services Fund. "I was wrong. The For-Profit
Education Industry has proven equal to the task." Eisman's speech lays out
his analysis of the sector's enormous profitability and its questionable
quality, then argues that the colleges' business model is about to be
radically transformed by the Obama administration's plan to hold the
institutions accountable for the student-debt-to-income ratio of their
graduates. "Under gainful employment, most of the companies still have high
operating margins relative to other industries," Eisman said. "They are just
less profitable and significantly overvalued. Downside risk could be as high
as 50 percent. And let me add that I hope that gainful employment is just
the beginning. Hopefully, the DOE will be looking into ways of improving
accreditation and of ways to tighten rules on defaults." Stocks of the
companies appeared to fall briefly in the last hour of trading Wednesday,
after
news of Eisman's speech
made the rounds.
"Subprime goes to college: The new mortgage crisis — how students at
for-profit universities could default on $275 billion in taxpayer-backed student
loans," by Steven Eusnan, The New York Post, June 6, 2010 ---
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/subprime_goes_to_college_FeiheNJfGYtoSwmtl5etJP
Until recently, I thought that there would never again be an
opportunity to be involved with an industry as socially destructive
and morally bankrupt as the subprime mortgage industry. I was wrong.
The for-profit education industry has proven equal to the task.
The for-profit industry has grown at an extreme and unusual rate,
driven by easy access to government sponsored debt in the form of
Title IV student loans, where the credit is guaranteed by the
government. Thus, the government, the students and the taxpayer bear
all the risk, and the for-profit industry reaps all the rewards.
This is similar to the subprime mortgage sector in that the subprime
originators bore far less risk than the investors in their mortgage
paper.
Read more:
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/subprime_goes_to_college_FeiheNJfGYtoSwmtl5etJP#ixzz0q6iq9jsm
Until recently, I thought that there would never again be an
opportunity to be involved with an industry as socially destructive
and morally bankrupt as the subprime mortgage industry. I was wrong.
The for-profit education industry has proven equal to the task.
The for-profit industry has grown at an extreme and unusual rate,
driven by easy access to government sponsored debt in the form of
Title IV student loans, where the credit is guaranteed by the
government. Thus, the government, the students and the taxpayer bear
all the risk, and the for-profit industry reaps all the rewards.
This is similar to the subprime mortgage sector in that the subprime
originators bore far less risk than the investors in their mortgage
paper.
Read more:
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/subprime_goes_to_college_FeiheNJfGYtoSwmtl5etJP#ixzz0q6iq9jsm
Until recently, I thought that there would
never again be an opportunity to be involved with an industry as socially
destructive and morally bankrupt as the subprime mortgage industry. I was
wrong. The for-profit education industry has proven equal to the task.
The for-profit industry has grown at an
extreme and unusual rate, driven by easy access to government sponsored debt
in the form of Title IV student loans, where the credit is guaranteed by the
government. Thus, the government, the students and the taxpayer bear all the
risk, and the for-profit industry reaps all the rewards. This is similar to
the subprime mortgage sector in that the subprime originators bore far less
risk than the investors in their mortgage paper.
A student prepares for an online quiz at home
for the Universtity of Phoenix. In the past 10 years, the for-profit
education industry has grown 5-10 times the historical rate of traditional
post secondary education. As of 2009, the industry had almost 10% of
enrolled students but claimed nearly 25% of the $89 billion of federal Title
IV student loans and grant disbursements. At the current pace of growth,
for-profit schools will draw 40% of all Title IV aid in 10 years.
How has this been allowed to happen?
The simple answer is that they’ve hired every
lobbyist in Washington, DC. There has been a revolving door between the
people who work for this industry and the halls of government. One example
is Sally Stroup. In 2001-2002, she was the head lobbyist for the Apollo
Group — the company behind the University of Phoenix and the largest
for-profit educator. But from 2002-2006 she became assistant secretary of
post-secondary education for the Department of Education under President
Bush. In other words, she was directly in charge of regulating the industry
she had previously lobbied for.
From 1987 through 2000, the amount of total
Title IV dollars received by students of for-profit schools fluctuated
between $2 billion and $4 billion per annum. But when the Bush
administration took over, the DOE gutted many of the rules that governed the
conduct of this industry. Once the floodgates were opened, the industry
embarked on 10 years of unrestricted massive growth. Federal dollars flowing
to the industry exploded to over $21 billion, a 450% increase.
At many major-for profit institutions, federal
Title IV loan and grant dollars now comprise close to 90% of total revenues.
And this growth has resulted in spectacular profits and executive salaries.
For example, ITT Educational Services, or ESI, has a roughly 40% operating
margin vs. the 7%-12% margins of other companies that receive major
government contracts. ESI is more profitable on a margin basis than even
Apple.
This growth is purely a function of government
largesse, as Title IV has accounted for more than 100% of revenue growth.
Here is one of the more upsetting statistics.
In fiscal 2009, Apollo increased total revenues by $833 million. Of that
amount, $1.1 billion came from Title IV federally funded student loans and
grants. More than 100% of the revenue growth came from the federal
government. But of this incremental $1.1 billion in federal loan and grant
dollars, the company only spent an incremental $99 million on faculty
compensation and instructional costs — that’s 9 cents on every dollar
received from the government going toward actual education. The rest went to
marketing and paying executives.
Leaving politics aside for a moment, the other
major reason why the industry has taken an ever increasing share of
government dollars is that it has turned the typical education model on its
head. And here is where the subprime analogy becomes very clear.
There is a traditional relationship between
matching means and cost in education. Typically, families of lesser
financial means seek lower cost colleges in order to maximize the available
Title IV loans and grants — thereby getting the most out of every dollar and
minimizing debt burdens.
The for-profit model seeks to recruit those
with the greatest financial need and put them in high cost institutions.
This formula maximizes the amount of Title IV loans and grants that these
students receive.
With billboards lining the poorest
neighborhoods in America and recruiters trolling casinos and homeless
shelters (and I mean that literally), the for-profits have become
increasingly adept at pitching the dream of a better life and higher
earnings to the most vulnerable of society.
If the industry in fact educated its students
and got them good jobs that enabled them to receive higher incomes and to
pay off their student loans, everything I’ve just said would be irrelevant.
So the key question to ask is — what do these
students get for their education? In many cases, NOT much, not much at all.
At one Corinthian Colleges-owned Everest
College campus in California, students paid $16,000 for an eight-month
course in medical assisting. Upon nearing completion, the students learned
that not only would their credits not transfer to any community or four-year
college, but also that their degree is not recognized by the American
Association for Medical Assistants. Hospitals refuse to even interview
graduates.
And look at drop-out rates. Companies don’t
fully disclose graduation rates, but using both DOE data and
company-provided information, I calculate drop out rates of most schools are
50%-plus per year.
Default rates on student loans are already
starting to skyrocket. It’s just like subprime — which grew at any cost and
kept weakening its underwriting standards to grow.
The bottom line is that as long as the
government continues to flood the for-profit education industry with loan
dollars and the risk for these loans is borne solely by the students and the
government, then the industry has every incentive to grow at all costs,
compensate employees based on enrollment, influence key regulatory bodies
and manipulate reported statistics — all to maintain access to the
government’s money.
Read more:
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/subprime_goes_to_college_FeiheNJfGYtoSwmtl5etJP#ixzz0q6hwLIst
June 6, 2010 reply from
dgsearfoss@comcast.net
Hi Bob,
Equally as bad, if not worse, are the companies
that provide on-line courses to the military. They price their tuition at
exactly the amount that will be covered by the military, set horribly low
levels of expectation as reflected by the “testing” and “grading”, and
virtually none of the “credits” are transferrable to an accredited higher
education institution.
It is a scandal that should be dealt with harshly
by Congress.
Jerry
On May 4, 2010, PBS Frontline broadcast an hour-long video called College
Inc. --- a sobering analysis of for-profit onsite and online colleges and
universities.
For a time you can watch the video free online ---
Click Here
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/collegeinc/view/?utm_campaign=viewpage&utm_medium=toparea&utm_source=toparea
Bob Jensen's threads on many of the for-profit universities are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Crossborder.htm
Although there is a gray zone, for-profit colleges should not be confused
with diploma mills ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#DiplomaMill
Brainstorm on What For-Profit Colleges are Doing Right as Well as Wrong
"'College, Inc.'," by Kevin Carey, Chronicle of Higher Education,
May 10, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/College-Inc/23850/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
PBS broadcast a
documentary on for-profit higher education last
week, titled College, Inc. It begins with the slightly ridiculous
figure of
Michael Clifford, a former cocaine abuser turned
born-again Christian who never went to college, yet makes a living padding
around the lawn of his oceanside home wearing sandals and loose-fitting
print shirts, buying up distressed non-profit colleges and turning them into
for-profit money machines.
Improbably, Clifford emerges from the documentary
looking OK. When asked what he brings to the deals he brokers, he cites
nothing educational. Instead, it's the "Three M's: Money, Management, and
Marketing." And hey, there's nothing wrong with that. A college may have
deep traditions and dedicated faculty, but if it's bankrupt, anonymous, and
incompetently run, it won't do students much good. "Nonprofit" colleges that
pay their leaders executive salaries and run
multi-billion dollar sports franchises have long
since ceded the moral high ground when it comes to chasing the bottom line.
The problem with for-profit higher education, as
the documentary ably shows, is that people like Clifford are applying
private sector principles to an industry with a number of distinct
characteristics. Four stand out. First, it's heavily subsidized. Corporate
giants like the University of Phoenix are now pulling in hundreds of
millions of dollars per year from the taxpayers, through federal grants and
student loans. Second, it's awkwardly regulated. Regional accreditors may
protest that their imprimatur isn't like a taxicab medallion to be bought
and sold on the open market. But as the documentary makes clear, that's
precisely the way it works now. (Clifford puts the value at $10-million.)
Third, it's hard for consumers to know what they're
getting at the point of purchase. College is an experiential good;
reputations and brochures can only tell you so much. Fourth—and I don't
think this is given proper weight when people think about the dynamics of
the higher-education market—college is generally something you only buy a
couple of times, early in your adult life.
All of which creates the potential—arguably, the
inevitability—for sad situations like the three nursing students in the
documentary who were comprehensively ripped off by a for-profit school that
sent them to a daycare center for their "pediatric rotation" and left them
with no job prospects and tens of thousands of dollars in debt. The
government subsidies create huge incentives for for-profit colleges to
enroll anyone they can find. The awkward regulation offers little in the way
of effective oversight. The opaque nature of the higher-education experience
makes it hard for consumers to sniff out fraudsters up-front. And the fact
that people don't continually purchase higher education throughout their
lives limits the downside for bad actors. A restaurant or automobile
manufacturer that continually screws its customers will eventually go out of
business. For colleges, there's always another batch of high-school
graduates to enroll.
The Obama administration has made waves in recent
months by proposing to tackle some of these problems by implementing
"gainful
employment" rules that would essentially require
for-profits to show that students will be able to make enough money with
their degrees to pay back their loans. It's a good idea, but it also raises
an interesting question: Why apply this policy only to for-profits?
Corporate higher education may be the fastest growing segment of the market,
but it still educates a small minority of students and will for a long time
to come. There are plenty of traditional colleges out there that are mainly
in the business of preparing students for jobs, and that charge a lot of
money for degrees of questionable value. What would happen if the gainful
employment standard were applied to a mediocre private university that
happily allows undergraduates to take out six-figure loans in exchange for a
plain-vanilla business B.A.?
The gainful employment standard highlights some of
my biggest concerns about the Obama administration's approach to
higher-education policy. To its lasting credit, the administration has taken
on powerful moneyed interests and succeeded. Taking down the FFEL program
was a historic victory for low-income students and reining in the abuses of
for-profit higher education is a needed and important step.
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
The biggest question remains concerning the value of "education" at the micro
level (the student) and the macro level (society). It would seem that students
in training programs should have prospects of paying back the cost of the
training if "industry" is not willing to fully subsidize that particular type of
training.
Education is another question entirely, and we're still trying to resolve
issues of how education should be financed. I'm not in favor of "gainful
employment rules" for state universities, although I think such rules should be
imposed on for-profit colleges and universities.
What is currently happening is that training and education programs are in
most cases promising more than they can deliver in terms of gainful employment.
Naive students think a certificate or degree is "the" ticket to career success,
and many of them borrow tens of thousands of dollars to a point where they are
in debtor's prisons with their meager laboring wages garnished (take a debtor's
wages on legal orders) to pay for their business, science, and humanities
degrees that did not pay off in terms of career opportunities.
But that does not mean that their education did not pay off in terms of
life's fuller meaning. The question is who should pay for "life's fuller
meaning?" Among our 50 states, California had the best plan for universal
education. But fiscal mismanagement, especially very generous unfunded
state-worker unfunded pension plans, has now brought California to the brink of
bankruptcy. Increasing taxes in California is difficult because it already has
the highest state taxes in the nation.
Student borrowing to pay for pricey certificates and degrees is not a good
answer in my opinion, but if students borrow I think the best alternative is to
choose a lower-priced accredited state university. It will be a long, long time
before the United States will be able to fund "universal education" because of
existing unfunded entitlements for Social Security and other pension
obligations, Medicare, Medicaid, military retirements, etc.
I think it's time for our best state universities to reach out with more
distance education and training that prevent many of the rip-offs taking place
in the for-profit training and education sector. The training and education may
not be free, but state universities have the best chance of keeping costs down
and quality up.
"Wal-Mart Employees Get New College Program—Online," by Marc Parry,
Chronicle of Higher Education, June 3, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/Wal-Mart-Employees-Get-New/24504/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
The American Public University System
has been described as a higher-education version
of Wal-Mart: a publicly traded corporation that mass-markets moderately
priced degrees in many fields.
Now it's more than an analogy. Under a deal
announced today, the for-profit online university
will offer Wal-Mart workers discounted tuition and credit for job
experience.
Such alliances are nothing new; see these materials
from
Strayer
and
Capella for other examples. But Wal-Mart is the
country's largest retailer. And the company is pledging to spend $50-million
over three years to help employees cover the cost of tuition and books
beyond the discounted rate, according to the
Associated Press.
"What's most significant about this is that, given
that APU is very small, this is a deal that has the potential to drive
enrollments that are above what investors are already expecting from them,"
Trace A. Urdan, an analyst with Signal Hill Capital Group, told Wired
Campus. "Which is why the stock is up."
Wal-Mart workers will be able to receive
credit—without having to pay for it—for job training in subjects like ethics
and retail inventory management, according to the AP.
Wal-Mart employs 1.4 million people in the U.S.
Roughly half of them have a high-school diploma but no college degree,
according to
The New York Times. A department-level
manager would end up paying about $7,900 for an associate degree, factoring
in the work credits and tuition discount, the newspaper reported.
“If 10 to 15 percent of employees take advantage of
this, that’s like graduating three Ohio State Universities,” Sara Martinez
Tucker, a former under secretary of education who is now on Wal-Mart’s
external advisory council, told the Times.
"News Analysis: Is 'Wal-Mart U.' a Good Bargain for Students?" by Marc
Parry, Chronicle of Higher Education, June 13, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/article/Is-Wal-Mart-U-a-Good/65933/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
There might have been a Wal-Mart University.
As the world's largest retailer weighed its options
for making a big splash in education, executives told one potential academic
partner that Wal-Mart Stores was considering buying a university or starting
its own.
"Wal-Mart U." never happened. Instead, the retailer
chose a third option: a landmark alliance that will make a little-known
for-profit institution, American Public University, the favored
online-education provider to Wal-Mart's 1.4 million workers in the United
States.
A closer look at the deal announced this month
shows how American Public slashed its prices and adapted its curriculum to
snare a corporate client that could transform its business. It also raises
one basic question: Is this a good bargain for students?
Adult-learning leaders praise Wal-Mart, the
nation's largest private employer, for investing in education. But some of
those same experts wonder how low-paid workers will be able to afford the
cost of a degree from the private Web-based university the company selected
as a partner, and why Wal-Mart chose American Public when community-college
options might be cheaper. They also question how easily workers will be able
to transfer APU credits to other colleges, given that the university plans
to count significant amounts of Wal-Mart job training and experience as
academic credit toward its degrees.
For example, cashiers with one year's experience
could get six credits for an American Public class called "Customer
Relations," provided they received an "on target" or "above target" on their
last performance evaluation, said Deisha Galberth, a Wal-Mart spokeswoman. A
department manager's training and experience could be worth 24 credit hours
toward courses like retail ethics, organizational fundamentals, or
human-resource fundamentals, she said.
Altogether, employees could earn up to 45 percent
of the credit for an associate or bachelor's degree at APU "based on what
they have learned in their career at Wal-Mart," according to the retailer's
Web site.
Janet K. Poley, president of the American Distance
Education Consortium, points out that this arrangement could saddle Wal-Mart
employees with a "nontransferable coupon," as one blogger has described it.
"I now see where the 'trick' is—if a person gets
credit for Wal-Mart courses and Wal-Mart work, they aren't likely to be able
to transfer those to much of anyplace else," Ms. Poley wrote in an e-mail to
The Chronicle. Transferability could be important, given the high turnover
rate in the retail industry.
Inside the Deal Wal-Mart screened 81 colleges
before signing its deal with American Public University. One that talked
extensively with the retailer was University of Maryland University College,
a 94,000-student state institution that is a national leader in online
education. According to University College's president, Susan C. Aldridge,
it was during early discussions that Wal-Mart executives told her the
company was considering whether it should buy a college or create its own
college.
When asked to confirm that, Ms. Galberth said only
that Wal-Mart "brainstormed every possible option for providing our
associates with a convenient and affordable way to attend college while
working at Wal-Mart and Sam's Club," which is also owned by Wal-Mart Stores.
"We chose to partner with APU to reach this goal. We have no plans to
purchase a brick-and-mortar university or enter the online education
business," she said.
The Wal-Mart deal was something of a coming-out
party for American Public University. The institution is part of a
70,000-student system that also includes American Military University and
that largely enrolls active-duty military personnel. As American Public
turned its attention to luring the retail behemoth, it was apparently able
to be more flexible than other colleges and willing to "go the extra mile"
to accommodate Wal-Mart, said Jeffrey M. Silber, a stock analyst and
managing director of BMO Capital Markets. That flexibility included
customizing programs. APU has a management degree with courses in retail,
and its deans worked with Wal-Mart to add more courses to build a retail
concentration, said Wallace E. Boston, the system's president and chief
executive.
It also enticed Wal-Mart with a stable technology
platform; tuition prices that don't vary across state lines, as they do for
public colleges; and online degrees in fields that would be attractive to
workers, like transportation logistics.
Unlike American Public, Maryland's University
College would not put a deep discount on the table.
Credit for Wal-Mart work was also an issue, Ms.
Aldridge said.
"We feel very strongly that any university academic
credit that's given for training needs to be training or experience at the
university level," Ms. Aldridge said. "And we have some very set standards
in that regard. And I'm not certain that we would have been able to offer a
significant amount of university credit for some of the on-the-job training
that was provided there."
Awarding credit for college-level learning gained
outside the classroom is a long-standing practice, one embraced by about 60
percent of higher-education institutions, according to the most recent
survey by the Council for Adult And Experiential Learning. A student might
translate any number of experiences into credit: job training, military
service, hobbies, volunteer service, travel, civic activities.
Pamela J. Tate, president and chief executive of
the council, said what's important isn't the percentage of credits students
get from prior learning—a number that can vary widely. What's important, she
said, is that students can demonstrate knowledge. Workers might know how
they keep the books at a company, she explained. But that doesn't
automatically mean they've learned the material of a college accounting
course.
Karan Powell, senior vice president and academic
dean at American Public University system, said credit evaluation at her
institution "is a serious, rigorous, and conservative process." But will the
credits transfer? "Every college or university establishes its own
transfer-credit policies as they apply to experiential learning as well as
credit from other institutions," she said in an e-mail. "Therefore, it would
depend on the school to which a Wal-Mart employee wanted to transfer."
Affordable on $12 an Hour? Then there's the
question of whether low-wage workers will be able to afford the degrees. One
of the key features of this deal is the discount that Wal-Mart negotiated
with American Public.
"Wal-Mart is bringing the same procurement policies
to education that it brings to toothpaste," said John F. Ebersole, president
of Excelsior College, a distance-learning institution based in New York.
American Public University's tuition was already
cheap by for-profit standards and competitive with other nonprofit college
options. It agreed to go even cheaper for Wal-Mart, offering grants equal to
15 percent of tuition for the company's workers. Those employees will pay
about $11,700 for an associate degree and $24,000 for a bachelor's degree.
But several experts pointed out that public
colleges might provide a more affordable option.
The Western Association of Food Chains, for
example, has a partnership with 135 community colleges in the western United
States to offer an associate degree in retail management completely online,
Ms. Tate said. Many of the colleges also grant credit for prior learning.
Though the tuition varies by state, the average tuition cost to earn the
degree is about $4,500, she said. By contrast, she said, the American Public
degree is "really expensive" for a front-line worker who might make $12 an
hour.
"What I couldn't figure out is how they would be
able to afford it unless Wal-Mart was going to pay a substantial part of the
tuition," she said. "If not, then what you've got is this program that looks
really good, but the actual cost to the person is a whole lot more than if
they were going to go to community college and get their prior learning
credits assessed there."
How the retailer might subsidize its employees'
education is an open question. In announcing the program, Wal-Mart pledged
to spend up to $50-million over the next three years "to provide tuition
assistance and other tools to help associates prepare for college-level work
and complete their degrees."
Alicia Ledlie, the senior director at Wal-Mart who
has been shepherding this effort, told The Chronicle in an e-mail that the
company is "right now working through the design of those programs and how
they will benefit associates," with more details to be released later this
summer.
One thing is clear: The deal has a big financial
impact on American Public. Wal-Mart estimates that about 700,000 of its 1.4
million American employees lack a college degree.
Sara Martinez Tucker, a former under secretary of
education who is now on Wal-Mart's external advisory council, suggests 10 or
15 percent of Wal-Mart associates could sign up.
"That's 140,000 college degrees," she told The
Chronicle. "Imagine three Ohio State Universities' worth of graduates, which
is huge in American higher education."
Jensen Comment
This Wal-Mart Fringe Benefit Should Be Carefully Investigated by Employees
It does not sit well with me!
- If Wal-Mart would pay the same amount of benefit for online state
university degrees (e.g., the University of Wisconsin has over 100,000
online students) as the for-profit American Public University that
charges higher tuition even at a Wal-Mart discount, why would a student
choose the less prestigious and relatively unknown American Public
University? Possibly American Public wins out because it's easier to get
A & B grades with less academic ability and less work.
"Want a Higher G.P.A.? Go to a Private College: A 50-year
rise in grade-point averages is being fueled by private institutions, a
recent study finds," by Catherine Rampell. The New York Times, April 19,
2010 ---
http://finance.yahoo.com/college-education/article/109339/want-a-higher-gpa-go-to-a-private-college?mod=edu-collegeprep
- I certainly hope that the Wal-Mart contributions toward tuition can
be extended to state-supported colleges and universities having more
respected credits. For example, online degrees from the University of
Wisconsin or the University of Maryland are are likely much more
respected for job mobility and for acceptance into graduate schools.
- Giving credit for "job experience" is an absolute turn off for me.
Most adults have some form of "job experience." This is just not
equivalent to course credit experience in college where students face
examinations and academic projects. Weaker colleges generally use credit
for "job experience" ploy as a come on to attract applicants. But the
credits awarded for job experience are not likely to be transferrable to
traditional colleges and universities.
- The "discounted tuition" in this for-profit online program is likely
to be higher than the in-state tuition from state-supported colleges and
universities.
- I'm dubious about the standards for admission in for-profit colleges
as well as the rigor of the courses. Watch the Frontline video served up
by PBS.
On May 4, 2010, PBS Frontline broadcast an hour-long video called College
Inc. --- a sobering analysis of for-profit onsite and online colleges and
universities.
For a time you can watch the video free online ---
Click Here
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/collegeinc/view/?utm_campaign=viewpage&utm_medium=toparea&utm_source=toparea
- The American Public University System is accredited by the North
Central Association accrediting agency that is now under investigation
for weakened standards for college credits.
"Inspector General Keeps the Pressure on a Regional Accreditor," by Eric
Kelderman, Chronicle of Higher Education, May 27, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/article/Inspector-General-Keeps-the/65691/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
The inspector general of the U.S. Department of
Education has reaffirmed a recommendation that the department should
consider sanctions for the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central
Association of Colleges and Schools, one of the nation's major regional
accrediting organizations. In a
report this week, the Office of Inspector General
issued its final recommendations stemming from a
2009 examination of the commission's standards for
measuring credit hours and program length, and affirmed its earlier critique
that the commission had been too lax in its standards for determining the
amount of credit a student receives for course work.
The Higher Learning Commission accredits more than
1,000 institutions in 19 states. The Office of Inspector General completed
similar reports for two other regional accreditors late last year but did
not suggest any sanctions for those organizations.
Possible sanctions against an accreditor include
limiting, suspending, or terminating its recognition by the secretary of
education as a reliable authority for determining the quality of education
at the institutions it accredits. Colleges need accreditation from a
federally recognized agency in order to be eligible to participate in the
federal student-aid programs.
In its examination of the Higher Learning
Commission, the office looked at the commission's reaccreditation of six
member institutions: Baker College, DePaul University, Kaplan University,
Ohio State University, the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, and the
University of Phoenix. The office chose those institutions—two public, two
private, and two proprietary institutions—as those that received the highest
amounts of federal funds under Title IV, the section of the Higher Education
Act that governs the federal student-aid programs.
It also reviewed the accreditation status of
American InterContinental University and the Art Institute of Colorado, two
institutions that had sought initial accreditation from the commission
during the period the office studied.
The review found that the Higher Learning
Commission "does not have an established definition of a credit hour or
minimum requirements for program length and the assignment of credit hours,"
the report says. "The lack of a credit-hour definition and minimum
requirements could result in inflated credit hours, the improper designation
of full-time student status, and the over-awarding of Title IV funds," the
office concluded in its letter to the commission's president, Sylvia
Manning.
More important, the office reported that the
commission had allowed American InterContinental University to become
accredited in 2009 despite having an "egregious" credit policy.
In a letter responding to the commission, Ms.
Manning wrote that the inspector general had ignored the limitations the
accreditor had placed on American InterContinental to ensure that the
institution improved its standards, an effort that had achieved the intended
results, she said. "These restrictions were intended to force change at the
institution and force it quickly."
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
The most successful for-profit universities advertise heavily about credibility
due to being "regionally accredited." In some cases this accreditation was
initially bought rather than achieved such as by buying up a small, albeit still
accredited, bankrupt not-for-profit private college that's washed up on the
beach. This begs the question about how some for-profit universities maintain
the spirit of accreditation acquired in this manner.
Bob Jensen's threads on assessment are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
Government Aid Will Still Flow to For-Profit College Programs of Dubious
Quality
"Education Dept. Will Release Stricter Rules for For-Profits but Delays One on
'Gainful Employment'," by Kelly Fields and Jennifer Gonzalez, Chronicle of
Higher Education, June 15, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/article/Education-Dept-Will-Release/65958/
After an intense lobbying effort by for-profit
colleges, the Education Department announced Tuesday that it will postpone
the release of a rule that proprietary institutions said would shutter
thousands of their programs.
The rule, which would cut off federal student aid
to programs whose graduates carry high student-loan debt relative to their
incomes, is one of 14 that the department and college stakeholders have been
negotiating over the past eight months. The other regulations, including one
that would tighten a ban on incentive compensation for college recruiters,
will be made public Friday.
In a call with reporters Tuesday, an Education
Department official said the agency still plans to hold for-profits
accountable for preparing their graduates for "gainful employment," but
needs more time to develop an appropriate measure of that outcome. The
official said the proposal will be released later this summer, and will most
likely be included in a package of final rules due out in November.
"We have many areas of agreement where we can move
forward," Arne Duncan, the U.S. secretary of education, said in a statement.
"But some key issues around gainful employment are complicated, and we want
to get it right, so we will be coming back with that shortly."
The delay gives for-profit
colleges more time to fight the department's proposal to bar aid for
programs in which a majority of students' loan payments would exceed 8
percent of the lowest quarter of graduates' expected earnings, based on a
10-year repayment plan. The colleges have already spent hundreds of
thousands of dollars
pushing an alternative that would require programs
to provide prospective students with more information about their graduates'
debt levels and salaries.
Their lobbying and public-relations blitz has met
with mixed success. While the department has not yet abandoned plans to
measure graduates' debt-to-income ratios, the rules that will be released
Friday would require programs to disclose their graduation and job-placement
rates and median debt levels—the approach favored by for-profits.
A Welcome Delay Trace A. Urdan, an analyst with
Signal Hill Capital Group, said the delay in releasing the rest of the rule
suggested that "the department has heard the message from industry and
Congress, and that there was some overreaching."
"Clearly, trying to gather more data before
proceeding is being responsible," he added.
For-profit colleges have complained that the
department has refused to release the data it used to justify drafting the
rule, and have questioned whether they even exist.
The fight over gainful employment comes amid
increased federal scrutiny of the for-profit sector, which educates a
growing share of students and is highly dependent on federal student aid. On
Thursday, the education committee of the U.S. House of Representatives will
hold a hearing to examine whether accrediting agencies are doing enough to
ensure that students studying online are getting an adequate amount of
instruction for the degrees they earn. The hearing will focus on a recent
report by the Education Department's Office of Inspector General that
questioned the decision of the Higher Learning Commission of the North
Central Association of Colleges and Schools, one of the nation's major
regional accrediting organizations, to approve accreditation of American
InterContinental University, a for-profit college owned by the Career
Education Corporation. The Senate education committee follows with a hearing
next week focused on the growth of the for-profit sector and the risks that
may pose to taxpayers.
In a statement issued Tuesday, the chairman of the
Senate committee praised the proposed rules. "The federal government must
ensure that the more than $20-billion in student aid that these schools
receive is being well spent and students are being well informed and well
served," said Sen. Tom Harkin, Democrat of Iowa. "For-profit colleges must
work for students and taxpayers, not just shareholders."
Meanwhile, a top Republican on the panel, Sen.
Lamar Alexander, of Tennessee, called the disclosures that would be required
by the rules that will be released on Friday "much better than the first
approach on gainful employment." Mr. Alexander, a former secretary of
education, had threatened to offer an amendment to withhold the funds needed
to put the rule into effect if the department followed through with its
original proposal.
"Secretary Duncan is focusing on a real problem,"
he said. "Some students are borrowing too much and not getting enough value
for what they are paying."
Tougher Stance on Recruitment But if the department
is showing signs that it may soften its stance on gainful employment, it has
dug in its heels on another controversial issue: recruiter compensation.
During negotiations over the rules, the department proposed striking a dozen
"safe harbors" from a ban on compensating recruiters based on student
enrollment. It followed through with that proposal in the rules due out
Friday, while promising to provide guidance on what is—and isn't—allowed
under the ban.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on for-profit colleges operating in the gray zone of
fraud ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm#ForProfitFraud
"Ed Tech Trends to Watch in 2010," by Converge Staff, Converge
Magazine, June 14, 2010 ---
http://www.convergemag.com/classtech/2010-Ed-Tech-Trends.html
Bob Jensen's education technology threads
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
"Special Education Students Beat the Odds With Technology," by
Converge Staff, Converge Magazine, June 16, 2010 ---
http://www.convergemag.com/classtech/Special-Education-Students-Beat-the-Odds-With-Technology.html
Bob Jensen's threads on technology aids for handicapped learners are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Handicapped
"Want a Higher G.P.A.? Go to a Private College: A 50-year rise
in grade-point averages is being fueled by private institutions, a recent study
finds," by Catherine Rampell. The New York Times, April 19, 2010 ---
http://finance.yahoo.com/college-education/article/109339/want-a-higher-gpa-go-to-a-private-college?mod=edu-collegeprep
Over the last 50 years, college grade-point
averages have risen about 0.1 points per decade, with private schools
fueling the most grade inflation, a recent study finds.
The study, by Stuart Rojstaczer and Christopher
Healy, uses historical data from 80 four-year colleges and universities. It
finds that G.P.A.'s have risen from a national average of 2.52 in the 1950s
to about 3.11 by the middle of the last decade.
For the first half of the 20th century, grading at
private schools and public schools rose more or less in tandem. But starting
in the 1950s, grading at public and private schools began to diverge.
Students at private schools started receiving significantly higher grades
than those received by their equally-qualified peers -- based on SAT scores
and other measures -- at public schools.
In other words, both categories of schools inflated
their grades, but private schools inflated their grades more.
Based on contemporary grading data the authors
collected from 160 schools, the average G.P.A. at private colleges and
universities today is 3.3. At public schools, it is 3.0.
The authors suggest that these laxer grading
standards may help explain why private school students are over-represented
in top medical, business and law schools and certain Ph.D. programs:
Admissions officers are fooled by private school students' especially
inflated grades.
Additionally, the study found, science departments
today grade on average 0.4 points lower than humanities departments, and 0.2
points lower than social science departments. Such harsher grading for the
sciences appears to have existed for at least 40 years, and perhaps much
longer.
Relatively lower grades in the sciences discourage
American students from studying such disciplines, the authors argue.
"Partly because of our current ad hoc grading
system, it is not surprising that the U.S. has to rely heavily upon
foreign-born graduate students for technical fields of research and upon
foreign-born employees in its technology firms," they write.
These overall trends, if not the specific numbers,
are no surprise to anyone who has followed the debates about grade
inflation. But so long as schools believe that granting higher grades
advantages their alumni, there will be little or no incentive to impose
stricter grading standards unilaterally.
Buying grades is also common in some foreign universities ---
http://works.bepress.com/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=vincent_johnson
“Gaming for GPA” by Bob Jensen
So your goal in education is a gpa
That’s as close as possible to an average of A;
First you enroll in an almost unknown and easy private college
Where your transcript records accumulated knowledge.
But take the hardest courses in prestigious schools
Where you accumulate transfer credit pools;
Then transfer the A credits to your transcript cool
And bury the other credits where you were a fool.
And when the Great Scorer comes to write against your name
It’s not a question of whether you won or went lame;
You always win if you know how to play the game
And for a lifetime there’s no transcript record of your shame.
Bob Jensen's threads on grade inflation ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm#GradeInflation
And
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Assess.htm#RateMyProfessor
"CEO Interviews on CNBC," by Felix Meschke and Andy (Young Han) Kim
Nanyang, SSRN, June 20, 2010 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1627683
Thanks to Jim Mahar for this link.
Abstract:
This paper investigates whether media attention systematically affects stock
prices by analyzing price and volume reactions to 6,937 CEO interviews that
were broadcast on CNBC between 1997 and 2006. We document a significant
positive abnormal return of 162 basis points accompanied by abnormally high
trading volume over the [-2, 0] trading day window. After the interviews,
prices exhibit strong mean reversion; over the following ten trading days,
the cumulative abnormal return is negative 108 basis points. The pattern is
robust even after controlling for the announcements of major corporate
events and surrounding news articles. We also find that one standard
deviation larger abnormal viewership is associated with a 0.5% higher event
day abnormal return and 0.5% larger post-event reversals. Furthermore, we
find evidence that enthusiastic individual investors are more likely to
trade purely based on CNBC interviews not confounded by any events or news
articles. These price and volume dynamics suggest that the financial news
media is able to generate transitory buying pressure by catching the
attention of enthusiastic individual investors.
Jensen Comment
I suspect it is safe to extrapolate (somewhat at least) these results to CEO
comments in other similar and widely watched media services on stock picking in
such places as the WSJ, NYT, Yahoo Finance, Motley Fools, etc.
Bob Jensen's threads on the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#EMH
Somebody asked me how to find the cost of corporate fraud
From:
XXXXX
Sent: Wednesday, June 23, 2010 2:40 PM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: Cost of corporate frauds
Hi Bob,
I was tooling around your web
site, and there’s a lot of good stuff there… but I was wondering if you know
where I might find some stats on the cost of corporate fraud – how much is lost
on market cap, jobs lost, value of 401Ks, amount of debt left unpaid, or the
like.
If you can point me in the right
direction I would be most appreciative.
Regards,
XXXXX
From:
Jensen, Robert [mailto:rjensen@trinity.edu]
Sent: Wednesday, June 23, 2010 6:05 PM
To: XXXXX
Subject: RE: Cost of corporate frauds
If you
are seeking a dollar number I don’t think anything is available. In fact, I’m
not certain how to even define “cost of corporate fraud” in a measurable way
when you consider the higher order costs such as lost income of unemployed or
under employed victims., lost of business from suppliers, litigation costs,
media reporting costs, and thousands of other factors that are interactive and
not additive.
If you
find someone who claims to know the cost of corporate fraud I would be
immediately suspicious. Press reports often say the number is in the billions,
but that could be anywhere from $1 billion to $1 trillion.
Furthermore we only know about corporate frauds that have been detected. The
cost of undetected corporate fraud is a complete unknown.
Bob
Jensen
From:
XXXXX
Sent: Wednesday, June 23, 2010 6:07 PM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: RE: Cost of corporate frauds
Thanks for your response. I wasn’t finding any info,
so I was beginning to think it didn’t exist.
Do you know, though, if there is anything on a
particular fraud, e.g., Enron and Worldcom)?
June 25, 2010 reply from Bob
Jensen
Hi XXXXX,
I was
afraid you would never ask!
Try
the following links:
Fraud
Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm
"Video: Ted Talk – Sweat The Small Stuff:
Hilarious examples of Behavioral Economics," Simoleon Sense, June 9,
2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/video-ted-talk-sweat-the-small-stuff-hilarious-examples-of-behavioral-economics/
Bob Jensen's not-so-hilarious threads on EMH
controversies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#EMH
"Women to CPA Firms: I Quit!" by Joanne Cleaver, BNET, June 14,
2010 ---
http://blogs.bnet.com/management/?p=1594&tag=content;col1
Thank you Roger Collins for the Heads Up!
I’m no number cruncher, but even I can see that
something’s out of line here:
- Women earn 51 percent of accounting undergrad
degrees
- Women are 51 percent of employees at public
accounting firms
- Women are 17.4 percent of accounting firm
partners
Organizations like
Catalyst and the
American Institute
of Certified Public Accountants have long lamented
that women aren’t making partner. They’ve trotted out the predictable
bromides: flexible work schedules, more mentoring, and more female role
models. But none of that actually targets the crux of the problem: At what
point, exactly, do women quit? Why do they leave? And what can firms and
women do about it?
Recently, the two associations for women in
accounting — the
American Society of Women Accountants and the
American Women’s Society of CPA’s — teamed up with
my research firm to find out. We released the first
Accounting MOVE Report on April 15 (for a little
tax-accountant humor). Our top-line recommendation: With one program, firms
can retain women to partnership and immediately gain clients and revenue.
Really? More money now and more women in the long
run?
Yes. Here’s how: concentrate business development
training at the level where women are most likely to quit. For most firms,
that’s at the senior-manager level — the step right before partner. Our
study of 20 firms found that women are 50 percent of all managers but 40
percent of senior managers. At firms with directors, women accounted for 33
percent. And from there, it was a dizzying drop to 17.4 percent of partners.
(By the way, that 17.4 percent is in line with previous research.)
Here’s what we found at that crucial senior level:
Women promoted to senior manager suddenly realize that to make that final
big step to partner, they must bring in clients. But guess what? They didn’t
get into accounting to be salespeople — at least, that’s what dozens of
women told us. But partners must make rain. And senior managers must learn
to seed the clouds. This is such an unsettling prospect to many female
senior managers that they’d rather defect to the corporate world where, they
believe, they won’t be under the gun to bring in business.
Three years ago New Jersey CPA firm
Rothstein Kass realized that this was a
killer dynamic. Now RK has a constellation of training tools for senior
women poised for partnership. “Rainmakers Roundtable” first coaches each
woman to articulate her own approach to drawing in new clients. When you
hear yourself say it, you own it. Then, the program alternates between three
sales-skills workshops and three networking events. Each networking event
puts into play the newly learned skills. By the last event, the RK women are
networking with senior women at law firms and investment firms.
RK principal Rosalie Mandel has
been the poster girl for many of the firm’s initiatives to advance women. A
decade ago, when she had her first child she forged a part-time,
principal-track schedule. It worked out so well that the managing partners
asked her to lead the firm’s innovations in work-life and advancing women.
She was named principal partly on her successes in those arenas.
Mandel says that because intense career advancement
typically overlaps with intense family responsibilities, it’s incumbent on
firms to clear the internal path so that rising women can tackle
career-derailing issues. “Men have that natural camaraderie,” she says. “You
see that the men who golf with the big guys get pulled forward a little
faster. Women don’t have that. Who has time? You come in to work, and you
work hard so you can get home.”
The Rainmakers Roundtable helps make up for time
spent at school plays rather than after-dinner drinks. Women learn exactly
how to ask for a high-level referral. They forge alliances with similarly
situated women in law and investment banking firms, with the shared goal of
recruiting new clients together, for all. They polish their personal
elevator pitches.
Partly due to the Roundtable, fully half of
Rothstein Kass directors are women. That should translate to a healthy lift
in women partners — now an unimpressive 10 percent — with the next round of
promotions.
New clients = more revenue. Rainmaking women =
qualified potential partners. And that’s how to move the numbers at
accounting firms.
What parallel dilemmas challenge women in your
industry? Could the Rainmakers Roundtable be adapted to the particular
challenges facing upper-middle management women in your company?
Women Partners in the Big 4 Accounting Firms
For the tenth consecutive year, Deloitte & Touche USA
LLP tops the Big Four accounting firms in percentage of women partners,
principals and directors, according to Public Accounting Report's 2006 Survey of
Women in Public Accounting. The survey revealed that Deloitte's percentage of
women partners, principals and directors is currently 19.3 percent, surpassing
that of KPMG (16.8 percent), Pricewaterhouse Coopers (15.8 percent) and Ernst &
Young (13.5 percent). Deloitte has held this lead every year since the inception
of the survey in 1997, according to Jonathan Hamilton, editor, Public Accounting
Report.
SmartPros, December 26, 2006 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x55948.xml
Women now make up more than 60 percent of
all accountants and auditors in the United States, according to the
Clarion-Ledger. That is an estimated 843,000 women in the accounting and
auditing work force.
AccountingWeb, "Number of Female Accountants Increasing," June 2,
2006 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=102218
Jensen Comment
Nearly 20 years ago, Deloitte embarked on a "Women's Initiative" to
help female employees break the glass ceiling ---
http://www.deloitte.com/dtt/section_node/0,1042,sid=2261,00.htm
The AAA Commons has a hive on Diversity ---
http://commons.aaahq.org/pages/home
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting careers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob1.htm#careers
"European Business Schools Set Sights on U.S.: Seeking U.S. students
and a bigger global footprint, schools from Spain, France, and the U.K. are
rushing to set up outposts on American soil," by Alison Damast, Business
Week, June 17, 2010 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/content/jun2010/bs20100617_473655.htm?link_position=link1
Over the past decade or so, European business
schools have been aggressive about reaching out to the American market,
doing everything from forming alliances with U.S. schools to launching
student- and faculty-exchange programs. Now a handful of elite European
schools are taking this a step further, trying to create a more substantial
presence in the U.S. by opening up traditional brick-and-mortar campuses.
In the past few months, schools from France to the
U.K. have announced plans to build campuses in the coming year in the U.S.,
including one planned outpost announced just last week. It's a strategic
move by these institutions to increase their stature and influence in the
American market, says Robert Bruner, dean of the University of Virginia's
Darden School of Business (Darden
Full-Time MBA Profile).
"The U.S. is where the MBA was invented and, to
some extent to establish a footprint in this market, is an additional means
of legitimizing a school's brand and stature globally," says Bruner, who
also chairs the Globalization of Management Education Task Force of the
Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, one of the leading
business school accreditation agencies.
Eye on the Hot Spots
That's a viewpoint that these European B-schools
are taking as they cautiously attempt to entrench themselves in the U.S. A
number of the schools that have announced plans to build campuses are
well-regarded universities in Europe, but not as well-known by students
outside their home countries. By starting degree programs in such hot spots
as Miami and New York, they say they will be able to enhance their global
reputation in both the academic and business community in the U.S. as well
as expand and enhance the degree programs they offer students. Another
underlying motivation is the opportunity for them to recruit more American
students to their campuses. At most European business schools, Americans
make up just a handful of the students in the degree programs, making it
hard for them to build up a strong alumni base in the U.S., deans at these
schools say.
Many European business schools will be watching
closely to see whether these business schools will be successful at branding
themselves in the U.S., says Dave Wilson, president and chief executive of
the Graduate Management Admission Council, which administers the Graduate
Management Admission Test (GMAT). Of U.S. GMAT test takers, the vast
majority, or about 98 percent, send their test scores to U.S. schools,
leaving just a handful of American students who consider non-U.S schools.
The European schools will have to work hard to attract these students to
their U.S. outposts, Wilson says.
"These are sort of pioneers who are breaking new
ground, and it will be a challenge to get U.S. students," Wilson says. "I
think most European schools are going to sit back and watch, because this is
really a brand new bet for them."
Manhattan Opening
Just this May, Spain's
IESE Business School (IESE
Full-Time MBA Profile) opened the doors of its New
York campus on West 57th Street, a six-story building with two classrooms,
breakout rooms, and office space. The school had been planning its U.S.
campus for three years and has spent close to $20 million refurbishing the
building, says Eric Weber, an associate dean of IESE and director of the
school's New York office. Says Weber: "We're pretty bullish about the U.S."
The school will not be offering an MBA program at
the New York office, but it has ambitious plans for the site, which include
promotion of its custom programs for executives, establishing a research
center on global business, and setting up activities for alumni and
corporate sponsors. Professors from the school's Barcelona campus will take
students to New York for several weeks, where they will study business in
the context of New York City, Weber says.
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
One competitive advantage that foreign schools will bring to the table is to
play on the wanderlust of the typical four-year college graduate. Before
becoming tied down with a spouse and children, the lure of Europe is especially
appealing to some graduates. Graduates recall hearing in class about all the
world adventures of many of their professors, especially professors in
humanities who often focus their own research on romantic European history,
language, and literature. Students may see a European business school degree as
having greater opportunity for job offers in Europe --- which may be a myth in
many instances. Of course other students may lean toward Asian-school
degrees for the same reasons. For a while Russia was popular until living in
Russia became so dangerous and Russian universities became more corrupt.
Ketz Me If You Can
"Grade Inflation Op/Ed," by: J. Edward Ketz, SmartPros, June 2010 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x69779.xml
I was interviewed recently about grade inflation,
which motivated me to return to this familiar topic. While I have little new
to offer, that does not mean that nothing can be done about the problem. If
accounting faculty members have the will, they can reduce the amount of
grade inflation in the system.
I remember when grade inflation began. I was an
undergraduate at Virginia Tech during the Vietnam War. In 1969 Congress
passed legislation, signed by President Johnson, that stopped students from
staying in school indefinitely to avoid the draft, limiting the deferment to
four years. The act required students to have at least a C average, else
they could be drafted. (It also created the draft lottery. I even remember
my draft lottery number—187.)
The public turned from supporting the war to
opposing the war around this time. A number of university professors opposed
the war; other faculty members who did not oppose the war did not want the
blood of young men on their conscience. So, many of them refused to give
less than a C grade to any student. The only significant exception was the
engineering college, which apparently thought that ignorant engineers could
be dangerous to society. Overall, there was an immediate and statistically
significant upward shift in the university’s GPA the next quarter.
As everybody knows, the other major impact on
grades is student evaluations. Universities, striving to objectivize the
assessment of instructor performance, have turned to students. Universities
used to employ evaluations by other faculty members—and a few still do—but
faculty members are loathe to cut the throats of those who may return the
favor.
There are many problems with student evaluations,
but I’ll mention only one here. Instructors can manipulate the system by
playing the game and patronizing the students. I learned this early in my
career when I was a member of the Promotion and Tenure Committee two years
in a row. The first year we had a person who regularly attained about
1.5-2.0 on a seven point scale, one being low and seven being high. When the
committee castigated his teaching one year, he came back the following year
with 6.5s in all his sections. The committee learned that he achieved this
feat by giving students the exam questions a few days before the exam and
offering coffee and donuts during the exams.
Today there is no draft, so the consequences of a
bad grade does not carry the weight of yesteryear. Perhaps it will lead to a
lower self-esteem, but self-esteem is overrated. It only leads to inflated
egos.
I have sympathy toward untenured faculty who need
to avoid giving promotion and tenure committee members reasons to deny
tenure. But, tenured faculty have no such excuses. They can and should tell
administrators to quit satisfying students’ demands when they involve a
decline in educational quality.
This past semester a colleague and I team-taught
Introductory Accounting to about 700 students (the number at the beginning
of the term). About 200 students dropped the course. Of those who stayed,
the class achieved a course GPA of 2.2; in other words, the median grade in
the class was C+.
We think we avoided grade inflation. Our teaching
evaluations will take a hit, but so what? The class deserved the grades they
obtained and no higher.
Surely other instructors hold the line as well, but
some others do not. We need as many faculty as possible to quit giving
grades out merely because somebody paid tuition. The way to stop grade
inflation is simple—just do it.
"Want a Higher G.P.A.? Go to a
Private College: A 50-year rise in grade-point averages is being fueled by
private institutions, a recent study finds," by Catherine Rampell. The New York
Times, April 19, 2010 ---
http://finance.yahoo.com/college-education/article/109339/want-a-higher-gpa-go-to-a-private-college?mod=edu-collegeprep
Grade Inflation is the Number One Disgrace of Higher Education ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm#GradeInflation
June 8, 2010 message from Zabihollah Rezaee (zrezaee)
[zrezaee@MEMPHIS.EDU]
I have developed and taught a
"Corporate Governance, Ethics and Business Sustainability" course. All MBA
students are required to take this course at the University of Memphis. I am
attaching the course syllabus and will gladly share my PPT slides and other
teaching materials.
Best,
Zabi
Zabihollah "Zabi" Rezaee, PhD,
CPA, CMA, CIA, CGFM, CFE, CSOXP, CGRCP, CGOVP
Thompson-Hill Chair of Excellence/
Professor of Accountancy Fogelman College of Business and Economics 300
Fogelman College Administration Bldg.
The University of Memphis
Memphis, TN 38152-3120
901.678.4652 (phone)
901.678.0717 (fax)
zrezaee@memphis.edu (e-mail)
https://umdrive.memphis.edu/zrezaee/www/
June 8, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Thank you for sharing Zabi,
In addition to your attachment, I found the links at
https://umdrive.memphis.edu/zrezaee/www/
You might find some helpful references at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Governance
Includes a Harvard University Guidance Link
Bob Jensen
June 9, 2010 reply from Robert Bruce Walker
[walkerrb@ACTRIX.CO.NZ]
I scanned both sets of lecture notes and note that
they both concentrate on the role of the auditor and therefore put the
matter of ethics and fraud into the context of large scale enterprises. At
the risk of appearing, to Americans at least, even more crazy than I appear
already, it might be useful if I widen the potential net in regard to ethics
in business and in accounting.
As I continue my research into the origins of
accounting I try to delve into the commercial practices of Arab culture, the
origin of the elements that make up double entry bookkeeping. And for those
of you who read what I write you would know that I ascribe a significant
role to double entry in the development of the modern economic system that
we now operate. Double entry is not essential to commercial practice per se
- but it certainly is in the operation of the large combines (big corporate
and banks) that characterizes modern commerce.
There is little, in the secondary sources at least,
on actual medieval Arab accounting practice. To compensate for this I have
begun to look into Arab, and more broadly, Islamic law to discern what I
believe are the accounting issues presented to the people of those times.
This has led me to a study of Sharia law. Many in the West would perceive
this law as being a caricature of limb removal and stoning and that is there
for sure. But the Qu'ran, supported by the traditions, to a significant
degree embodies a commercial code of practice that translates into law or at
least the Muslim version of law.
This is not surprising, perhaps, as Muhammad was,
prior to his epiphanies, a merchant. This is forced on him to a substantial
degree as the place where he was born, Mecca, had little else for him to do.
He clearly had an innate sense of what was fair. He played the role of an
arbitrator at various times. Something he saw in the merchant dominated
society in which he lived sickened him. It might be related to usury
(originally meaning only the lending at interest). Though it is difficult to
determine as the notion of interest in his time had the taint of the
ungodly.
In any event Sharia commercial conduct was based on
the idea of personal responsibility, underpinned of course by divine
ordination. This results in conduct anathema to our culture. For example,
profit had to be fair. This tends to suggest that there is significant
transparency in trade - in principle this must mean that the purchaser has
some sort of right to examine profits to ensure that the profit is
justified. I suppose that this cannot be done without a sophisticated
book-keeping system. Contracts are not enforceable as such. One party can
walk away if the contract is oppressive. We have this in our legal system to
a degree. The principles of the law of equity were derived to modify the
worst excesses of contract law, but the contract still has primacy
nonetheless. Pooling of resources basically has to be carried out in
partnerships as befits a system based on personal responsibility. Trust
amongst merchants and financiers is central. That is why a bill (yes the
Arabs used bills of exchange and may have invented them) drawn by one person
will be honoured by another many thousands of miles away.
For some reason the concepts central to Islamic
commerce - trust, fairness, personal responsibility - are lacking in the
modern Western way of doing business. Equally the Islamic concepts of
business would militate against the development of the large corporate or
the large bank. Having said that, there is a growing trend in Britain for
non-Muslims to subject themselves in commercial dispute to Sharia
consideration. As the driving is to find fairness and does not rely on the
corrosive effect of the adversarial system, the result is likely to be
quicker, cheaper and fairer.
Whilst I stray from my mission to find the roots of
accounting as I become fascinated by Muhammad and his doctrines, I wish that
some elements of the impulse behind Sharia could inform our system. As a
fervent atheist and possible nihilist, as befits the Nietzshean that I am, I
cannot believe in the lynchpin that holds it together being God. Nonetheless
I cannot escape the sense of sickness that I have when I see and experience
the way commerce is conducted in our society and the excesses that ensue. I
see it in the never ending series of stories that Bob digs out. I see it in
my own practice of insolvency. Each fraud I see is worse than the last. I
don't believe that our system can be sustained if the attitudes that cause
this prevail. As I have also taken to studying Marx to understand the
formation of capital in 19th century Britain, I might be seen to fall prey
to the Marxist fallacy of the inevitability of the destruction of the
capitalist system. I don't need this to see the potential for economic
catastrophe. After all the potential is plain to see in our very recent
economic and financial history. Our solution is to make ever more
complicated regulation when we cannot deal with complexity that already
existed.
I even begin to lose faith in accounting itself. I
have always justified my faith by assuming that accounting is a force for
good. However, it becomes more and more apparent to me that accounting is
only necessary to sustain the huge economic combines to which we can trace
many of the travails we now suffer - BP being only the last in a long line
of corporate dishonor. And for those of you who do not know BP has its
origins in a company named the Anglo-Persian Oil company, a company at the
centre of the removal by coup of the elected Iranian leader Mossadegh with
all the problems that has engendered in the last 60 years.
I don't know the solution but I sure can see the
problem. Is it too much to ask that we cast aside our ethnocentrism and look
at other cultures and their commercial practice?
Robert B Walker
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting history are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#AccountingHistory
-----Original Message-----
From: Robert Bruce Walker
[walkerrb@ACTRIX.CO.NZ]
Sent: Friday, June 11, 2010 7:21 AM
Subject: History of Insolvency
Might I then continue by
telling you of the central significance of the National Bankruptcy Act of
1898. As I said it was the culmination of 100 years of law from the time of
the grant of Constitutional authority to Congress to make bankruptcy law.
The law making process would be reactivated each time there was an economic
convulsion. These laws had either sunset clauses or were repealed. Near
the end of the century a St Louis lawyer was commissioned to prepare an Act
that he would have had as debtor friendly. This was not acceptable to
Congress because it preferred rehabilitation to realization. Here lies the
foundation for Chapter 11.
Of more significance to the
accountant is the profound change to the definition of solvency. Hitherto
it had been simply 'to be able to pay debts as they fall due', a rather more
elusive idea than might first appear.
In any event the definition
was changed to one of a comparison between property (assets in accountant's
terms) and liabilities. There was a clause relating to the exclusion of
property fraudulently conveyed, but that is not significant in this
context. This definition has prevailed to this day in the 1978 albeit
modified in a crucial way in that it created an ambiguity tested in the TWA
case in about 1996.
I have summarized the above
from J Adriance Bush in an introduction the Act published in 1899. I got it
from Cornell University's website. Anyway Mr Bush comments that the
radically new solvency test would test the judiciary in years to come. That
has been so. It has culminated somewhat finally in the TWA case. It was
resolved that assets should be at fair value and the liabilities at face
value. This was because one side wanted the market price internalized into
the debt of TWA and another side didn't. And that some might be happy with
that. However, it does beg an important question:
what if there is a liability
but it has no face value? These are Bob's beloved financial instruments.
They can only be recognized by reference to a current interest rate as the
liabilities they absolutely are. If such liabilities are to be so
recognized, why would you apply a different rate to other liabilities? That
would mean more conventional liabilities - being say a bond issued - should
be measured at current rate to be consistent within the balance sheet. It
may sound strange at first, but it is the position adopted by FASB in
concept statement 7. It irritated me to begin with but I have now accepted
it as the right answer.
So we have a clash between
what accounting rules say and what lawyers say.
I think you American
accountants have abandoned the field. If the accountant is not the arbiter
of what is and what is not solvent, then what is he or she?
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting history are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#AccountingHistory
Bookkeeping in the Ancient Arab Culture and Commerce
Hi Robert,
Thank you very much for this great historical information.
Robert E. (Bob) Jensen Trinity University Accounting Professor (Emeritus) 190
Sunset Hill Road Sugar Hill, NH 03586 Tel. 603-823-8482 www.trinity.edu/rjensen
-----Original Message-----
From: Robert Bruce Walker
[walkerrb@ACTRIX.CO.NZ]
Sent: Thursday, June 10, 2010 5:01 PM
Professor ten Have in his book History of
Accountancy states:
"In this Arabic culture, bookkeeping had already
reached a high level of development. The administration of the customs, some
fragments of which have been preserved, included already a general ledger,
general journal and cash book; the system of monthly and annual closing was
known. In the State budget of 918, which is available, a distinction is made
between current and extraordinary expenditure. In Palermo, Sicily, a well
developed bookkeeping system has been found dating back to 1135; this shows
Arab influence. There is available an Arab manual dealing with the
merchandise trade at the end of the 12th century. This book was printed in
1318.
Accordingly, an assumption is that the Arabs
influenced the development of bookkeeping in Italy has a very strong
foundation; however, it has not been validated to this day" (page 31)
He then cites some European writer (Dr S Elzinga)
writing other than in English which rather cuts off a monolingual persons
such a myself. I have other material, some of which you have sent me, which
suggest that double entry was present in the Nile to the Oxus region for
more than 1000 years. There is a suggestion that it actually comes from
India - this is consistent with the origins of the Arabic numeral (the
positional number system) and of algebra itself, both of which seem to come
from India. The Arabs as the great medieval traders had links to India -
Muhammad himself apparently went there on a trading mission.
The trouble with double entry is that it is always
present as a concept whether the person preparing the record knew it or not.
I think it evolved gradually and imperceptibly. But my contention is that
Arab commerce would not have been possible without it.
The best general description of the foundations of
Islamic culture that I have found is that by Professor Hodgson, previously a
professor of history at Chicago (now long dead), in his 3 volume The Venture
of Islam. The work is absolutely breath taking in its scope but doesn't give
too much about the commercial culture prior to the life of Muhammad.
However, he does describe why Mecca was sited where it was. It did not have
a lot going for it as it did not have much of an oasis. What it did have was
a defensible position and reasonably proximity to a port. For this reason it
became an important trade link between India, SE Asia and China beyond that
and Constantinople and other European destinations. These trade routes were
well established in the 7th century. In short Mecca, whilst it did have a
shrine prior to Islam, was really dependent upon commerce at the time of
Muhammad. The area from the Nile to the Oxus (Professor Hodgon's substitute
for the Middle East) must be seen as the crucible of the mechanics of modern
commerce. It was the cross road between the West and the East.
As may be apparent from what I say I am writing my
version of the history of accounting. I am doing so in accordance with my
version of the Nietzschean genealogical method. Which means of course that I
can write pretty much what I want for Nietzsche says that history is better
understood as myth rather than by the traditional archival methods. So
perhaps I am writing a myth of accounting. At the risk of appearing pompous,
it is as much the philosophy of accounting as anything else. I hope by my
trawl through history and thought to inform the current day problems of
accounting by tracing their genealogy as it were.
I am not writing in sequence. I have started with
the Italians then back to the Arabs which I am working on - and having to
fill large gaps in my knowledge for I too have been educated in an
ethnocentric manner. I am writing the major piece which ends the book - that
is a discussion of solvency. For this I am researching American bankruptcy
law - the National Bankruptcy Act 0f 1898 being the pivot for this
particular piece. What is so peculiar about the US is that the law on
solvency (or otherwise) is entirely a legal pursuit, not informed by
accounting in any way. That is the reason the case law never solves the
problem. There are two strands in the US - one law, one accounting - both
groping their way towards solving the most important accounting issue - that
of solvency determination. Yet neither of them intersects. We in New Zealand
20 years ago discarded our British model for company law and took the
American solvency approach by way of Canada. Whether from some conscious
plan or not solvency determination in NZ was expressly linked to GAAP. Our
law is now filtering into Europe.
As an aside, it is worth noting that national
bankruptcy law in the US is sanctioned by the Constitution itself. The
history of the development of the law through the 19th century is a
fascinating subject unto itself and which has led to the absurdly debtor
friendly Chapter 11. But there is a limit to what I can do.
Robert Bruce Walker
New Zealand
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting history are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#AccountingHistory
Book Review by Robert Sack, The Accounting Review, May 2010, pp.
1122-1125
DAVID MOSSO, Early Warning and Quick Response: Accounting in the Twenty-First
Century (Bingley, U.K.: Emerald Group/JAI Press, 2009, ISBN
978-1-84855-644-7, pp. viii, 86).
This is an engaging book with compelling arguments
for a complete overhaul of our current set of accounting standards and of
the process by which they are set.1 David Mosso is well qualified to comment
on both, having served as a member of the Financial Accounting Standards
Board FASB from 1978 to 1987, as Vice Chair of the Board from 1986 to
1987, and as the FASB’s Assistant Director of Research from 1987 to 1996. He
came to the Board with extensive experience in governmental accounting and,
after his work with the FASB, served as Chair of the Federal Accounting
Standards Advisory Board from 1997 to 2006. He is quick to acknowledge his
role in the development of our current Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles (GAAP) and to express his regret for their failings.
In essence, Mosso argues that we must replace our
current mixed-attribute GAAP with full fair value accounting. His proposal,
which he calls the Wealth Measurement Model, would recognize all assets and
liabilities, as he defines them, at their current fair value, as defined by
SFAS No. 157. That fair value balance sheet would measure the entity’s
wealth at that date. Changes in the entity’s wealth from one period to the
next would act as an early warning of potential trouble to all of the
entity’s constituents. As to the standard-setting process, Mosso argues that
the standard setter should outline the principles of the Wealth Measurement
Model and then observe practice, being alert for aberrations in the way
those principles are applied. New standards would mostly be interpretations
of the basic principles and so could be issued quickly with a minimum of due
process.
The primary line of thought in Mosso’s book is a
proposal to radically revise our current accounting model. On pages 11–12,
he proposes six principles for his Wealth Measurement Model, quoted as
follows:
• The objective of accounting is to measure an
entity’s economic wealth net worth and income earnings for the
purpose of diagnosing the entity’s financial health.
• All measurable assets and liabilities of an
entity must be recognized on the entity’s balance sheet, along with the
owners’ equity in those assets and liabilities.
• All balance sheet assets and liabilities, and
changes in them, must be measured at fair value
• All issues and redemptions of owners’ equity
shares must be measured at fair value with gain or loss recognition in
earnings for any difference between the fair value of the shares and the
fair value of things received or given in exchange.
• All major nonmeasureable assets, liabilities,
commitments, and contingencies of an entity must be disclosed in notes
to the financial statements.
• The primary financial statements … must be
segmented and supplemented in a manner to facilitate the diagnosis of an
entity’s financial health and future prospects.
Mosso argues that these principles must be
mandatory and applicable to every entity. He observes that issuing the
FASB’s Concept Statements as nonauthoritative guidance was a mistake,
leading them to be seen as a basis for debate rather than as a basis for
decision-making.
. . .
In Chapters 9 and 10, Mosso redefines assets,
liabilities, and equity in the context of his six wealth measurement
principles. An asset is an economic resource that is controlled by an entity
(p. 46). That definition clarifies the FASB’s current definition in that it
leaves out the criteria “probable” and “future economic benefit,” both of
which he argues have been confusing in practice. A liability is an
unfulfilled binding promise made by an entity to transfer specified economic
benefits in determinable amounts at determinable times or on demand p.
47.That definition differs from the current FASB definition in that it uses
a broader “promise” criterion in lieu of the difficult-to-apply idea of a
“probable future sacrifice.” Interestingly, Mosso argues that, by using
these definitions, receivables and payables will be reciprocal—there will be
a mutual understanding of the claim between the two parties to the
transaction. That understanding will be established by a triggering act as,
for example, the performance of an earnings event. We have not insisted on
mutuality in our current accounting for assets and liabilities, allowing for
different assessments of “probability” by the holder of the asset and the
obligor.
. . .
Following on Mosso’s challenge, and the FAF’s
door-opening, the academic community ought to seize on the opportunity for a
larger place at the table, where we can bring our unbiased skills to
bear—even beyond the work of the individual academic Board member and the
contributions of the AAA Financial Accounting and Reporting Section’s
Financial Reporting Policy Committee. That challenge is perhaps the key
message from this thoughtprovoking book.
Jensen Comment
Financial assets and liabilities tend to be sufficiently independent such that
the sum of the exit values of the parts is the sum of the value of the whole
baring blockage discounts and issues of subsidiary control interactions.
But I take issue with valuation of non-financial assets where an asset's exit
value is the worst possible use of the asset. Value in use entails looking at
assets in interactive combination and their possibly huge covariance components
of value. Furthermore they co-vary with many intangible assets and liabilities
that cannot be valued even in Mosso's formulation of change. Covariance
components can be defined in hypothetical models, but their measurement in
reality is next to impossible ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#FairValue
Fair
Value Re-measurement Problems in a Nutshell: (1) Covariances and (2)
Hypothetical Transactions and (3) Estimation Cost
It's All Phantasmagoric Accounting in Terms of Value in Use
In an
excellent plenary session presentation in Anaheim on August 5, 2008
Zoe-Vanna Palmrose mentioned how advocates of fair value accounting for both
financial and non-financial assets and liabilities should heed the cautions
of George O. May about how fair value accounting contributed to the great
stock market crash of 1929 and
the ensuing
Great Depression. Afterwards Don
Edwards and I lamented that accounting doctoral students and younger
accounting faculty today have little interest in and knowledge of accounting
history and the great accounting scholars of the past like George O. May ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_O._May
Don mentioned how the works of George O. May should be revisited in
light of the present movement by standard setters to shift from historical
cost allocation accounting to fair value re-measurement (some say fantasy
land or phantasmagoric) accounting ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#FairValue
The point is that if fair value
re-measurement is required in the main financial statements, the impact upon
investors and the economy is not neutral. It may be very real like it was in
the Roaring 1920s.
In the
21st Century, accounting standard setters such as the FASB in the U.S. and
the IASB internationally are dead set on replacing traditional historical
cost accounting for both financial (e.g., stocks and bonds) and
non-financial (e.g., patents, goodwill, real estate, vehicles, and
equipment) with fair values. Whereas historical costs are transactions based
and additive across all assets and liabilities, fair value adjustments are
not transactions based, are almost impossible to estimate, and are not
likely to be additive.
If
Asset A is purchased for $100 and Asset B is purchased for $200 and have
depreciated book values of $50 and $80 on a given date, the book values may
be added to a sum of $130. This is a
basis adjusted cost allocation valuation
that has well-known limitations in terms of information needed for
investment and operating decisions.
If
Asset A now has an exit (disposal) value of $20 and Asset B has an exit
value of $90, the exit values can be added to a sum of $110 that has meaning
only if each asset will be liquidated piecemeal. Exit value accounting is
required for personal estates and for companies deemed by auditors to be
non-going concerns that are likely to be liquidated piecemeal after debts
are paid off.
But
accounting standard setters are moving toward standards that suggest that
neither historical cost valuation nor exit value re-measurement are
acceptable for going concerns such as viable and growing companies.
Historical cost valuation is in reality a cost allocation process that
provides misleading surrogates for "value in use."
Exit values violate rules that re-measured fair values should be estimated
in terms of the "best possible use" of the items in question. Exit values
are generally the "worst possible uses" of the items in a going concern. For
example, a printing press having a book value of $1 million and an exit
value of $100,000 are likely to both differ greatly from "value in use."
The
"value in use" theoretically is the present value of all discounted cash
flows attributed to the printing press. But this entails wild estimates of
future cash flows, discount rates, and terminal salvage values that no two
valuation experts are likely to agree upon. Furthermore, it is generally
impossible to isolate the future cash flows of a printing press from the
interactive cash flows of other assets such as a company's copyrights,
patents, human capital, and goodwill.
What
standard setters really want is re-measurement of assets and liabilities in
terms of "value in use." Suppose that on a given date the "value in use" is
estimated as $180 for Asset A and $300 for Asset B. The problem is that we
cannot ipso facto add these two values to $480 for a combined "value
in use" of Asset A plus Asset B. Dangling off in phantasmagoria fantasy land
is the covariance of the values in use:
Value
in Use of Assets A+B = $180 + $300 + Covariance of Assets A and B
For
example is Asset A is a high speed printing press and Asset B is a high
speed envelope stuffing machine, the covariance term may be very high when
computing value in use in a firm that advertises by mailing out a thousands
of letters per day. Without both machines operating simultaneously, the
value in use of any one machine is greatly reduced.
I once
observed high speed printing presses and envelope stuffing machines in
action in Reverend Billy Graham's "factory" in Minneapolis. Suppose to
printing presses and envelope stuffing machines we add other assets such as
the value of the Billy Graham name/logo that might be termed Asset C. Now we
have a more complicated covariance system:
Value in Use of Assets A+B+C = (Values of A+B+C) + (Higher Order
Covariances of A+B+C)
And
when hundreds of assets and liabilities are combined, the two-variate,
three-variate, and n-variate higher order covariances for combined ""value
in use" becomes truly phantasmagoric accounting. Any simplistic surrogate
such as those suggested in the FAS 157 framework are absurdly simplistic and
misleading as estimates of the values of Assets A, B, C, D, etc.
Furthermore, if the "value of the firm" is somehow estimated, it is
virtually impossible to disaggregate that value down to "values in use" of
the various component assets and liabilities that are not truly independent
of one another in a going concern. Financial analysts are interested in
operations details and components of value and would be disappointed if all
that a firm reported is a single estimate of its total value every quarter.
Of
course there are exceptions where a given asset or liability is independent
of other assets and liabilities. Covariances in such instances are zero. For
example, passive investments in financial assets generally can be estimated
at exit values in the spirit of FAS 157. An investment in 1,000 shares of
Microsoft Corporation is independent of ownership of 5,000 shares of Exxon.
A strong case can be made for exit value accounting of these passive
investments. Similarly a strong case can be made for exit value accounting
of such derivative financial instruments as interest rate swaps and forward
contracts since the historical cost in most instances is zero at the
inception of many derivative contracts.
The problem with fair value re-measurement of passive investments in
financial assets lies in the computation of earnings in relation to cash
flows. If the value of 1,000 shares of Microsoft decreases by -$40,000 and
the value of 5000 shares of Exxon increases by +$140,000, the combined
change in earnings is $100,000 assuming zero covariance. But if the
Microsoft shares were sold and the Exxon shares were held, we've combined a
realized loss with an unrealized gain as if they were equivalents. This
gives rise to the "hypothetical transaction" problem
of fair value re-measurements. If the Exxon shares are held for a very long
time, fair value accounting may give rise to years and years of "fiction" in
terms of variations in value that are never realized. Companies hate
earnings volatility caused by fair value "fictions" that are never realized
in cash over decades of time.Continued at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#FairValue
Mosso's vague about measuring fair value of non-financial assets. Presumably
entry value might be used instead of exit value, but entry value is not really
valuation. It is a re-definition of historical cost and is subject to all the
arbitrariness of historical cost such as depreciation and amortization
assumptions.
Fair value might be discounted cash flows for some assets and liabilities,
but if the asset in question is a single particle amidst an entire
conglomeration of heterogeneous particles, how do we allocate the present value
into the whole down to its myriad of particles?
Although there are many flaws in the present mixed attributes conglomeration
of valuations of assets and liabilities, I just do not see that valuation of
non-financial assets at their worst possible usages makes any sense. Especially
troublesome are fixed assets that have high values in use and low exit values.
For example, ERP information systems, factory robots, computers, etc. may lose
most of their exit value the moment they are put to use even though their
expected lives may be ten or more years. Maybe I'm just an old has been who
clings to admiration of the Payton and Littleton matching concept.
Furthermore, re-valuation can be a very costly process such as paying to
re-value a hotel chain's hundreds of pieces of real estate scattered about the
world ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#FairValue
Bob Sack concludes his book review by asserting that the "academic community
ought to seize on the opportunity for a larger place at the table." Be that as
it may, the academic community has be debating these issues since the days of
MacNeal, Canning, Payton, Scott, Chambers, Sterling, Edwards, Bell, and on and
on through tens of thousands of pages of books, journal articles, and
transcripts of speeches and course notes. Woodrow Wilson was correct when he
said that moving a professors is harder than moving a cemetery.
Standard setters have already commenced the Mosso express train.
Let me off as it approaches the "Non-Financial Asset Depot."
June 13, 2010 reply from Robert Bruce Walker
[walkerrb@ACTRIX.CO.NZ]
I must confess that the writings of Mr Mosso are
not particularly interesting to me – the ideas are not new and simply
reflect a distillation of current debates. Far more significant is the
writing of RA Bryer, the latest iteration of which I stumbled upon as a
draft on
Bob’s website (Ideology and reality in accounting: a Marxist history of
US accounting theory debate from the late 19th century to FASB’s conceptual
framework).
This essay works at two levels. At the first level
is a brilliant narrative showing the evolution of corporate accounting and
the debate about historic cost versus fair value. This was happening in the
first part of the 20th century. It shows, if nothing else, that nothing is
new.
The second level is, as the title suggests, an
ideological analysis. Bryer suggests that one of the prime considerations in
corporate accounting emerged from the fight to the death between labour and
capital such as prevailed in the early 20th century in America. This fight
was indeed vicious, culminating in what we would call terrorism. For
example, there was a bombing at a newspaper premises in LA. Clarence Darrow
no less was the defending attorney for the workers and was caught, or very
close to it, in the process of jury tampering. He did, and it is almost
certain he did, this because he knew that a capitalist finger was on the
judicial scales. It might even be the case that the capitalist (whose name
escapes me) may have been the author of the bombing himself!
In any event Bryer uses the Marxist labour theory
of value (LTV) and its related theories of money and exchange to show the
weird parallels between it and historic cost accounting (HCA). He seems to
suggest that the notion of future value (present value) accounting is an
ideological attempt to deny the validity of LTV. Conversely HCA is an
affirmation of LTV, based as it is on past exchange rather than the prospect
of exchange.
It is well worth looking at Marx’s analysis because
it does shed light on the enterprise that is accounting – the role of
commodities, the pricing mechanism and the idea of purely monetary exchange.
Yet I cannot believe that there is this ideological element to accounting. I
believe the impulse to HCA is an impulse concerned with the centrality and
integrity of double entry bookkeeping. Bryer turns my long held view on its
head.
I know he is wrong but I have to summon all my
knowledge, experience and cogitation powers to prove it. All accountants
academic or otherwise, especially American accountants, should read what he
writes. It is one of the most important things that has ever been written
about the subject of accounting.
"Of geeks and goalies," The Economist Magazine's Babbage
Blog, June 26, 2010 ---
http://www.economist.com/blogs/babbage?fsrc=nlw|pub|03_30_2010|publishers_newsletter
. . .
Subsequent analysis revealed 15 previously unknown
indicators of where the ball might go (he also tested 12 indicators which
had already been studied in sports literature). Three patterns of
coordinated "distributed movements" turned out to be telltales. As Mr Diaz
explains in a
press release:
"When a goalkeeper is in a penalty situation,
they can't wait until the ball is in the air before choosing whether to
jump left or right--a well-placed penalty kick will get past them. As a
consequence, you see goalkeepers jumping before the foot hits the ball.
My question is: Are they making a choice better than chance (50/50), and
if so, what kind of information might they be using to make their
choice?"
"When, for example, you shift the angle of your
planted foot, perhaps in an attempt to hide the direction of the kick,
you're changing your base of support. In order to maintain stability,
maybe you have to do something else like move your arm. And it just
happens naturally. If this happens over and over again, over time your
motor system may learn to move the arm at the same time as the foot. In
this way the movement becomes one single distributed movement, rather
than several sequential movements. A synergy is developed."
The next step was to see how good 31 novices were
at predicting the trajectory when shown an animation of the motion capture
data which blacked out at the point of contact between the foot and the
ball. Although fifteen were no better than chance, the remaining 16 were.
One observed difference between the two groups was the response time, longer
for the successful predictors. (Responses which took more than half a second
following the blackout went unrecorded.) Whether this would ultimately
translate into better performance remains moot. England's keeper may well
hope so. Its strikers probably don't.
PS To be fair, this time England are approaching
possible penalties very methodically, even enlisting
the help of statisticians.
PPS The following anecdote is entirely extraneous
to the topic at hand but it cries out for a mention. In the 2006 shoot-out
against Argentina Germany's then goalkeeper, Jens Lehmann, notoriously
carried a list of where the rival strikers put their penalties tucked in his
sock. He actually went in the right direction--clearly a prerequisite for
success--every time, saving two Argentine attempts. As Esteban Cambiasso
steadied himself for the decisive shot, the German goalie conspicuously
consulted a crumpled piece of paper pulled out from under his shin pad.
Discomfited, the striker sent the orb to the right, directly into the hands
of the lunging Lehmann. Adding insult to injury, it later transpired that he
wasn't even on the list.
This is only the ending part of the article
Related items from Jensen's archives:
Goal Tenders versus Movers and Shakers
Skate to where the puck is going, not to where it is.
Wayne Gretsky (as quoted for many years by Jerry Trites
at
http://www.zorba.ca/ )
Jensen Comment
This may be true for most hockey players and other movers and shakers,
but for goal tenders the eyes should be focused on where the puck is at
every moment --- not where it's going. The question is whether an
accountant is a goal tender (stewardship responsibilities) or a mover
and shaker (part of the managerial decision making team). This is also
the essence of the debate of historical accounting versus pro forma
accounting.
Graduate student Derek Panchuk and professor
Joan Vickers, who discovered the Quiet Eye phenomenon, have just
completed the most comprehensive, on-ice hockey study to determine where
elite goalies focus their eyes in order to make a save. Simply put, they
found that goalies should keep their eyes on the puck. In an article to
be published in the journal Human Movement Science, Panchuk and Vickers
discovered that the best goaltenders rest their gaze directly on the
puck and shooter's stick almost a full second before the shot is
released. When they do that they make the save over 75 per cent of the
time.
"Keep your eyes on the puck," PhysOrg, October 26, 2006 ---
http://physorg.com/news81068530.html
A Different Set of Heroes, Ethics, Morals, and Rules
"Bernie Madoff, Free at Last In prison he doesn’t have to hide his lack of
conscience. In fact, he’s a hero for it," Steve Fishman, New York
Magazine, June 6, 2010 ---
http://nymag.com/news/crimelaw/66468/
Last August, shortly after his arrival at the
federal correctional complex in Butner, North Carolina, Bernard L. Madoff
was waiting on the evening pill line for his blood-pressure medication when
he heard another inmate call his name. Madoff, then 71, author of the most
devastating Ponzi scheme in history, was dressed like every other prisoner,
in one of his three pairs of standard-issue khakis, his name and inmate
number glued over the shirt pocket. Rec time, the best part of a prisoner’s
day, was drawing to a close, and Madoff, who liked to walk the gravel track,
sometimes with Carmine Persico, the former mob boss, or Jonathan Pollard,
the spy, had hurried to the infirmary, passing the solitary housing unit—the
hole—ducking through the gym and the twelve-foot-high fence and turning in
the direction of Maryland, the unit where child molesters are confined after
they’ve served their sentences. As usual, the med line was long and moved
slowly. There were a hundred prisoners, some standing outside in the heat,
waiting for one nurse.
Madoff was accustomed to hearing other inmates call
his name. From July 14, the day he arrived, he’d been an object of
fascination. Prisoners had assiduously followed his criminal career on the
prison TVs. “Hey, Bernie,” an inmate would yell to him admiringly while he
was at his job sweeping up the cafeteria, “I seen you on TV.” In return,
Madoff nodded and waved, smiling that sphinxlike half-smile. “What did he
say?” Madoff sometimes asked.
But that evening an inmate badgered Madoff about
the victims of his $65 billion scheme, and kept at it. According to K. C.
White, a bank robber and prison artist who escorted a sick friend that
evening, Madoff stopped smiling and got angry. “Fuck my victims,” he said,
loud enough for other inmates to hear. “I carried them for twenty years, and
now I’m doing 150 years.”
For Bernie Madoff, living a lie had once been a
full-time job, which carried with it a constant, nagging anxiety. “It was a
nightmare for me,” he told investigators, using the word over and over, as
if he were the real victim. “I wish they caught me six years ago, eight
years ago,” he said in a little-noticed interview with them.
And so prison offered Madoff a measure of relief.
Even his first stop, the hellhole of Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC),
where he was locked down 23 hours a day, was a kind of asylum. He no longer
had to fear the knock on the door that would signal “the jig was up,” as he
put it. And he no longer had to express what he didn’t feel. Bernie could be
himself. Pollard’s former cellmate John Bowler recalls a conversation
between Pollard and Madoff: “Bernie was telling a story about an old lady.
She was bugging him for her money, so he said to her, ‘Here’s your money,’
and gave her a check. When she saw the amount she says, ‘That’s
unbelievable,’ and she says, ‘Take it back.’ And urged her friends [to
invest].”
Pollard thought that taking advantage of old ladies
was “kind of fucked up.”
“Well, that’s what I did,” Madoff said
matter-of-factly.
“You are going to pay with God,” Pollard warned.
Madoff was unmoved. He was past apologizing. In
prison, he crafted his own version of events. From MCC, Madoff explained the
trap he was in. “People just kept throwing money at me,” Madoff related to a
prison consultant who advised him on how to endure prison life. “Some guy
wanted to invest, and if I said no, the guy said, ‘What, I’m not good
enough?’ ” One day, Shannon Hay, a drug dealer who lived in the same unit in
Butner as Madoff, asked about his crimes. “He told me his side. He took
money off of people who were rich and greedy and wanted more,” says Hay, who
was released in December. People, in other words, who deserved it.
There is, as it happens, honor among thieves, a
fact that worked mostly to Madoff’s benefit. In the context of prison, he
isn’t a cancer on society; he’s a success, admired for his vast
accomplishments. “A hero,” wrote Robert Rosso, a lifer, on a website he
managed to found called convictinc .com. “He’s arguably the greatest con of
all time.”
From the day Bernard Lawrence Madoff, prisoner No.
61727-054, arrived at the softer of Butner’s two medium-security facilities
in handcuffs and shackles, his over-the-collar hair shorn close, his rich
man’s paunch diminished, he was a celebrity, even if his admirers were now
murderers and sex offenders. The Butner correctional complex, which includes
four prisons and a medical center, already has its share of crime kings.
Pollard, the Israel cause célèbre who spied for the Jewish homeland, lived
in Madoff’s housing unit, Clemson (the dorms are named after Atlantic Coast
Conference colleges). Persico, the former Colombo-family godfather, lives in
nearby Georgia Tech. Omar Ahmad-Rahman, the blind sheikh who helped engineer
the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, is in Butner. The Rigases from
Pennsylvania, the father and son who bankrupted Adelphia Communications
Corporation, are there—they wear crisp, pressed uniforms, which inmates
assume they pay others to maintain.
Yet even in this crowd, Madoff stands out. Every
inmate remembers the day he arrived. “It was like the president was
visiting,” a visitor to Butner that day told me. News helicopters buzzed
overhead, and the administration locked down part of the prison, confining
some inmates to their units, while an aging con man with high blood pressure
shuffled through processing, where other inmates fitted him for a uniform
and offered a brief orientation: “Man, chill out and go with the flow, ” was
the advice of one former drug dealer.
Quickly, the flow came to Madoff. From the moment
he alighted, he had “groupies,” according to several inmates. Prisoners
trailed him as he took his exercise around the track. (Persico had also
attracted a throng when he arrived, but was disgusted and quickly put an end
to it.) “They buttered him up,” one former inmate told me. “Everybody was
trying to kiss his ass,” says Shawn Evans, who spent 28 months in Butner.
They even clamored for his autograph.
And Madoff was usually more than happy to respond.
“He enjoyed being a celebrity,” says Nancy Fineman, an attorney to whom
Madoff granted an interview shortly after his arrival at Butner. (Fineman
represents victims who are suing some of Madoff’s “aiders and abettors,” as
she calls them.) Madoff seemed surprised and tickled by the lavish
treatment, though he steadfastly refused to sign anything. Even in prison,
he wasn’t going to dilute the brand. “He was sure they would sell it on
eBay,” Fineman told me. “He still did have a big ego.”
Remarkably, that ego appears to have survived
intact. H. David Kotz, the Security and Exchange Commission’s inspector
general, investigated his agency’s failure to uncover Madoff’s Ponzi scheme,
and Madoff volunteered to speak to him—he is, no doubt, the world’s expert
on the subject. He quickly reminded Kotz of his stature—“I wrote a good
portion of the rules when it comes to trading,” Madoff said. He insisted
that he’d been “a good trader” with a solid strategy, explaining that he’d
stumbled into trouble because of his success. Hedge funds—“just marketers,”
he said with evident disgust—pushed cash on him. He overcommitted, got
behind, and generated a few imaginary trades, figuring he’d make it up—and
never did. Whatever his own missteps, Madoff saved his scorn for the SEC. He
did impressions of its agents, leaning back with his hands behind his head
just as one self-serious agent did—“a guy who comes on like he’s Columbo,”
but who was “an idiot,” Madoff said, as recorded in the extraordinary
exhibit 104, a twelve-page account of the interview that is part of Kotz’s
report. Madoff is no ironist. His disdain for the SEC is professional, even
if the agency’s incompetence saved his skin for years—all Columbo had to do
was make one phone call. “[It’s] accounting 101,” Madoff told Kotz, still
amazed.
Madoff’s ego was on display in prison, too. “Bernie
walked around prison confident,” says ex-con Keith Mack, adding, with a
trace of resentment, “he acted like he beat the world.” And to most inmates
he had. Many—and I communicated with more than two dozen current and recent
Butner inmates (though not Madoff)—can recount stories of his conquests, a
good number of them related by Madoff himself. “He said something to me one
day,” recalls an ex–drug trafficker, released in February. “He could spin
the globe and stop it anywhere with his finger, and chances are he had a
house there or he’d been there. I was pretty blown away.” One evening,
Bowler, a drug trafficker (“I’m not a con man, I’m a businessman,” he wrote
to me), sat next to Madoff watching a 60 Minutes segment about him. Prison
authorities keep the volume off, and inmates wear headphones and tune in to
the radio signal that broadcasts the sound. Bowler removed one earpiece.
“ ‘Bernie, you got ’em for millions,’ I said to him. ‘No, billions,’ he told
me.” Another evening, one former inmate was watching a TV news report on the
auction of Madoff’s much-chronicled watch collection—he owned more than 40,
from Rolexes to a Piaget. The watch featured that evening fetched just $900,
and Madoff, whose only watch now is a Timex Ironman that he bought at the
commissary for $41.65 and is likely engraved with his inmate number, called
out, “They told me that watch was worth $200,000.” The inmates laughed along
with him. They didn’t see any reason for Madoff to regret his past. “If I’d
lived that well for 70 years, I wouldn’t care that I ended up in prison,”
Evans says.
Inmates were impressed by the sheer scale of
Madoff’s operation and turned to him for guidance in getting their own
ambitions on track. Madoff had always enjoyed being counselor to the wealthy
and powerful. That had been part of the scheme’s seduction: Bernie, the
scrappy kid from Queens, depended on by rich businessmen. “He wants to be
remembered as a titan of Wall Street,” says Fineman, and one who subsidized
the private schools and fancy vacations of his wealthy friends, even if it
was with the funds of other investors. And to inmates he still was a titan.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on Madoff and Ponzi frauds in general ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#Ponzi
Question
Can any of you identify the mystery "Fraud Girl" who will be writing a weekly
(Sunday) column for Simoleon Sense?
Hint
She seems to have a Chicago connection and seems very well informed about the
blog posts of Francine McKenna.
http://retheauditors.com/
But I really do know know who is the mystery "Fraud Girl."
"Guest Post: Fraud Girl Says, “Regulators, Ignore the Masses — It’s Your
Responsibility!!”
(A New SimoleonSense Series on Fraud, Forensic Accounting, and Ethics)
Simoleon Sense, April 25, 2010 ---
Click Here
http://www.simoleonsense.com/guest-post-fraud-girl-says-regulators-ignore-the-masses-it%e2%80%99s-your-responsibility-must-follow-series-on-fraud-forensic-accounting-and-ethics/
I’m exceptionally proud to introduce you to Fraud
Girl, our new Sunday columnist. She will write about all things corp
governance, fraud, accounting, and business ethics. To give you some
background (and although I can not reveal her identity). Fraud girl recently
visited me in Chicago for the Harry Markopolos presentation to the local
CFA. We were incredibly lucky to meet with Mr. Markopolos and enjoyed 3
hours of drinks and accounting talk. Needless to say Fraud Girl was leading
the conversation and I was trying to keep up. After a brainstorm session I
persuaded her to write for us and teach us about wall street screw-ups.
So watch out, shes smart, witty, and passionate
about making the world a better place. I think Sundays just got a lot
better…
Miguel Barbosa
Founder of SimoleonSense
P.S. For Questions or Comments: Reach fraud girl at:
FraudGirl@simoleonsense.com
Regulators, Ignore the Masses — It’s Your Responsibility
Men in general judge more by the sense of
sight than by the sense of touch, because everyone can see but only
a few can test feeling. Everyone sees what you seem to be, few know
what you really are; and those few do not dare take a stand against
the general opinion, supported by the majesty of the government. In
the actions of all men, and especially of princes who are not
subject to a court of appeal, we must always look to the end. Let a
prince, therefore, win victories and uphold his state; his methods
will always be considered worthy, and everyone will praise them,
because the masses are always impressed by the superficial
appearance of things, and by the outcome of an enterprise. And the
world consists of nothing but the masses; the few have no influence
when the many feel secure.
-Niccolo Machiavelli,
The Prince
Why are Machiavelli’s words so astonishingly
prophetic? How does a 500 year old quote explain contagion, bubbles, and
Ponzi schemes? Do financial decision makers consciously overlook reality or
do they merely postpone due diligence? That is the purpose of this series —
to analyze financial fraud(s) and question business ethics.
Recent accounting scandals i.e. Worldcom, Enron,
Madoff, reveal a variety of methods for boosting short term performance at
the expense of long run shareholder value. WorldCom recorded bogus revenue,
Enron boosted their operating income through improper classifications, and
Madoff ran the largest Ponzi scheme in history. Sure these scandals were
unethical, deceived the public, and made a ton of money. But what is the
most striking similarity? Each of these companies was seen as the golden
goose egg; an indestructible force that could never fail. Of course, the key
word is “seen”, regulators, attorneys, financial analysts, and auditors
failed to see reality. But why?
Fiduciaries are entrusted with protecting the
public and shareholders from crooks like Skilling, Pavlo, and Schrushy. An
average shareholder lacks the knowledge and expertise of a prominent
regulator, right? Shareholders don’t perform the company’s annual audit,
review all legal documentation, or communicate with top executives. No,
shareholders base their decisions off information that is “accurate” and
“meticulously examined”.
Unfortunately in each of these instances regulators
failed to take a stand against consensus and became another ignorant face in
the crowd. “Everyone sees what you seem to be, few know what you really are;
and those few do not dare take a stand against the general opinion”. Who are
the few that really know who these companies are? The answer should be
evident. What isn’t clear is why these cowardly few are in charge of
overseeing our financial markets.
When Auditors Look The Other Way
A week ago, I came across this article:
Ernst & Young defends its Lehman work in letter to clients.
I chuckled as I was reading it, remembering Roxie Hart
from the play Chicago shouting the words “Not Guilty” to anyone who would
listen. Like Roxie, the audit team pleaded that the media was inaccurate. In
recording Lehman’s Repo 105 transactions, they claimed compliance with GAAP
and believed the financial statements were ‘fairly represented’. But, fair
reporting is more than complying with GAAP. Often auditors are “compliant”
while cooking the books (a mystery that still eludes me). In this case, the
auditors blatantly covered their eyes and closed their ears to what they
must have known was deliberate misrepresentation of Lehman Brother’s
financial statements.
We will explore the Lehman Brothers fiasco in next
week’s post…but here’s the condensed version. Days prior to quarter end,
Lehman Brothers used “Repo 105” transactions, which allowed them to lend
assets to others in exchange for short-term cash. They borrowed around $50
Billion; none of which appeared on their balance sheet. Lehman instead
reported the debt as sales. They used the borrowed cash to pay down other
debt. This reduced both their total liabilities and total assets, thereby
lowering their leverage ratio.
This was allegedly in compliance with SFAS 140,
Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and
Extinguishments of Liabilities that allowed Lehman to move the $50 Billion
of assets from its balance sheet. As long as they followed the rules,
auditors could stamp [the] financial statements with a “Fairly Represented”
approval and issue an unqualified opinion.
Clearly in this case complying was unethical and
probably illegal.
Howard Schilit, the author of Financial Shenanigans:
How to Detect Accounting Gimmicks & Fraud in Financial Reports,
once said, “You [the auditor] work for the investor, even though you are
paid by someone else”. He insists that auditors should look beyond the
checklists and guidelines and should instead question everything. Auditors
are the first line of defense against fraud and the shareholders are
dependent upon the quality of their services. So I ask again, with respect
to Lehman Brothers, were the auditors working for the investors or where
they in the pockets of senior management?
What can we do?
An admired value investor believes in a similar
tactic for confirming the honesty of companies. It’s known as “killing the
company”, where in his words, “we think of all the ways the company can die,
whether it’s stupid management or overleveraged balance sheets. If we can’t
figure out a way to kill the company, then you have the beginning of a good
investment”. Auditors must think like this, they must kill the company, and
question everything. If you can’t kill a company, then (and only then) are
the financial statements truly a fair representation of the firms
operations.
There was no “killing” going on when the lead
auditing partner said that his team did not approve Lehman’s Accounting
Policy regarding Repo 105s but was in some way comfortable enough with them
to audit their financial statements. This engagement team failed in looking
beyond SFAS 140 and should have realized what every law firm (aside from one
firm in London) was stating; that the accounting methods Lehman Brothers
used to record Repo 105s were a deliberate attempt to defraud the public.
So I repeat: Ignoring reality is not an option.
Ignoring the crowd, however, is an obligation.
See you next week….
-Fraud Girl
Bob Jensen's threads on fraud are linked at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm
Bob Jensen's Fraud Updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting news are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
"Guest Post – Fraud Girl: “Fraud by Hindsight”- How Wall Street Firms
[Legally] Get Away With Fraudulent Behavior!," Fraud Girl, Simoleon Sense,
June 6, 2010 ---
Click Here
http://www.simoleonsense.com/guest-post-fraud-girl-%e2%80%9cfraud-by-hindsight%e2%80%9d-how-wall-street-firms-legally-get-away-with-fraudulent-behavior/
Last week we discussed the credit rating
agencies and their roles the financial crisis. These agencies provided false
ratings on credit they knew was faulty prior to the crisis. In defense,
these agencies (as well as Warren Buffet) said that they did not foresee the
crisis to be as severe as it was and therefore could not be blamed for
making mistakes in their predictions. This week’s post focuses on
foreseeability and the extent to which firms are liable for incorrect
predictions.
Like credit agencies, Wall Street firms have
been accused of knowing the dangers in the market prior to its collapse. I
came across this post (Black
Swans*, Fraud by hindsight, and Mortgage-Backed Securities)
via the Wall Street Law Blog that discusses how
firms could assert that they can’t be blamed for events they couldn’t
foresee. It’s a doctrine known as Fraud by Hindsight (“FBH”) where
defendants claim “that there is no fraud if the alleged deceit can only be
discerned after the fact”. This claim has been used in numerous securities
fraud lawsuits and surprisingly it has worked in the defendant’s favor on
most occasions.
Many Wall Street firms say they “could not
foresee the collapse of the housing market, and therefore any allegations of
fraud are merely impermissible claims of fraud by hindsight”. Was Wall
Street able to foresee the housing market crash prior to its collapse?
According to the writers at WSL Blog, they did foresee it saying, “From 1895
through 1996 home price appreciation very closely corresponded to the rate
of inflation (roughly 3% per year). From 1995 through 2006 alone – even
after adjusting for inflation – housing prices rose by more than 70%”. Wall
Street must (or should) have foreseen a drastic change in the market when
rises in housing costs were so abnormal. By claiming FBH, however, firms can
inevitably “get away with murder”.
What exactly is FBH and how is it used in
court? The case below from Northwestern University Law Review details the
psychology and legalities behind FBH while attempting to show how the FBH
doctrine is being used as a means to dismiss cases rather than to control
the influence of Wall Street’s foreseeability claims.
Link Provided to Download "Fraud by Hindsight" (Registration Required)
I’ve broken down the case into two parts. The
first part provides two theories on hindsight in securities litigation: The
Debiasing Hypothesis & The Case Management Hypothesis. The Debiasing
Hypothesis provides that FBH is being used in court as a way to control the
influence of ‘hindsight bias’. This bias says that people “overstate the
predictability of outcomes” and “tend to view what has happened as having
been inevitable but also view it as having appeared ‘relatively inevitable’
before it happened”. The Debiasing Hypothesis tries to prove that FBH aids
judges in “weeding out” the biases so that they can focus on the allegations
at hand.
The Case Management Hypothesis states that FBH
is a claim used by judges to easily dismiss cases that they deem too
complicated or confusing. According to the analysis, “…academics have
complained that these [securities fraud] suits settle without regard to
merit and do little to deter real fraud, operating instead as a needless
tax on capital raising. Federal judges, faced with overwhelming caseloads,
must allocate their limited resources. Securities lawsuits that are often
complex, lengthy, and perceived to be extortionate are unlikely to be a
high priority. Judges might thus embrace any doctrine [i.e. FBH
doctrine] that allows them to dispose of these cases quickly” (782-783). The
case attempts to prove that FBH is primarily used for case management
purposes rather than for controlling hindsight bias.
The psychological aspects behind hindsight
bias are discussed thoroughly in this case. Here are a few excerpts from the
case regarding this bias:
(1)“Studies show that judges are vulnerable
to the bias, and that mere awareness of the phenomenon does not ameliorate
its influence on judgment. The failure to develop a doctrine that
addresses the underlying problem of judging in hindsight means that the
adverse consequences of the hindsight bias remain a part of securities
litigation. Judges are not accurately sorting fraud from mistake, thereby
undermining the system, even as they seek to improve it” (777).
(2) “Judges assert that a company’s
announcement of bad results, by itself, does not mean that a prior
optimistic statement was fraudulent. This seems to be an effort to divert
attention away from the bad outcome and toward the circumstances that gave
rise to that outcome, which is exactly the problem that hindsight bias
raises. That is, if people overweigh the fact of a bad outcome in
hindsight, then the cure is to reconstruct the situation as people saw it
beforehand. Thus, the development of the FBH doctrine suggests a
judicial understanding of the biasing effect of judging in hindsight and of
a means to address the problem” (781).
(3) “Once a bad event occurs, the evaluation
of a warning that was given earlier will be biased. In terms of evaluating a
decision-maker’s failure to heed a warning, knowledge that the warned-of
outcome occurred will increase the salience of the warning in the
evaluator’s mind and bias her in the direction of finding fault with the
failure to heed the warning. In effect, the hindsight bias becomes an
‘I-told-you-so’ bias.” (793).
(4) “In foresight, managers might reasonably
believe that the contingency as too unlikely to merit disclosure, whereas in
hindsight it seems obvious a reasonable investor would have wanted to know
it. Likewise, as to warning a company actually made, in foresight most
investors might reasonably ignore them, whereas in hindsight they seem
profoundly important. If defendants are allowed to defend themselves by
arguing that a reasonable investor would have attended closely to these
warnings, then the hindsight bias might benefit defendants” (794).
Next week we’ll explore the second part of the
case and discuss the importance of utilizing FBH as a means of deterring the
hindsight bias. We’ll see how the case proves that FBH is not being used for
this purpose and is instead used as a mechanism to dismiss cases that simply
do not want to be heard.
See you next week…
-Fraud Girl
Bob Jensen's Rotten to the Core threads on credit rating agencies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#CreditRatingAgencies
Bob Jensen's Rotten to the Core threads on banks and brokerages ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Bob Jensen's Fraud updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
June 8, 2010 reply from Robert Bruce Walker
[walkerrb@ACTRIX.CO.NZ]
The link below is a book review of Michael Lewis’s
latest book ‘The Big Short’. The book is clearly based on an article that
Bob uncovered about 9 months ago. The mechanism underpinning the ‘short’ is
better explained in the NYRB essay and, presumably, in the book itself. It
seems that the ‘mezzanine’ tranches (BBB rated) of a series of MBS were
packaged, rated AAA and then issued in another MBS. Dubious this might be,
but fraud it will not be. It lacks the central element of mens rea. In the
face of an accusation of fraud the accused will generally resort to the
defence of incompetence or inadequacy – a dangerous thing when facing civil
action as well – but better than being seen to have acted ‘knowingly’.
No-one knew the property markets would collapse. Many people, including me*,
thought that it was inevitable – but we did not know it.
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2010/jun/10/heart-crash/?pagination=false
*When I was first told of the ‘low doc’ loan
concept by an investment manager, I could hardly believe it. He, on the
other hand, described the packager of such products as very clever. The
investor in question failed badly due to an over-exposure to MBS. Funny
that.
"Guest Post – Fraud Girl: “Fraud by Hindsight”- How Wall Street Firms
[Legally] Get Away With Fraudulent Behavior! Part 2," by Fraud Girl,
Simoleon Post, June 13, 2010 ---
Click Here
http://www.simoleonsense.com/guest-post-fraud-girl-%e2%80%9cfraud-by-hindsight%e2%80%9d-how-wall-street-firms-legally-get-away-with-fraudulent-behavior-part-2/
Last week we discussed the first part of the “Fraud
by Hindsight” study. As we learned, the FBH doctrine is utilized in
securities litigation cases. In learning about the FBH doctrine we reviewed
the Debiasing Hypothesis and the Case Management Hypothesis. According to
the Debiasing Hypothesis, FBH is used as a tool to “weed out” hindsight bias
in order to focus on legal issues at hand. The Case Management Hypothesis,
on the other hand declares that FBH is used to dismiss securities fraud
cases in order to facilitate judicial control over them. This week we will
strive to analyze how Fraud By Hindsight has evolved, meaning, how the
courts apply the doctrine (in real life), which differs markedly from the
doctrine’s theoretical meaning.
History
The first mention of FBH was in 1978 with Judge
Friendly in the case Denny v. Barber. The plaintiff in this case claimed
that the bank had “engaged in unsound lending practices, maintained
insufficient loan loss reserves, delayed writing off bad loans, and
undertook speculative investments” (796). Sound familiar? Anyway — the
plaintiff plead that the bank failed to disclose these problems in earlier
reports and instead issued reports with optimistic projections. Judge
Friendly claimed FBH stating that there were a number of “intervening
events” during that period (i.e. increasing prices in petroleum and the City
of New York’s financial crisis) that were outside the control of managers
and it was therefore insufficient to claim that the defendant should have
known better when out-of-the-ordinary incidents have occurred. The end
result of the case provided that “hindsight alone might not constitute a
sufficient demonstration that the defendants made some predictive decision
with knowledge of its falsity or something close to it” (797). Friendly
established that FBH is possible, but that in this case the underlying
circumstances did not justify a judgment against the bank.
The second relevant mention of FBH was in 1990 with
Judge Easterbrook in the case DiLeo v. Ernst & Young. Like the prior case,
DiLeo involved problems with loans where the plaintiff plead that the bank
and E&Y had known but failed to disclose that a substantial portion of the
bank’s loans were uncollectible. This case was different, in that there were
no “intervening events” that could have blind sighted managers from issuing
more accurate future projections. Still, Easterbrook claimed FBH and said,
“the fact that the loans turned out badly does not mean that the defendant
knew (or should have known) that this was going to happen” (799-800).
Easterbrook believed that the plaintiff must be able to separate the true
fraud from the underlying hindsight evidence in order to prove their case.
Easterbrook’s articulation of the FBH doctrine set
the stage for all future securities class action cases. As the authors
state, the phrase was cited only about twice per year before DiLeo but it
increased to an average of twenty-seven times per year afterwards.
Unfortunately, the courts found Easterbrook’s perception of the phrase to be
more compelling. Instead of providing that the hindsight might play a role
determining if fraud has occurred, Easterbrook claimed that there simply is
no “fraud by hindsight”. This allows the courts to adjudicate cases solely
on complaint, therefore supporting the Case Management Hypothesis.
The results of many tests provided in this case
proved that courts were using the doctrine as a means to dismiss cases. Of
all the tests, I found one to be most interesting: The Stage of the
Proceedings. The results of the test shows that “over 90 percent of FBH
applications involve judgments on the pleadings” (814) stage rather than at
summary judgment. In the preliminary (pleading) stages, the knowledge of
information is not provided, meaning that it is less likely that hindsight
bias will affect their decisions. The more the judge delves into the case,
the more they are susceptible to the hindsight bias. If the judge is
utilizing the FBH doctrine mostly during the pleading stages where hindsight
bias is “weak”, then the Debiasing Hypothesis is not valid.
The authors point out the problems with utilizing
the FBH doctrine in this way:
“The problem, however, is that the remedy is
applied at the pleadings stage, not the summary judgment stage. At the
pleadings stage, a bad outcome truly is relevant to the likelihood of fraud.
At this stage, the Federal Rules do not ask the courts to make a judgment on
the merits, and hence the remedy of foreclosing further litigation is
inappropriate. By foreclosing further proceedings, courts are not saying
that they do not trust their own judgment, but that they do not trust the
process of civil discovery to identity whether fraud occurred” (815).
Because cases are being dismissed so early in the
litigation process, courts are not allowing for the discovery of fraud that
may be apparent even though hindsight is a factor in the case.
By gathering this and other evidence, the case
concludes that judges utilize FBH as a case management tool. They cited that
the development of the FBH doctrine could be described as “naïve cynicism”.
Though judges understand that hindsight bias must be taken into
consideration, they express the belief that the problem does not affect
their own judgment. The courts are relying on their own intuitions and
gathering the necessary facts to prove fraud by hindsight. The authors note
a paradox here saying, “Judges simultaneously claim that human judgment
cannot be trusted, and yet they rely on their own judgment”.
The problem is that the naively cynical (FBH)
approach has led to securities fraud cases to be governed by moods. The
authors say that “In the 1980s and 1990s, as concern with frivolous
securities litigation rose, courts and Congress simply made it more
difficult for plaintiffs to file suit. In the post-Enron era, this
skepticism about private enforcement of securities fraud might have abated
somewhat, leading to lesser pleading requirements” (825).
Recap & Implications
Overall the case proves that the courts have not
yet been able to establish a sensible mechanism for sorting fraud from
mistake. It therefore allows cases that really involve fraud to potentially
be dismissed. In cases since DiLeo, the win rate for defendants in FBH cases
is 70 percent, as compared with 47 percent in those cases that did not
mention it. The mere declaration of “Fraud by Hindsight” gives the defendant
an automatic advantage over the plaintiff. Now, the defendant may in fact be
innocent – but the current processes are not able to determine who is or
isn’t guilty. Remember, judges spend much of their time in these cases
separating the hindsight bias from the fraud. This task can become very
complex and time consuming.
In sum, the increasing use of FBH has been
beneficial for (1) judges because they don’t have to listen to these
complicated cases and (2) defendant’s because they are likely to win the
case by using the doctrine. The only ones who don’t benefit from doctrine
are the plaintiff’s who may truly have been victims of fraud. It is crucial
that the judiciary revise the way the FBH is interpreted in order to protect
the innocent and convict the guilty.
Have any ideas on how to fix the FBH problem? Send
me an email at fraudgirl @ simoleonsense.com.
See you next week.
- Fraud Girl
Click Here To Access The Original Fraud by Hindsight Case – Part II ---
http://www.scribd.com/doc/32994403/Fraud-by-Hindsight-Part-II
Bob Jensen's threads on fraud are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm
“What A Tangled Web We Weave: AIG’s Cassano Says He Told PwC Everything,”
by Francine McKenna, re:TheAuditors, June 30, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/06/30/going-concern-what-a-tangled-web-we-weave-aigs-cassano-says-he-told-pwc-everything/
My
new column is up @Going Concern:
Joseph Cassano, the former head of AIG’s
Financial Products Group, testifies today for the Financial Crisis
Inquiry Commission, a bipartisan commission with a critical non-partisan
mission — to examine the causes of the financial crisis.
[...]
The Department of Justice cleared Mr. Cassano
in May. No criminal charges will be filed. U.K.’s Serious Fraud Office
dropped probes last month, and the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission also closed their investigations too…the investigations went
south
when, “prosecutors found evidence Mr. Cassano
did make key disclosures. They obtained notes written by a PwC auditor
suggesting Mr. Cassano informed the auditor and senior AIG executives
about the adjustment…[and] told AIG shareholders in November 2007 that
AIG would have “more mark downs,” meaning it would lower the value of
its swaps.”
So who’s telling the truth? Was PwC duped by
AIG? Who is looking out for AIG shareholders and the US taxpayer in this
mess?
Based on
my reading of the Audit Committee minutes, I
believe that PwC was aware of weaknesses in internal controls over the
AIGFP super senior credit default portfolio throughout 2007 and prior.
Why were they pussy-footing around still on January 15, 2008 as to
whether these control weaknesses were a significant deficiency (which
would not have to have been disclosed) or a material weakness (which
eventually was)?
Read the rest
here.
http://goingconcern.com/2010/06/what-a-tangled-web-we-weave-aig’s-cassano-says-he-told-pwc-everything/
Bob Jensen's threads on PwC are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#PwC
"PwC May Have Overlooked Billions in Illegal JP Morgan Transactions.
Oopsie," by Adrenne Gonzalez, Going Concern, June 10, 2010 ---
http://goingconcern.com/2010/06/pwc-may-have-overlooked-billions-in-illegal-jp-morgan-transactions-oopsie/
Now £15.7 billion may not seem like much to you if
you are, say, Bill Gates or Ben Bernanke but for PwC UK, it may be the magic
number that gets them into a whole steaming shitpile of trouble.
UK regulators allege that from 2002 – 2009, PwC
client JP Morgan shuffled client money from its futures and options business
into its own accounts, which is obviously illegal. Whether or not JP Morgan
played with client money illegally is not the issue here, the issue is: will
PwC be liable for signing off on JPM’s activities and failing to catch such
significant shenanigans in a timely manner?
PwC did not simply audit the firm, they were hired
to provide annual client reports that certified client money was safe in the
event of a problem with the bank. Obviously that wasn’t the case.
The Financial Reporting Council and the Institute
of Chartered Accountants of England are investigating the matter, and the
Financial Services Authority has already fined P-dubs £33.3 million for
co-mingling client money and bank money. That’s $48.8 million in Dirty Fed
Notes if you are playing along at home.
Good luck with that, PwC. We genuinely mean that.
Bob Jensen's threads on PwC are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
Where Were the Auditors?
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#AuditFirms
Bob Jensen's Rotten to the Core threads on banks and brokerages ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Are the Canadian critics being too kind and gentle on themselves?
"Have Canadian Law Schools Become 'Psychotic Kindergartens'?" Inside
Higher Ed, June 7, 2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/06/07/qt#229422
Canadian bloggers have been buzzing in the last
week about a harsh critique of the country's law schools, which are compared
to "psychotic kindergartens" in a journal article published by Robert
Martin, a retired law professor at the University of Western Ontario. The
article was published last year in the journal Interchange, but has
only recently been the topic of debate. The article portrays law schools as
politically correct and focused on obscure issues. Martin closes his piece
by suggesting that Canada's law schools all be shut down and turned over to
the homeless as a place to live -- thus in Martin's view solving multiple
social problems at the same time. The article is available only to
subscribers of the journal, and while its focus is law schools, it isn't
much more kind to the rest of the country's universities. "Each fall, a
horde of illiterate, ignorant cretins enters Canada's universities. A few
years later, they all move on, just as illiterate, just as ignorant and
rather more cretinous, but now armed with bits of paper, which most of them
are probably not able to read, called degrees," he writes. The Canadian
legal blog
SLAW features a defense of legal education in the
country and criticism of Martin's views.
Our Compassless Colleges: What Are Students Really Not Learning" ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm#Berkowitz
Questions
What is driving tuition increases in law schools?
Are these same cost drivers impacting on some business schools and accountancy
programs for the same reasons?
Why are minority enrollments increasing with the exception of African American
law students?
Jensen Comment
Before reading the argument below, it should be noted that court decisions have
been adverse to affirmative action admissions and financial aid, most notably
the famous case that shook the foundations of the University of Michigan ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm#AcademicStandards
"Law-School Cost Is Pushed Up by Quest for Prestige, Not Accreditation,
GAO Survey Finds," by Eric Kelderman, Chronicle of Higher Education,
October 26, 2009 ---
http://chronicle.com/article/Competition-Not/48940/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
Critics have
sometimes blamed the accreditation standards of the American Bar Association
for driving up the cost of law school and making it more difficult for
students of color to be admitted to those programs.
But a report
released on Monday by the Government Accountability Office says that most
law schools surveyed instead blamed competition for better rankings and a
more hands-on approach to educating students for the increased price of a
law degree. In addition, the federal watchdog agency reported that, over
all, minorities are making up a larger share of law-school enrollments than
in the past, although the percentage of African-American students in those
programs is shrinking. The GAO attributed that decrease to lower
undergraduate grade-point averages and scores on law-school admissions
tests.
Law-school
accreditation is technically voluntary but practically important: 19 states
now require candidates to have a degree from an institution approved by the
bar association to be eligible to take the bar examination. And a degree
from an ABA-accredited institution makes a student eligible to take the bar
exam in any state.
The costs of
getting a law degree, however, have increased at a faster rate than the
costs of comparable professional programs, says the report, "Higher
Education: Issues Related to Law School Cost and Access." In-state tuition
and fees at public law schools averaged $14,461 in the 2007-8 academic year,
7.2 percent higher than the cost 12 years earlier. In comparison, the cost
of a medical degree from a public institution increased 5.3 percent over the
same period, to $22,048 annually.
Law-school costs
for nonresidents and at private institutions also increased at a slower rate
over that period, but now total about twice as much or more in dollars
compared with residents' costs at public institutions.
The reasons for the
fast-rising costs are that law schools are providing courses and
student-support programs that require more staff and faculty, the federal
survey found. In addition, law schools spent more on faculty salaries and
library resources, among other things, to boost their standing in the U.S.
News & World Report annual rankings, law-school officials told the GAO.
Those findings
stand in contrast to some criticisms that the accreditation standards for
faculty and facilities are a major factor in the cost of law schools.
"Officials from more than half of the ABA-accredited schools we spoke with
stated they would meet or exceed some ABA accreditation standards even if
they were not required," the report says.
Law-school
officials also cited recent declines in state appropriations as a reason for
rising tuition, federal researchers reported.
Accreditation
standards also were not widely blamed for the declining share of
African-American law students, most of those surveyed said. Between the
1994-95 and 2006-7 academic years, the percentage of black students has
shrunk from 7.5 percent of law school students to 6.5 percent, even as the
number of blacks earning bachelor's degrees has grown by two percentage
points.
"Most law-school
officials, students, and minority-student-group representatives we
interviewed focused on issues such as differences in LSAT scores, academic
preparation, and professional contacts, rather than accreditation standards,
to explain minority access issues," the report says.
But the report also
noted that some officials blamed not only accreditation, but also rankings
by U.S. News & World Report for lower or static enrollment rates of
minorities: "Schools are reluctant to admit applicants with lower LSAT
scores because the median LSAT score is a key factor in the U.S. News &
World Report rankings."
The study was a
requirement of the Higher Education Opportunity Act, passed in 2008, and was
meant to compare the costs and level of minority enrollment at law schools
to similar professional-degree programs, including medical, dental, and
veterinary colleges. Federal researchers surveyed officials at 22
institutions, including three that are not accredited by the ABA, and
students in two law programs, one of which did not have the ABA's stamp of
approval.
Bob Jensen's threads on accreditation are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm#AccreditationIssues
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
You can search video and start the video when a particular word crops up
YouTube's Interactive Transcripts ---
http://googlesystem.blogspot.com/2010/06/youtubes-interactive-transcripts.html
YouTube added a cool feature for videos with closed
captions: you can now click on the "transcript" button to expand the entire
listing. If you click on a line, YouTube will show the excerpt from the
video corresponding to the text. If you use your browser's find feature, you
can even search inside the video. Here's an
an example of video that includes a transcript.
Bob Jensen's search helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Searchh.htm
Evolution from Education to Training and Back to Education
"As Doctoral Education in Europe Evolves, Educators Meet to Chart Its
Progress," by Aisha Labi, Chronicle of Higher Education, June 6, 2010
---
http://chronicle.com/article/As-Doctoral-Education-in/65799/
Doctoral education across Europe is evolving
quickly and, even as universities shift their focus from traditional
training based largely on individual relationships to structured programs,
in-depth research must remain at the core of Ph.D. work, educators from
across Europe agreed at a two-day conference here on the future of doctoral
education in Europe.
The conference, the third annual meeting of the
European University Association's Council for Doctoral Education, came five
years after European educators, meeting in Salzburg, Austria, agreed to a
set of
10 core principles for for doctoral
education.
European higher education has undergone profound
changes since the Salzburg meeting, with nearly 50 countries across Europe
making huge strides in the past decade toward harmonizing their university
systems as part of the Bologna Process, which culminated earlier this year
in the official creation of the European Higher Education Area.
The initial focus of many of the Bologna reforms
was on what are referred to as the first- and second-degree cycles,
resulting in bachelor's and master's degrees. Unlike the first two cycles,
the doctoral cycle is not tied to earning a set number of credits, nor
should it be, participants at the Berlin meeting agreed, although a working
declaration agreed to at the meeting's conclusion noted that "thinking in
credits could be a useful common ground for joint programs or moving between
programs."
In a period of "breathtaking transformation,"
American Ph.D. programs have served as a "loose model" for many of the new
doctoral schools that are quickly becoming the norm in European doctoral
education, noted Giuseppe Silvestri, a former rector of the University of
Palermo and a member of the steering committee of the Council for Doctoral
Education. But the advent of structured programs in Europe does not mean
that doctoral education is becoming uniform, he emphasized, and indeed the
sheer diversity of programs, including those that span institutions in
several countries or pilot programs for a selected number of candidates at a
single institution, is striking.
The American model for graduate education is also
evolving, in many cases as a result of some of the same changes that are
affecting Europe, Karen P. DePauw, a former chair of the Council of Graduate
Schools and vice president and dean for graduate education at Virginia Tech,
told the conference. As in Europe, graduate education in American
universities is taking place in an increasingly internationalized context,
with faculty members and graduate students collaborating more with
international colleagues, and with formal degree programs involving
international partner universities on the rise. The spread of the Bologna
Process has created new challenges as well, she noted, including increased
competition among programs with high numbers of international students.
Research remains at the core of the American doctorate, but is also
increasingly being incorporated much more into master's and even
undergraduate programs, she said.
Internationalization is an essential component of
quality doctoral education, Juan José Moreno Navarro, director general for
university policy at the Spanish Ministry of Education, emphasized, because
"quality research is international." The working conclusions produced by the
conference emphasized the central role of internationalization as "a means
to research capacity," and noted that institutions need to have in place
both top-down strategies to organize international engagements but also
bottom-up support from research staffs for such collaborations.
In the United States, a Commission on the Future of
Graduate Education in the United States, organized by two education groups,
recently issued a set of recommendations for improving graduate education,
including a call for increased government financing for graduate studies.
Higher education in Europe is still largely paid for by public subsidies,
and European graduates do not struggle with the same kinds of
educational-debt burdens that their American counterparts often face. But
sustained financing for graduate studies also faces constraints.
Seeking Professional Status Izabela Stanislawiszyn,
president of Eurodoc, an association of European doctoral students, spoke
about concerns of doctoral candidates, who want to be seen not as students
but as early-stage professionals. The distinction is more than semantic. In
most European countries, being an employee carries benefits, such as access
to pensions and career security, that students do not enjoy. "We prefer to
be treated as professionals, not as students," she said.
Europe's 680,000 doctoral candidates represent a
"real engine of growth," Ms. Stanislawiszyn said, and much of the conference
discussion touched on their future trajectories and how doctoral education
can better prepare them for careers in academe and beyond.
In Germany, especially, which counts for a fourth
of all European doctorates, many Ph.D. holders end up working in industry.
For many employers, graduates who have shown that they are capable of doing
the kind of intellectual "deep dig" that comes from doctoral research are
especially attractive job candidates, said Wilhelm Krull, secretary general
of Germany's Volkswagen Foundation, Germany's largest nongovernmental backer
of scientific research.
Jean Chambaz, vice president for research at the
University of Paris VI (Pierre et Marie Curie), chairs the steering
committee for the Council for Doctoral Education. He warned against a "false
dichotomy" between careers in academe and industry. "I don't think that we
remain an academic when we go from the Ph.D. to the postdoc to an academic
career," he said. "You enter an academic career, and the Ph.D. should be
considered the first step of a career, when you're trained through the
practice of research, whatever you do later in your career."
Still, especially in a climate of increased
pressure from the governments that still provide most of the financing for
higher education to demonstrate the relevance and values of the degrees that
are being produced, focusing on the doctorate's essential academic,
research-oriented dimension is crucial, Geoffrey Boulton, a professor of
geosciences at the University of Edinburgh, emphasized. "The ivory tower is
important," he said. "It is where professors and others are able to patrol
the boundaries of what we know with a microscope. It may seem irrelevant to
others, but don't deride the ivory tower; we have to defend it."
The conference produced a series of draft
recommendations for the progress of doctoral education in Europe that will
be distributed among member institutions for their input.
Bob Jensen's threads on the sorry state of accounting doctoral programs in
North America ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
UCLA Award Finalist: Congratulations to Francine McKenna ---
http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/x32584.xml
As reported by Going Concern, May 25, 2010
2010 Gerald Loeb Award Finalists Announced by UCLA Anderson
School of Management [UCLA]
Congratulations are due to our own
Francine McKenna (look for her column later today)
who was named as a finalist for a Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished
Business and Financial Journalism in the “Online Commentary and Blogging
Category” for her work at
re:The Auditors.
Other nominees include Adrian Wooldridge, Steven N.
Kaplan, Nell Minow, Patrick Lane, Brad DeLong, Luigi Zingales, Saugato Datta,
Thomas Picketty and Chris Edwards for “Online Debates” for The Economist;
David Pogue for “Pogue’s Posts” for The New York Times; Jim Prevor
for “Business, Finances and Public Policy” for The Weekly Standard.
Jensen Comment
Francine puts in more investigative research into her blog and Twitter feeds
than most any blogger I can think of at the moment. In addition to investigating
the literature, she often goes directly to sources seeking interviews.
The competition for the Gerald Loeb Award is intense. Among the other
competitors is one of my favorites, David Pogue.
"Florida Appeals Court Turns Down Heat, For Now, On BDO Seidman," by
Francine McKenna, re: theAuditors, June 24, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/06/24/florida-appeals-court-turns-down-heat-for-now-on-bdo-seidman/
I was surprised by the news that
the record verdict against BDO Seidman in the Bankest fraud had been
reversed. I was stunned not because the verdict
had been reversed on appeal but by the reasons why. Everyone has to prepare
for a new trial because a judge erred in the setup of the proceedings.
That’s not supposed to happen.
It was a screwy sequence of events, for sure.
Every
time I wrote about the case I had to carefully
consider how to present all the twists and turns, ins and outs and complex
machinations the court forced both sides to endure.
The 20-page opinion was written by Judge Vance
E. Salter. Judges Gerald B. Cope and Linda Ann Wells concurred. Salter
said Rodriguez’s trial-planning decision was based on good intentions
for efficiency purposes.
“These objectives are much harder to achieve,
however, in a complex case,” Salter said.
Rodriguez ordered the first phase of the trial
to determine whether BDO Seidman had committed gross negligence, but
Salter noted that was two months before the jury considered issues of
causation, reliance and comparative fault.
One potential negative for the plaintiffs in the
retrial is the likely judge. Miami-Dade Circuit Judge John Schlesinger, the
judge who rendered the verdict for the defense in the
BDO International phase of the case, has taken
over Judge Jose Rodriguez’s civil division and will hear the retrial. I
was not impressed with Judge Schlesinger’s
level of interest or aptitude during the BDO International trial for this
“complex case brought by plaintiffs not in privity with the accounting
firm/defendant.”
From Leagle’s posting of
the opinion: The salutary objectives of
judicial economy (no phase II damages trial is required if the jury
returns a defense verdict in phase I), and the reduction of a longer
case into more digestible “phases,” often support bifurcation and the
exercise of that discretion. These objectives are much harder to
achieve, however, in
a complex case brought by plaintiffs not in privity with the accounting
firm/defendant. In such a case, liability
ultimately turns on specific demonstrations of knowledge, intent, and
reliance. The evidence pertaining
to those issues is inextricably intertwined with the claims and
affirmative defenses on issues of comparative fault, causation, and
gross negligence.
Bankest’s attorney Steven Thomas is optimistic
about a retrial. Me? Not so much. This isn’t because I doubt Mr. Thomas’
ability to kick tail as he did in the original trial. This isn’t because
the case doesn’t have sufficient merit.
From
Michael Rapoport at DJ/Wall Street Journal:
Steven Thomas, an attorney for Espirito Santo,
said he was looking forward to a retrial. “The evidence of BDO Seidman’s
failures of even the most basic auditing procedures is so overwhelming
that we expect a new jury will reach the same conclusion as the original
jury,” he said in a statement.
My doubts about the efficacy of a new trial are
based on the disappointing, frustrating and completely unsatisfying way the
court and the judges in this case have proceeded. Some of the additional
comments raised by the Appeals Court do not bode well for this plaintiff’s
chances next time around. This is in spite of the fact they
made a point of saying they would stop at the
prejudice imposed by the trifurcation issue and say no more that would
prejudice a new trial.
Because of the prejudice inherent in the
premature, first-phase gross negligence finding, we do not address in
detail other aspects of the trial. Our conclusion regarding the
“trifurcation” issue renders moot or pretermits our consideration of
most of the other parts of the jury’s verdicts and the remaining points
on appeal and cross-appeal.
There are two other issues raised by the Appeals
Court that may prove problematic to the plaintiffs in a retrial.
Continued in article
Here's Jim Peterson’s review
of the court outcome ---
Click Here
http://www.jamesrpeterson.com/home/2010/06/seidman-gets-a-new-trial-in-bankest-and-how-does-winning-feel-.html
In particular, Jim thinks BDO Seidman is headed down the tubes in spite of this
“win” on appeal.
Bob Jensen's threads on BDO Seidman, are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
"Koss Sues Grant Thornton, Blames Firm’s Assignment of Newbie Auditors,"
by Caleb Newquist , Going Concern, June 25, 2010 ---
http://goingconcern.com/2010/06/koss-sues-grant-thornton-blames-firms-assignment-of-newbie-auditors/
Koss hired one of the best accounting firms in the
world, Grant Thornton, and should have been able to rely on Thornton’s
audits to uncover wrongdoing, Avenatti said. The suit against the auditing
firm says auditors assigned to Koss were not properly trained.
The lawsuit lists hundreds of checks that Sachdeva
ordered drawn on company accounts to pay for her personal expenses. She
disguised the recipients — upscale retailers such as Neiman Marcus, Saks
Fifth Avenue and Marshall Fields — by using just the initials. But the suit
says Grant Thornton could have ascertained the true identity of the
recipients by inspecting the reverse side of the checks, which showed the
full name.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on Grant Thornton are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
"Will Auditors Ever Answer To Investors For Aiding And Abetting?," by
Francine McKenna, re: TheAuditors, June 16, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/06/16/will-auditors-ever-answer-to-investors-for-aiding-and-abetting/
The House – Senate Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act Conference reconvened on Tuesday, June 15
and
Compliance Week says a version of the Specter Bill
– to repeal the Supreme Court’s Stoneridge decision – will not be included
in whatever comes out of the process.
Bruce Carton in Compliance Week:
As this process gets underway, auditors, lawyers, bankers and other
advisers to public companies are quietly breathing a sigh of relief that
one of the items no longer on the table is an amendment proposed by Sen.
Arlen Specter that would have overturned the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2008
ruling in Stoneridge Investment Partners, LLC v. Scientific-Atlanta,
Inc., thereby permitting “aiding and abetting” liability for a
company’s auditors and others. The final version of the financial reform
bill that passed the Senate did not include the Specter amendment.
However,
a coalition of state regulators, public pension
funds, professors, consumers and investors and the attorneys who advise
them, are still working to put something back in the bill as an amendment to
restore the right of investors to defend themselves and hold white collar
criminals accountable.
Their email to me states:
The
amendment brought by Senators Arlen Specter
(D-PA), Jack Reed (D-RI), Dick Durbin (D-IL) and many other senior
Democrats would have enacted one simple change in current anti-investor
law – law that was “legislated” by a conservative Supreme Court rather
than the U.S. Congress. The reform would have restored the right of
pension funds and other investors to hold accountable in courts those
who knowingly aid and abet securities fraud.
This legal right of investors, which for fifty
years helped white collar crime victims recover their losses while also
deterring future fraud enablers, was stripped from shareholders and
bondholders by the radical Stoneridge Supreme Court decision of
2008, which expanded upon an earlier misguided Court decision in order
to throw out thousands of remaining meritorious fraud claims brought by
retirement funds and individual investors against investment banks and
others who helped design the Enron fraud – the largest financial crime
in U.S. history.
Earlier this Spring, a Federal appeals court
cited the “Supremes” and threw out the legitimate claims of ripped-off
shareholders and bondholders in the billion dollar Refco, Inc.
derivatives fraud. In Refco, a now criminally convicted corporate
lawyer had worked with Refco’s senior execs to execute fake transactions
as a paper trail leading to falsified financial statements that were
issued to investors and the public.
Both Congressman Barney Frank and Senator Ted Kaufman responded to
questions about the Specter amendment during my visit to Washington DC for
Compliance Week’s Annual Conference. House
Financial Services Committee Chairman Frank said at the conference that
he was in favor of bringing the amendment back in the bill. Senator
Kaufman, although a
co-sponsor of the original amendment, is
in favor but does not think it’s likely.
I’ve written quite a bit about the impact of third party liability on the
auditors in fraud claims and the
Stoneridge decision.
In February of 2008 , I wrote about Treasury’s attempt to address the
nagging issues of
viability and sustainability of the accounting profession.
They punted.
I have consistently disagreed with the Big 4’s
claim that auditor liability caps are necessary to
avoid losing one of the remaning firms to catastrophic litigation.
I have lamented the fact that the auditors don’t
get sued often enough for my tastes and, when they do, they often
settle. I’ve also said that they don’t deserve our pity, as they are
less than transparent regarding their true financial capacity to address
ongoing litigation…
“The Treasury Department established the
Advisory Committee on the Auditing Profession to examine the
sustainability of a strong and vibrant auditing profession.”
John P.
Coffey, the Co-Managing Partner of Bernstein
Litowitz Berger & Grossmann LLP… agrees with what I have been saying on
this blog all last year.
It is with this
perspective that I address one of the questions the Committee
is considering, namely, whether there ought to be a cap on auditor
liability. I respectfully submit that the case for such a cap has not
been made…
…the fact that, in
today’s environment, auditors are rarely named as defendants in these
actions. In a three-year period immediately before the PSLRA was enacted
– April 1992 through April 1995 – auditors were named as defendants in
81 of 446 private securities class actions filed, for an average of 27
suits per year, or 18% of all private securities class actions. As the
reforms of the PSLRA and the concomitant jurisprudence took hold, that
number dropped precipitously. Auditors were named as defendants in only
five suits in 2005, and only two cases in each of 2006 and 2007.
The number for 2007
is especially telling because approximately one out of every eleven
companies with U.S.-listed securities – almost 1200 companies in all –
filed financial restatements in 2007 to correct material accounting
errors. Further, an analysis of securities actions filed in 2006 and
2007 demonstrates a significant decline in the number of cases alleging
GAAP violations, appearing to suggest “a movement away from the focus in
recent years on the validity of financial results and accounting
treatment.”
Well, that’s changed post-financial crisis. In
addition to the big frauds like
Satyam, Glitnir, the
Madoff feeder funds and
garden variety accounting malpractice claims, the
auditors are named in high profile subprime cases where fraud is alleged
such as
New Century and
Lehman.
It’s still not a deluge, since the
PSLRA makes it damn difficult to draw the auditors
in without a smoking gun or, actually, a rogue mechanical pencil. Even with
a top
notch bankruptcy examiner’s report – I’m talking
Refco here – it’s not easy.
July 11, 2007, Bloomberg
Refco
Inc.’s tax accountant, Ernst & Young, and a
company law firm may have helped the defunct futures trader defraud
investors, according to an examiner’s report unsealed today.
Ernst & Young, the second-biggest U.S.
accounting firm, and Mayer Brown Rowe & Maw, a Chicago-based law firm,
might face claims by Refco for aiding and abetting the fraud, examiner Joshua
Hochberg said in a report filed in U.S.
Bankruptcy Court in New York. Grant Thornton, the sixth biggest U.S.
accounting firm, might face claims of professional negligence for work
it did before Refco’s bankruptcy, Hochberg said.
Contrast that seemingly slam-dunk assessment with
this report on August 22, 2009:
Two accounting firms and a law firm won
dismissal of a lawsuit on behalf of former Refco Inc currency trading
customers who lost more than $500 million when the defunct futures and
commodities broker went bankrupt.
U.S. District Judge Gerard Lynch on Tuesday
said Marc Kirschner, a trustee representing the customers, failed to
show that Ernst & Young LLP [ERNY.UL], Grant Thornton LLP and the law
firm Mayer Brown LLP knew of or substantially assisted in the fraudulent
diversion of assets that led to Refco’s demise.
The Manhattan federal judge, however, gave
permission for Kirschner to file a new complaint. Citing the trustee’s
access to a “substantial trove” of Refco documents, Lynch said: “It is
far from clear that repleading would be futile.”
In his 35-page opinion, Lynch said Grant
Thornton’s work gave it “a complete picture of how Refco and the Refco
fraud, functioned.”
He also said Mayer Brown “actively participated
in carrying out Refco’s fraudulent misstatement of its financial
position,” while Ernst performed to work for Refco “despite apprehending
the scope of the fraud.”
Judges, even while granting motions to dismiss,
have more than once bemoaned the fact that the law does not allow them to
act differently. In case after case,
the judges are forced to let culpable third-party actors in these frauds off
the hook.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on auditing firm litigation woes ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on professionalism and independence in auditing --- a
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Professionalism
"A Missed Opportunity on Financial Reform: How could Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac have escaped Congress's attention?" by Walter Levitt, The
Wall Street Journal, June 24, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704853404575322491510468572.html#mod=djemEditorialPage_t
As a lifelong Democrat and public servant to four
presidents, I had hoped the financial reform bill would be the best example
of my party's long-standing reputation for standing on the side of
individual investors.
It's not. The bill, already weakened by deal-making
as it emerged from the Senate, has been bled dry of nearly every meaningful
protection of investors.
Ironically, the authors of this bill are the same
Democrats who normally would have opposed many of its features if they were
in the minority. Now in the majority, these politicians are investor
advocates in their press releases alone.
The Democrats had the chance to do this bill the
right way. They should have been motivated by Congress's previous failure to
adopt meaningful reform, which left investors unprepared for the crisis. And
they had the input of talented leaders and experts who attempted to help
lawmakers deal with systemic risk and gaps in basic investor protections.
Whatever these positive contributions, Congress
more than overwhelmed them with sins of commission and sins of omission. One
of many bad ideas that made it into the bill: Public companies will now have
a wider loophole to avoid doing internal audits investors can trust. This
requirement was the most important pro-investor reform of the last decade,
and it worked. Of the 522 U.S. financial restatements in 2009, 374 were at
small firms not subject to auditor reviews.
But the reform bill about to be passed expands the
number of small companies exempt from Sarbanes-Oxley audit requirements.
When fraud is happening at a public company, small or large, investors care.
Now, thanks to Democratic leadership, investors are less likely to know.
There are many missed opportunities in this bill,
but these are the biggest:
First, Democratic leaders in Congress failed to
revoke the 1975 law that prevents municipal bond issuers from facing the
kind of regulation and scrutiny of the corporate bond market. If the
municipal bond market melts down in the next few years, we'll know who to
blame.
Second, they failed to pass a meaningful
majority-vote or proxy access rule for corporate ballots. Instead, thanks to
Sen. Chris Dodd (D., Conn.), the Senate passed a proxy access rule that is
comically useless: You need 5% of shares to get on the proxy. Very rarely do
investors assemble such large stakes in any company.
Third, New York Sen. Chuck Schumer's wise idea to
let the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) become a self-funded agency
will likely be killed by appropriators who are unwilling to give up the
power of the purse.
Fourth, Democratic leaders left in place the
confusing dual regulatory structure of the SEC and the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission. A merger was necessary to eliminate regulatory arbitrage
and corrosive bureaucratic turf battles, yet it didn't happen.
Fifth, Senate Democrats failed to support Rep.
Barney Frank's (D., Mass.) effort to pass a new law to overcome the legal
precedent of the 2008 Supreme Court's Stoneridge decision, which allows
third-party consultants, accountants and other abettors of fraud to avoid
liability. Again, another sellout of investor interests.
Sixth, Congress didn't deal with the massive
problems of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It's one thing to fail to see
trouble before it happens. Now, there's no excuse. The central role played
by these two organizations in the financial crisis is indisputable. Congress
had a chance to fully restrict these agencies from anything but the most
basic market-making activities, and it didn't.
Finally, Democrats could have proposed a law
obligating investment advisers to serve their clients' interests above all
others. That was in the House version of the bill, but the Senate punted the
idea, and it's is likely to end up kicked down the road even further.
The sad reality is that we may not have a chance to
enact these kinds of reforms until after the next major financial crisis.
For those of us who champion the rights of investors, that's too long to
wait—especially since until very recently we didn't think we would have to.
Mr. Levitt, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission from
1993 to 2001, now serves as an adviser to the Carlyle Group and Goldman
Sachs.
Bob Jensen's threads on Freddie and Fannie are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm
"They
Left Fannie Mae, but We Got the Legal Bills," by Grechen Morgenson,
The New York Times, September 5, 2009 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/06/business/economy/06gret.html?_r=1&scp=2&sq=gretchen
morgensen&st=cse
I Saw Maxine Kissing Franklin Raines ---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vbZnLxdCWkA
Before Franklin Raines resigned as CEO of Fannie Mae and paid over a
million dollar fine for accounting fraud to pad his bonus, he was the
darling of the liberal members of Congress. Frank Raines was creatively
managing earnings to the penny just enough to get his enormous bonus.
The auditing firm of KPMG was accordingly fired from its biggest
corporate client in history ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#Manipulation
Video on the efforts of some members of Congress seeking to cover up
accounting fraud at Fannie Mae ---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1RZVw3no2A4
The Largest Earnings Management Fraud in History and Congressional
Efforts to Cover it Up
Without trying to place the blame on Democrats or Republicans, here are
some of the facts that led to the eventual fining of Fannie Mae
executives for accounting fraud and the firing of KPMG as the auditor on
one of the largest and most lucrative audit clients in the history of
KPMG. The restated earnings purportedly took upwards of a million
journal entries, many of which were re-valuations of derivatives being
manipulated by Fannie Mae accountants and auditors (Deloitte was charged
with overseeing the financial statement revisions.
Fannie Mae may have conducted the largest earnings management scheme in
the history of accounting.
You can read the following at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm
.
. . flexibility also gave Fannie the ability to manipulate earnings
to hit -- within pennies -- target numbers for executive bonuses.
Ofheo details an example from 1998, the year the Russian financial
crisis sent interest rates tumbling. Lower rates caused a lot of
mortgage holders to prepay their existing home mortgages. And Fannie
was suddenly facing an estimated expense of $400 million.
Well, in its wisdom, Fannie decided to recognize only $200 million,
deferring the other half. That allowed Fannie's executives -- whose
bonus plan is linked to earnings-per-share -- to meet the target for
maximum bonus payouts. The target EPS for maximum payout was $3.23
and Fannie reported exactly . . . $3.2309. This bull's-eye was worth
$1.932 million to then-CEO James Johnson, $1.19 million to
then-CEO-designate Franklin Raines, and $779,625 to then-Vice
Chairman Jamie Gorelick.
That same year Fannie installed software that allowed management to
produce multiple scenarios under different assumptions that,
according to a Fannie executive, "strengthens the earnings
management that is necessary when dealing with a volatile book of
business." Over the years, Fannie designed and added software that
allowed it to assess the impact of recognizing income or expense on
securities and loans. This practice fits with a Fannie corporate
culture that the report says considered volatility "artificial" and
measures of precision "spurious."
This disturbing culture was apparent in Fannie's manipulation of its
derivative accounting. Fannie runs a giant derivative book in an
attempt to hedge its massive exposure to interest-rate risk.
Derivatives must be marked-to-market, carried on the balance sheet
at fair value. The problem is that changes in fair-value can cause
some nasty volatility in earnings.
So, Fannie decided to classify a huge amount of its derivatives as
hedging transactions, thereby avoiding any impact on earnings. (And
we mean huge: In December 2003, Fan's derivatives had a notional
value of $1.04 trillion of which only a notional $43 million was not
classified in hedging relationships.) This misapplication continued
when Fannie closed out positions. The company did not record the
fair-value changes in earnings, but only in Accumulated Other
Comprehensive Income (AOCI) where losses can be amortized over a
long period.
Fannie had some $12.2 billion in deferred losses in the AOCI balance
at year-end 2003. If this amount must be reclassified into retained
earnings, it might punish Fannie's earnings for various periods over
the past three years, leaving its capital well below what is
required by regulators.
In all, the Ofheo report notes, "The misapplications of GAAP are not
limited occurrences, but appear to be pervasive . . . [and] raise
serious doubts as to the validity of previously reported financial
results, as well as adequacy of regulatory capital, management
supervision and overall safety and soundness. . . ." In an agreement
reached with Ofheo last week, Fannie promised to change the methods
involved in both the cookie-jar and derivative accounting and to
change its compensation "to avoid any inappropriate incentives."
But we don't think this goes nearly far enough for a company whose
executives have for years derided anyone who raised a doubt about
either its accounting or its growing risk profile. At a minimum
these executives are not the sort anyone would want running the U.S.
Treasury under John Kerry. With the Justice Department already
starting a criminal probe, we find it hard to comprehend that the
Fannie board still believes that investors can trust its management
team.
Fannie Mae isn't an ordinary company and this isn't a
run-of-the-mill accounting scandal. The U.S. government had no
financial stake in the failure of Enron or WorldCom. But because of
Fannie's implicit subsidy from the federal government, taxpayers are
on the hook if its capital cushion is insufficient to absorb big
losses. Private profit, public risk. That's quite a confidence game
-- and it's time to call it.
**********************************
:"Sometimes
the Wrong 'Notion': Lender Fannie Mae Used A Too-Simple Standard For
Its Complex Portfolio," by Michael MacKenzie, The Wall Street
Journal, October 5, 2004, Page C3
Lender Fannie
Mae Used A Too-Simple Standard For Its Complex Portfolio
What exactly
did
Fannie Mae do wrong?
Much has been
made of the accounting improprieties alleged by Fannie's regulator,
the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight.
Some investors
may even be aware the matter centers on the mortgage giant's $1
trillion "notional" portfolio of derivatives -- notional being the
Wall Street way of saying that that is how much those options and
other derivatives are worth on paper.
But
understanding exactly what is supposed to be wrong with Fannie's
handling of these instruments takes some doing. Herewith, an effort
to touch on what's what -- a notion of the problems with that
notional amount, if you will.
Ofheo alleges
that, in order to keep its earnings steady, Fannie used the wrong
accounting standards for these derivatives, classifying them under
complex (to put it mildly) requirements laid out by the Financial
Accounting Standards Board's rule 133, or FAS 133.
For most
companies using derivatives, FAS 133 has clear advantages, helping
to smooth out reported income. However, accounting experts say FAS
133 works best for companies that follow relatively simple hedging
programs, whereas Fannie Mae's huge cash needs and giant portfolio
requires constant fine-tuning as market rates change.
A Fannie
spokesman last week declined to comment on the issue of hedge
accounting for derivatives, but Fannie Mae has maintained that it
uses derivatives to manage its balance sheet of debt and mortgage
assets and doesn't take outright speculative positions. It also uses
swaps -- derivatives that generally are agreements to exchange
fixed- and floating-rate payments -- to protect its mortgage assets
against large swings in rates.
Under FAS 133, if
a swap is being used to hedge risk against another item on the
balance sheet, special hedge accounting is applied to any gains and
losses that result from the use of the swap. Within the application
of this accounting there are two separate classifications:
fair-value hedges and cash-flow hedges.
Fannie's
fair-value hedges generally aim to get fixed-rate payments by
agreeing to pay a counterparty floating interest rates, the idea
being to offset the risk of homeowners refinancing their mortgages
for lower rates. Any gain or loss, along with that of the asset or
liability being hedged, is supposed to go straight into earnings as
income. In other words, if the swap loses money but is being applied
against a mortgage that has risen in value, the gain and loss cancel
each other out, which actually smoothes the company's income.
Cash-flow
hedges, on the other hand, generally involve Fannie entering an
agreement to pay fixed rates in order to get floating-rates. The
profit or loss on these hedges don't immediately flow to earnings.
Instead, they go into the balance sheet under a line called
accumulated other comprehensive income, or AOCI, and are allocated
into earnings over time, a process known as amortization.
Ofheo claims
that instead of terminating swaps and amortizing gains and losses
over the life of the original asset or liability that the swap was
used to hedge, Fannie Mae had been entering swap transactions that
offset each other and keeping both the swaps under the hedge
classifications. That was a no-go, the regulator says.
"The major
risk facing Fannie is that by tainting a certain portion of the
portfolio with redesignations and improper documentation, it may
well lose hedge accounting for the whole derivatives portfolio,"
said Gerald Lucas, a bond strategist at Banc of America Securities
in New York.
The bottom line is that both the FASB and the IASB must someday soon
take another look at how the real world hedges portfolios rather than
individual securities. The problem is complex, but the problem has come
to roost in Fannie Mae's $1 trillion in hedging contracts. How the SEC
acts may well override the FASB. How the SEC acts may be a vindication
or a damnation for Fannie Mae and Fannie's auditor KPMG who let Fannie
violate the rules of IAS 133.
Question
How many of you recall the infamous Footnote 16 testimony of C.E. Andrews in the
Senate hearings when Andersen was near but not quite over the cliff?
"McGladrey Reorganizes, Celebrates New Logo With Monster Cake," by
Susan Black, Big Four Blog, June 24, 2010 ---
http://bigfouralumni.blogspot.com/2010/06/mcgladrey-reorganizes-celebrates-new.html
RSM McGladrey (tax and consulting) and partner firm
McGladrey & Pullen (assurance) recently decided to go to market under the "McGladrey"
brand. Combined, the firms are fifth-largest U.S. firm with revenues of $1.5
billion, 7,000 professionals in nearly 90 offices. Also, the firms recently
realigned to focus on national lines of business and industry. Both firms
are members of RSM International, the sixth largest global network in the
world, and operate as separate legal entities in an alternative practice
structure
We wonder if this is the influence of
C.E. Andrews, who took
over last year 2009 as president and chief operating officer of RSM
McGladrey. C.E. Andrews was almost 30 years at Andersen; most recently as
head of Audit. And Andersen did shorten its prior name of Arthur Andersen
and changed its logo from the double doors to the orange sun.
Continued in article
When C.E. Andrews Fumbled a Footnote
Flashback to Year 2002 ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#Senator
A
Senator Complains to
C.E. Andrews,
the Head of Auditing at Andersen, About Enron's Related Party
Disclosure in Enron's Year 2000 Annual Report
SEN.
DORGAN: Should it raise a red flag for an auditor if the chief
financial officer of a company is personally involved in complex
financial transactions in their own firm? This was the case with
Mr. Fastow who had a personal stake, as I understand it, in the
success of these SPEs and was compensated in that matter. Should
that concern an auditor and did it concern Andersen?
MR.
ANDREWS: Senator, as it pertains to related party transactions,
again, the accounting and disclosure rules require that related
party transactions be reviewed and disclosed where there would
be material on financial statements and, in this case, that
related party transaction was disclosed in the footnotes to the
Enron financial statements.
SEN.
DORGAN: Do you have those footnotes with you?
MR.
ANDREWS: Chairman, I do not.
SEN. DORGAN: The reason
I ask is I've read some of those footnotes and I think it would
have been impossible for even the most experienced analyst to
understand what those footnotes meant, and that is of concern.
The exchange above is quoted from
http://www.c-span.org/enron/scomm_1218.asp#open
The footnote
being referred to above is Footnote 16 from the Year 2000 Annual
Report that can be downloaded from
http://www.enron.com/corp/investors/annuals/2000/ar2000.pdf
I have
reproduced Footnote 16 below. Who do you think is correct with
respect to the related-party disclosure adequacy in the disputed
Footnote 16 --- C.E. Andrews or Senator Dorgan?
Do the related
party disclosures in the footnote below add value to you when
analyzing risk? Does this tell you that Enron's CFO made over $30
million from his limited partnership that entered into derivatives
for Enron?
Footnote 16
from the Year 2000 Enron Annual Report
http://www.enron.com/corp/investors/annuals/2000/ar2000.pdf
16. RELATED PARTY
TRANSACTIONS
In
2000 and 1999, Enron entered into transactions with
limited partnerships (the Related Party) whose general
partner's managing member is a senior office of Enron.
The limited partners of the Related Party are unrelated
to Enron. Management believes that the terms of the
transactions with the Related Party were reasonable
compared to those which could have been negotiated with
unrelated third parties.
In
2000, Enron entered into transactions with the Related
Party to hedge certain merchant investments and other
assets. As part of the transactions, Enron (i)
contributed to newly-formed entities (the Entities)
assets valued at approximately $1.2 billion, including
$150 million in Enron notes payable, 3.7 million
restricted shares of outstanding Enron common stock and
the right to receive up to 18.0 million shares of
outstanding Enron common stock in March 2003 (subject to
certain conditions) and (ii) transferred to the Entities
assets valued at approximately $309 million, including a
$50 million note payable and an investment in an entity
that indirectly holds warrants convertible into common
stock of an Enron equity method investee. In return,
Enron received economic interests in the Entities, $309
million in notes receivable, of which $259 million is
recorded at Enron's carryover basis of zero, and a
special distribution from the Entities in the form of
$1.2 billion in notes receivable, subject to changes in
the principal for amounts payable by Enron in connection
with the execution of additional derivative
instruments. Cash in these Entities of $172.6 million
is invested in Enron demand notes. In addition, Enron
paid $123 million to purchase share-settled options from
the Entities on 21.7 million shares of Enron common
stock. The Entities paid Enron $10.7 million to
terminate the share-settled options on 14.6 million
shares of Enron common stock outstanding. In late 2000,
Enron entered into share-settled collar arrangements
with the Entities on 15.4 million shares of Enron common
stock. Such arrangements will be accounted for as
equity transactions when settled.
In
2000, Enron entered in derivative transactions with the
Entities with a combined notional amount of
approximately $2.1 billion to hedge certain merchant
investments and other assets. Enron's notes receivable
balance was reduced by $36 million as a result of
premiums owed on derivative transactions. Enron
recognized revenues of approximately $500 million
related to the subsequent change in the market value of
these derivatives, which offset market value changes of
certain merchant investments and price risk management
activities. In addition, Enron recognized $44.5 million
and $14.1 million of interest income and interest
expense, respectively, on the notes receivable from and
payable to the Entities.
In
1999, Enron entered into a series of transactions
involving a third party and the Related Party. The
effect of the transactions was (i) Enron and the third
party amended certain forward contracts to purchase
shares of Enron common stock, resulting in Enron having
forward contracts to purchase Enron common shares at the
market price on that day, (ii) the Related Party
received 6.8 million shares of Enron common stock
subject to certain restrictions and (iii) Enron received
a note receivable, which was repaid in December 1999,
and certain financial instruments hedging an investment
held by Enron. Enron recorded the assets received and
equity issued at estimated fair value. In connection
with the transactions, the Related Party agreed that the
senior officer of Enron would have no pecuniary interest
in such Enron common shares and would be restricted from
voting on matters related to such shares. In 2000,
Enron and the Related Party entered into an agreement to
terminate certain financial instruments that had been
entered into during 1999. In connection with this
agreement, Enron received approximately 3.1 million
shares of Enron common stock held by the Related Party.
A put option, which was originally entered into in the
first quarter of 2000 and gave the Related Party the
right to sell shares of Enron common stock to Enron at a
strike price of $71.31 per share, was terminated under
this agreement. In return, Enron paid approximately
$26.8 million to the Related Party.
In
2000, Enron sold a portion of its dark fiber inventory
to the Related Party in exchange for $30 million cash
and a $70 million note receivable that was subsequently
repaid. Enron recognized gross margin of $67 million on
the sale.
In
2000, the Related Party acquired, through
securitizations, approximately $35 million of merchant
investments from Enron. In addition, Enron and the
Related Party formed partnerships in which Enron
contributed cash and assets and the Related Party
contributed $17.5 million in cash. Subsequently, Enron
sold a portion of its interest in the partnership
through securitizations. See Note 3. Also Enron
contributed a put option to a trust in which the Related
Party and Whitewing hold equity and debt interests. At
December 31, 2000, the fair value of the put option was
a $36 million loss to Enron.
In
1999, the Related Party acquired approximately $371
million of merchant assets and investments and other
assets from Enron. Enron recognized pre-tax gains of
approximately $16 million related to these
transactions. The Related Party also entered into an
agreement to acquire Enron's interests in an
unconsolidated equity affiliate for approximately $34
million.
|
Footnote 16
Analysis by Frank Partnoy
Testimony of Frank Partnoy Professor
of Law, University of San Diego School of Law Hearings
before the United States Senate Committee on
Governmental Affairs, January 24, 2002 ---
http://www.senate.gov/~gov_affairs/012402partnoy.htm
Part C of the Testimony
C. Using Derivatives to Inflate
the Value of Troubled Businesses A third example is even
more troubling. It appears that Enron inflated the value
of certain assets it held by selling a small portion of
those assets to a special purpose entity at an inflated
price, and then revaluing the lion’s share of those
assets it still held at that higher price.
Consider the following sentence
disclosed from the infamous footnote 16 of Enron’s 2000
annual report, on page 49: “In 2000, Enron sold a
portion of its dark fiber inventory to the Related Party
in exchange for $30 million cash and a $70 million note
receivable that was subsequently repaid. Enron
recognized gross margin of $67 million on the sale.”
What does this sentence mean?
It is possible to understand
the sentence today, but only after reading a January 7,
2002, article about the sale by Daniel Fisher of Forbes
magazine, together with an August 2001 memorandum
describing the transaction (and others) from one Enron
employee, Sherron Watkins, to Enron Chairman Kenneth
Lay. Here is my best understanding of what this sentence
means:
First, the “Related Party” is
LJM2, an Enron partnership run by Enron’s Chief
Financial Officer, Andrew Fastow. (Fastow reportedly
received $30 million from the LJM1 and LJM2 partnerships
pursuant to compensation arrangements Enron’s board of
directors approved.)
Second, “dark fiber” refers to
a type of bandwidth Enron traded as part of its
broadband business. In this business, Enron traded the
right to transmit data through various fiber-optic
cables, more than 40 million miles of which various
Internet-related companies had installed in the United
States. Only a small percentage of these cables were
“lit” – meaning they could transmit the light waves
required to carry Internet data; the vast majority of
cables were still awaiting upgrades and were “dark.” The
rights associated with those “dark” cables were called
“dark fiber.” As one might expect, the rights to
transmit over “dark fiber” are very difficult to value.
Third, Enron sold “dark fiber”
it apparently valued at only $33 million for triple that
value: $100 million in all – $30 million in cash plus
$70 million in a note receivable. It appears that this
sale was at an inflated price, thereby enabling Enron to
record a $67 million profit on that trade. LJM2
apparently obtained cash from investors by issuing
securities and used some of these proceeds to repay the
note receivable issued to Enron.
What the sentence in footnote
16 does not make plain is that the investor in LJM2 was
persuaded to pay what appears to be an inflated price,
because Enron entered into a “make whole” derivatives
contract with LJM2 (of the same type it used with
Raptor). Essentially, the investor was buying Enron’s
debt. The investor was willing to buy securities in
LJM2, because if the “dark fiber” declined in price – as
it almost certainly would, from its inflated value –
Enron would make the investor whole. In these
transactions, Enron retained the economic risk
associated with the “dark fiber.” Yet as the value of
“dark fiber” plunged during 2000, Enron nevertheless was
able to record a gain on its sale, and avoid recognizing
any losses on assets held by LJM2, which was an
unconsolidated affiliate of Enron, just like JEDI.
As if all of this were not
complicated enough, Enron’s sale of “dark fiber” to LJM2
also magically generated an inflated price, which Enron
then could use in valuing any remaining “dark fiber” it
held. The third-party investor in LJM2 had, in a sense,
“validated” the value of the “dark fiber” at the higher
price, and Enron then arguably could use that inflated
price in valuing other “dark fiber” assets it held. I do
not have any direct knowledge of this, although public
reports and Sherron Watkins’s letter indicate that this
is precisely what happened.
For example, suppose Enron
started with ten units of “dark fiber,” worth $100, and
sold one to a special purpose entity for $20 – double
its actual value – using the above scheme. Now, Enron
had an argument that each of its remaining nine units of
“dark fiber” also were worth $20 each, for a total of
$180.
Enron then could revalue its
remaining nine units of “dark fiber” at a total of $180.
If the assets used in the transaction were difficult to
value – as “dark fiber” clearly was – Enron’s inflated
valuation might not generate much suspicion, at least
initially. But ultimately the valuations would be
indefensible, and Enron would need to recognize the
associated losses.
It is an open question for this
Committee and others whether this transaction was
unique, or whether Enron engaged in other, similar
deals. It seems likely that the “dark fiber” deal was
not the only one of its kind. There are many sentences
in footnote 16.
|
|
Bob Jensen's threads on the fall of Andersen, Enron, and WorldCom ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm
"Auditors Under Fire. In The UK. That Is All," by Francine McKenna,
re: TheAuditors, June 7, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/06/07/auditors-under-fire-in-the-uk-that-is-all/
It seems as if the British are paying attention
more closely to the audit industry and their complicity in the financial
crisis and other failures than the media, legislators and regulators in the
US.
Well… there was that
blip of interest when the Lehman Bankruptcy
Examiner called out Ernst & Young for their malpractice in that colossal
failure.
But the stories mentioning Ernst & Young have
mostly stopped for now. There were a few floating into my inbox the last few
days mentioning
EY’s request for a motion to dismiss in some Lehman litigation.
Let’s hope there’s no judge in New York who wants to
be known as the one who let EY or anyone else involved in that mess off the
hook too early and too easily.
It’s not surprising to me that the dialogue about
auditor failure along with others in the crisis is loudest in the UK. It was
the British –
Prem Sikka, Richard Murphy and
Dennis Howlett – who first took notice of what I
was writing here, three years ago, before anyone else. They were so
surprised to find someone in the US who was free to write so so critically.
“In a
separate statement, the [Accountant's Joint
Disciplinary Scheme] said the case also gave rise to concerns about the
dominance of the Big Four accountancy firms.
The JDS said it had found it difficult to get
any expert evidence for its investigation because
specialists were confined “almost exclusively” to the Big Four, and
because of conflicts of interest, these were unable to comment.”
It is a dialogue. The audit firm leadership in the
UK actually talk back and speak their mind. In their own voice, it seems.
Sometimes to
comic effect.
There are so many corks popping the UK, hitting
them in the eyes, audit firm leadership is actually trying to preempt.
They’re shaking in their £1000 bespoke leather slip-ons.
Well, not really.
Maybe their bottom lips are quivering a bit in
quiet indignation.
Mr Powell, 54, also has plans to continue to
grow the business, in particular to double the revenues of the [PwC]
consultancy practice against a backdrop of scything cuts in UK and
European government spending.
The response of the affable and
youthful-looking Mr Powell to this mounting in-tray is softly spoken and
mostly diplomatic, although there are flashes of steel, as perhaps
expected from the boss of a firm which counts 90 per cent of the FTSE
100 as its clients in one capacity or another across audit, tax and
consulting.
He tells the Financial Times in an interview
in his offices overlooking the River Thames that it is “time to turn up
the heat in the organisation”.
However, on regulatory inquiries he wants a
debate. First with Vince Cable, the business secretary, about changing
“ground rules” for auditors and then with investors and regulators about
the desire for more subjectivity in the audit report.
In what context were the “affable and
youthful-looking” Mr. Powell’s comments made, whilst sipping tea in his
“offices overlooking the River Thames” ? PwC is being skewered in the UK
press over its complete and utter lack of competence in the JP Morgan
“billions in client funds in the wrong accounts” debacle.
Didn’t hear about it? It’s a British thing.
Mr Powell’s comments come as PwC’s audit
practice may face a separate inquiry by the Financial Reporting Council,
which oversees auditors, after the Financial Services Authority last
week revealed
the firm had failed over a seven-year period to spot
that JPMorgan
had accidentally placed as much as
$23bn (£16bn) of client funds into the wrong bank accounts. PwC has
declined to comment.
His comments also follow government plans to
cut public sector spending on consulting services, an area that
contributes up to 40 per cent of PwC’s £450m consulting and advisory
business. PwC aims to at least double revenues and staff in its
consulting business in the next five years, and has seen “well into
double-digit” growth in its UK consulting practice in the past 11
months, Mr Powell said.
Big Four efforts to aggressively expand their
consulting practices have attracted some controversy, as they had scaled
them back after the Enron crisis amid concerns it could affect the
independence of their audit reports.
Indeed. I must say old chap… Getting a little
squidgy for you?
Remember, PwC is not only long time auditor for JP
Morgan Chase but also
Bank of America,
AIG,
Freddie Mac,
Northern Rock,
Goldman Sachs and several
Madoff feeder funds. And don’t ever forget
Glitnir and
Satyam.
How’s that for an
all-star lineup of litigation?
Ernst and Young, for its part, had a long,
protracted and quite embarrassing run with the Equitable Life litigation.
But as that
immortal Brit once
said, “All’s well that ends well.”
Ernst & Young’s statement about the official
disciplinary investigation into its role in the Equitable
Life affair may well lead the casual reader to
think it had come away triumphant…It was still fined £500,000 with costs
of £2.4m. But it now crows that the most serious allegations – that it
lacked objectivity and independence – have been thrown out. The firm
also comments that the appeal tribunal took the view that Equitable and
E&Y were right to think it “very unlikely” the insurer would lose the
court case, and that there was no requirement to disclose a “remote
contingency”…It is true that the disaster at Equitable was primarily the
doing of its former executives, and that auditors cannot be expected to
discover all management folly and incompetence. But shouldn’t any audit
firm worth its salt be embarrassed by failing to spot a scandal of this
magnitude?
Ernst & Young apologized to the policy holders.
Apologized.
It’s all behind us now. The audit partner in
question has since retired. Just like
Bally’s.
Ease of abdication of responsibility by the firms
is the lamentable downside of
proceedings that take forever and a day to conclude.
In a statement, Ernst & Young said: “Any
lessons from our audit of Equitable have long been learned and embedded
in our audit systems and procedures. We extend our sympathies to the
policyholders of Equitable Life, who have been impacted by the
near-collapse of the society, following events which lay well outside of
our control and the remit of our role as auditor.”
This fine was handy pocket change for EY and
nothing compared to what they face potentially in the Lehman litigation.
It’s only unfortunate for EY it lasted so long and cost them so much in
solicitor fees.
So why hasn’t the same
contained outrage over the auditors role in the crisis
and other failures crossed lips like spittle in the
US? Why hasn’t Congress demanded EY or one of the others testify over their
role in the crisis? Why hasn’t mainstream media stayed on the story and
written about
the pile of steaming lawsuits suffocating each and every one of the Big 4
audit firms in the US?
Will the media, regulators and legislators wait
until the
New Century v. KPMG case finally comes to trial?
I’d better brace myself for the calls from newbie journalists all over
again.
Or maybe we’ll putter along with updates as
Satyam, Glitnir, Lehman,
Anglo Irish and others play out in the New York
courts.
The Deloitte SAP case in Marin County is pretty
sexy. Michael
Krigsman rightly calls it a game changer for
systems integrators. Who dares to call a spade and spade and accuse a Big 4
of fraud for the bait and switch which is putting junior folks on a big SAP
engagement when you promised experienced ones?
Municipalities hungry for cash, that’s who.
Continued at
http://retheauditors.com/2010/06/07/auditors-under-fire-in-the-uk-that-is-all/
June 7, 2010 reply from Robert Bruce Walker
[walkerrb@ACTRIX.CO.NZ]
Here is Accountancy’s report on the JP Morgan
client accounting fiasco. You will see that PwC was actually engaged to
provide some sort of specific certification in that respect. Whilst trust
account auditing can be tricky, you don’t need to be an audit ‘expert’ to
track GBP 16 billion. A few simple tracing tests ought to do it.
"PwC in potential inquiry over client money
breach: FSA fines JP Morgan record £33m," by Pat Sweet
PricewaterhouseCoopers could face an inquiry by
accounting regulators over its repeated certification that JP Morgan
Securities Ltd (JPMSL) kept clients' funds separate from its own - a
certification which is now in contention after the bank was discovered
to have breached the rules.
The role of PwC - also the bank's auditors - in
the certification of how the investment bank handled client funds is now
under scrutiny, following a record £33.3m fine on the bank by the
Financial Services Authority, which discovered that JPMSL had mixed its
own funds with those of clients.
Under the FSA’s client money rules, firms are
required to keep client money separate from the firm's money in
segregated accounts with trust status. This helps to protect client
money in the event of the firm's insolvency.
The FSA fined JPMSL after it found to have
mixed client funds with its own cash over a seven year period. Up to
£16bn of clients’ money went into the wrong bank accounts.
The FSA plans to pass on the details of its
investigation to both the Financial Reporting Council and the ICAEW,
which will then determine whether any further action is necessary,
according to the Times.
In addition to serving as principal auditor,
PwC was retained by JP Morgan Securities Limited to produce an annual
client asset returns report, to confirm that customers’ funds were being
effectively ring-fenced and therefore protected in the event of the
bank’s collapse.
However, PwC signed off the client report even
though JP Morgan was in breach of the rules.
The money at risk in this case consisted of
funds held by customers of JPMSL's futures and options business — a sum
that varied from £1.3bn to £15.7bn between 2002 and July 2009, when the
breach came to light.
PwC has declined to comment.
Jensen Comment
One of the most consistent advocates of the “insurance” alternative is Josh
Ronen at NYU ---
http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~jronen/
Financial Statements Insurance ---
http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~jronen/articles/December_final_Version.pdf
A proposed corporate governance reform: Financial statements insurance ---
http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~jronen/articles/Journal_of_Engineering.pdf
Financial Statements Insurance Enhances Corporate Governance in a
Sarbanes-Oxley Environment ---
http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~jronen/articles/FSI_enhances_int.pdf
Financial Statements Insurance ---
http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~jronen/articles/Forensic_Accounting.pdf
Other papers listed at
http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~jronen/
"Video: Ernst & Young Fined Over Equitable Life," by Emma Hunt,
Accountancy Age, June 11, 2010 ---
http://www.accountancyage.com/accountancyage/video/2264616/video-ernst-young-fined
Bob Jensen's threads on Ernst & Young are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
Bob Jensen's Fraud Updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on PwC Litigation are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on auditing professionalism and independence are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Professionalism
From: The Summa [mailto:no-reply@wordpress.com]
Sent: Saturday, June 26, 2010 1:14 AM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: [New comment] Economic Consequences and the Political Nature of
Accounting Standard Setting
Tammy Buck added a new comment to the post Economic
Consequences and the Political Nature of Accounting Standard Setting.
http://profalbrecht.wordpress.com/2010/01/06/economic-consequences-and-the-political-nature-of-accounting-standard-setting/comment-page-3/
Tammy Buck said on Economic Consequences and the
Political Nature of Accounting Standard Setting June 3, 2010 at 5:19 pm Prof
Albrecht – Thanks for the thought provoking article! I would like to point
out that your statement – “First, financial statements are intended to
provide information to investors for making investment decisions.” – is
itself a value judgment of what accounting standards/financial statements
are & ought to do. If this is “true” (or rather, more desirable), then
certain accounting standards ought to be chosen over others. But if isn’t
desirable (maybe financial statements have another purpose?), then
conservatively biased standards might not be appropriate. Who decides this
focus? Investors, professors, the SEC, FASB, Fortune 500 firms? Maybe it’s
the open process of democratic process. So of course accounting standards
aren’t pure theoretical truth. But shouldn’t some independence be desirable?
Should (there I go with a value judgment!) the FASB be independent from both
the Big 4 & the big public companies? Do you really want Goldman Sachs
having a significant influence over GAAP (for instance)? Just some
questions. Maybe I just think accounting standard setter independence sounds
theoretically better, but my position is naive.
thanks,
Tammy Buck
Jensen Comment
I think independence is a goal we should strive for in standard setting, and I
think that making FASB members sever their previous financial ties with
employers is probably a good but overrated idea. One cannot so easily sever
relationships with former employers, colleagues, and friends. I was more
disturbed by the reduction of the FASB’s numbers of members such that biased
board members have much more clout. There’s a certain amount of democratic
strength in numbers on the IASB. If the FASB was not self destructing I would
work much harder to plug for a larger FASB.
Having said this, I will now give you my subjective opinion on the number one
cause of new or revised standards/interpretations that add great complexity to
accounting rules. The number one cause is the creative effort that clients use
to circumvent the spirit and intent of accounting “rules” and “guidelines.”
One needs only to look carefully at the contracts being written to find clues
about efforts to deceive. When companies (like Avis, Safeway, and all the
airlines) were forming unconsolidated lease holding subsidiaries to hide
enormous amounts of capital lease debt from their consolidated balance sheets,
the FASB rewrote the consolidation rules. In the 1980s when companies were
keeping increasing amounts (trillions) of derivative financial instruments debt
off the books (interest rate swaps were not even disclosed let alone booked),
the FASB was forced to write FAS 119, 133, and all the ensuing amending
standards and complicated DIG interpretations. When Andy Fastow, with the help
of Andersen consultants, invented ways to keep over a billion dollars worth of
debt off Enron’s books using over 3,000 SPEs, the FASB rewrote more complicated
rules for SPEs.
More recently Lehman Bros. took advantage of a loophole in the spirit of FAS
140 that allowed Lehman to mask debt with repo sales rules that have always been
inane in my viewpoint. Belatedly, Lehman’s debt masking is leading to new rules
about repo accounting “sales” that are deceptive and not really sales at all.
And, like Francine, I don’t trust the dependency of auditors on the CEOs and
CFOs of their largest clients. Just as Andersen auditors caved in to Enron’s
proposed deceptions, I think E&Y auditors caved in to Lehman’s proposed
deceptions. As Tom Selling stated, “the audit (financing) model is broken.”
However, unlike Francine, I firmly believe that public sector auditing would
exacerbate the problem. Hence I view the “independence problem” as being much
more critical with audit firms than with standard setters.
For audit firms, the long-run answer might be the replacement of assurance
with insurance, although there are many unresolved questions about insurance in
this context.
For standard setters, the long-run answer might be more research funding,
larger boards, faster turnover of board members, and more serious lobbying
rules.
Hence my conclusion is that the never-ending efforts of some clients to
deceive investors is the primary instigator of complicated new standards and
interpretations. Perhaps that’s as it should be. I’m not in favor of watering
down complicated standards on the naïve assumption that auditors will one day
get tougher, on “principle,” with the hosts that feed them. And I think that
today’s database technology is up to the task of auditing with complicated
standards and interpretations.
Perhaps the DIG should be expanded to a SIG for helping auditors and clients
with questions about any standard in problematic circumstances. One thing that
really continues to bother me, however, is how Ken Lay manipulated the SEC into
a ruling that officially allowed Enron to embark on some of Enron’s most
deceptive accounting. Can a DIG or a SIG be similarly manipulated by big
corporations?
The FASB and IASB processes of setting standards are far from perfect, but
perhaps you’re too young to remember the really bad old days of the ARB, APB,
and IASC --- historic standard setters that ducked controversial issues opposed
by audit clients and issued rulings only about milk toast issues.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standard setting are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Bob Jensen's threads on auditing independence and professionalism are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Professionalism
"KPMG chief calls for audit reform," by Mario Christodoulou,
Accountancy Age, June 18, 2010 ---
|http://www.financialdirector.co.uk/accountancyage/news/2264982/kpmg-chief-calls-audit-reform
Thank you to David Albrecht for the heads up.
KPMG’s senior partner has added his voice to
growing calls for reform to audit in the wake of the crisis.
In a speech at the ICAEW on Wednesday John
Griffith-Jones he said it is was time for “really bold thinking” about the
future of audit.
He suggested auditors might work “collaboratively”
with regulators and rating agencies, along with boards and management to
discuss risk.
“What is the point, they and others ask, of doing
extensive and increasingly elaborate audits of the financial accounts of our
banks, when audits failed to identify the huge and systemic risks which led
to the near collapse of the Global banking system in the Autumn of 2008?” he
said.
“It is a straightforward question; It deserves a
straightforward answer.”
It followed an earlier call from PwC senior partner
Ian Powell to reform the audit model.
“The overall model is long overdue some serious
market-wide discussion. For me, the fundamental questions revolve around the
scope of the audit; should this be extended and the nature of audit
reporting extended with it,” he said in an April speech to ICAS members.
Also in April, Graham Clayworth, audit partner at
BDO, said the profession needed to consider providing assurance around a
company’s business model and risks, typically, “front of the book”
disclosures.
“We have to ask what comfort the auditor can give
in terms of the information that is in the front… “The concession that the
profession will have to make for additional liability limits will be to
extend work that the auditor does at the front of the book,” said.
"KPMG chief calls for audit reform," by Mario Christodoulou,
Accountancy Age, June 18, 2010 ---
|http://www.financialdirector.co.uk/accountancyage/news/2264982/kpmg-chief-calls-audit-reform
Thank you to David Albrecht for the heads up.
KPMG’s senior partner has added his voice to
growing calls for reform to audit in the wake of the crisis.
In a speech at the ICAEW on Wednesday John
Griffith-Jones he said it is was time for “really bold thinking” about the
future of audit.
He suggested auditors might work “collaboratively”
with regulators and rating agencies, along with boards and management to
discuss risk.
“What is the point, they and others ask, of doing
extensive and increasingly elaborate audits of the financial accounts of our
banks, when audits failed to identify the huge and systemic risks which led
to the near collapse of the Global banking system in the Autumn of 2008?” he
said.
“It is a straightforward question; It deserves a
straightforward answer.”
It followed an earlier call from PwC senior partner
Ian Powell to reform the audit model.
“The overall model is long overdue some serious
market-wide discussion. For me, the fundamental questions revolve around the
scope of the audit; should this be extended and the nature of audit
reporting extended with it,” he said in an April speech to ICAS members.
Also in April, Graham Clayworth, audit partner at
BDO, said the profession needed to consider providing assurance around a
company’s business model and risks, typically, “front of the book”
disclosures.
“We have to ask what comfort the auditor can give
in terms of the information that is in the front… “The concession that the
profession will have to make for additional liability limits will be to
extend work that the auditor does at the front of the book,” said.
Why must we worry about the hiring-away pipeline?
Credit Rating Agencies ----
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_rating_agency
A credit rating agency (CRA) is a
company that assigns
credit ratings for
issuers of certain types of
debt obligations as well as the debt instruments
themselves. In some cases, the servicers of the underlying
debt are also given ratings. In most cases, the
issuers of
securities are companies,
special purpose entities, state and local
governments,
non-profit organizations, or national governments
issuing debt-like securities (i.e.,
bonds) that can be traded on a
secondary market. A credit rating for an issuer
takes into consideration the issuer's
credit worthiness (i.e., its ability to pay back a
loan), and affects the
interest rate applied to the particular security
being issued. (In contrast to CRAs, a company that issues
credit scores for individual credit-worthiness is
generally called a
credit bureau or
consumer credit reporting agency.) The value of
such ratings has been widely questioned after the 2008 financial crisis. In
2003 the
Securities and Exchange Commission submitted a
report to Congress detailing plans to launch an investigation into the
anti-competitive practices of credit rating agencies and issues including
conflicts of interest.
Agencies that assign credit ratings for
corporations include:
How to Get AAA Ratings on Junk Bonds
- Pay cash under the table to credit rating agencies
- Promise a particular credit rating agency future multi-million
contracts for rating future issues of bonds
- Hire away top-level credit rating agency
employees with insider information and great networks inside the credit
rating agencies
By now it is widely known that the big credit rating agencies (like Moody's,
Standard & Poor's, and Fitch) that rate bonds as AAA to BBB to Junk were
unethically selling AAA ratings to CDO mortgage-sliced bonds that should've been
rated Junk. Up to now I thought the credit rating agencies were merely selling
out for cash or to maintain "goodwill" with their best customers to giant Wall
Street banks and investment banks like Lehman Bros., AIG., Merrill Lynch, Bear
Stearns, Goldman Sachs, etc. ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#Sleaze
But it turns out that the credit rating agencies were also in that "hiring-away"
pipeline.
Wall
Street banks and nvestment banks were employing a questionable tactic used by
large clients of auditing firms. It is common for large clients to hire away the
lead auditors of their CPA auditing firms. This is a questionable practice,
although the intent in most instances (we hope) is to obtain accounting experts
rather than to influence the rigor of the audits themselves. The tactic is much
more common and much more sinister when corporations hire away top-level
government employees of regulating agencies like the FDA, FAA, FPC, EPA, etc.
This is a tactic used by industry to gain more control and influence over its
regulating agency. Current regulating government employees
who get too tough on industry will, thereby, be cutting off their chances of
getting future high compensation offers from the companies they now regulate.
The
investigations of credit rating agencies by the New York Attorney General and
current Senate hearings, however, are revealing that the hiring-away tactic was
employed by Wall Street Banks for more sinister purposes in order to get AAA
ratings on junk bonds. Top-level employees of the credit rating agencies were
lured away with enormous salary offers if they could use their insider networks
in the credit rating agencies so that higher credit ratings could be stamped on
junk bonds.
"Rating Agency Data Aided Wall Street in
Deals," The New York Times, April 24, 2010 ---
http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/24/rating-agency-data-aided-wall-street-in-deals/#more-214847
One of the mysteries of the financial crisis is how
mortgage investments that turned out to be so bad earned credit ratings that
made them look so good, The New York Times’s Gretchen Morgenson and Louise
Story
report. One answer is that Wall Street was given
access to the formulas behind those magic ratings —
and hired away some of the very people who had devised
them.
In essence, banks started with the answers and
worked backward, reverse-engineering top-flight ratings for investments that
were, in some cases, riskier than ratings suggested, according to former
agency employees.
Read More »
"Credit rating agencies
should not be dupes," Reuters, May 13, 2010 ---
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE64C4W320100513
THE PROFIT INCENTIVE
In fact, rating agencies sometimes discouraged
analysts from asking too many questions, critics have said.
In testimony last month before a Senate
subcommittee, Eric Kolchinsky, a former Moody's ratings analyst, claimed
that he was fired by the rating agency for being too harsh on a series of
deals and costing the company market share.
Rating agencies spent too much time looking for
profit and market share, instead of monitoring credit quality, said David
Reiss, a professor at Brooklyn Law School who has done extensive work on
subprime mortgage lending.
"It was incestuous -- banks and rating agencies had
a mutual profit motive, and if the agency didn't go along with a bank, it
would be punished."
The Senate amendment passed on Thursday aims to
prevent that dynamic in the future, by having a government clearinghouse
that assigns issuers to rating agencies instead of allowing issuers to
choose which agencies to work with.
For investigators to portray rating agencies as
victims is "far fetched," and what needs to be fixed runs deeper than banks
fooling ratings analysts, said Daniel Alpert, a banker at Westwood Capital.
"It's a structural problem," Alpert said.
Continued in article
Also see
http://blogs.reuters.com/reuters-dealzone/
Jensen Comment
CPA auditing firms have much to worry about these investigations and pending new
regulations of credit rating agencies.
Firstly, auditing firms are at the higher end
of the tort lawyer food chain. If credit rating agencies lose class action
lawsuits by investors, the credit rating agencies themselves will sue the bank
auditors who certified highly misleading financial statements that greatly
underestimated load losses. In fact, top level analysts are now claiming that
certified Wall Street Bank financial statement were pure fiction:
"Calpers
Sues Over Ratings of Securities," by Leslie Wayne, The New York Times,
July 14, 2009 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/15/business/15calpers.html
Secondly, the CPA profession must begin to question the ethics of allowing
lead CPA auditors to become high-level executives of clients such as when a lead
Ernst & Young audit partner jumped ship to become the CFO of Lehman Bros. and as
CFO devised the questionable Repo 105 contracts that were then audited/reviewed
by Ernst & Yound auditors. Above you read that: "In
fact, rating agencies sometimes discouraged analysts from asking too many
questions, critics have said." We must also
worry that former auditors sometimes discourage current auditors from asking too
many questions.
http://retheauditors.com/2010/03/15/liberte-egalite-fraternite-lehman-brothers-troubles-for-ernst-young-threaten-the-big-4-fraternity/
Credit rating of CDO mortgage-sliced bonds
turned into fiction writing by hired away raters!
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!
At the height of the mortgage boom, companies like
Goldman offered million-dollar pay packages to
(credit agency) workers like Mr. Yukawa
who had been working at much lower pay at the rating agencies, according to
several former workers at the agencies.
In some cases, once these (former credit
agency) workers were at the banks, they had dealings
with their former colleagues at the agencies. In the fall of 2007, when banks
were hard-pressed to get mortgage deals done, the Fitch analyst on a Goldman
deal was a friend of Mr. Yukawa, according to two people with knowledge of the
situation.
"Prosecutors Ask if 8 Banks Duped Rating Agencies," by Loise Story,
The New York Times, May 12, 2010 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/13/business/13street.html
The New York attorney general has started an
investigation of eight banks to determine whether they provided misleading
information to rating agencies in order to inflate the grades of certain
mortgage securities, according to two people with knowledge of the
investigation.
The investigation parallels federal inquiries into
the business practices of a broad range of financial companies in the years
before the collapse of the housing market.
Where those investigations have focused on
interactions between the banks and their clients who bought mortgage
securities, this one expands the scope of scrutiny to the interplay between
banks and the agencies that rate their securities.
The agencies themselves have been widely criticized
for overstating the quality of many mortgage securities that ended up losing
money once the housing market collapsed. The inquiry by the attorney general
of New York,
Andrew M. Cuomo,
suggests that he thinks the agencies may have been duped by one or more of
the targets of his investigation.
Those targets are
Goldman Sachs,
Morgan Stanley,
UBS,
Citigroup, Credit Suisse,
Deutsche Bank, Crédit Agricole and
Merrill Lynch, which is now owned by
Bank of America.
The companies that rated the mortgage deals are
Standard & Poor’s,
Fitch Ratings and
Moody’s Investors Service. Investors used their
ratings to decide whether to buy mortgage securities.
Mr. Cuomo’s investigation
follows an article in The New York Times that
described some of the techniques bankers used to get more positive
evaluations from the rating agencies.
Mr. Cuomo is also interested in the revolving door
of employees of the rating agencies who were hired by bank mortgage desks to
help create mortgage deals that got better ratings than they deserved, said
the people with knowledge of the investigation, who were not authorized to
discuss it publicly.
Contacted after subpoenas were issued by Mr.
Cuomo’s office notifying the banks of his investigation, representatives for
Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse, UBS and Deutsche Bank declined to comment.
Other banks did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
In response to questions for the Times article in
April, a Goldman Sachs spokesman, Samuel Robinson, said: “Any suggestion
that Goldman Sachs improperly influenced rating agencies is without
foundation. We relied on the independence of the ratings agencies’ processes
and the ratings they assigned.”
Goldman, which is already under investigation by
federal prosecutors, has been defending itself against civil fraud
accusations made in a complaint last month by the
Securities and Exchange Commission. The deal at
the heart of that complaint — called Abacus 2007-AC1 — was devised in part
by a former Fitch Ratings employee named Shin Yukawa, whom Goldman recruited
in 2005.
At the height of the mortgage boom, companies like
Goldman offered million-dollar pay packages to workers like Mr. Yukawa who
had been working at much lower pay at the rating agencies, according to
several former workers at the agencies.
Around the same time that Mr. Yukawa left Fitch,
three other analysts in his unit also joined financial companies like
Deutsche Bank.
In some cases, once these workers were at the
banks, they had dealings with their former colleagues at the agencies. In
the fall of 2007, when banks were hard-pressed to get mortgage deals done,
the Fitch analyst on a Goldman deal was a friend of Mr. Yukawa, according to
two people with knowledge of the situation.
Mr. Yukawa did not respond to requests for comment.
A Fitch spokesman said Thursday that the firm would cooperate with Mr.
Cuomo’s inquiry.
Wall Street played a crucial role in the mortgage
market’s path to collapse. Investment banks bundled mortgage loans into
securities and then often rebundled those securities one or two more times.
Those securities were given high ratings and sold to investors, who have
since lost billions of dollars on them.
. . .
At Goldman, there was even a phrase for the way
bankers put together mortgage securities. The practice was known as “ratings
arbitrage,” according to former workers. The idea was to find ways to put
the very worst bonds into a deal for a given rating. The cheaper the bonds,
the greater the profit to the bank.
The rating agencies may have facilitated the banks’
actions by publishing their rating models on their corporate Web sites. The
agencies argued that being open about their models offered transparency to
investors.
But several former agency workers said the practice
put too much power in the bankers’ hands. “The models were posted for
bankers who develop C.D.O.’s to be able to reverse engineer C.D.O.’s to a
certain rating,” one former rating agency employee said in an interview,
referring to
collateralized debt obligations.
A central concern of investors in these securities
was the diversification of the deals’ loans. If a C.D.O. was based on mostly
similar bonds — like those holding mortgages from one region — investors
would view it as riskier than an instrument made up of more diversified
assets. Mr. Cuomo’s office plans to investigate whether the bankers
accurately portrayed the diversification of the mortgage loans to the rating
agencies.
Bob Jensen's Rotten to the Core threads on banks and investment banks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Bob Jensen's Rotten to the Core threads on credit rating agencies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#CreditRatingAgencies
Bob Jensen's threads on credit rating agency scandals ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#CreditRatingAgencies
"Blackboard's 'Next Generation' Software Gets Mixed Reviews," by
Sophia Li, Chronicle of Higher Education, June 4, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/Blackboards-Next-Generation/24539/?sid=wc&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
Bob Jensen's threads on Blackboard ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Blackboard.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on the history of course management systems ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/290wp/290wp.htm
"Volcker and Derivatives: The end game for financial reform,"
The Wall Street Journal, June 24, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704853404575323032606552688.html
Financial reform in the hands of a Democratic
Congress is looking eerily similar to health-care reform: Public skepticism
is proving to be no brake on the liberal ambitions, and substance is
increasingly divorced from the problems Washington claims to be solving.
The bill emerging from House-Senate conference
seems less concerned with preventing future bank bailouts than with
preventing future bank profits. And if some Main Street companies suffer
collateral damage in the drive to reduce Wall Street's over-the-counter
derivatives trading, Democrats appear to view them as acceptable casualties.
As early as today, House and Senate negotiators may
agree on a Volcker Rule, limiting the risks big banks can take in trading
for their own account, as well as a separate set of rules regulating the
derivatives trades banks can do on behalf of clients. America doesn't need
both.
A Volcker Rule won't be easy to implement but it
makes policy sense: limit the opportunities for banks to speculate with
federally insured deposits. Combined with high capital standards, this won't
lead to perfect outcomes—we're talking about regulation, after all—but it
would once again draw a risk-taking line that was crossed too often in 2008.
The other new rules, however, could harm taxpayers
and commercial customers more than banks. For taxpayers, the danger comes
from Senate plans to force much of the derivatives market through
too-big-to-fail clearinghouses. Lead Senate negotiator Chris Dodd has backed
a plan to explicitly give these clearinghouses taxpayer assistance in the
event they face a liquidity crisis.
The other dangerous idea is to force commercial
companies to post additional margin even if they do not speculate but are
simply using derivatives to hedge legitimate risks. A recent Business
Roundtable survey finds that 90% of large corporations use derivatives and
that the average firm would have to tie up 15% of the cash on its balance
sheet if subjected to the new margin requirements.
To take one example, Caterpillar might pay a bank
to assume the risk of currency fluctuations in foreign markets so that it
can focus on making bulldozers. It's possible that, depending on the
movements of the dollar against foreign currencies, such a contract will
ultimately require Caterpillar to pay more to the bank. Forcing banks to
demand more cash up front from such companies is like saying regulators
should approve every loan a bank makes, and review every single decision to
extend credit.
The theory that derivatives caused the financial
crisis also continues to take a beating, most recently from regulation
cheerleader Elizabeth Warren. The Troubled Asset Relief Program's
Congressional overseer recently put out a report on the government's 2008
seizure of AIG. While the report has its flaws, Ms. Warren explodes the myth
that the entire problem at AIG was caused by its credit-default-swap
contracts. She explains that it was the housing bets, many of which were
made without using CDS, that brought AIG to the brink of collapse.
The message to Congress is to take Volcker but pass
on punishing derivatives. Which means we'll probably get the opposite.
Jensen Comment
I personally don't agree with the above editorial position of regulation of
derivatives. I think derivatives markets should be regulated along the lines
recommended by my hero Frank Partnoy ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds
GLOBAL DERIVATIVE DEBACLES: From Theory to Malpractice ---
http://www.worldscibooks.com/economics/7141.html
by Laurent L Jacque (Tufts University, USA & HEC School of Management, France)
World Scientific Books, ISBN: 978-981-283-770-7, 628pp
978-981-281-853-9: US$54 / £36 US$40.50 / £27
Table of Contents (44k) --- http://www.worldscibooks.com/etextbook/7141/7141_toc.pdf
Preface (27k)--- http://www.worldscibooks.com/etextbook/7141/7141_preface.pdf
Chapter 1: Derivatives and the Wealth of Nations (133k) ---
http://www.worldscibooks.com/etextbook/7141/7141_preface.pdf
Jensen Comment
This book is weak on derivatives accounting but stronger on economics, finance,
and law.
Chapter 1 has a short summary of ancient history.
Bob Jensen's threads and timeline on the history of derivatives
instruments scandals and frauds ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds
One of my heroes in life is Frank Partnoy
I quote him scores of times at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds
"Living Like It's 1931: Law professor Frank Partnoy questions
whether the regulatory reform bill under debate in Congress will be enough to
move the economy toward prosperity," by Sarah Johnson, CFO.com, June
17, 2010 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14505447/c_14505581?f=home_todayinfinance
The calendar says 2010, but Frank Partnoy believes
that in certain respects, we're living like it's 1931. That was a
transitional year between the 1929 stock market crash and the passing of two
transformative securities laws, in 1933 and 1934, that established a
regulatory body for public companies, mandated widespread financial
reporting, and created antifraud remedies.
Seven decades later, optimists would like to
believe that the regulatory reform bill in Congress will mark the beginning
of better days for the U.S. economy. But Partnoy, a University of San Diego
law and finance professor and longtime follower of regulatory reforms,
thinks 2010 will likewise be considered a transitional time. "We're still in
the middle of the ball game in terms of regulatory response," he told CFO in
a recent interview.
In Partnoy's view, the regulatory response to the
financial crisis thus far has been "muddled." Congress is plodding through
more than 1,500 pages of reforms that will affect various areas of the U.S.
financial system. The reforms include a new government authority to prevent
financial institutions from becoming too big to fail, a consumer protection
agency, regulations for the derivatives market, and even some measures that
could be deemed antiregulation (such as a provision that would exempt the
smallest U.S. publicly traded companies from getting an audit opinion on
their internal controls).
The bill is expected to be finalized at the end of
this month. Around the same time, Partnoy will speak about the new
regulatory reforms and their resemblance to past reforms at the upcoming CFO
Core Concerns Conference, to be held June 27-29 in Baltimore. An edited
version of CFO's recent interview with Partnoy follows.
How can we assess whether the new legislation will
be successful? The only way we'll know is to wait and hope. If we could go
back in time a few years with these proposed rules, would the crisis have
been prevented? The answer is no. Congress is considering more than 1,500
pages of reform, but most of that is not directed at problems that would
have prevented the crisis.
What piece of the legislation do you most hope will
survive the process? The most crucial part is the removal of regulatory
references to credit ratings. I have my fingers crossed that it will pass.
Participants in the financial markets need to stop relying on Moody's and
S&P.
Why isn't a similar proposal by the Securities and
Exchange Commission to end the practice good enough? The SEC doesn't have
the power to change a statute; Congress does. And many of these references
extend beyond the securities area, outside the purview of the SEC. In
addition, it's important for Congress to fire a shot across the bow of all
regulators to let them know that it's not appropriate to rely on ratings.
It's the kind of reform that needs to come from the top, and that means
Congress.
In a joint paper with former SEC chief accountant
Lynn Turner, you called on Congress to "clarify that financial statements
have primacy over footnotes, not the other way around." Why do you think our
financial-reporting system has evolved to become, in your view, not as
transparent as it should be? It's been a slow evolution that has been driven
by lobbying, in particular by major financial institutions. This started in
the 1980s, when accounting standard-setters were trying to figure out
whether swaps should be accounted for on the balance sheet. Once that
argument was lost — once we went down the road of saying that swaps were
different — it was a very slippery slope. There's a focused group of market
participants who benefit from off-balance-sheet treatment but only a few who
represent investor interests. Analysts are in an interesting position
because on the one hand, they would be able to do a better job if they had
more information about exposures and liabilities. But if everything is
off-balance-sheet, they have a comparative advantage in finding out what's
buried on page 246 of Form 10-K.
Do you see any signs that this issue will be
addressed in the legislation? Congress, Wall Street, and large institutional
investors all seem to have united against putting these financial
instruments on the balance sheet. It seems unlikely that there will be any
kind of substantive change.
What's your view on proposed reforms for
derivatives? What I regard as the most important reform has met with mixed
reactions. That would be simply for banks to more accurately report their
exposure to derivatives and give better information about worst-case
scenarios. Those initiatives have taken a back seat to the push for
requiring that derivatives be traded on exchanges, and then for trying to
move derivatives outside of the banking sector. Keep in mind, the
transactions that generated the crisis were not transactions that would ever
find a home on an exchange. They're private, custom-tailored deals that fall
outside of the legislation. Paradoxically, we might end up with a law that
will hurt useful markets in plain-vanilla derivatives, yet will not resolve
problems.
Another 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 are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
Bob Jensen's timeline of derivative financial instruments frauds can be
found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds
Oil and Water Must Read: Economists versus Criminologists
:"Why the ‘Experts’ Failed to See How Financial Fraud Collapsed the Economy,"
by "James K. Galbraith, Big Picture, June 2, 2010 ---
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2010/06/james-k-galbraith-why-the-experts-failed-to-see-how-financial-fraud-collapsed-the-economy/
The following is the text of a James K. Galbraith’s written statement
to members of the Senate Judiciary Committee delivered this May. Original
PDF text is here.
Chairman Specter, Ranking Member Graham, Members of
the Subcommittee, as a former member of the congressional staff it is a
pleasure to submit this statement for your record.
I write to you from a disgraced profession.
Economic theory, as widely taught since the 1980s, failed miserably to
understand the forces behind the financial crisis. Concepts including
“rational expectations,” “market discipline,” and the “efficient markets
hypothesis” led economists to argue that speculation would stabilize prices,
that sellers would act to protect their reputations, that caveat emptor
could be relied on, and that widespread fraud therefore could not occur. Not
all economists believed this – but most did.
Thus the study of financial fraud received little
attention. Practically no research institutes exist; collaboration between
economists and criminologists is rare; in the leading departments there are
few specialists and very few students. Economists have soft- pedaled the
role of fraud in every crisis they examined, including the Savings & Loan
debacle, the Russian transition, the Asian meltdown and the dot.com bubble.
They continue to do so now. At a conference sponsored by the Levy Economics
Institute in New York on April 17, the closest a former Under Secretary of
the Treasury, Peter Fisher, got to this question was to use the word
“naughtiness.” This was on the day that the SEC charged Goldman Sachs with
fraud.
There are exceptions. A famous 1993 article
entitled “Looting: Bankruptcy for Profit,” by George Akerlof and Paul Romer,
drew exceptionally on the experience of regulators who understood fraud. The
criminologist-economist William K. Black of the University of
Missouri-Kansas City is our leading systematic analyst of the relationship
between financial crime and financial crisis. Black points out that
accounting fraud is a sure thing when you can control the institution
engaging in it: “the best way to rob a bank is to own one.” The experience
of the Savings and Loan crisis was of businesses taken over for the explicit
purpose of stripping them, of bleeding them dry. This was established in
court: there were over one thousand felony convictions in the wake of that
debacle. Other useful chronicles of modern financial fraud include James
Stewart’s Den of Thieves on the Boesky-Milken era and Kurt Eichenwald’s
Conspiracy of Fools, on the Enron scandal. Yet a large gap between this
history and formal analysis remains.
Formal analysis tells us that control frauds follow
certain patterns. They grow rapidly, reporting high profitability, certified
by top accounting firms. They pay exceedingly well. At the same time, they
radically lower standards, building new businesses in markets previously
considered too risky for honest business. In the financial sector, this
takes the form of relaxed – no, gutted – underwriting, combined with the
capacity to pass the bad penny to the greater fool. In California in the
1980s, Charles Keating realized that an S&L charter was a “license to
steal.” In the 2000s, sub-prime mortgage origination was much the same
thing. Given a license to steal, thieves get busy. And because their
performance seems so good, they quickly come to dominate their markets; the
bad players driving out the good.
The complexity of the mortgage finance sector
before the crisis highlights another characteristic marker of fraud. In the
system that developed, the original mortgage documents lay buried – where
they remain – in the records of the loan originators, many of them since
defunct or taken over. Those records, if examined, would reveal the extent
of missing documentation, of abusive practices, and of fraud. So far, we
have only very limited evidence on this, notably a 2007 Fitch Ratings study
of a very small sample of highly-rated RMBS, which found “fraud, abuse or
missing documentation in virtually every file.” An efforts a year ago by
Representative Doggett to persuade Secretary Geithner to examine and report
thoroughly on the extent of fraud in the underlying mortgage records
received an epic run-around.
When sub-prime mortgages were bundled and
securitized, the ratings agencies failed to examine the underlying loan
quality. Instead they substituted statistical models, in order to generate
ratings that would make the resulting RMBS acceptable to investors. When one
assumes that prices will always rise, it follows that a loan secured by the
asset can always be refinanced; therefore the actual condition of the
borrower does not matter. That projection is, of course, only as good as the
underlying assumption, but in this perversely-designed marketplace those who
paid for ratings had no reason to care about the quality of assumptions.
Meanwhile, mortgage originators now had a formula for extending loans to the
worst borrowers they could find, secure that in this reverse Lake Wobegon no
child would be deemed below average even though they all were. Credit
quality collapsed because the system was designed for it to collapse.
A third element in the toxic brew was a simulacrum
of “insurance,” provided by the market in credit default swaps. These are
doomsday instruments in a precise sense: they generate cash-flow for the
issuer until the credit event occurs. If the event is large enough, the
issuer then fails, at which point the government faces blackmail: it must
either step in or the system will collapse. CDS spread the consequences of a
housing-price downturn through the entire financial sector, across the
globe. They also provided the means to short the market in residential
mortgage-backed securities, so that the largest players could turn tail and
bet against the instruments they had previously been selling, just before
the house of cards crashed.
Latter-day financial economics is blind to all of
this. It necessarily treats stocks, bonds, options, derivatives and so forth
as securities whose properties can be accepted largely at face value, and
quantified in terms of return and risk. That quantification permits the
calculation of price, using standard formulae. But everything in the
formulae depends on the instruments being as they are represented to be. For
if they are not, then what formula could possibly apply?
An older strand of institutional economics
understood that a security is a contract in law. It can only be as good as
the legal system that stands behind it. Some fraud is inevitable, but in a
functioning system it must be rare. It must be considered – and rightly – a
minor problem. If fraud – or even the perception of fraud – comes to
dominate the system, then there is no foundation for a market in the
securities. They become trash. And more deeply, so do the institutions
responsible for creating, rating and selling them. Including, so long as it
fails to respond with appropriate force, the legal system itself.
Control frauds always fail in the end. But the
failure of the firm does not mean the fraud fails: the perpetrators often
walk away rich. At some point, this requires subverting, suborning or
defeating the law. This is where crime and politics intersect. At its heart,
therefore, the financial crisis was a breakdown in the rule of law in
America.
Ask yourselves: is it possible for mortgage
originators, ratings agencies, underwriters, insurers and supervising
agencies NOT to have known that the system of housing finance had become
infested with fraud? Every statistical indicator of fraudulent practice –
growth and profitability – suggests otherwise. Every examination of the
record so far suggests otherwise. The very language in use: “liars’ loans,”
“ninja loans,” “neutron loans,” and “toxic waste,” tells you that people
knew. I have also heard the expression, “IBG,YBG;” the meaning of that bit
of code was: “I’ll be gone, you’ll be gone.”
If doubt remains, investigation into the internal
communications of the firms and agencies in question can clear it up. Emails
are revealing. The government already possesses critical documentary trails
— those of AIG, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the Treasury Department and the
Federal Reserve. Those documents should be investigated, in full, by
competent authority and also released, as appropriate, to the public. For
instance, did AIG knowingly issue CDS against instruments that Goldman had
designed on behalf of Mr. John Paulson to fail? If so, why? Or again: Did
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac appreciate the poor quality of the RMBS they were
acquiring? Did they do so under pressure from Mr. Henry Paulson? If so, did
Secretary Paulson know? And if he did, why did he act as he did? In a recent
paper, Thomas Ferguson and Robert Johnson argue that the “Paulson Put” was
intended to delay an inevitable crisis past the election. Does the internal
record support this view?
Let us suppose that the investigation that you are
about to begin confirms the existence of pervasive fraud, involving millions
of mortgages, thousands of appraisers, underwriters, analysts, and the
executives of the companies in which they worked, as well as public
officials who assisted by turning a Nelson’s Eye. What is the appropriate
response?
Some appear to believe that “confidence in the
banks” can be rebuilt by a new round of good economic news, by rising stock
prices, by the reassurances of high officials – and by not looking too
closely at the underlying evidence of fraud, abuse, deception and deceit. As
you pursue your investigations, you will undermine, and I believe you may
destroy, that illusion.
But you have to act. The true alternative is a
failure extending over time from the economic to the political system. Just
as too few predicted the financial crisis, it may be that too few are today
speaking frankly about where a failure to deal with the aftermath may lead.
In this situation, let me suggest, the country
faces an existential threat. Either the legal system must do its work. Or
the market system cannot be restored. There must be a thorough, transparent,
effective, radical cleaning of the financial sector and also of those public
officials who failed the public trust. The financiers must be made to feel,
in their bones, the power of the law. And the public, which lives by the
law, must see very clearly and unambiguously that this is the case.
Thank you.
~~~
James K. Galbraith is the author of
The Predator State: How Conservatives Abandoned the Free Market and Why
Liberals Should Too, and of a new preface to The Great Crash, 1929, by
John Kenneth Galbraith. He teaches at The University of Texas at Austin
June 9, 2010 reply from Thompson, Shari
[shari.thompson@PVPL.COM]
Bob, that is an awesome article! I can only hope
that the system listens!
Bob Jensen's threads on the subprime sleaze is at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#Sleaze
History of Fraud in America ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/415wp/AmericanHistoryOfFraud.htm
Lecture Notes for a Forensic Accounting Course
June 2, 2010 message from J. S. Gangolly
[gangolly@CSC.ALBANY.EDU]
Two years ago I taught a
Forensic Investigations course. I had prepared extensive lecturenotes, etc.
All materials are available at
the following addresses:
Course outline:
http://www.albany.edu/acc/courses/acc551fall2008/acc551fall2008.pdf
Lecture notes:
http://www.albany.edu/acc/courses/acc551fall2008/acc551fall2008lecturenotes.pdf
I also gave group assignments,
etc. that I can send if there is a need.
Jagdish
I filed this under "Things That Wrankle Tax Professor Amy Dunbar at the
University of Connecticut"
"Supreme Court Declines to Hear Textron Work Product Privilege Case,"
Journal of Accountancy, June 2006 ---
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Web/20102952.htm
June 1, 2010 reply from Amy Dunbar
[Amy.Dunbar@BUSINESS.UCONN.EDU]
Here’s my two cents worth
on Textron. The Supreme Court’s denial of cert implies that the IRS and
perhaps other claimants do not have to worry about work product privilege
with respect to workpapers created in the ordinary course of doing
business. I find that case troubling because it may mean that any reserve
workpapers could now be open to litigants in general. I don’t have any
trouble with IRS having access to the workpapers because I am not convinced
that the tax assessment process should be considered an adversarial process,
which is what the work product privilege was meant to protect. However,
“FAS 5” contingencies, now fondly known as ASC Topic 450 contingencies, are
typically adversarial, and should be protected under work product
privilege. If anyone can tell me why my concern is misplace I would love to
hear your reasoning.
The court noted: “
In some instances the spreadsheet entries estimated the probability of IRS
success at 100 percent.”
A 100% reserve???? How common is this?
I think the IRS should find out. The proposed Form 1120 Schedule UTB won’t
help with this because the actual reserves do not have to be disclosed, only
the maximum liability associated with the tax position.
I love the following quote:
“Textron apparently thinks it is "unfair" for the government to have
access to its spreadsheets, but tax collection is not a game.
Underpaying taxes threatens the essential public interest in revenue
collection. If a blueprint to Textron's possible improper deductions can
be found in Textron's files, it is properly available to the government
unless privileged. Virtually all discovery against a party aims at
securing information that may assist an opponent in uncovering the
truth. Unprivileged IRS information is equally subject to discovery.”
Obviously the tax division
of the auditing firm didn’t recommend these transactions because PCAOB Rule
3522 requires recommended tax products to have a more likely than not
probability of success.
“A registered public
accounting firm is not independent of its audit client if the firm, or
any affiliate of the firm, during the audit and professional engagement
period, provides any non-audit service to the audit client related to
marketing, planning, or opining in favor of the tax treatment of, …
a transaction that was initially recommended, directly or indirectly, by
the registered public accounting firm and a significant purpose of which
is tax avoidance, unless the proposed tax treatment is at least more
likely than not to be allowable under applicable tax laws.”
I doubt the tax division
signed the return either in view of preparer penalties, but I think that the
very large corporations typically file their own returns, so preparer
penalties are not a deterrent, but I may be wrong about my assumption.
A 100% reserve for a
position will exist any time a position doesn’t meet the more-likely-than
not test under FIN 48, but Textron was pre-FIN 48.
Amy Dunbar
UConn
June 1, 2010 reply from Francine McKenna
[retheauditors@GMAIL.COM]
Here's
what I've written about Textron.
http://retheauditors.com/2009/01/28/round-and-round-she-goes-where-she-stops-nobody-knows/
"...In
other news on Thursday, Ernst and Young was also watching, I’m sure, while
one of the defendants in their
very own tax shelter case
plead guilty. Although the four
former EY partners charged have
not yet been tried, a guilty
plea by a former investment advisor who
helped market the tax shelters is certainly a damaging development.
And in a win of sorts for now for
EY, their client Textron won
a ruling that
allows them to withhold their tax accrual workpapers from the IRS. The
ruling is important because it speaks to the protection of attorney-client
privilege when the work product in question has been shown to a company’s
external auditors. From the blog, ataxingmatter,
a short explanation of why the court’s decision was wrong:
“During an audit of the company covering its 1998-2001 tax years, the
IRS requested Textron’s tax accrual workpapers, but the company refused
to provide them, claiming that they are protected by various privileges,
including the work-product privilege, even though they were at the least
“dual purpose documents”. The First Circuit upheld the privilege, and
even concluded that the company had not waived the protection by showing
the internal workpapers to its outside auditor, Ernst & Young, calling
the auditor-client relationship a “cooperative not adversarial
relationship” that was unlikely to lead to litigation.
Even so, the
court acknowledged that E&Y’s own workpapers, which likely incorporate
and even reveal Textron’s analyses, may be discoverable on remand, under
the Arthur Young Supreme Court opinion. The court’s determination that
the company’s internal tax accrual workpapers may not be summonsed is
manifestly inconsistent with the court’s conclusion that the outside
auditor’s workpapers incorporating the same analysis may be.”
Auditors, in the course of
performing their audit, require free and open access to documents and to
executives in order to do a complete, thorough, and professional job. We
have seen similar issues raised when discussing changes
and additional disclosures under FAS 5. Auditors
understand the delicate balance and, although fully understanding of their
responsibilities to push for full disclosure, are not willing to push when
they believe more disclosure is contrary to their client’s (read corporate
executives’) best interest even if additional disclosure may be in
the best interest of investors and shareholders.
So, a ruling here
that allows attorney-client privilege for their clients while still allowing
the auditors to have access to the information is good for the auditors.
Their clients can not use the excuse of losing this protection to keep
important information from them.
So,
here’s the conundrum:
1) Audit
workpapers are not protected.
2) Clients
will remain skittish about sharing information with auditors that they
want to remain protected under work-product doctrine or the broader
attorney-client privilege.
3)Auditors
themselves are not comfortable with broader, more detailed legal
contingency disclosures, for example, and have said so with regard to
expanded disclosure under FAS 5.
Result:
Auditors will see
less and less of what is relevant to audit “in accordance with applicable
auditing standards and supported by appropriate audit evidence.”
Regards,
Francine
Bob Jensen's threads on Ernst & Young litigation are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
Question
Has Francine gone a "bridge too far?"
As I write this, Kenny Rogers is singing "You've got to know when to hold 'em
and when to fold 'em"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D8o6Os0xQf8
"Bigger, Stronger, Faster: The PCAOB After The Supreme Court Ruling,"
by Francine McKenna, re: TheAuditors, June 9, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/06/09/bigger-stronger-faster-the-pcaob-after-the-supreme-court-ruling/
Jensen Comment
Although I love the intensity and investigative effort that Francine pours into
her blog, she does have a tendency to make conjectures that are unsupported
hypotheses that she considers "truth." These hardly
satisfy this old academic.
Example of an unsupported conjecture in the above blog post:
This is not the way to treat a regulator. Although
the inspection process is intense, time consuming and very expensive for the
audit firms to comply with, they are clearly
paying it only lip service. They view it as a
necessary evil rather than a constructive or a deterrent force. This must
change if the PCAOB is ever going to be an effective tool for protecting the
investor public
She has not convinced me that the inspections are failures to a degree that
she repeatedly alleges in her posts. We need much more intensive research into
how the audit firms are reacting to the inspection process before inspections
take place and after inspection reports are released to the public ---
http://pcaobus.org/Inspections/Pages/default.aspx
From:
Jim Fuehrmeyer [mailto:jfuehrme@nd.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, March 23, 2010 9:21 AM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: FW: Deloitte
Bob,
I was the “Professional Practice Director”, that’s the audit quality control
guy, for Deloitte’s Chicago office for the six years prior to my retirement
in May 2007. I got to experience first-hand everything from the absorption
of AA’s people in Chicago to the advent of the PCAOB and its annual
inspection process the first few years. I don’t think most folks have any
appreciation for the very real impact the PCAOB has had on the profession.
The quality of documentation, the increased amount of partner involvement,
the added quality control processes, the expansion of detail testing – the
PCAOB has had a huge impact. Most folks also don’t have an appreciation for
the impact of 404 not only on the audit process but on corporate cultures as
well. As you pointed out a few messages ago, we do see all the failings in
the press, but what we don’t see is all the positives and all the
improvements.
Hope your wife is doing OK.
Jim
|
JAMES L. FUEHRMEYER, JR.
Associate Professional Specialist
Department of Accountancy |
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . |
MENDOZA COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME
384 Mendoza College of Business
Notre Dame, IN 46556
office: (574) 631-1752 | fax: (574) 631-5255
e:
jfuehrme@nd.edu | w:
http://business.nd.edu |
|
|
"Bigger, Stronger, Faster: The PCAOB After The Supreme Court Ruling."
by Francine McKenna, re:TheAuditors, June 29. 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/06/26/bigger-stronger-faster-the-pcaob-after-the-supreme-court-ruling/
. . .
It’s been apparent to me that the audit firms don’t
take the inspection results seriously, and don’t significantly change their
processes as a result. In some cases they
publicly embarrassed the PCAOB by
openly disagreeing with them.
This is not the way to treat a regulator. Although
the inspection process is intense, time consuming and very expensive for the
audit firms to comply with, they are clearly paying it only lip service.
They view it as a necessary evil rather than a constructive or a deterrent
force. This must change if the PCAOB is ever going to be an effective tool
for protecting the investor public.
Continued in articl
Once again Francine makes a weak case with anecdotal evidence that CPA
auditors do not take the PCAOB inspections seriously. This is counter to what
researchers and CPA firm executives claim to be more serious auditing efforts
because of the entire Sarbanes legislation.
For a counter argument that Sarbanes and the PCAOB were not so irrelevant see
Professor Mark Nelson's counter conclusions drawn from an FEI study--- .
Here are some research studies you may have overlooked. I
have not studied all of them in detail, but it appears they have differing
degrees of relevance on your negative opinions about the PCAOB and SOX. Some are
supportive of your audit firm “lip service only” conjecture, while others
contradict your conjecture. There are also differing conclusions regarding the
need for small firm relief from Section 404.
Here’s a nice review and analysis of an FEI Study (of
clients expected to hate SOX)
Mark Nelson has a nice summary of why SOX happened and how it is impacting
corporations ---
Click Here
http://citebm.business.illinois.edu/TWC%20Class/Project_reports_Fall2008/Sarbanes-Oxley/Mark%20Nelson/Mark%20Nelson%20BADM%20458%20Final%20Paperx.pdf
SEC Research Study (More varied set of respondents)
http://www.sec.gov/news/studies/2009/sox-404_study.pdf
This
report also presents the general findings of in-depth phone interviews of
external users and auditors of financial statements, conducted by the Office of
the Chief Accountant. The results of the interviews were generally consistent
with the findings of the Web survey, although these parties were less
knowledgeable about the costs of complying with Section 404. External users
tended to put a heavy premium on having high quality financial statements that
are in compliance with generally accepted accounting principles, and these users
felt that companies need effective ICFR to ensure this is the case.
In
sum, the evidence from the survey response data shows that the cost of Section
404 compliance decreased following the Commission’s reforms introduced in 2007
and is expected to decrease further based on respondents’ estimates for the
fiscal year in progress at the time of the survey. Moreover, the survey
participants perceive the reforms to have been a significant catalyst for these
changes. This evidence may prove useful in understanding the effects of the 2007
reforms as well as guiding any subsequent regulatory efforts.
Internal Controls After Sarbanes-Oxley: Revisiting
Corporate Law's Duty of Care as Responsibility for Systems
http://scholarship.law.georgetown.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1130&context=facpub
Sarbanes-Oxley section 404 compliance:
Recent changes in US-traded foreign firms' internal control reporting
Click Here
http://www.emeraldinsight.com/Insight/viewContentItem.do;jsessionid=45A42C9C311A9743DCD3645988CF123E?contentType=Article&hdAction=lnkpdf&contentId=1795163
The Case Against Exempting Smaller Reporting
Companies from Sarbanes-Oxley Section 404: Why Market-Based Solutions are Likely
to Harm Ordinary Investors
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1421844
Also see
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=983772
http://works.bepress.com/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=paul_arnold
More on the Costs and Benefits of Section 404 of Sarbanes-Oxley
http://reneejones.wordpress.com/2007/07/02/more-on-the-costs-and-benefits-of-section-404-of-sarbanes-oxley/
Also see
http://cardozolawreview.com/PastIssues/29.2_prentice.pdf
Also see
http://www.nysscpa.org/cpajournal/2008/808/perspectives/p13.htm
http://www.cluteinstitute-onlinejournals.com/PDFs/1228.pdf
Sarbanes-Oxley 404 material weaknesses and
discretionary accruals
Click Here
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B7GWN-4VB55BW-1&_user=10&_coverDate=06%2F30%2F2010&_rdoc=1&_fmt=high&_orig=search&_sort=d&_docanchor=&view=c&_searchStrId=1366747316&_rerunOrigin=google&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=7d0a63a66e7ec311aff0d298f1f3cde5
Ed Swanson
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=547922
Has SOX Made New York Less Competitive in Global Markets?
http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/corpgov/2007/07/18/has-sox-made-new-york-less-competitive-in-global-markets/
A Canadian Perspective
http://www.luc.edu/law/activities/publications/lljdocs/vol39_no3/ben_ishai.pdf
This is just a sampling.
There are many more such impact research studies.
June 12, 2010 reply from Francine McKenna
Dear Bob,
Thanks so much. There are many,
many studies on the costs and benefits of SOx but I take those with a grain
of salt. I do not believe that fundamental internal controls over financial
reporting are a "cost-benefit" kind of decision. Identifying your controls
over financial reporting (and making sure they are designed effectively),
documenting them in policies and procedures for your staff to follow and
testing their operating effectiveness are the minimum for running a good
accounting department. SOx did not mandate anything other than what
companies should have been doing all along.
I have written about all of the
various studies by Treasury and SEC CIFR on "simplifying financial
reporting". Look where they got us.
http://retheauditors.com/2008/06/06/day-1-the-rest-of-the-gang-robert-pozen/
You'd be surprised by how often
I cite academic studies. In fact, here's an interesting one I found on the
way to something else that you may like.
http://www.antitrustinstitute.org/archives/files/AAI%20Working%20Paper%20No.%2008-03_091820081520.pdf
The American Antitrust Institute
AAI Working Paper
No. 08-03
ABSTRACT
Title: THE AUDIT
INDUSTRY: WORLD’S WEAKEST OLIGOPOLY?
Author: Bernard
Ascher, Research Fellow, American Antitrust Institute
When I encourage more
studies, I mean the kind you lament all the time are not done often
enough because of the focus on accountics - non-accountics studies about
strategy, business model and inner workings of the audit firms and the
impact of regulation and the external economic environment on the firms.
I see those are done by a group of professors at Harvard Business School
that focus on professional services. They develop case studies for
teaching that are very helpful to me even if I do not always agree with
their conclusions.
I attended this program in 2003
while I was a Regional Vice President at Jefferson Wells/Manpower. I wish I
could go every year.
http://www.exed.hbs.edu/programs/lpsf/
Francine
June 12 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Francine,
Below your wrote: “If I hear positive stories (about the
Big Four) I expect them to show up somewhere else.”
Although I also greatly admire and quote Prim Sikka’s writings, I
think both you and he have similar expectations.
I guess that’s another version of cherry picking what
testimonials you write up, which I guess is all right as long as you’ve
owned up to cherry picking the negatives. And you’ve just owned up to this
in your remarks below.
But thank you Francine for what you do with great skill. You and
Prim brought a beacons of light into the academic world even if they only
shine in one direction.
What’s interesting to me, however, is where admittedly biased
analysts occasionally gain credibility by taking opposite sides now and
then. I sometimes, certainly not always, find this in academia when
researchers fairly present both sides on a contentious issue. It also
happens when honest researchers report research outcomes inconsistent with
their hopes and anticipations. I continually strive for such academic
balance myself which is why I obviously frustrate my good friends Paul
Williams, Amy Dunbar, Denny Beresford, and Francine McKenna now and then.
In the media world, this is one of the reasons I like the
extremely biased Jon Stewart on Comedy Central. On occasion Jon
pleases me when he does something totally out of character like ridicule
MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann. Conversely you would never see Keith Olbermann
invite David Walker to his show even though
no one strives harder than David Walker to be bipartisan. Keith only
invites his choir members as guests on Countdown as if he’s afraid of
dealing head on in an argument. “Truth tellers” like Keith only like to hear
their own versions of truth.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ZylQXm-vis
Saturday Night Live did a
balancing act when it belittled President Obama for zero important
accomplishments and portrayed Sarah Palin as a simpleton who can analyze
Russia’s foreign policy by looking out from her front porch.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_Jf9s23uF0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXVIwo5fLYs
Thank you Francine for what you do with great skill. You and Prim
brought a beacons of light into the academic world even if they only shine
in one direction.
One point upon which we greatly differ, however, is that the main
problem with CPA auditing is that it’s in the private sector.
Professionalism in government agencies just has too many contradictions to
give me a warm and fuzzy feeling that government can do a better job
auditing the Fortune 500. Government auditors just don’t cut it any better
as a rule than private sector CPA firms in compliance auditing of any type.
The big difference, however, is that you can’t sue the government for
incompetence and fraud unless it grants permission to be sued. Also hell
almost freezes over before a government bureaucrat can be fired even with
adverse media attention. This is often not so when there’s adverse media
attention in the private sector.
Bob Jensen
From:
AECM, Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia [mailto:AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Francine McKenna re: The Auditors Blog
Sent: Friday, June 11, 2010 11:54 AM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: Has Francine gone a "bridge too far?"
Half of my contacts are still
working for the firms. Is that an endorsement of glass half full or a
capitulation? My site is a critical look at the firms. If I hear positive
stories I expect them to show up somewhere else. Like on the firms' own web
sites. I am not the place to look for them. That focus and that bias is
clearly and repeatedly disclosed.
From: "Jensen, Robert" <rjensen@TRINITY.EDU>
Date: Fri, 11 Jun 2010 10:49:04 -0500
To: <AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU>
Subject: Re: Has Francine gone a "bridge too far?"
But do your contacts ever say anything good about the
professionalism of their employers?
It seems like you only report the negatives.
My own contacts seem much more upbeat about the Big Four.
Guess we have a different set of contacts.
Bob Jensen
From:
AECM, Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia [mailto:AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Francine McKenna re: The Auditors Blog
Sent: Friday, June 11, 2010 10:28 AM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: Has Francine gone a "bridge too far?"
Bob, you misunderstand me. I am
very pro-SOx for all the reasons you mention and all the ones I have. I am
critical of the Big 4 audit firm model and how leadership must focus on
profit to the detriment of the investor.
I do not depend on a "few disgruntled partners." My sample size is quite
large including many who hold or have held leadership roles.
From: "Jensen, Robert" <rjensen@TRINITY.EDU>
Date: Fri, 11 Jun 2010 09:03:18 -0500
To: <AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU>
Subject: Re: Has Francine gone a "bridge too far?"
I especially recommend Mark Nelson’s paper and his conclusion
(Mark is actually one of our leading accountics researchers).
Click Here
http://citebm.business.illinois.edu/TWC%20Class/Project_reports_Fall2008/Sarbanes-Oxley/Mark%20Nelson/Mark%20Nelson%20BADM%20458%20Final%20Paperx.pdf
If companies, as you state, “did what they needed to be doing all
along” then we would never have had all those enormous pre-SOX scandals that
threatened the very survival of equity markets in the United States (as
aptly pointed out by Mark).
Especially note Mark’s conclusion that SOX worked pretty much as
intended --- much to the amazement of many audit clients going into SOX
compliance with enormous skepticism. The SEC study seems to confirm that SOX
and the PCAOB are really preventing much, certainly not all, the fraud that
arose like the mushroom cloud prior to the desparation SOX legislation.
The WSJ editors are consistently, like you, enormous skeptics of
SOX and Big Four auditing firms in general, but then WSJ editors, unlike
you, will defend some big-time felons to the end (e.g., Mike Milken and the
big time options back dating executives).
I think
Abe Brilloff for many years repeatedly, at an enormous personal cost,
demonstrated how relying upon the assumed professionalism and ethics among
“professionals” just is not enough to protect society from the greed of
professionals that seems to germinate from unfettered opportunity.
I sometimes think that you overly rely upon interviews with a few
disgruntled insiders in the Big Four. A random sampling might point
sometimes to different conclusions about how insiders in general feel about
the Big Four and professionalism that is strived for in audits and Section
404 investigations.
By the way, are systems engineers and IT auditors really so
distinct professionally? I assumed that an IT auditor had to have a great
deal of systems engineering skills.
Bob Jensen
"The Big 4 Audit Report: Should
the Public Perceive It as a Label of Quality?" by Ross D. Fuerman,,"
Accounting and the Public Interest 9 (1), 148 (2009) ---
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=APIXXX000009000001000148000001&idtype=cvips&gifs=Yes&ref=no
ABSTRACT:
There has been little research comparing the relative performance of the Big
4 CPA firms. Users of audited financial statements often practically have no
other CPA firms to choose from for auditing services in the large public
company auditing services market and thus desire more of this information.
In 1,017 financial reporting lawsuits against Big 5 auditees filed from 1999
through 2004, the auditor litigation outcomes are used to proxy for the
likelihood of audit failure and thus for audit quality. Control variables
significant in prior empirical work were used in polytomous regression and
in logistic regression. Ernst & Young has comparatively better auditor
litigation outcomes, which proxy for a lower likelihood of audit failure and
a stronger level of audit quality. The Ernst & Young results are robust;
they are insensitive to the use of ten different model specifications. There
is also evidence suggesting that PricewaterhouseCoopers may be a
comparatively high quality auditor, but these latter results are sensitive
to the model specification. Clearly, the null hypothesis of consistency in
audit quality among the Big 4 CPA firms is rejected. ©2009 American
Accounting Association
Bob Jensen's threads on auditing professionalism
are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Professionalism
Bob Jensen's threads on auditing firm litigation
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
"What Will Audit Firms Do On Their PCAOB Annual Reports?" Big Four
Blog, June 18, 2010 ---
http://www.bigfouralumni.blogspot.com/
Jensen Question
Is there a reason the wording is “do on” instead of “put on?”
Bob Jensen's threads on auditing professionalism ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Professionalism
"Today in Auditor Musical Chairs: KPMG and Deloitte Both Get the Boot
(from troublesome clients)," Caleb Newquist, Going Concern, June 29,
2010 ---
http://goingconcern.com/2010/06/today-in-auditor-musical-chairs-kpmg-and-deloitte-both-get-the-boot/
Jensen Comment
Note in particular that KPMG was concerned about poor internal controls.
Cloud Computing ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_computing
"How Cloud Computing Can Transform Business," by Bernard Golden,
Harvard Business Review Blog, June 4, 2010 ---
http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2010/06/business_agility_how_cloud_com.html?cm_mmc=npv-_-DAILY_ALERT-_-AWEBER-_-DATE
You're in a meeting. You and your team identify a
great new business opportunity. If you can launch in 60 days, a rich new
market segment will be open for your product or service. The action plan is
developed. Everything's a go.
And then you come down to earth. You need new
computer equipment, which takes weeks, or months, to install. You also need
new software, which adds more weeks or months. There's no way to meet the
timeframe required by the market opening. You are stymied by your
organization's lack of IT agility.
Or, you could have the experience
the New York Times had when it needed to convert
a large number of digital files to a format
suitable to serve up over the web. After the inevitable "it will take a lot
of time and money to do this project," one of their engineers went to the
Amazon Web Services cloud, created 20 compute instances (essentially,
virtual servers), uploaded the files, and converted them all over the course
of one weekend.
Total cost? $240.
This example provides a sense of why cloud computing is transforming the
face of IT, with the potential to deliver real business value. The rapid
availability of compute resources in a cloud computing environment enables
business agility — the dexterity for businesses to quickly respond to
changing business conditions with IT-enabled offerings.
Notwithstanding the fact that IT seems to always
have the latest, greatest thing on its mind, cloud computing has the entire
IT industry excited, with companies such as IBM, Microsoft, Amazon, Google
and others investing billions of dollars in this new form of computing. And
in terms of IT users,
Gartner recently named cloud computing as the
second most important technology focus area for 2010.
But what is cloud computing exactly? Why is it
different than what went before? And why should you care? While there are
many definitions of cloud computing, I look to the definition of cloud
computing from the National Institute of Standards and Testing (NIST), part
of the US Department of Commerce. In its cloud computing definition,
NIST identifies five characteristics of cloud computing,
which include:
- on-demand self service, which allows business
units to get the computing resources they need without having to go
through IT for equipment .
- broad network access, which enables
applications to be built in ways that align with how businesses operate
today - mobile, multi-device, etc.
- resource pooling, which allows for pooling of
computing resources are to serve multiple consumers
- rapid elasticity, which allow for quick
scalability or downsizing of resources depending on demand
- and measured service, which means that
business units only pay for the compute resources they use. Translation:
IT costs match business success.
To offer a concrete example of how cloud computing
agility enables organizations to respond to business opportunity, let me
share the experience of one of our clients, the Silicon Valley Education
Foundation. Its Lessonopoly application allows 13,000 teachers throughout
Silicon Valley to collaborate on lesson plans. NBC approached SVEF just
before this year's Winter Olympics with science-focused lesson plans
centered around the science behind the experience of Olympic athletes (e.g.,
the loads placed on a skier's legs as she swerves around a slalom gate).
One concern SVEF had was whether or not Lessonopoly
could handle the likely application load increase. There were only a few
days before the start of the Olympics, which would initiate heavy use of
these lesson plans. The group had migrated the application to Amazon Web
Services a few months earlier, and they were able to quickly shut down the
small machine Lessonopoly was running on and bring it back up on a larger
instance with three times the computing capacity of the original.
It's a cliché to say that business is changing at
an ever-increasing pace, but one of the facts about clichés is they often
contain truth. The deliberate pace of traditional IT is just not suited for
today's hectic business environment. Cloud computing's agility is a much
better match for constantly mutating business conditions. To evaluate
whether your business opportunities could be well-served by leveraging the
agility of cloud computing, download the
HyperStratus Cloud Computing Agility Checklist, which
outlines ten conditions that indicate a business case for taking advantage
of the agility of cloud computing.
Bernard Golden is CEO of HyperStratus, a Silicon Valley-based cloud
computing consultancy that works with clients in the US and throughout the
world. Contact him at bernard.golden@hyperstratus.com
Winner: "Heads
in the Cloud" from Anseo.net
This post shows how one school uses cloud computing through Google Apps as a
communication tool for the staff and board of management.
Bob Jensen's threads on Tools and Tricks of the Trade ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
Ten Highest and Ten Lowest States in Terms
of Taxpayer Liability
A Lot of Taxpayers in the South Pay Zero Taxes (Non-Payers) Due to
Credits, Deductions, and Poverty

Source: Scott A. Hodge, Tax Foundation, May 24, 2010 ---
http://www.taxfoundation.org/publications/show/26336.html
According to the latest IRS figures for 2008, a record 52 million filers—36
percent of the 143 million who filed a
tax return—had no tax liability because their credits and deductions reduced
their liability to zero.
Indeed, tax credits such as the child tax credit and earned income tax credit
have become so generous
that a family of four earning up to about $52,000 can expect to have their
income tax liability erased entirely.
Jerry Trites pointed me to this interesting paper from Accenture on ERP
"A Smart Start to Strong Enterprise Resource Planning Requests for Proposals"
Summary ---
Click Here
http://www.accenture.com/Global/Services/By_Industry/Government_and_Public_Service/PS_Global/R_and_I/Smart-Proposals.htm
Full Paper ---
Click Here
http://www.accenture.com/NR/rdonlyres/839885D0-A344-4139-A26E-0393B463095B/0/ACC_SmartStartWP.pdf
Bob Jensen's sadly neglected threads on ERP ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosap.htm
Citing a Study at the University of Washingon
"E-Book Readers Bomb on College Campuses," by Allison Damast,
Business Week, June 10, 2010 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/content/jun2010/bs20100610_200335.htm?link_position=link1
June 17, 2010 reply from Les Livingstone
[jlivingstone@UMUC.EDU]
Bob Jensen correctly points out that E-Book readers
so far are a flop. But this does not mean that E-Books are a flop.
In our MBA accounting/economics/finance course all
3 of our required textbooks are E-Books - which do not use E-Book readers.
These 3 E-Books can be purchased in these formats:
1. Online versions with ads to read online: Free. 2. Online versions without
ads to read online: Under $7 each. 3. Downloadable and printable pdf files:
Under $10 each. 4. Hard copy paperbacks: Under $20 each for two and under
$30 for the largest book. So their combined cost varies between a low of
zero to a high of $70, and no E-Book readers are needed. Any computer will
do. The range of $0 to $70 for 3 textbooks is great in these days of
hardcover textbooks at prices of $100-$200 each.
Lest anyone thinks that these E-Books are of
inferior quality, let me note that one is in its 5th edition, one is in its
2nd edition, and the third is presently being readied for its 2nd edition.
Since most textbooks do not ever reach a 2nd edition, this is an indicator
of good quality.
Student evaluations frequently express joy and
happiness at the quality and low cost of these 3 textbooks.
Best wishes, Les Livingstone
http://leslivingstone.com/
June 17, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Thank you Les,
I hope you
won’t mind if I post your reply in various documents on my Website.
Keep in mind
that, because I drive a Subaru, does not mean that I prefer it to a
Mercedes. Hard copy, in some ways, is priced like luxury cars relative to
Subaru models. However, unlike automobiles, inexpensive e-Books have some
advantages over the luxury (higher priced hard copy) versions, including
such things as text search, free book replacement for lost readers,
portability (think of trying to get 100 printed books into a backpack), etc.
Many of us
luddites still board airplanes with paperback books in our carry-on luggage.
And I was one of the early adopters with my Rocket eBook that I now cannot
even find ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ebooks.htm
I did find this technology useful on a couple of trips to China and long
flights to other parts of the world. But it just did not stick with me.
Perhaps when iPad eventually sells a version with a USB/firewire port I will
change my mind.
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on electronic book readers ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ebooks.htm
"The Auditors And Financial Regulatory Reform: That Dog Don’t Hunt,"
by Francine McKenna, re: The Auditors, May 31, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/05/31/the-auditors-and-financial-regulatory-reform-that-dog-dont-hunt/
It’s not every day that a regular girl from Chicago
has a chance to talk with a sitting US Senator about the subject most
important to her.
No… I’m not talking about Rosie, my Rottweiler.
I’m talking about the auditors’ role in the
financial crisis and their place in the regulatory reform bills now being
considered. Through a series of wonderful and kind acts, namely the efforts
of one
particular journalist, I was invited to talk with
Delaware Senator Ted Kaufman (D) and his staff about accounting industry
reform.
The conversation was wide ranging and opinions
expressed off-the-record. The meeting happened on the same day as Representative
Barney Frank’s speech to the Compliance Week conference
and we talked about his remarks. I expressed my
disappointment with several things especially Rep. Frank’s capitulation on a
Sarbanes-Oxley exception for smaller companies and his rambling response to
the question about a Department of Justice implied “too few to fail” policy.
The Kaufman team is led with mucho gusto by the
Senator. It was great to have a chance to meet them, but I realize it’s
probably too late to get anything that addresses audit industry reform in
this bill. There’s a lot of compromise
going on with what’s already there.
Health care reform took some of the fight out of
more than a few on both sides of the aisle and in both legislative bodies.
Rep. Frank mentioned it a few times during his speech. He described
advantages and disadvantages from a legislative perspective of the pure
focus on financial regulatory reform now that health care is “a done deal.”
It makes it both easier for media to spotlight an individual politician’s
positions without the clutter of other major legislation and harder for that
politician to hide behind multiple major initiatives when it comes to
supporting or voting for controversial or dramatic change.
I came to the meeting with a few points to make. I
think I did that but, as usual, a discussion of the issues facing the audit
industry can get a little depressing, even for me.
However, this meeting, as well as the ones at the
PCAOB, made me realize the time has come to make proposals and suggestions
for industry change instead of just pointing out the issues, problems and
need for change.
Most regulators and legislators avoid talking about
wholesale change to the structure of the accounting/audit industry. It
seems too big a task and untenable. The refrain I hear most often both when
attending conferences and events and on this site is, “We can’t get rid of
the audit opinion. It’s required.” I’ve also written about the strong and
steady political contributions the accounting industry makes,
party-agnostic, dictated primarily by the politician’s position and
influence over the audit firms’ interests.
Lack of vision and loads of cash. These are the
fundamental obstacles to serving investors and other stakeholders with
financial reporting that can be trusted.
But it’s also true that Big Oil has spent years
deluding itself and others into thinking that this kind of spill was
impossible and that preparing for one wasn’t necessary. Indeed, BP once
called a blowout disaster “inconceivable.”
Certainly, if you can’t conceive of a disaster, you’ll become more and
more lax, more and more reckless, until one happens. You’ll cut corners
on backup systems and testing. And you certainly won’t pre-build and
pre-position any relevant equipment for staunching the flow. Since a
disaster can’t happen, you and your allies in Congress will block all
serious safeguards and demagogue all efforts to oversee the industry as
“Big Government interference in the marketplace that will raise the
price of gasoline for average Americans.”
This quote comes from Salon
and refers to the oil spill disaster. But it could
have just as easily been said about the litigation threats against the
largest global accounting firms and doubts about their
viability and credibility post-financial crisis.
If legislators and regulators can’t imagine a world without the audit firms
and the audit report in their current form, then they can’t work towards
something better for investors and the capitalist system.
The firms are broken and their basic product is
worthless. The auditors were completely impotent to warn investors of
over-leverage and risky business models, to prevent erroneous and
potentially fraudulent financial reporting and to mitigate the impact on
everyone of these errors, misstatements, obfuscations and subterfuge by
executives of the failed, bailed out and nationalized financial
institutions.
It wasn’t such an intellectual leap for media,
regulators and legislators to see the inherent conflicts in the ratings
agencies’ business model post-crisis and to essentially, with the stroke of
a pen, destroy that business model.
New York Times, The Caucus Blog,
May 13, 2010: One amendment, sponsored by Senators George LeMieux,
Republican of Florida and Maria Cantwell, Democrat of Washington, would
remove references to the credit agencies in major financial
services laws, including the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
the Investment Company Act of 1940 and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act. It was approved by a vote of 61 to 38.
Additional reform legislation sponsored by
Senator Al Franken – I kid you not – puts the
government in the middle between ratings agencies and the securities
issuers. The ideas is to take the “pleaser” part out of how the credit
raters make their living.
The Atlantic,
May 13, 2010: “The new legislation calls for every new ABS bond issue to
have a rating by one agency assigned by a new board, instead of being
chosen by the investment bank creating the security. The board will
consist of mostly investors along with a few other industry
participants. Although the underwriter can solicit additional ratings,
it cannot escape the verdict of the assigned agency, so it cannot shop
around for whichever agency has the most favorable view.”
Wouldn’t it be funny if the audit
firms took advantage of the credit ratings agencies’ weakness
and swooped in to do that business? After all, the
auditors have the trust
and integrity thing down pat. But there’s
no way the audit firms would have the nerve to even float that idea post-EY/Lehman…
Nobody disagrees when I remind them that audit
firms have the same inherent conflict of interest as ratings agencies. The
audit firms have a business relationship with Audit Committees who are
selected by the corporations’ executives. Audit partners are “pleasers.”
The
audit fees for the
largest financial institutions are in the $100,000,000 annually range but
it’s been a challenge to grow that business in the current economic
environment. The Sarbanes-Oxley gravy train has pretty much derailed.
Is it such a stretch to think about taking the
control over appointment and renewal of auditors away from the corporations
– the corporate executives are the true corrupting influence on the poor,
innocent auditors – and give it to the SEC or PCAOB? Corporations could be
required to pay the auditor regardless of the audit opinion or how many
exceptions are found or hard the auditor has to push back on aggressive
accounting. All this can happen under the watchful eye of their regulator
who can put the firms on a “good list” and can effect limited or general
“debarment” type actions if an audit firm or audit partner rolls over and
plays dead too often.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on the survival threats of large auditing firms ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#Auditors
Here's a question for our FIN 48 expert, Amy Dunbar
"FIN 48 - Did Anyone Consider Compliance Costs for the Average Client?"
AccountingWeb, June 13. 2010 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/blogs/ann-callari/tax-chick/fin-48-did-anyone-consider-compliance-costs-average-client
"What is the XBRL Cloud Report?" Rivet
Blog, No Date ---
http://blog.rivetsoftware.com/2010/03/03/xbrl-cloud-report/
The Cloud
Report is a validation tool created by a third party to
assist with the XBRL filing process. In fact, some
printers use this tool as their validation tool for
their XBRL clients. Rivet currently uses its own
proprietary tool to perform this function and does not
rely on a third party for its validation. In addition,
Rivet’s validation rules are based on official SEC
guidelines, as are documented in the EDGAR manual. We
work very closely with the SEC to ensure our
interpretation of the SEC guidelines adhere to the EDGAR
manual appropriately.
It is
important to note that all filings submitted to the SEC
pass EDGAR validations otherwise they would not have
been accepted by the SEC. The Cloud is a third party’s
interpretation of the SEC guidelines as are all the
validation tools on the market. It is not an official
validation tool of the SEC. When the Cloud was first
created, there were concerns that the terminology used,
specifically error, was interpreted as not
being accepted by the SEC for filing. This was not the
case. The Cloud’s term error includes both SEC
Rule violations and SEC Warnings. For example, the Cloud
lists Error LC3. This Cloud error is actually
an SEC warning related to the fact that no numbers can
be listed in the element name label. Yet the SEC Rule
requires that the element name label exactly match the
financial statement label including the numbers. The
filer must meet the SEC Rule as they will not be able to
submit through Edgar without following it. Yet because
the filer is following the SEC Rule, they will get a SEC
warning because the label includes numbers and
therefore, an error LC3 in the Cloud.
The
Cloud has always meant to be used as a collaborative
tool to help vendors and filers interpret the SEC EDGAR
Rules. If you have ever looked at these rules, you will
agree that it is very difficult for a non-technical
person to interpret. We have worked with the Cloud’s
founder to offer guidance on how we interpret the rules
and he has provided us with valuable feedback in our
interpretation. This has led to conversations with the
SEC and has helped everyone in interpreting the SEC
Rules more accurately.
In
summary,
- The
Cloud Report is not an SEC endorsed tool. It is a
third party interpretation of the guidelines.
- All
filings run through the Cloud Report were
successfully filed with the SEC. The Cloud errors do
not mean SEC errors.
- The
Cloud Report was meant to be used as a validation
tool, not to evaluate XBRL vendors.
The
Cloud should not be used as a tool to rank XBRL vendors
for several reasons:
-
First, all filers have passed the SEC Rules during
the filing process otherwise they would not have
been able to file. The errors listed on the
Cloud Report are SEC warnings.
-
Second, XBRL vendors cannot necessarily control what
the filer decides to do with regard to the SEC
warnings. For example, if Rivet is providing our
full service solution to a client, we change the
terse element label to reflect the element name so
that there is no SEC warning produced. If our client
has taken the filing process in house, we cannot
control if they make this change or not. Either way
is accepted by the SEC, but without updating the
terse element label, a warning is produced and on
the Cloud, an error is produced. Since this
has no bearing on their filing, they usually pass on
performing this step.
-
Third, the Cloud was meant to be a collaborative
tool to be used in the filing process to ensure
accuracy. All XBRL vendors have Cloud errors.
The Cloud is an interpretation of the SEC guidelines
and is not an official SEC validation tool.
If you
find that this tactic is being used by a XBRL vendor
vying for your business, you may want to ask the
following:
-
Please show me your percentage of overall errors
compared to the other XBRL vendors for all filings
to date. All vendors have some Cloud errors
because Cloud errors are the same as SEC warnings
and are accepted by the SEC for filing.
-
Drilldown into a particular filing and have the XBRL
vendor show you the actual Cloud error and
have them explain in detail how this error
impacted the filing.
Please
let me know if I can be of any assistance during your
evaluation phase. I would be more than happy to work
with you in evaluating your XBRL needs.
|
Bob Jensen's badly neglected threads on XBRL
are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm
This site is better on history than current updates.
A good site for current XBRL updates ---
http://www.computercpa.com/
June 3, 2010 message from Ira Kawaller
[kawaller@kawaller.com]
I've just posted
an article that was just published in the May issue of the
AFP Exchange.
It deals
with cross hedging -- i.e., hedging in the face of basis risk. This is an
issue that is nearly universal for those with commodity exposures, but it
may also arise from time to time with financial hedges, as well.
The thrust of the
article is that these imperfections may work to the benefit of the hedging
entity, and anticipating
when
these imperfections are likely to be beneficial can help contribute to the
bottom line.
Please feel free
to contact me if you have any questions or care to discuss.
Ira Kawaller
View the Article
Kawaller & Co. Services
the Kawaller Fund
"Institutional Research Roundup," by Doug Lederman, Inside Higher
Ed, June 1, 2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/06/01/air
Institutional researchers
are higher education's version of a utility infielder. That doesn't mean
they lack expertise: They specialize in bringing data to bear on issues and
problems, and explaining and interpreting those data to campus constituents
who often come at the information from widely varying viewpoints. Their
versatility comes, though, in the wide range of subjects they touch and of
decisions over which they have some influence.
Given that eclectic role,
the annual forum of the Association for Institutional Research typically
covers a plethora of topics, and
this year's
meeting, the organization's 50th, is no exception.
But it is also true that examining the forum's agenda usually offers a sense
of which issues are keeping institutional leaders up at night, since those
are often the topics that presidents and provosts and other campus officials
have asked their data gurus to dive into.
Not surprisingly, given
the emphasis that policy makers are placing on college completion and the
fiscal realities that make every lost student a liability, retention and
student success were all over the AIR agenda. Roughly a third of the 375
sessions related to institutional efforts to measure or improve students’
academic progress in higher education.
In one such session, Roger
Mourad, director of institutional research at Michigan’s Washtenaw Community
College, compared the characteristics of students who transferred from his
institution and then graduated from a four-year college to those who
transferred and did not earn a bachelor’s degree.
The study would help to
shed light, Mourad said, on what he said remains a “very viable debate
nowadays”: “Whether community colleges are democratic institutions operating
as gateways to four-year institutions, or do they end up diverting students
away from four-year bachelor’s institutions?”
Mourad’s study, which
examined students who entered Washtenaw for the first time in 2000 and
followed for eight years those who transferred to a four-year institution,
found that about 44 percent of all transferring students graduated (with
significantly higher proportions of transfers graduating from the University
of Michigan than from Eastern Michigan University and other institutions).
Students were more likely
to complete their bachelor’s degrees if they earned more credits and had
higher grade point averages at the two-year college before transferring, as
one might expect, Mourad said. But every additional semester they spent at
Washtenaw actually reduced their odds of earning a bachelor’s degree, he
said. “Students who were more immersed academically at the community college
over a shorter period of time were better prepared to succeed at four-year
institutions,” he said.
Why might staying longer
at the community college actually reduce their likelihood of completion at
the four-year institution? Mourad and the audience offered several theories,
including that students “become too comfortable with the small class size,
the easier access to faculty members,” and other nurturing elements of the
two-year environment, or that they get used to the “less competitive”
environment (marked by “easier grading”) that they may find at two-year
institutions. “When they hit the four-year institutions, do they have
transfer shock?” he wondered.
Diane Dean, an assistant
professor of higher education policy at Illinois State University, came at
the question of bachelor’s degree completion from another angle.
Amid growing interest
among state policy makers in trying to limit fast-rising tuition rates, she
examined whether
state guaranteed tuition programs affected
retention and completion rates.
Looking at comparable
students and institutions in Illinois (which has a guaranteed tuition
program) and those in surrounding Great Lakes states, which do not, Dean
found that Illinois’s program had had insignificant effects on the success
of its students at public universities. That may be, she speculated, because
guaranteeing students a tuition rate may improve predictability of what
students pay, but it doesn’t, by itself, make college more affordable for
those students.
A Search for a Better
Way
Many if not most sessions
at the institutional researchers’ meeting involved campus IR officials
presenting the results of studies they’ve conducted, with the goal of
shedding light on local issues or problems.
One session Monday had a
very different purpose: providing a forum for a group of college officials
grappling with a common problem: the failure of the federal graduation rate
to capture what’s happening on campuses filled with adult students.
Chris Davis, vice provost
of institutional effectiveness at Chicago’s National-Louis University, said
that many campuses like his were trying to find their own alternatives to
the federal rate, which by focusing exclusively on full-time, first-time
students captures a tiny fraction of the students at many adult-serving
institutions. National-Louis has begun contemplating a series of indicators
to measure its own students' success, such as looking separately at the
graduation rates of students who transfer into the university with 15 or
more credits and those who enter the university with 45 or more credits.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on June 4, 2010
ECB Warns Write-Downs Could Reach $239 Billion
by: David
Enrich and Stephen Fidler
Jun 02, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Bad
Debts, Banking, Treasury Department
SUMMARY: "...The
European Central Bank warned late Monday that euro-zone banks face ?195
billion ($239.26 billion) in write-downs this year and the next due to an
economic outlook that remained 'clouded by uncertainty.' ...The ECB in May
launched a series of initiatives to help banks, including the purchases of
government debt from banks and the renewal of a program to give cheap
six-month loans to banks....The moves helped provide some stability to the
banks, but Europe's intertwined banking system remains stressed." Factors
leading to this predicament stem from heavy exposure for real estate loans
in Spain, Portugal, and Greece. Another contributing point is the fact that
Europe did not replenish their banks' capital in 2008 and 2009 as did the
U.S. and U.K., partly with taxpayer funds.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article is useful in discussing bank balance sheets and loan losses as they
relate to an overall economy.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
What is the underlying problem that began leading to concerns about the
overall health of European banks?
2. (Introductory)
What bank write-downs may reach ?195 billion ($239.26 billion) this year and
next? How does an economic slow down lead to this situation?
3. (Advanced)
Explain why "some European banks have less capital and more leverage than
their U.S. counterparts"? In your answer, define the terms capital and
leverage. Comment on the formula for leverage used in the chart entitled "In
Deeper" sourced from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD).
4. (Advanced)
What is the European banks' "stress test" that was begun in 2009 and is now
being prepared for the second time?
5. (Introductory)
Describe factors on both sides of the argument as to whether to disclose
these stress test results that were not disclosed last year and that the
European Central Bank (ECB) may not disclose this year as well.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"ECB Warns Write-Downs Could Reach $239 Billion," by David Enrich and Stephen
Fidler, The Wall Street Journal, June 1. 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703406604575278620471963334.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
In the latest indication that European banks are in
ill health, the European Central Bank warned late Monday that euro-zone
banks face €195 billion ($239.26 billion) in write-downs this year and the
next due to an economic outlook that remained "clouded by uncertainty."
The ECB news, part of its semiannual
financial-stability report, comes on the heels of a campaign by governments
and central banks to ease sovereign-debt problems in southern Europe. The
efforts have failed to calm worries that a banking crisis may be forming on
the Continent. That has led to escalating pressure on regulators and
governments to do more.
European governments already have cobbled together
a €110 billion bailout for Greece and a €750 billion rescue for other weak
economies of the euro zone. The ECB in May launched a series of initiatives
to help banks, including the purchases of government debt from banks and the
renewal of a program to give cheap six-month loans to banks, while the U.S.
Federal Reserve reactivated a swap line to provide European banks with
dollars.
The moves helped provide some stability to the
banks, but Europe's intertwined banking system remains stressed. Investors
have hammered the sector, banks are stashing near-record amounts of deposits
at the ECB—€305 billion as of Friday—instead of lending the funds to other
institutions, risk-wary U.S. financial institutions are reducing their
exposure to euro-zone banks, and U.S. government officials are pushing their
case for Europe to disclose publicly the results of stress tests for
euro-zone banks.
ECB Vice President Lucas Papademos defended the
central bank's response to the banking crisis and said results of European
Union-wide stress tests of banks should be completed in July, providing
further details on the capacity of the region's banks to withstand shocks.
The results of stress tests last year of individual banks weren't released
publicly. Some European countries are opposed to the public release of
results.
. . .
Like the financial crisis two years ago that was
sparked by the unraveling of the U.S. subprime-mortgage industry, Europe's
banking problems originated in a tiny patch of the global economy: Greece.
But the problems run deeper than the highly
publicized fiscal woes facing Greece, prompting similar concerns about
Portugal, Ireland and Spain. Credit-ratings firms have reduced these
countries' rankings and have warned about possible future downgrades, with
Fitch reducing Spain's triple-A rating by one notch on Friday.
All told, more than €2 trillion of public and
private debt from Greece, Spain and Portugal is sitting on the balance
sheets of financial institutions outside the three countries, according to a
Royal Bank of Scotland report last week. Investors, bankers and government
officials are worried that as that debt loses value, banks across Europe
could be saddled with losses.
"Make no mistake: This is big," said Jacques
Cailloux, RBS's chief European economist and the report's author. "We're
talking about systemic risk [and] the potential for contagion."
Concerns also are mounting about how European banks
will finance themselves in coming years. The banks have hundreds of billions
of euros in debt maturing by 2012, analysts and bankers say. Replacing those
funds could be difficult and costly, given fierce competition for deposits
and skittishness among bond investors. The situation has alarmed bankers and
government officials, and it helped fuel last week's selloff in bank stocks.
With funding scarce, some banks are becoming more
dependent on the ECB. The central bank has doled out more than €800 billion
in loans to banks, nearing its all-time high, according to UBS analysts. The
ECB warned Monday that the "continued reliance" of some midsize banks on
credit from the central bank remains "a cause for concern."
The U.S. and U.K. moved aggressively in 2008 and
2009 to replenish their banks' capital buffers, sometimes with taxpayer
funds.
Most of Europe didn't follow suit, because their
banking systems were largely spared the carnage of their Anglo-American
counterparts. But as a result, most European banks today have thinner
capital cushions and heavier debt loads than their U.S. and U.K. rivals,
leaving them vulnerable to an economic slowdown.
"Some European banks have less capital and more
leverage than their U.S. counterparts and…the crisis in Europe seems to have
lagged behind that in the U.S. in both the writing off of losses and in the
speed of raising more capital," said Angel Gurria, secretary-general of the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, in a speech in May.
OECD figures show that a selection of major U.S.
banks are operating with leverage ratios—the ratio of assets to common
equity—of between 12 and 17. By comparison, the same ratio for a group of
major European banks ranged from 21 to 49, according to the OECD.
European policy makers have been trying to address
that disparity by working on a global overhaul of banking regulations, to be
enacted in 2012, that would require banks to hold more capital and
liquidity. "But the regulatory fixes aren't going to solve the problem right
now," said Michael Ben-Gad, an economics professor at City University
London.
European governments and central bankers had hoped
bailing out Greece and launching a liquidity program would relieve immediate
pressure on other governments and the banking sector. But that hasn't
happened, and new pressures could arise soon. The ECB last summer doled out
€442 billion in one-year loans to euro-zone banks. Those loans come due June
30, potentially causing banks to scramble for a fresh source of cash this
month.
European officials face calls from the banking
industry, the investment community and foreign government leaders, including
U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, to redouble efforts to stabilize
the banking system through new initiatives.
RBS's Mr. Cailloux argues that the ECB should
expand its recently launched program to buy government bonds and should
broaden the effort to include private-sector debt as well.
That could ease concerns that banks will suffer
heavy losses, potentially blowing holes in their balance sheets, on their
portfolios of sovereign and corporate bonds tied to some European economies.
But such a move also could expose the central bank to potential losses.
Citigroup Inc. last week circulated a paper calling
on the ECB to launch a sort of insurance program to allow holders of
government bonds—a group largely consisting of European banks—to sell the
securities to the ECB in case of default. "Time is now of the essence and
the authorities should continue to be bold and innovative in working to
accelerate the impact of the available lines of support," Nazareth
Festekjian, a Citigroup managing director, wrote in the paper.
The ECB had no comment on calls to increase the
size of the bond-buying program or on the Citigroup recommendations.
Others want local European bank regulators to play
a more proactive role monitoring their banks' exposures to troubled
countries.
In the U.K., the Financial Services Authority has
been conducting repeated stress tests of major British banks' exposures to
southern Europe. Similarly intense efforts don't appear to be under way
elsewhere in Europe, said Pat Newberry, chairman of the U.K.
financial-services regulatory practice at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.
Mr. Newberry said conducting such tests would help
European governments and banks get a better handle on their individual and
collective vulnerabilities and to understand "how a series of unfortunate
events can aggregate to turn a problem into a catastrophe."
U.S. authorities believe that stress tests can help
restore market confidence. The tests the U.S. conducted last year helped
inject greater transparency and confidence in the banking system, U.S.
officials have said.
Banks are notorious for underestimating loan loss reserves and auditors
are notorious for letting them get away with it ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008bailout.htm#AuditFirms
On May 26, 2010 the FASB issued an exposure draft that would make it more
difficult to enormously underestimate load losses. International standards are
expected to be changed accordingly.
On May 26, 2010, the FASB issued a proposed Accounting Standards Update,
Accounting for Financial Instruments and Revisions to the Accounting for
Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities, setting out its proposed
comprehensive approach to financial instrument classification and measurement,
and impairment, and revisions to hedge accounting. Also, extensive new
presentation and disclosure requirements are proposed.
Here’s a “brief” from PwC on the new May 26 ED from the FASB ---
Click Here
http://cfodirect.pwc.com/CFODirectWeb/Controller.jpf?ContentCode=THUG-85UVWW&SecNavCode=MSRA-84YH44&ContentType=Content
PwC points out some of the major differences between these
proposed FASB revisions versus the IASB provisions.
Click Here to download the ED http://snipurl.com/fasb5-26-2010
June 1, 2010 message from Orenstein, Edith
[eorenstein@FINANCIALEXECUTIVES.ORG]
AECM - I thought you would find this of interest,
and thank you to Gary Previts & Teri Yohn for supporting this expanded
outreach by Financial Executives International (FEI) to academics. Regards,
Edith Orenstein, FEI FEI Expands Outreach To Academics
http://www.financialexecutives.org/eweb/upload/FEI/academicpromoMay2010.pdf
June 1, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
I was a long-time academic
member of FEI and even served as the President of the South Texas Chapter.
Although I benefitted from
the various publications of the FEI, what I found most rewarding was the
monthly meetings and other outings where I had face-to-face encounters with
top financial officers in the South Texas Chapter (that included the
headquarters of AT&T, Valero, USAA, and a number of other very large
corporations). Among other things, local contacts might provide your
students with internships. There were also free CPE opportunities that were
presented by the Big Four.
What is not clear in
Edith’s message are the local chapter dues policies. These cover such things
as receptions and meals. Although the South Texas Chapter charged regular
members for all meals and receptions whether or not they attended each
meeting, an exception was made for academic members who only had to pay for
events that they attended. I suspect this policy varies among local
chapters.
Thanks Edith!
Bob Jensen
"A Place to See and Be Seen (and Learn a Little, Too): $109-million
renovation of Ohio State's library reinforces its role in connecting the campus,"
by Scott Carlson, Chronicle of Higher Education, May 30, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/article/Do-Libraries-Still-Matter-/65708/?sid=wb&utm_source=wb&utm_medium=en
The Shocking Future of Higher Education and Education Technology ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm
"Preventing Plagiarism," by Amy Cavender, Chronicle of Higher
Education, June 11, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/Preventing-Plagiarism/24695/?sid=wc&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
In the ideal world, none of us would ever have to
write a note on a student's paper like the one in this photo. Since this
isn't the ideal world, we're likely to have to deal with plagiarism
every now and again. Dealing with instances of plagiarism will be the topic
of my post for next week.
This week, I'd like to float a few ideas on
preventing plagiarism.
The way we approach writing assignments can
certainly make a difference. Most faculty are well aware that reusing the
same essay prompts from one year to another is a bad idea, and asking
students to submit longer papers in stages is useful for catching potential
problems before they get a student into real trouble. (Incremental
due dates may also reduce the temptation for students to plagiarize, since
they force students to get started earlier.)
There are some good suggestions for instructors at
pages maintained by the
The University of Texas and
The University of Alberta Libraries.
Further, I'm convinced that a lot (certainly not
all) of the plagiarism committed by undergraduates is less than fully
intentional, and that much of it stems from poor information-management
practices.
That conviction has persuaded me that I need to
change my approach to teaching students how to use
Zotero. Some
time ago, I wrote a post on
teaching tech in Political Science. In that post,
I mentioned introducing students to Zotero in order to emphasize the
collaborative nature of scholarship and to make it easy for students to
format their citations properly.
But Zotero is also a marvelous
information-management system, and is therefore well-suited to avoiding the
accidental plagiarism that results from not keeping good track of one's
sources. If students get into the habit of keeping both their sources
and their notes in Zotero, they're much less likely to inadvertently
neglect to cite a source, or to accidentally cite something as a paraphrase
or summary when it's really a direct quote.
Bob Jensen's threads on plagiarism are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Plagiarism.htm
June 12, 2010 message from
Keith Weidkamp
From:
Keith Weidkamp [mailto:weidkamp@surewest.net]
Sent: Saturday, June 12, 2010 7:26 PM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject:
Hello Professor Jensen
I have followed ACEM and the many
daily contributions for over two years. On two occasions I have commented
back to individual professors. My name is Keith Weidkamp and I am a retired
Professor of Accounting at Sierra College in Rocklin California. For over
20 years I have worked with Professor Leland Mansuetti, and for the past
five years also with Professor Perry Edwards, developing, testing, and also
publishing web-based practice sets, homework problems, study and review
packets for Principles, Financial, Managerial, and Intermediate Accounting.
We have with limited advertising and a few conference presentations added
many schools to our adoption list. Texas A & M, Clemson, Trinity, Chicago,
Mary Harden Baylor, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and many other smaller colleges
and universities currently use one or more of our software products
As recently as yesterday and
quite often over the last few months there have been comments and
information regarding cheating and plagiarism. Over the past two
years we have been working on and have developed and tested two web-based
systems for Accounting practice sets and for Accounting homework that
virtually eliminates the copying of work, and answers to questions and
project examinations. In our first presentation a month ago at the
National TACTYC Convention in Phoenix, as the word got out regarding our new
algorithmic products and software, we had over 50 Four-year and Two-year
schools, from across the country ask for more information and an on-line
demonstration.
Our new web-based software has
added new opportunity to control a problem that has been an unfortunate
issue to deal with for many years. While
realizing that AECM is not a place to advertise, since the focus of AECM is
Accounting Education and Multi-Media, I am asking you what you would
recommend I do to get this information out to our large group professors as
an informational item.
Attached you will find two
information documents that outline our two new Algorithmic products. We
have now two algorithmic practice sets and a full set of algorithmic topical
problems (25 topics). Both of these products have the same key features.
On all practice sets each
student starts with a different set of beginning balances. A unique set of
check figures is available for each student user. Answers to key questions
at the mid-point and at the end of the project, are different for each
student. With a single click an Instructor can view the work file of any
student. With two clicks an instructor can print a copy of the student's
graded examination showing their answers and the correct answers for that
student.
On the Accounting Coach
homework and/or study software, there are 25 topics for a student to choose
from. Students are provided unlimited practice and Teacher Help screens for
every topic and sub-topic. Every homework assignment ends with a short 5-8
minute algorithmic examination. This exam is scored and the grade
automatically entered into the instructor grade book. A well-prepared
student can complete a topic assignment in 15-20 minutes. A student needing
more assistance can continue the algorithmic practice and retake the
algorithmic examination as many times as necessary to achieve a satisfactory
score.
Special Features of this
Software:
1. Cheating and copying
others work is eliminated.
2. All student work is
automatically graded and the score recorded into the instructor
grade book.
3. Each practice set and
problem has unlimited opportunity for practice, assistance,
reinforcement and
learning.
4. Student clerical time as
well as homework and practice time is significantly
reduced.
5. Instructor grading and
recording time is almost completely eliminated.
6. Direct on-line support is
provided from the Professor Authors!
The three authors of this
software have a combined classroom experience of over 75 years. They use
this software daily in their classes. Over 500 students use this software
each semester at their school.
The new web-based software,
with all of the special improvements not possible in a CD version, has
eliminated all publishing, shipping, and markup costs. All products can be
purchased via PayPal for just $19.95 per student copy.
June 13, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Keith,
I am forwarding your
message to the AECM, because I think what you’ve accomplished is probably
valuable to some instructors although not to the extent that I buy into your
claim that “cheating and copying others’ work is eliminated.”
Your pedagogy is very
limited in that it does not allow for creative solutions that differ from
your templates. This is why some instructors assign term papers rather than
practice sets. But term papers both increases and decreases opportunities to
cheat.
And you’ve not eliminated
advanced forms of cheating.
For one thing, students
have very clever ways of communicating with one another and with answer
files ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Plagiarism.htm#NewKindOfCheating
In very large classes, it
is often possible for surrogate students to pretend to be somebody else.
Adopters of Your
Practice Sets May Have a False Sense of Security
You’re assuming that clever students
(possibly advanced students) will not write answer templates such as Excel
workbooks that are archived (e.g., in a fraternity’s database). Those
templates may be just as efficient in finding solutions as your own answer
templates that you use for grading purposes.
It has long been a
practice of case-method teachers to recycle cases with changed numbers and
sometimes even changed contexts and assumptions. However, students still
find value added in having archives of the solutions answers of former
versions of a case. This is one of the things that makes case method
teaching very frustrating. It’s almost imperative to continually use new
cases rather than recycled cases.
Seeking Creative
Solutions Both Increase and Decrease Opportunities to Cheat
I defy anybody or any software from
detecting all forms of plagiarism. Out of trillions upon trillions of pages
of writings in history, a student can simply type in a sentence or a
paragraph or an entire page of writing that has a 99% probability of being
detected.
Unless somebody, like
Tournitin, archives student term papers and problem solutions, plagiarism
detection has more than a 99% chance of failing. For example, if a student
writes an unpublished essay at Florida International that is never archived
anywhere except in one professor’s brain, I defy you to detect its
plagiarism in unpublished term papers elsewhere in the world.
Turnitin and other
plagiarism services attempt to archive unpublished writings so that such
works are not so easily plagiarized ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Plagiarism.htm#Detection
Even Turnitin cannot
archive more than a miniscule fraction of writings that have never been
digitized.
The Best Way to Prevent
Cheating
The real trick for professors is to
assign unique projects where finding works or people to plagiarize will be
an education in and of itself. For example, if I assign a project on
accounting for contango swaps in Iceland I’ve eliminated 99.99999999999% of
writings that can be safely plagiarized in a student term project at the
University of Southern California. And I defy you to find a term paper
writing service that will take this project on at reasonable prices. Of
course there is an epsilon chance of finding something or somebody to
plagiarize, but like I said doing this may be an education in and of itself.
And I think cheating on this project will be more difficult than writing an
Excel workbook for solution templates to your practice cses.
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on cheating ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Plagiarism.htm
IASB-FASB Convergence Efforts Hit IFRS Roadblocks and Delays
"IASB and FASB issue statement on their convergence work," IASB, June 2. 2010
---
Click Here
http://www.iasb.org/News/Announcements+and+Speeches/IASB+and+FASB+issue+statement+on+their+convergence+work.htm
The IASB and the FASB today announced their
intention to prioritise the major convergence projects to permit a sharper
focus on issues and projects that they believe will bring about significant
improvement and convergence between IFRSs and US GAAP. Their joint statement
is as follows:
In our November 2009 joint statement, we, the
International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and the US Financial
Accounting Standards Board (FASB) again reaffirmed our commitment to
improving International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs) and US
generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) and achieving their
convergence. That Statement affirmed June 2011 as the target date for
completing the major projects in the 2006 Memorandum of Understanding (MoU),
as updated in 2008, described project-specific milestone targets, and
acknowledged the need to intensify our standards-setting efforts to meet
those targets.
We committed to providing transparency and
accountability regarding those plans by reporting periodically on our
progress. Our first report, dated 31 March 2010, described the progress we
had made to date, explained some of the challenges we face in improving and
converging our standards in certain areas, and reported changes made to
certain project-specific milestone targets.
As noted in our March 2010 progress report, we
recognise the challenges that arise from seeking effective global
stakeholder engagement on a large number of projects. Since publishing the
March progress report, stakeholders have voiced concerns about their ability
to provide high-quality input on the large number of major Exposure Drafts
planned for publication in the second quarter of this year.
The IASB and the FASB are in the process of
developing a modified strategy to take account of these concerns that would:
prioritise the major projects in the MoU to permit
a sharper focus on issues and projects that we believe will bring about
significant improvement and convergence between IFRS and US GAAP. stagger
the publication of Exposure Drafts and related consultations (such as public
round table meetings) to enable the broad-based and effective stakeholder
participation in due process that is critically important to the quality of
their standards. We are limiting to four the number of significant or
complex Exposure Drafts issued in any one quarter. issue a separate
consultation document seeking stakeholder input about effective dates and
transition methods. The modified strategy retains the target completion date
of June 2011 for many of the projects identified by the original MoU,
including those projects, as well as other issues not in the MoU, where a
converged solution is urgently required. The target completion dates for a
few projects have extended into the second half of 2011. The nature of the
comments received on the Exposure Drafts will determine the extent of the
redeliberations necessary and the timeline required to arrive at high
quality, converged standards.
The IASB and the FASB have begun discussions on
this proposed strategy with their respective oversight bodies and
regulators, including members of the IASC Foundation Monitoring Board.
It is expected that this action by the FASB and
IASB will not negatively impact the Securities and Exchange Commission’s
work plan, announced in February, to consider in 2011 whether and how to
incorporate IFRS into the US financial system.
The boards expect to publish shortly a progress
report that includes a revised work plan.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standards setting controversies are at
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://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#FAS02
Bob Jensen's threads on IASB-FASB standards convergence ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
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.
Differences between FASB and IASB standards ---
http://www.deloitte.com/dtt/cda/doc/content/pocketiasus.pdf
"Countrywide (now part of Bank of America) Pays $108 Million to Settle
Fees Complaint." by Edward Wyatt, The New York Times, June 7, 2010 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/08/business/08ftc.html?hp
The Federal Trade Commission announced Monday that
two Countrywide mortgage servicing companies had agreed to pay $108 million
to settle charges that they collected excessive fees from financially
troubled homeowners.
The $108 million payment is one of the largest
overall judgments in the commission’s history and resolves its largest
mortgage servicing case. The money will go to more than 200,000 homeowners
whose loans were serviced by Countrywide before July 2008, when it was
acquired by Bank of America.
Jon Leibowitz, the chairman of the Federal Trade
Commission, said that Countrywide’s loan servicing operation charged
excessive fees to homeowners who were behind on their mortgage payments, in
some cases asserting that customers were in default when they were not.
The fees, which were billed as the cost of services
like property inspections and lawn mowing, were grossly inflated after
Countrywide created subsidiaries to hire vendors to supply the services,
increasing the cost several-fold in the process, the commission said.
In addition, the commission said that Countrywide
at times imposed a new round of fees on homeowners who had recently emerged
from bankruptcy protection, sometimes threatening the consumers with a new
foreclosure.
“Countrywide profited from making risky loans to
homeowners during the boom years, and then profited again when the loans
failed,” Mr. Leibowitz said.
The $108 million settlement represents the agency’s
estimate of consumer losses, but does not include a penalty, which the
commission is not allowed to impose.
Clifford J. White III, the director of the
executive office for the United States Trustees Program, which enforces
bankruptcy laws for the Department of Justice, said that the commission’s
settlement “will help prevent future harm to homeowners in dire financial
straits who legitimately seek bankruptcy protection.”
The settlement bars Countrywide from making false
representations about amounts owed by homeowners, from charging fees for
services that are not authorized by loan agreements, and from charging
unreasonable amounts for work.
In addition, the settlement requires Countrywide to
establish internal procedures and an independent third party to verify that
bills and claims filed in bankruptcy court are valid.
“Now more than ever, companies that service
consumers’ mortgages need to do so in an honest and fair way,” Mr. Leibowitz
said.
The F.T.C. has not yet established how much will be
paid to each consumer, in part, Mr. Leibowitz said, because Countrywide’s
record keeping was “abysmal.” About $35 million of the $108 million total
was charged to homeowners already in bankruptcy proceedings, with the
remainder charged to customers whom Countrywide said were in default on
their mortgages.
Jensen Comment
I think Countrywide got off too easy. The evil Countrywide brokered mortgages to
borrowers that had no hope of paying back the debt and then charged they
excessive fees when they got behind in their payments.
Bob Jensen's threads on the sleaze of Countrywide are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#Sleaze
Bob Jensen's fraud updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Won't Pledge to "Do No Evil"
"MBA Oath Loses Traction at Yale," Business Week, May 26, 2010
---
http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/blogs/mba_admissions/archives/2010/05/mba_oath_loses_traction_at_yale.html
It looks like the MBA Oath, a controversial attempt
to give the business world its own version of the Hippocratic Oath, may be
suffering its first major defeat. The Community Blog at the
Yale School of Management (Yale
Full-Time MBA Profile) is
reporting
that an SOM Town Hall meeting ended without an
endorsement of the oath. According to the post, “We didn’t reach a
consensus, so we won’t join, nor formally oppose the Business Oath. Future
classes may decide to take a stance, but for now, the conversation has
begun, and individuals can sign or not sign as they see fit.” Bottom line:
an oath that has been enthusiastically embraced by virtually every top
b-school is getting a noncommittal shrug from Yale.
Key takeaways from Sornette's forecasting method which he calls the
Financial Bubble Experiment
- There are good reasons to think that stock markets
are fundamentally unpredictable. Many econophysicists believe for example,
that the data from these markets bear a startling resemblance to other data
from seemingly unconnected phenomena, such as the size of earthquakes,
forest fires and avalanches, which defy all efforts of prediction.
- Sornette says there are two parts to his
forecasting method. First, he says bubbles are markets experiencing
greater-then-exponential growth. That makes them straightforward to spot,
something that surprisingly hasn't been possible before.
Second, he says these bubble markets display the tell signs of the human
behaviour that drives them. In particular,
people tend to follow each other and this result in a kind of herding
behaviour that causes prices to fluctuate in a periodic fashion.
- That's when Sornette announced an brave way of
test his forecasting method which he calls the Financial Bubble Experiment.
His idea is to make a forecast but keep it secret. He posts it in encrypted
form to the arXiv which time stamps it and ensures that no changes can be
made.
Then, six months later, he reveals the forecast and analyses how successful
it has been. Today, we can finally see the analysis of his first set of
predictions made 6 months ago.
- It's tempting to imagine that this extra
information would have a calming effect on otherwise volatile markets. But
the real worry is that it could have exactly the opposite effect: that
predictions of the imminent collapse whether accurate or not would lead to
violent corrections. That will have big implications for econophysics and
those who practice it.
"Econophysicist Accurately Forecasts Gold Price Collapse: The first results
from the Financial Bubble Experiment will have huge implications for
econophysics," MIT's Technology Review, June 2, 2010 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/25269/?nlid=3065
There are good reasons to think that stock markets
are fundamentally unpredictable. Many econophysicists believe for example,
that the data from these markets bear a startling resemblance to other data
from seemingly unconnected phenomena, such as the size of earthquakes,
forest fires and avalanches, which defy all efforts of prediction.
Some go as far as to say that these phenomena are governed by the same
fundamental laws so that if one is unpredictable, then they all are.
And yet financial markets may be different. Last year, this blog covered an
extraordinary forecasts made by Didier Sornette at the Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology in Zurich, who declared that the Shanghia Composite
Index was a bubble market and that it would collapse within a certain
specific period of time.
Much to this blog's surprise, his prediction turned out to be uncannily
correct.
Sornette says there are two parts to his forecasting method. First, he says
bubbles are markets experiencing greater-then-exponential growth. That makes
them straightforward to spot, something that surprisingly hasn't been
possible before.
Second, he says these bubble markets display the tell signs of the human
behaviour that drives them. In particular, people tend to follow each other
and this result in a kind of herding behaviour that causes prices to
fluctuate in a periodic fashion.
However, the frequency of these fluctuations increases rapidly as the bubble
comes closer to bursting. It's this signal that Sornette uses in predicting
a change from superexponential growth to some other regime (which may not
necessarily be a collapse).
While Sornette's success last year was remarkable it wasn't entirely
convincing as this blog pointed out at the time
"The problem with this kind of forecast is that it is difficult interpret
the results. Does it really back Sornette's hypothesis that crashes are
predictable? How do we know that he doesn't make these predictions on a
regular basis and only publicise the ones that come true? Or perhaps he
modifies them as the due date gets closer so that they always seem to be
right (as weather forecasters do). It's even possible that his predictions
influence the markets: perhaps they trigger crashes Sornette believes he can
spot."
That's when Sornette announced an brave way of test his forecasting method
which he calls the Financial Bubble Experiment. His idea is to make a
forecast but keep it secret. He posts it in encrypted form to the arXiv
which time stamps it and ensures that no changes can be made.
Then, six months later, he reveals the forecast and analyses how successful
it has been. Today, we can finally see the analysis of his first set of
predictions made 6 months ago.
Back then, Sornette and his team identified four markets that seemed to be
experiencing superexponential growth and the tell tale signs of an imminent
bubble burst.
These were:the IBOVESPA Index of 50 brazillian stocks, a Merrill Lynch
Corporate Bond Indexthe spot price of goldcotton futures
These predictions had mixed success. First let's look at the failures.
Sornette says that it now turns out that the Merill Lynch Index was in the
process of collapse when Sornette made the original prediction six months
ago. So that bubble burst long before Sornette said it would. And cotton
futures are still climbing in a bubble market that has yet to collapse. So
much for those forecasts.
However, Sornette and his team were spot on with their other predictions.
Both the IBOVESPA Index and the spot price of gold changed from
superexponential growth to some other kind of regime in the time frame that
Sornette predicted. That's an impressive result by anybody's standards.
And the team says it can do better. They point out that they learnt a
substantial amount during the first six months of the experiment. They have
used this experience to develop a tool called a "bubble index" which they
can use to determine the probability that a market that looks like a bubble
actually is one.
This should help to make future forecasts even more accurate. Had this tool
been available six months ago, for example, it would have clearly showed
that the Merrill Lynch index had already burst, they say. If Sornette
continues with this type of success it's likely that others will want to
copy his method. An interesting question is what will happen to the tell
tale herding behaviour once large numbers of analysts start looking for and
betting on it.
It's tempting to imagine that this extra information would have a calming
effect on otherwise volatile markets. But the real worry is that it could
have exactly the opposite effect: that predictions of the imminent collapse
whether accurate or not would lead to violent corrections. That will have
big implications for econophysics and those who practice it.
Either way, Sornette is continuing with the experiment. He has already
sealed his set of predictions for the next six months and will reveal them
on 1 November. We'll be watching.
Ref:
http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/0911/0911.0454.pdf:
The Financial Bubble Experiment: Advanced Diagnostics and Forecasts of
Bubble Terminations Volume I
Jensen Comment
If there is anything at all to Sornette's forecasting theory, it most likely
cannot be extended to markets where insiders play a key role such as the price
bubble of a particular company's common shares. Insiders can, and often do,
manipulate markets. But in deep commodities markets such as the price of gold or
stock index prices, Sornette may have something that is rooted in his herding
behavior theory. The problem of course is in identifying false positives.
"Preparing Undergraduates as Business Professionals," Harvard
Business Review, June 2, 2010 ---
Click Here
http://blogs.hbr.org/imagining-the-future-of-leadership/2010/06/preparing-undergraduates-as-bu.html?cm_mmc=npv-_-DAILY_ALERT-_-AWEBER-_-DATE
Editor's note: This post is part of a six-week blog series on
how leadership might look in the future. The conversations generated by
these posts will help shape the agenda of a symposium on the topic in June
2010, hosted by HBS's
Nitin Nohria,
Rakesh Khurana, and
Scott Snook. This week's focus: leadership development.)
Don't Get Gored
"For Richer or Poorer: Financial Planning for Newlyweds," Smartpros,
May 27, 2010 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x69612.xml
"FDIC Offers Money-Saving Tips in the New World of Credit Cards,"
Smartpros, May 27, 2010 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x69598.xml
Bob Jensen's helpers for personal financial planning ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob1.htm#InvestmentHelpers
"Are You a Teacher or Are You a Mentor?" by Joe Hoyle, Teaching
Financial Accounting Blog, May 30, 2010 ---
http://joehoyle-teaching.blogspot.com/2010/05/are-you-teacher-or-are-you-mentor.html
"How Do You Radically Improve Education?" by Joe Hoyle,
Teaching Financial Accounting Blog, May 30, 2010 ---
http://joehoyle-teaching.blogspot.com/2010/05/how-do-you-radically-improve-education.html
Really about what's wrong with textbooks.
The above site provides a link to Joe's updated and free financial accounting
textbook.
Joe also makes his examinations free to educators.
Question
Can you detect when Jeff Skilling lied just by studying his face?
"Guest Post: Fraud Girl – Can We Detect Lying From Nonverbal Cues?"
Simoleon Sense, June 20, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/guest-post-fraud-girl-can-we-detect-lying-from-nonverbal-cues/
This includes a video of Jeff Skilling's testimony
“The greatest past users of deception…are
highly individualistic and competitive; they would not easily fit into a
large organization…and tend to work by themselves. They are often
convinced of the superiority of their own opinions. They do in some ways
fit the supposed character of the lonely, eccentric bohemian artist,
only the art they practice is different. This is apparently the only
common denominator for great practitioners of deception such as
Churchill, Hitler, Dayan, and T.E. Lawrence”
-Michael I. Handel (58)
Welcome Back.
Last week we wrapped up Part II of the Fraud by
Hindsight case. We noted that hindsight bias is a major concern in
securities litigation & fraud cases. We explained how fraud by hindsight
leads judges to misinterpret relevant facts and such let financial criminals
off the hook.
This week we will analyze the work of Paul Ekman, a
professor at the University of California who has spent approximately 50
years analyzing human emotions and nonverbal communication. Ekman’s work is
featured in the television show “Lie to Me”. One of his most popular books,
Telling Lies: Clues to Deceit in the Marketplace, Politics, and Marriage,
describes “how lies vary in form and how they can differ from other types of
misinformation that can reveal untruths”. He claims that although
‘professional lie hunters’ can learn how to recognize a lie, the so-called
‘natural liars’ can still fool them.
So the question is:
Can most financial felons be classified as ‘natural
liars’? If so, is it at all possible to catch them via their body language,
voice, and facial expressions?
To test this, I examined (a clip from) the February
2002 testimony of former Enron CEO Jeff Skilling to see if I could spot any
deception clues. In his testimony, Skilling pleads that his resignation from
Enron was solely for personal reasons and that he had no knowledge that
Enron was on the brink of collapse. In order to not be misled by Skilling’s
words, I watched the testimony without sound and focused solely on his
facial expressions and body movements. Ekman noted, “most people pay most
attention to the least trustworthy sources – words and facial expressions –
and so are easily misled” (81). In trying to be coherent with Ekman’s
beliefs, this is what I found on Jeff Skilling:
Video of Jeff Skilling's testimony
Continued in article
http://www.simoleonsense.com/guest-post-fraud-girl-can-we-detect-lying-from-nonverbal-cues/
Related References from Bob Jensen's Archives
Question
What new technology reads emotions in faces?
A demonstration version of the face detection and analysis software package
is available for download at:
http://www.iis.fraunhofer.de/EN/bf/bv/kognitiv/biom/dd.jsp
"Happy, sad, angry or astonished?" PhysOrg, July 3, 2007 ---
An advertisement for a new perfume is hanging in
the departure lounge of an airport. Thousands of people walk past it every
day. Some stop and stare in astonishment, others walk by, clearly amused.
And then there are those who seem puzzled when they look at the poster.
With the help of a small video camera, the system
automatically localizes the faces of everyone who walks past the
advertisement. And nothing escapes its watchful eye: Does the passerby look
happy, surprised, sad or even angry?
The system for rapid facial analysis is being
developed by researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits
IIS in Erlangen. Highly complex algorithms immediately localize human faces
in the image, differentiate between men and women and analyze their
expressions.
“The special feature of our facial analysis
software is that it operates in real time,” says Dr. Christian Küblbeck,
project manager at the IIS. “What’s more, it is able to localize and analyze
a large number of faces simultaneously.” The most important facial
characteristics used by the system are the contours of the face, the eyes,
the eyebrows and the nose. First of all, the system has to go through a
training phase in which it is presented with huge quantities of data
containing images of faces. In normal operation, the computer compares
30,000 facial characteristics with the information that it has previously
learned.
“On a standard PC, the calculations are carried out
so quickly that mood changes can be tracked live,” explains Küblbeck.
However, we do not need to worry about an invasion of our privacy, as the
software analyzes the data on a purely statistical basis.
The software package is not only of interest to
advertising psychologists; there are numerous potential applications for the
system. It can be used, for example, to test the user-friendliness of
computer software programs. The system monitors the facial expressions of
the user in order to determine which aspects of the program arouse a
particularly strong reaction. Alternatively, it can assess the reactions of
the users of learning software, in order to establish the extent to which
they are put under stress or challenged by the task they are performing. The
system could also be used to check the levels of concentration of car
drivers.
A demonstration version of the face detection and analysis software
package is available for download at:
http://www.iis.fraunhofer.de/EN/bf/bv/kognitiv/biom/dd.jsp
Question
What new technology reads emotions in faces?
A demonstration version of the face detection and analysis software package
is available for download at:
http://www.iis.fraunhofer.de/EN/bf/bv/kognitiv/biom/dd.jsp
"Happy, sad, angry or astonished?" PhysOrg, July 3, 2007 ---
An advertisement for a new perfume is hanging in
the departure lounge of an airport. Thousands of people walk past it every
day. Some stop and stare in astonishment, others walk by, clearly amused.
And then there are those who seem puzzled when they look at the poster.
With the help of a small video camera, the system
automatically localizes the faces of everyone who walks past the
advertisement. And nothing escapes its watchful eye: Does the passerby look
happy, surprised, sad or even angry?
The system for rapid facial analysis is being
developed by researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits
IIS in Erlangen. Highly complex algorithms immediately localize human faces
in the image, differentiate between men and women and analyze their
expressions.
“The special feature of our facial analysis
software is that it operates in real time,” says Dr. Christian Küblbeck,
project manager at the IIS. “What’s more, it is able to localize and analyze
a large number of faces simultaneously.” The most important facial
characteristics used by the system are the contours of the face, the eyes,
the eyebrows and the nose. First of all, the system has to go through a
training phase in which it is presented with huge quantities of data
containing images of faces. In normal operation, the computer compares
30,000 facial characteristics with the information that it has previously
learned.
“On a standard PC, the calculations are carried out
so quickly that mood changes can be tracked live,” explains Küblbeck.
However, we do not need to worry about an invasion of our privacy, as the
software analyzes the data on a purely statistical basis.
The software package is not only of interest to
advertising psychologists; there are numerous potential applications for the
system. It can be used, for example, to test the user-friendliness of
computer software programs. The system monitors the facial expressions of
the user in order to determine which aspects of the program arouse a
particularly strong reaction. Alternatively, it can assess the reactions of
the users of learning software, in order to establish the extent to which
they are put under stress or challenged by the task they are performing. The
system could also be used to check the levels of concentration of car
drivers.
A demonstration version of the face detection and analysis software
package is available for download at:
http://www.iis.fraunhofer.de/EN/bf/bv/kognitiv/biom/dd.jsp
Questions
Has the art and science of reading faces ever been part of an auditing
curriculum?
Have there been any accountics studies of Ekman's theories as applied to
auditing behavioral experiments?
(I can imagine that some accounting doctoral students have not experimented
along these lines?)
Paul Ekman video on how to read faces and detect lying ---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IA8nYZg4VnI
This video runs for nearly one hour
Paul Ekman ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Ekman
Ekman's work on facial expressions had its starting
point in the work of psychologist
Silvan Tomkins.[Ekman
showed that contrary to the belief of some
anthropologists including
Margaret Mead, facial expressions of emotion are
not culturally determined, but universal across human cultures and
thus
biological in origin. Expressions he found to be
universal included those indicating
anger,
disgust,
fear,
joy,
sadness, and
surprise. Findings on
contempt are less
clear, though there is at least some preliminary evidence that this emotion
and its expression are universally recognized.]
In a research project along with Dr. Maureen
O'Sullivan, called the
Wizards Project (previously named the
Diogenes Project), Ekman reported on facial "microexpressions"
which could be used to assist in lie detection. After testing a total of
15,000 [EDIT: This value conflicts with the 20,000 figure given in the
article on Microexpressions] people from all walks of life, he found only 50
people that had the ability to spot deception without any formal training.
These naturals are also known as "Truth Wizards", or wizards of
deception detection from demeanor.
He developed the
Facial Action Coding System (FACS) to taxonomize
every conceivable human facial expression. Ekman conducted and published
research on a wide variety of topics in the general area of non-verbal
behavior. His work on lying, for example, was not limited to the face, but
also to observation of the rest of the body.
In his profession he also uses verbal signs of
lying. When interviewed about the Monica Lewinsky scandal, he mentioned that
he could detect that former President
Bill Clinton was lying because he used
distancing language.
Ekman has contributed much to the study of social
aspects of lying, why we lie,
and why we are often unconcerned with detecting lies.
He is currently on the Editorial Board of Greater Good magazine,
published by the
Greater Good Science Center of the
University of California, Berkeley. His
contributions include the interpretation of scientific research into the
roots of compassion, altruism, and peaceful human relationships. Ekman is
also working with Computer Vision researcher
Dimitris Metaxas on designing a visual
lie-detector.
Research Papers Worth
Reading On Deceit, Body Language, Influence etc.. (with
links to pdfs)
Sixteen Enjoyable Emotions. – (2003)
Emotion Researcher, 18, 6-7. by Ekman, P
“Become Versed in Reading Faces”.
Entrepreneur, 26 March 2009. Ekman, P. (2009)
Intoduction: Expression Of Emotion - In RJ
Davidson, KR Scherer, & H.H. Goldsmith (Eds.) Handbook
of Afective Sciences. Pp. 411-414.Keltner, D. & Ekman, P
(2003)
Facial Expression Of Emotion. – In M.Lewis
and J Haviland-Jones (eds) Handbook of emotions, 2nd
edition. Pp. 236-249. New York: Guilford Publications,
Inc. Keltner, D. & Ekman, P. (2000)
Emotional And Conversational Nonverbal Signals.
– In L.Messing & R. Campbell (eds.) Gesture, Speech and
Sign. Pp. 45-55. London: Oxford University Press.
A Few Can Catch A Liar. - Psychological
Science, 10, 263-266. Ekman, P., O’Sullivan, M., Frank,
M. (1999)
Deception, Lying And Demeanor.- In States
of Mind: American and Post-Soviet Perspectives on
Contemporary Issues in Psychology . D.F. Halpern and
A.E.Voiskounsky (Eds.) Pp. 93-105. New York: Oxford
University Press.
Lying And Deception. – In N.L. Stein, P.A.
Ornstein, B. Tversky & C. Brainerd (Eds.) Memory for
everyday and emotional events. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates, 333-347.
Lies That Fail.- In M. Lewis & C. Saarni
(Eds.) Lying and deception in everyday life. Pp.
184-200. New York: Guilford Press.
Who Can Catch A Liar. -American
Psychologist, 1991, 46, 913-120.
Hazards In Detecting Deceit. In D. Raskin,
(Ed.) Psychological Methods for Investigation and
Evidence. New York: Springer. 1989. (pp 297-332)
Self-Deception And Detection Of Misinformation.
In J.S. Lockhard & D. L. Paulhus (Eds.) Self-Deception:
An Adaptive Mechanism?. Englewood Cliffs, NJ:
Prentice-Hall, 1988. Pp. 229- 257.
Smiles When Lying. – Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology, 1988, 54, 414-420.
Felt- False- And Miserable Smiles.Ekman, P.
& Friesen, W.V.
Mistakes When Deceiving. Annals of the New
York Academy of Sciences. 1981, 364, 269-278.
Nonverbal Leakage And Clues To Deception
Psychiatry, 1969, 32, 88-105.
"You Can't Hide Your Lying Brain (or Can You?), by Tom Bartlett,
Chronicle of Higher Education, May 6, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/You-Cant-Hide-Your-Lying/23780/
Earlier this week Wired reported that a Brooklyn
lawyer wanted to use fMRI brain scans to prove that his client was telling
the truth. The case itself is an average employer-employee dispute, but
using brains scans to tell whether someone is lying—which a few, small
studies have suggested might be useful—would set a precedent for
neuroscience in the courtroom. Plus, I'm pretty sure they did something like
this on Star Trek once.
But why go to all the trouble of scanning someone's
brain when you can just count how many times the person blinks? A study
published this month in Psychology, Crime & Law found that when people were
lying they blinked significantly less than when they were telling the truth.
The authors suggest that lying requires more thinking and that this
increased cognitive load could account for the reduction in blinking.
For the study, 13 participants "stole" an exam
paper while 13 others did not. All 26 were questioned and the ones who had
committed the mock theft blinked less when questioned about it than when
questioned about other, unrelated issues. The innocent 13 didn't blink any
more or less. Incidentally, the blinking was measured by electrodes, not
observation.
But the authors aren't arguing that the blink
method should be used in the courtroom. In fact, they think it might not
work. Because the stakes in the study were low--no one was going to get into
any trouble--it's unclear whether the results would translate to, say, a
murder investigation. Maybe you blink less when being questioned about a
murder even if you're innocent, just because you would naturally be nervous.
Or maybe you're guilty but your contacts are bothering you. Who knows?
By the way, the lawyer's request to introduce the
brain scanning evidence in court was rejected, but lawyers in another case
plan to give it a shot later this month.
(The abstract of the study, conducted by Sharon
Leal and Aldert Vrij, can be found here. The company that administers the
lie-detection brain scans is called Cephos and their confident slogan is
"The Science Behind the Truth.")
"The New Face of Emoticons: Warping photos could help text-based
communications become more expressive," by Duncan Graham-Rowe, MIT's
Technology Review, March 27, 2007 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/Infotech/18438/
Computer scientists at the University of Pittsburgh
have developed a way to make e-mails, instant messaging, and texts just a
bit more personalized. Their software will allow people to use images of
their own faces instead of the more traditional emoticons to communicate
their mood. By automatically warping their facial features, people can use a
photo to depict any one of a range of different animated emotional
expressions, such as happy, sad, angry, or surprised.
All that is needed is a single photo of the person,
preferably with a neutral expression, says Xin Li, who developed the system,
called Face Alive Icons. "The user can upload the image from their camera
phone," he says. Then, by keying in familiar text symbols, such as ":)" for
a smile, the user automatically contorts the face to reflect his or her
desired expression.
"Already, people use avatars on message boards and
in other settings," says Sheryl Brahnam, an assistant professor of computer
information systems at MissouriStateUniversity, in Springfield. In many
respects, she says, this system bridges the gap between emoticons and
avatars.
This is not the first time that someone has tried
to use photos in this way, says Li, who now works for Google in New York
City. "But the traditional approach is to just send the image itself," he
says. "The problem is, the size will be too big, particularly for
low-bandwidth applications like PDAs and cell phones." Other approaches
involve having to capture a different photo of the person for each unique
emoticon, which only further increases the demand for bandwidth.
Li's solution is not to send the picture each time
it is used, but to store a profile of the face on the recipient device. This
profile consists of a decomposition of the original photo. Every time the
user sends an emoticon, the face is reassembled on the recipient's device in
such a way as to show the appropriate expression.
To make this possible, Li first created generic
computational models for each type of expression. Working with Shi-Kuo
Chang, a professor of computer science at the University of Pittsburgh, and
Chieh-Chih Chang, at the Industrial Technology Research Institute, in
Taiwan, Li created the models using a learning program to analyze the
expressions in a database of facial expressions and extract features unique
to each expression. Each of the resulting models acts like a set of
instructions telling the program how to warp, or animate, a neutral face
into each particular expression.
Once the photo has been captured, the user has to
click on key areas to help the program identify key features of the face.
The program can then decompose the image into sets of features that change
and those that will remain unaffected by the warping process.
Finally, these "pieces" make up a profile that,
although it has to be sent to each of a user's contacts, must only be sent
once. This approach means that an unlimited number of expressions can be
added to the system without increasing the file size or requiring any
additional pictures to be taken.
Li says that preliminary evaluations carried out on
eight subjects viewing hundreds of faces showed that the warped expressions
are easily identifiable. The results of the evaluations are published in the
current edition of the Journal of Visual Languages and Computing.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on visualization ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/352wpvisual/000datavisualization.htm
Question
Do big bonuses lead to worse performance?
"Does Bigger Bonus Equal Worse Performance?Around the turn of every year,
bankers can think of only one thing: the size of their bonuses," by Dan Ariely,
Wall Street Technology, June 18, 2010 ---
http://wallstreetandtech.com/career-management/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=225700612&cid=nl_wallstreettech_daily
Thanks Jagdish!
Around the turn of every year, bankers can think of
only one thing: the size of their bonuses.
Even beyond bonus season, they run different
scenarios and assumptions, trying to calculate their number.
This distracts them so much that the bigger the
bonus at stake, the worse the performance, according to behavioral economist
Dan Ariely, who lays out his theory in his new book "The Upside of
Irrationality" (HarperCollins, $27.99).
"For a long time we trained bankers to think they
are the masters of the universe, have unique skills and deserve to be paid
these amounts," said Ariely, who also wrote the New York Times bestseller
"Predictably Irrational."
"It is going to be hard to convince them that they
don't really have unique skills and that the amount they've been paid for
the past years is too much."
Ariely's findings come as regulators try to rein in
Wall Street's bonus culture after the 2008 financial collapse. The financial
industry argues it needs to pay large bonuses to attract and motivate its
top employees.
In an experiment in India, Ariely measured the
impact of different bonuses on how participants did in a number of tasks
that required creativity, concentration and problem-solving.
One of the tasks was Labyrinth, where the
participants had to move a small steel ball through a maze avoiding holes.
Ariely describes a man he identified as Anoopum, who stood to win the
biggest bonus, staring at the steel ball as if it were prey.
"This is very, very important," Anoopum mumbled to
himself. "I must succeed." But under the gun, Anoopum's hands trembled
uncontrollably, and he failed time after time.
A large bonus was equal to five months of their
regular pay, a medium-sized bonus was equivalent to about two weeks pay and
a small bonus was a day's pay.
There was little difference in the performance of
those receiving the small and medium-sized bonuses, while recipients of
large bonuses performed worst.
SHOCK TREATMENT
More than a century ago, an experiment with rats in
a maze rigged with electric shocks came to a similar conclusion. Every day,
the rats had to learn how to navigate a new maze safely.
When the electric shocks were low, the rats had
little incentive to avoid them. At medium intensity they learned their
environment more quickly.
But when the shock intensity was very high, it
seemed the rats could not focus on anything other than the fear of the
shock.
This may provide lessons for regulators who want to
change Wall Street's bonus culture, Ariely said. Paying no bonus or smaller
bonuses could help fix skewed incentives without loss of talent.
"The reality is, a lot of places are able to
attract great quality people without paying them what bankers are paid,"
Ariely said. "Do you think bankers are inherently smarter than other people?
I don't." (Reporting by Kristina Cooke; Editing by Daniel Trotta)
"Dan Ariely: The Mind's Grey Areas: By controlling situations that
create conflicts of interest, we can combat frauds and scandals better,"
Forbes, June 2010 ---
Click Here
http://www.forbes.com/2010/06/15/forbes-india-dan-ariely-the-minds-grey-areas-opinions-ideas-10-ariely.html?boxes=Homepagelighttop
My interest in the irrationality of human behavior
started many years ago in hospital after I had been badly burned. If you
spend three years in a hospital with 70% of your body covered in burns, you
are bound to notice several irrationalities. The one that bothered me in
particular was the way my nurses would remove the bandage that wrapped my
body. Now, there are two ways to remove a bandage. You can rip it off
quickly, causing intense but short-term pain. Or you can remove it slowly,
causing less intense pain but for a longer time.
My nurses believed in the quick method. It was
incredibly painful, and I dreaded the moment of ripping with remarkable
intensity. I begged them to find a better way to do this, but they told me
that this was the best approach and that they knew the best way for removing
bandages. It was their intuition against mine, and they chose theirs.
Moreover, they thought it unnecessary to test what appeared (to them) to be
intuitively right.
After leaving the hospital, I started doing
experiments that simulated these two ripping methods. And I found that the
nurses were wrong: Quick ripping turned out to be more painful than slow
ripping. In my experiments, I discovered a collection of tricks that could
have been used to lessen the pain or manage it more effectively. For
instance, they could have started from the most painful part of the
treatment and moved to less painful areas to give me a sense of improvement;
they could have given me breaks in between to recover. There are great
lessons to be learned from such experiments, lessons that apply to
economics, markets, policymaking and even our personal lives.
Is there an idea you believe can change the world?
Describe it in the comments section at the bottom of this story, and Forbes
could publish your idea.
As it turns out, it is not that useful, and
sometime even costly, to base our decisions on our intuitions. Instead, we
need to inject some science in the way we go about everyday life because if
one merely keeps following his instincts, he will continue making the same
(preventable) mistakes.
Over the years, I have examined many topics related
to the mistakes we all make when we make decisions, and one topic that I
have explored in some depth is that of cheating behavior, and I would like
to describe this in a bit more depth.
Bob Jensen's threads on rationality and behavioral economics are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#EMH
Bob Jensen's threads on outrageous compensation are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#OutrageousCompensation
Better to watch porn at the SEC (you might get fired, however, for doing
your job)
"SEC Settles Firing Claim For $755,000," by Kara Scannell, The Wall
Street Journal, June 30, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB20001424052748704103904575336813522797370.html#mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
The Securities and Exchange Commission agreed to
pay $755,000 to an enforcement lawyer who said he was fired for aggressively
pursuing an insider-trading case involving the hedge fund Pequot Capital
Management.
The settlement, approved Tuesday by a judge with
the U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board, ends the wrongful termination claim
brought by Gary Aguirre. The dispute had triggered a congressional
investigation into the agency's handling of the matter and brought a black
eye to the federal securities regulator.
Mr. Aguirre said he was fired after seeking
permission to interview a senior Wall Street executive in connection with
the Pequot probe. Mr. Aguirre said the executive, John Mack, received
special treatment because of his powerful position and high-profile
attorney. Mr. Mack at the time was under consideration to become CEO of
Morgan Stanley, a job he ultimately took. The SEC denied the allegation and
a review by the agency's inspector general said it conducted a thorough
investigation. Mr. Mack was never alleged to have engaged in any wrongdoing.
In May, after new information surfaced in a divorce
case, Pequot founder Arthur Samberg agreed, without admitting or denying
wrongdoing, to pay $28 million to settle allegations he engaged in insider
trading of Microsoft stock.
The SEC also sued former Microsoft Corp. employee
David Zilkha, who worked a short time at Pequot. He is contesting the
allegations. Mr. Aguirre expressed regret that his firing prevented him from
staying on the Pequot case. "Had we not been stopped in 2005, we may have
been able to enforce the law in a way that would have told Wall Street that
the SEC also was looking at big fish, which was a message it needed to hear
at that time," he said. Mr. Aguirre added that his lawsuit "wasn't about
money really. I felt more vindication really from the SEC's decision to file
against Pequot and their willingness to pay $28 million."
Mr. Aguirre said he didn't seek to return to the
SEC and that he will re-enter private practice after a two-month vacation.
The settlement equals Mr. Aguirre's pay for the
years since his termination in September 2005 plus attorneys' fees, said the
Government Accountability Project, a whistle-blower organization. Mr.
Aguirre also agreed to drop two related cases against the SEC.
SEC spokesman John Nester said, "The settlement
resolves all outstanding litigation between the parties and reflects the
agency's determination to focus on its core mission of protecting
investors."
Money as a Motivator
June 18, 2010 message from Bill Ellis
[bill.ellis@furman.edu]
Daniel Pink - Drive
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u6XAPnuFjJc
Bob,
Here’s Daniel Pink’s latest book. This time he presents theories on
motivation. This clever YouTube clip is a great animation explaining a point
made in the book.
Bill Ellis, CPA, MPAcc
Furman University
Accounting UES
864-908-4743
June 19, 2010
reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Bill,
What a great animation video that makes such good points about
compensation.
By the way, this animated video reminds me of why BYU’s variable-speed
videos are so successful for teaching basic accounting ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#BYUvideo
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on outrageous compensation are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#OutrageousCompensation
KPMG Caught Up in Diebold's Bill and Hold Fraud
"Diebold Restatement Calls Its Integrity Into Question," by: George Gutowski,
Seeking Alpha, October 3, 2007 ---
http://seekingalpha.com/article/48871-diebold-restatement-calls-its-integrity-into-question
Diebold (DBD) will change the way revenue is
reported after its accounting practices came under SEC scrutiny, the company
said in a press release issued Oct 2. Diebold may now record sales only
after its products are delivered or installed, said spokesman Mike Jacobsen.
A quick scan of their financial statements includes
this note to financial statements that defines revenue recognition.
Revenue Recognition The company's revenue
recognition policy is consistent with the requirements of Statement of
Position [SOP] 97-2, Software Revenue Recognition and Staff Accounting
Bulletin 104 (SAB 104). In general, the company records revenue when it
is realized, or realizable and earned. The company considers revenue to
be realized or realizable and earned when the following revenue
recognition requirements are met: persuasive evidence of an arrangement
exists, which is a customer contract; the products or services have been
provided to the customer; the sales price is fixed or determinable
within the contract; and collectibility is probable. The sales of the
company's products do not require production, modification or
customization of the hardware or software after it is shipped.
Kudos to the SEC for finally protecting the
investor. The corporate press release makes mention that while they are
still figuring it out, they will have to restate previous financial reports,
but do not believe that the cash position will be affected. This is
universal corporate baffle gab. Investors are supposed to be quiet if the
cash position does not change, everything else is not so important.
Essentially Diebold was not following its publicly
stated policies. Diebold was not following accounting standards that
investors should be able to rely on. KPMG the auditors in this case
certified the statements when they should not have. The Board OK'ed
everything. Governance! Governance! Governance!
What consequences will Diebold executives have for
this inadequacy? Many in the political arena contend that their voting
machines cannot count correctly. The SEC has definitively determined that
the corporate accounting was not counting correctly.
Does Diebold have a corporate culture problem?
"SEC CHARGES DIEBOLD AND FORMER EXECUTIVES WITH ACCOUNTING FRAUD,"
AccountingEducation.com, June 2, 2010 ---
http://accountingeducation.com/index.cfm?page=newsdetails&id=151150
The Securities and Exchange Commission today
charged Diebold, Inc. and three former financial executives for engaging in
a fraudulent accounting scheme to inflate the company's earnings. The SEC
separately filed an enforcement action against Diebold's former CEO seeking
reimbursement of certain financial benefits that he received while Diebold
was committing accounting fraud.
The SEC alleges that Diebold's financial management
received "flash reports" sometimes on a daily basis comparing the
company's actual earnings to analyst earnings forecasts. Diebold's financial
management prepared "opportunity lists" of ways to close the gap between the
company's actual financial results and analyst forecasts. Many of the
opportunities on these lists were fraudulent accounting transactions
designed to improperly recognize revenue or otherwise inflate Diebold's
financial performance.
Diebold an Ohio-based company that manufactures
and sells ATMs, bank security systems and electronic voting machines
agreed to pay a $25 million penalty to settle the SEC's charges. Diebold's
former CEO Walden O'Dell agreed to reimburse cash bonuses, stock, and stock
options under the "clawback" provision of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
The SEC's case against Diebold's former CFO Gregory
Geswein, former Controller and later CFO Kevin Krakora, and former Director
of Corporate Accounting Sandra Miller is ongoing.
"Diebold's financial executives borrowed from many
different chapters of the deceptive accounting playbook to fraudulently
boost the company's bottom line," said Robert Khuzami, Director of the SEC's
Division of Enforcement. "When executives disregard their professional
obligations to investors, both they and their companies face significant
legal consequences."
Scott W. Friestad, Associate Director of the SEC's
Division of Enforcement, added, "Section 304 of Sarbanes-Oxley is an
important investor protection provision because it encourages senior
management to proactively take steps to prevent fraudulent schemes from
happening on their watch. We will continue to seek reimbursement of bonuses
and other incentive compensation from CEOs and CFOs in appropriate cases."
Section 304 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act deprives
corporate executives of certain compensation received while their companies
were misleading investors, even in cases where that executive is not alleged
to have violated the securities laws personally. The SEC has not alleged
that O'Dell engaged in the fraud. Under the settlement, O'Dell has agreed to
reimburse the company $470,016 in cash bonuses, 30,000 shares of Diebold
stock, and stock options for 85,000 shares of Diebold stock.
According to the SEC's complaint against Diebold,
filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, the company
manipulated its earnings from at least 2002 through 2007 to meet financial
performance forecasts, and made material misstatements and omissions to
investors in dozens of SEC filings and press releases. Diebold's improper
accounting practices misstated the company's reported pre-tax earnings by at
least $127 million. Among the fraudulent accounting practices used to
inflate earnings and meet forecasts were: Improper use of "bill and hold"
accounting.
Recognition of revenue on a lease agreement subject
to a side buy-back agreement.
Manipulating reserves and accruals.
Improperly delaying and capitalizing expenses.
Writing up the value of used inventory.
Without admitting or denying the SEC's charges,
Diebold consented to a final judgment ordering payment of the $25 million
penalty and permanently enjoining the company from future violations of the
antifraud, reporting, books and records, and internal control provisions of
the federal securities laws.
The SEC charged Geswein, Krakora, and Miller, in a
complaint filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio,
with violating Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, Sections 10(b)
and 13(b)(5) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and Exchange Act Rules
10b 5 and 13b2-1; and aiding and abetting Diebold's violations of Sections
13(a), 13(b)(2)(A) and 13(b)(2)(B) of the Exchange Act and Exchange Act
Rules 12b-20, 13a-1, 13a-11, and 13a-13. In addition, the SEC charged
Geswein and Krakora with violating Exchange Act Rules 13a-14 and 13b2-2 and
Section 304 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. The Commission seeks permanent
injunctive relief, disgorgement of ill-gotten gains with prejudgment
interest, and financial penalties. The SEC also seeks officer-and-director
bars against Geswein and Krakora as well as their reimbursement of bonuses
and other incentive and equity compensation.
Scott Friestad, Robert Kaplan, Brian Quinn,
Christopher Swart, Pierron Leef, and Kristen Dieter conducted the SEC's
investigation in this matter. Litigation efforts in the ongoing case will be
led by David Gottesman and Robyn Bender. The SEC acknowledges the assistance
of the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Ohio and the
Federal Bureau of Investigation.
For more details see
http://www.thehighroad.us/showthread.php?t=204185
Bob Jensen's threads on Bill and Hold Fraud are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm#BillAndHold
Teaching Case
From The Wall Street Journal Weekly Accounting Review on June 25, 2010
Legal Fights Loom over Ratings-Firm Liability Rule
by:
Jeannette Neumann
Jun 18, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Corporate
Governance, Disclosure, Disclosure Requirements, Financial Reporting, Legal
Liability, Securitization
SUMMARY: "A
panel of Senate and House lawmakers negotiating final details of a
financial-overhaul bill agreed this week to allow investors to bring legal
action against credit-rating firms that 'knowingly or recklessly' fail to
'conduct a reasonable investigation of the rated security.'" At least one
legal analyst comments that the questions of "recklessly" and "reasonable"
are likely to be the subjects of a string of lawsuits before their
definitions are settled.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
three articles in this week's review all cover issues in disclosure and
other corporate governance matters. All three articles are useful in any
financial accounting or ethics course covering corporate social
responsibility and governance issues. This article in particular continues
coverage of the financial reform legislation stemming from the U.S.
financial crisis.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
What is the purpose of credit-rating firms such as McGraw-Hill Cos. Standard
& Poor's Corp. and Moody Corp.'s Moody's Investors Service?
2. (Introductory)
What is the role that these entities are considered to have played in the
financial crisis? (Hint: see the related article to answer this question.)
3. (Advanced)
What will be the implication of allowing "investors to bring legal action
against credit-rating firms..."?
4. (Advanced)
Why would "ratings firms 'fear litigation more than they fear regulation'"?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
Buffett to Testify to Crisis Panel on Moody's
by Aaron Lucchetti
May 27, 2010
Online Exclusive
"Legal Fights Loom over Ratings-Firm Liability Rule," by: Jeannette Neumann,
The Wall Street Journal, Jun 18, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703650604575313153186936336.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
Credit-rating firms are a big step closer to facing
a harsher liability standard on their work. But it could take years for
courts to decide what the planned rules mean.
A panel of Senate and House lawmakers negotiating
final details of a financial-overhaul bill agreed this week to allow
investors to bring legal action against credit-rating firms that "knowingly
or recklessly" fail to "conduct a reasonable investigation of the rated
security."
The new standard, if passed into law, likely would
make it easier for investors to sue the ratings companies, such as
McGraw-Hill Cos.' Standard & Poor's and Moody's Corp.'s Moody's Investors
Service, which for long have enjoyed near immunity from liability for
ratings gone awry.
But "what an 'investigation' is in this context is
not an easy question," said Jonathan Macey, a professor of corporate
governance and securities regulation at Yale Law School. "You're going to
spend tons of time litigating that question."
Ratings firms and others studying the industry have
maintained a tougher legal standard will come at a price. For one, companies
may increase the cost of rating debt to balance the risk of litigation, said
Joseph Mason, a professor of finance at Louisiana State University.
Ratings firms "fear litigation more than they fear
regulation" because past regulation efforts haven't "been that draconian,"
said Scott McCleskey, a former Moody's compliance officer who has testified
before Congress about the industry. He is now working at Complinet Inc. as
managing editor, North America.
The new liability standard "strikes the right
balance," Mr. McCleskey said, because it makes it easier for investors to
sue credit-rating agencies, but it doesn't open the floodgates for a slew of
lawsuits.
Representatives of the three major credit-rating
firms, including Fitch Ratings, a unit of Fimalac SA, didn't immediately
comment.
The news comes as the industry had a win in the
Capitol Hill negotiations—a proposed delay in implementation of a
quasigovernment board that would assign initial ratings for
structured-finance bonds.
Rating firms had resisted the idea, and members of
a conference committee on Wednesday agreed that the Securities and Exchange
Commission should study whether to establish the entity, which would be
designed to address potential conflicts of interest in the credit-ratings
business.
Under the new plan, the SEC would be required to
implement the proposed new board unless it determines that an alternate
mechanism is more appropriate.
As for the higher liability standard, industry
critics say it is high time the credit rating firms faced one. Raters were
blamed for catalyzing the housing bubble by assigning their highest ratings
to billions of dollars of financial products that later turned out to be
worthless.
The credit rating agencies have invoked the First
Amendment, largely with success, when faced with claims that their ratings
were too high or too low. The First Amendment cannot protect the ratings
companies from claims of fraud, lawyers say. But plaintiffs have a high
legal hurdle to establish that a firm issued a fraudulent rating.
The credit rating agencies are "essentially
liability proof and it's not because they're infallible," said Columbia Law
School professor John Coffee, who helped craft the liability standard for
the Senate bill, the version that was eventually chosen this week by the
conference committee.
The goal of the new standard is to "make litigation
a credible deterrent" by creating an incentive for the firms to step up due
diligence measures, said Mr. Coffee. While some maintain that the phrase a
"reasonable investigation" is unclear, Mr. Coffee says that if a rating
company hires a due diligence firm to vet the data they are using for their
rating, that should stand up in court as a "reasonable investigation."
Would the new standard have helped prevent the
credit crisis? Not necessarily, said Mr. Macey, the Yale professor. "I don't
think it would have significantly altered the probability of having this
debacle" because the firms are still so tightly-knit into the financial
system, he said. "It fails that litmus test."
The agreement on the liability standard is set to
be included in a conference report to be sent to the House and the Senate
for final approval. The provision could still be altered before a final
compromise.
Bob Jensen's threads on credit rating agency scandals are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#CreditRatingAgencies
"Notes from day 3 of June 2010 IASB-FASB meeting," IAS Plus,
June 18. 2010 ---
http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
Lessor accounting – Accounting models
In May 2010, the IASB expressed an interest in
using a hybrid lessor accounting model. Under a hybrid model, a lessor would
use a performance obligation approach to lessor accounting in some
situations and a partial derecognition approach in others. The FASB have
tentatively decided to adopt a performance obligation approach for all
leases. The Boards debated whether the hybrid approach should be adopted for
lessors' accounting.
Two possible variants of the hybrid approach were
discussed (known as 'D' and 'F'):
- Approach D would use the performance
obligation approach for leases for which the lessor's exposure to the
risks associated with the underlying asset is significant. (The IASB
staff commented that this approach was similar to the existing
requirement to classify leases as finance leases or operating leases.
The performance obligation approach would apply to leases where the
lessor's exposure to the underlying asset is significant (operating
leases). The partial derecognition approach would apply to all other
leases (finance leases).)
- Approach F would use the partial
derecognition approach for all leases except short term leases and
leases of certain real estate (including but not limited to investment
property as defined in IAS 40). (The IASB staff commented that this
approach would avoid the problems associated with short-term leases and
investment property leases and would result in the partial derecognition
approach for most leases.)
Both approaches had their supporters, and the
debate was heated at times. Those supporting the performance obligation
approach usually would not accept the partial derecognition approach at all.
However, some Board members did not think that either approach advanced
lessor accounting significantly.
One Board member thought the approaches were
looking at the wrong issue: to him the key issue was accounting for the
underlying asset; the right to use that asset was a separate item to be
accounted for under revenue recognition. However, this view did not receive
support.
Ultimately, the session chairman determined that
Approach D (performance obligation) had majority support among both Boards.
However, the Boards then seemed to second-guess themselves as they were
concerned that Approach D would challenge their decisions on leases with
inseparable service elements on the previous day. A discussion ensued in
which it became apparent that the IASB actually preferred a different lessor
model in some cases – for example in leases involving real estate (both
investment property and other real estate leases). This approach would
bifurcate the lease payments: the lease element would be accounted for using
the leasing standard; the service element using revenue recognition.
The Boards ended in two different places on this
issue: the FASB were firmly (4 in favour) in the performance obligation
(Approach D) approach. The IASB was firmly (11 in favour) in the bifurcation
approach.
The session chairman asked the staff to develop
realistic examples of both approaches to lessor accounting using a lease
that included inseparable service elements. Those examples would be
discussed in July.
One IASB member noted that he would not sign a
ballot on the revenue recognition ballot draft while the lease accounting
issue remain unresolved. This would mean that he would be unable to sign the
ballot as the lease issue would not be resolved until after his term as a
Board member expired.
Accounting for purchase options
The staff invited the Boards to reconsider their
tentative decisions on accounting for purchase options. They proposed that
the Boards adopt one of two fundamental approaches – as the staff was split,
they were unable to make a definitive recommendation. Approach A would
account for purchase options consistently with the accounting for options to
extend or terminate a lease; Approach B would account for purchase options
only upon exercise.
Some Board members who supported Approach B wanted
bifurcate the option from the lease and account for the renewal option as
any other kind of option. Purchase options were seen as fundamentally
different from renewal options - a renewal option provided an additional
period of a right to use; a purchase option gave access to the underlying
asset. These are different in substance and deserved different accounting.
After another vigorous debate, a majority of both
Boards (IASB: 10 in favour; FASB: 3 in favour) voted for Approach B. In
follow-up votes, both Boards agreed that the option should not be bifurcated
(that is, a 'do nothing with it' approach).
Insurance Contracts
Alternative views in the Exposure Draft
The IASB members who had indicated an intention to
present an Alternative View in the forthcoming Insurance Contracts Exposure
Draft outlined the likely reasons for their dissents.
John T Smith
Mr Smith would dissent for many of the reasons he
dissented to the issue of IFRS 4 Insurance Contracts. In addition, he
objects to the treatment of the risk adjustment, the treatment of renewal
options, and the accounting for investment contracts with a discretionary
participation feature issued by an insurance company. He summarised his
reasons by saying that he does not think the package of decisions in the ED
advanced financial reporting. He thought that IFRS users knew that IFRS 4
was imperfect; he did not want to convey the message that the ED was a
better answer.
Jan Engstrom
Mr Engstrom noted that he was still assessing
whether he would dissent.
He is concerned that the scope was too broad. He
agreed that health, life and catastrophe (high severity, low risk) contracts
should have 'insurance accounting'. However, he saw many general insurance
contracts (fire, auto, etc) as being no different in substance to service
contracts and to force them into the proposed insurance accounting model
would not help the insurance companies or their investors.
He disagrees with the treatment of acquisition
costs. He noted that other types of business incur substantial costs when
securing a contract (he used a defence supply contract as an example).
Payments to agents and other experts were expensed in the period incurred;
he did not see these 'contract acquisition costs' as any different in
substance to insurance contract acquisition costs and asked why they should
get different accounting.
Finally, he is not convinced that he understands
(and therefore can accept) the overall model to be proposed in the ED.
Patricia McConnell
Mrs McConnell had not yet confirmed her intention
to dissent.
However, she was particularly concerned about the
treatment of acquisition costs and issues of display and disclosure.
James Leisenring
Mr Leisenring noted that his dissent was moot,
since the ED would not be balloted until after his term as a Board member
expired. However, he would have dissented for a number of reasons.
Fundamentally, he believes that the approach to
insurance accounting to be proposed in the ED is inconsistent with the IASB
Framework in that it recognises things as assets and liabilities that
demonstratively do not meet the definitions of assets and liabilities in the
Framework.
He does not believe that the scope is operational,
especially with respect to health care and investment contracts. He does not
see the logic for not recording the cash surrender value of an insurance
policy as a liability when it is, in substance, the same as the demand
deposit floor, which is recorded as a liability.
He would also object to a number of the display
issues highlighted by other Board members.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory and standard setting ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
Ketz Me If You Can
"CPA Firms and Credit Rating Agencies," by J. Edward Ketz, Smartpros,
June 2010 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x69608.xml
My father-in-law tells the story about when he was
a young lad the cows wandered into the garlic patch; he drank the milk and
gagged. While milk and garlic are great, they weren't meant to be combined.
In the same way, I wonder why some are thinking about combining accounting
firms and credit rating agencies.
The
Financial Times ran the story on May 16. In
particular, the reporters claimed that KPMG and PwC were evaluating whether
to enter the world of credit rating, even quoting John Griffith Jones from
KPMG that the firm was in fact “passively considering it.” PwC’s Richard
Sexton added that CPA firms were always looking for ways to grow their
business.
My first reaction was obvious—wouldn’t this relationship create a conflict
of interest? The auditor examines the accounting reports and attests the
assertions by management contained in those reports. A credit rating agency
takes the quantitative and qualitative disclosures in the accounting
reports—and other information—and evaluates the entity’s ability to repay
the credit obligations on a timely basis. An enterprise that engaged in
both tasks might be pulled to give a thumbs up for some accounting
shenanigan to assure it received the fees of both audit and credit rating
activities, rationalizing that it could always downgrade the firm’s rating.
If you think such rationalization is impossible, consider the strategic
decisions made by Arthur Andersen in their Waste Management audit, as well
as some of the others. To his credit, Mr. Jones acknowledged these
conflicts of interest.
Let’s also review the structure of the audit process and the credit rating
evaluation process. The audit firm is paid by the firm it audits. In
today’s world, the credit rater is paid by the company it evaluates. Before
the 1970s, this was not true; in fact, today’s conflicts of interest were
avoided when rating agencies made their money by selling the information to
investors. (See my essays on the
performance of credit raters and on the
SEC study of credit rating agencies.)
Notice that both business models are the same: revenues come from the party
being evaluated. While neither structure is ideal, the audit process works
as well as it does because securities laws allow aggrieved investors to sue
auditors if it appears the auditor did not perform an adequate job. It
isn’t perfect, but at least these disincentives help align the interests of
auditors with the interests of the investment community.
Continued in article
Credit Rating Agencies ----
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_rating_agency
A credit rating agency (CRA) is a
company that assigns
credit ratings for
issuers of certain types of
debt obligations as well as the debt instruments
themselves. In some cases, the servicers of the underlying
debt are also given ratings. In most cases, the
issuers of
securities are companies,
special purpose entities, state and local
governments,
non-profit organizations, or national governments
issuing debt-like securities (i.e.,
bonds) that can be traded on a
secondary market. A credit rating for an issuer
takes into consideration the issuer's
credit worthiness (i.e., its ability to pay back a
loan), and affects the
interest rate applied to the particular security
being issued. (In contrast to CRAs, a company that issues
credit scores for individual credit-worthiness is
generally called a
credit bureau or
consumer credit reporting agency.) The value of
such ratings has been widely questioned after the 2008 financial crisis. In
2003 the
Securities and Exchange Commission submitted a
report to Congress detailing plans to launch an investigation into the
anti-competitive practices of credit rating agencies and issues including
conflicts of interest.
Agencies that assign credit ratings for
corporations include:
How to Get AAA Ratings on Junk Bonds
- Pay cash under the table to credit
rating agencies
- Promise a particular credit rating
agency future multi-million contracts for rating future issues of bonds
- Hire away
top-level credit rating agency employees with insider information and great
networks inside the credit rating agencies
By now it is widely known that the big credit rating agencies (like Moody's,
Standard & Poor's, and Fitch) that rate bonds as AAA to BBB to Junk were
unethically selling AAA ratings to CDO mortgage-sliced bonds that should've been
rated Junk. Up to now I thought the credit rating agencies were merely selling
out for cash or to maintain "goodwill" with their best customers to giant Wall
Street banks and investment banks like Lehman Bros., AIG., Merrill Lynch, Bear
Stearns, Goldman Sachs, etc. ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#Sleaze
But it turns out that the credit rating agencies were also in that "hiring-away"
pipeline.
Wall Street
banks and nvestment banks were employing a questionable tactic used by large
clients of auditing firms. It is common for large clients to hire away the lead
auditors of their CPA auditing firms. This is a questionable practice, although
the intent in most instances (we hope) is to obtain accounting experts rather
than to influence the rigor of the audits themselves. The tactic is much more
common and much more sinister when corporations hire away top-level government
employees of regulating agencies like the FDA, FAA, FPC, EPA, etc. This is a
tactic used by industry to gain more control and influence over its regulating
agency. Current regulating government employees who get
too tough on industry will, thereby, be cutting off their chances of getting
future high compensation offers from the companies they now regulate.
The
investigations of credit rating agencies by the New York Attorney General and
current Senate hearings, however, are revealing that the hiring-away tactic was
employed by Wall Street Banks for more sinister purposes in order to get AAA
ratings on junk bonds. Top-level employees of the credit rating agencies were
lured away with enormous salary offers if they could use their insider networks
in the credit rating agencies so that higher credit ratings could be stamped on
junk bonds.
"Rating Agency Data Aided Wall Street in
Deals," The New York Times, April 24, 2010 ---
http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/24/rating-agency-data-aided-wall-street-in-deals/#more-214847
One of the mysteries of the financial crisis is how
mortgage investments that turned out to be so bad earned credit ratings that
made them look so good, The New York Times’s Gretchen Morgenson and Louise
Story
report. One answer is that Wall Street was given
access to the formulas behind those magic ratings —
and hired away some of the very people who had devised
them.
In essence, banks started with the answers and
worked backward, reverse-engineering top-flight ratings for investments that
were, in some cases, riskier than ratings suggested, according to former
agency employees.
Read More »
Bob Jensen's threads on credit rating agency scandals ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#CreditRatingAgencies
1996 Case Loses after 14 Years:
"PwC loses ruling on big Pa. healthcare bankruptcy," by
Jonathan Stempe, Reuters, May 28, 2010 ---
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN2821575820100528
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP suffered a defeat on
Friday when a federal appeals court ordered an inquiry into whether the
auditor dealt in good faith with a large Pennsylvania hospital system that
went bankrupt.
The Third Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia
threw out a January 2007 ruling dismissing claims against PwC by a committee
of unsecured creditors of behalf of the now defunct Allegheny Health,
Education and Research Foundation.
These creditors accused Coopers & Lybrand LLP, one
of PwC's predecessor companies, of conspiring with AHERF officials in the
1996 and 1997 fiscal years to hide the increasingly dire financial health of
the Pittsburgh-based system.
AHERF ultimately sought Chapter 11 protection in
July 1998, with about $1.3 billion of debt, in the largest U.S. nonprofit
healthcare collapse. The system once ran 14 hospitals and two medical
schools and employed an estimated 31,000 people.
It is not clear whether Friday's ruling will result
in more litigation or prompt the parties to pursue a settlement.
PwC spokesman Steven Silber said company officials
could not be reached for comment. James Jones, a Pittsburgh-based lawyer for
the creditors, declined immediate comment.
In his 2007 ruling, U.S. District Judge David
Cercone said the creditors could not recover on AHERF's behalf under a legal
doctrine governing cases of equal fault, concluding AHERF was at least as
much at fault as PwC.
But the Third Circuit asked the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court for guidance on that state's law, including whether an auditor
such as PwC could be held liable for breach of contract, negligence or
aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty.
Writing for a unanimous three-judge panel of the
Third Circuit, Judge Thomas Ambro adopted the Pennsylvania court's
conclusion that an auditor could be held liable if it had "not dealt
materially in good faith with the client-principal."
This effectively barred the equal fault defense in
cases of "secretive collusion between officers and auditors to misstate
corporate finances to the corporation's ultimate detriment."
Ambro also directed the district court to
reconsider its finding that misstated financials could have been a
short-term "benefit" to AHERF.
He said that, as a matter of law, "a knowing,
secretive, fraudulent misstatement of corporate financial information"
cannot benefit a company.
The AHERF bankruptcy generated much litigation and
regulatory activity. In 2007, the bond insurer MBIA Inc (MBI.N) agreed to
pay $75 million to settle regulatory fraud charges over a reinsurance
transaction involving defaulted AHERF debt.
The case is Official Committee of Unsecured
Creditors of Allegheny Health, Education and Research Foundation v.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals, No.
07-1397. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel; editing by Steve Orlofsky and Andre
Grenon)
Bob Jensen's threads on PwC Litigation are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
A Two-Part
Teaching Case: The Cost of Quality Versus the Cost of Poor Quality
Two decades ago, managerial and cost accounting textbooks and courses began to
run modules on the "cost of quality" or to be more accurate the cost of poor
quality. The following case fits into these types of modules.
From
The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on May 21, 2010
FDA Widens Probe of J&J's McNeil Unit
by:
Jonathan D. Rockoff
May 18, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Cost
Management, Product Recall, Quality Costs
SUMMARY: On
April 30, 2010, Johnson & Johnson "...recalled a number of over-the-counter
medicines for children and infants after receiving complaints from consumers
and discovering manufacturing problems. The company also closed the plant in
Fort Washington, PA, that made the recalled products until it fixes the
issues and can assure quality production....The FDA conducted a routine
inspection of the Fort Washington plant last month. Agency inspectors found
that the J&J unit received 46 complaints from consumers between June 2009
and April 2010 regarding 'foreign materials, black or dark specks' in
certain medicines.'" The FDA has now widened its investigation and the J&J
McNeil Consumer Healthcare unit that makes these products is conducting a
comprehensive quality assessment over all its manufacturing operations.
"Some parents say the recall has weakened J&J's sterling reputation for
quality. The recall has also prompted a congressional investigation of the
company's handling of consumer complaints and the adequacy of the FDA's
inspections."
CLASSROOM
APPLICATION: Questions
focus on concepts in the cost of quality.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
How crucial is the concept of quality to Johnson & Johnson operations and
profitability?
2. (Advanced)
Define the terms "cost of quality" or "quality cost" and related concepts of
'prevention costs" and "appraisal costs."
3. (Advanced)
Which of the categories of quality costs-prevention or appraisal-is about to
increase significantly at J&J? Explain your answer.
4. (Advanced)
Define the concepts of "internal failure costs" and "external failure
costs."
5. (Advanced)
The FDA and congress may investigate J&J's handling of consumer complaint.
Under what part of the quality control process does handling these
complaints fall under?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"FDA
Widens Probe of J&J's McNeil Unit," by: Jonathan D. Rockoff, The Wall
Street Journal, May 18, 2010
The Food and Drug Administration has widened its investigation into the
recent recall of certain Johnson & Johnson children's medicines and is now
inquiring into manufacturing across the company's consumer health-care unit.
J&J's McNeil Consumer Healthcare makes a range of products for adults and
kids, notably Benadryl, St. Joseph aspirin, Motrin, Tylenol and Zyrtec.
On April 30, the company recalled a number of over-the-counter medicines for
children and infants after receiving complaints from consumers and
discovering manufacturing problems. The company also closed the plant in
Fort Washington, Pa., that made the recalled products until it fixes the
issues and can assure quality production.
The recall of the liquid children's medicines was the third by the J&J unit
since last September. An FDA spokeswoman said there had been no specific
complaints about products from other McNeil facilities. But given the
history of recent recalls, the FDA wanted to make sure there weren't any
similar manufacturing problems and to identify any steps the agency must
take to prevent the problems from recurring.
Besides Fort Washington, J&J's McNeil unit has plants in Lancaster, Pa., and
Las Piedras, Puerto Rico.
"We're doing our due diligence," said FDA spokeswoman Elaine Gansz Bobo.
The J&J unit "is conducting a comprehensive quality assessment across its
manufacturing operations and continues to cooperate with the FDA," a company
spokeswoman said.
Some parents say the recall has weakened J&J's reputation for quality. The
recall has also prompted a congressional investigation of the company's
handling of consumer complaints and the adequacy of the FDA's inspections.
The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform has asked J&J Chief
Executive William Weldon to testify at a hearing on May 27.
The FDA and J&J have told the committee they will cooperate and are in the
process of answering its questions, and the committee expects that Mr.
Weldon will attend, said Kurt Bardella, a spokesman for Rep. Darrell Issa
(R., Calif.), the panel's ranking Republican.
A J&J spokesman said the company is communicating with the committee and
will respond appropriately to the panel's request but declined to say if Mr.
Weldon will appear.
The recall last month involved more than 40 different Tylenol, Benadryl,
Motrin and Zyrtec products for children and infants. Some of the medicines
had higher concentrations of active ingredient than specified, and some
products may contain tiny metallic particles left as a residue from the
manufacturing process, according to J&J's McNeil unit.
The FDA conducted a routine inspection of the Fort Washington plant last
month. Agency inspectors found that the J&J unit received 46 complaints from
consumers between June 2009 and April 2010 regarding "foreign materials,
black or dark specks" in certain medicines. The FDA also said bacteria
contaminated raw materials to be used to make several lots of Tylenol
products for children.
FDA has begun to review all complaints it has received to determine whether
the recalled products caused any serious side effects. The agency has said
the chances that the recalled products could cause harm were remote, but
warned parents not to use the products as a precaution.
Update on
June 3, 2010
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on June 3, 2010
J&J Recall Probe Expands to Others
by:
Jonathan D. Rockoff
Jun 03, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Cost
Accounting, Managerial Accounting, Product Recall
SUMMARY: "A
Congressional probe of a Johnson & Johnson unit's manufacturing problems is
spreading beyond the company's recent recall of its children's medicines to
withdrawals of other over-the-counter products." The House Committee on
Oversight and Government Reform also contacted Blacksmith Brands about its
recall of PediaCare cough and cold medicines. The company purchased the
Pedia line from J&J's McNeil Consumer Healthcare unit in 2009 and those
products also were made in the same facility in which the other problem
products were made.
CLASSROOM
APPLICATION: This
review follows on initial coverage of this issue on 5/20/2010. Questions
focus on concepts in the cost of quality for management accounting classes
and on implications for financial accounting and reporting for product
recalls for financial accounting classes.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Advanced)
Define the terms "cost of quality" or "quality cost" and related concepts of
'prevention costs" and "appraisal costs."
2. (Introductory)
Which of the categories of quality costs-prevention or appraisal-are
occurring at Johnson &Johnson's McNeil unit and at Blacksmith Brands, who
bought J&J's PediaCare medicines, in response to manufacturing defects in
over the counter medicines?
3. (Advanced)
Define the concepts of "internal failure costs" and "external failure
costs."
4. (Introductory)
The FDA and Congress also are investigating J&J's use of an outside
contractor "after discovering in late 2008 that some Motrin wasn't
dissolving correctly." Under what part of the quality control process does
the cost of using such a contractor fall? Specifically comment in light of
J&J's statements about the purpose of hiring the contractor.
5. (Advanced)
Summarize the financial accounting and reporting implications of a product
recall such the one that Blacksmith Brands has issued for PediaCare cough
and cold medicines.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED
ARTICLES:
More Children's Medicine Made at J&J Facility
Is Recalled
by Jonathan D. Rockoff
May 29, 2010
Online Exclusive
"J&J Probe
Expands to Other Products," by: Jonathan D. Rockoff, The Wall Street Journal,
June 2, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704515704575283103714261396.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
A Congressional probe of a Johnson & Johnson unit's manufacturing problems
is spreading beyond the company's recent recall of its children's medicines
to withdrawals of other over-the-counter products.
The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform asked Blacksmith
Brands on Tuesday for further information about its recall last week of
PediaCare cough and cold medicines. Those products were made by J&J at the
same Fort Washington, Pa., plant that produced children's Tylenol and other
recalled kids drugs.
J&J's McNeil Consumer Healthcare unit had recalled certain Benadryl, Motrin,
Tylenol and Zyrtec pain and cold medicines for children on April 30 because
of manufacturing problems including the potential for metal particles in the
products. J&J has temporarily shut the plant.
A spokesman for Blacksmith Brands, of Tarrytown, N.Y., called the
committee's request standard in the event of recalls and said the company
would cooperate. Blacksmith Brands bought the four recalled PediaCare
products from J&J's McNeil unit last year, and had arranged prior to the
recall for other plants to make them starting in July.
The House committee sought information from WIS International, a
merchandising consultant, as part of its examination of McNeil's handling of
defective Motrin pain relief pills, according to a person familiar with the
investigation.
In 2008, J&J's McNeil unit discovered that some of the pills weren't
dissolving correctly. It hired a contractor to purchase the product from
store shelves, according to documents released at the Congressional
committee hearing last week.
The contractor advised its workers to buy up the Motrin packages, and to act
like customers, making no reference to this being a recall, according to a
memo released at the hearing.
In July 2009, McNeil issued a recall of the Motrin product.
Colleen Goggins, who oversees J&J's consumer group, told lawmakers last week
that the company didn't have "any intent to mislead or hide anything" and
that it had told the FDA it had hired a contractor to statistically sample
the products. A J&J spokeswoman said it is looking into the contractor's
work and would report back to the committee.
She wouldn't comment on whether WIS International was the contractor in the
memo.
An entity called "WIS" is named in the contractor's memo.
Officials at the company did not return messages left Wednesday seeking
comment. On Tuesday, Dave Haller, vice president of sales, account
management and marketing, said: "We don't comment on activities for our
clients, and Johnson & Johnson is not a client of ours." He would not say
whether J&J or one of its units had been a client in the past.
WIS International, which has headquarters in San Diego, Calif., and
Mississauga, Ontario, counts inventory on behalf of retailers, hospitals and
other kinds of firms. It also helps manufacturers recall tainted products
from retail store shelves.
The company's website says it has "worked on recalls and product purchases
ranging from a few hundred stores to nearly 60,000."
May 21.
2010 reply from James R. Martin/University of South Florida
[jmartin@MAAW.INFO]
Bob,
Using these cases is a good place to introduce and compare the various
quality models including Juran's Zero defects, Taguchi's Loss function, and
Deming's Robust quality philosophy.
(http://maaw.info/ConstrainoptTechs.htm#Quality
Models Compared). It also leads to the Six Sigma
approach to quality (http://maaw.info/SixSigmaSummary.htm),
many other concepts and arguments related to quality (http://maaw.info/QualityRelatedMain.htm),
and the
controversy over constrained optimization concepts in general (http://maaw.info/ConstrOptMain.htm).
Bob
Jensen's threads on managerial and cost accounting are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#ManagementAccounting
Tax and Tax Evasion Fraud Teaching Cases from The Wall Street Journal
Accounting Weekly Review on June 11, 2010
Showdown on Fund Taxes
by: Peter
Lattman and Laura Saunders
Jun 09, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
Click here to view the video on WSJ.com 
TOPICS: REIT,
Tax Laws, Tax Policy, Taxation
SUMMARY: A
bill being co-sponsored by Rep. Sander Levin (D-Mich.) and Max Baucus
(D-Mont.) proposed to increase taxes on gains by certain partnerships when
selling assets, when partners sell out, and when an entire partnership is
sold. Current law taxes these transactions at 15% capital gains rates; the
proposal increases the rate to 30% in 2011 and 33% in 2013. Partnerships
affected include those in venture capital, private equity, real estate and
commodities.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article is useful for partnership taxation courses.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
What types of entities might be impacted by a proposal for tax law changes
recently proposed by Democrat Senators?
2. (Advanced)
What is 'carried-interest' income to fund managers? How is this item part of
a fund manager's basic compensation, like wages? How is this item like a
capital gain?
3. (Advanced)
What is the difference between taxation of capital gains and taxation of
wages? Why are these differences part of the tax law?
4. (Advanced)
What is the "enterprise-value tax" that is also proposed as part of the bill
being co-sponsored by Rep. Sander Levin (D-Mich.) and Max Baucus (D-Mont.)?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
Swiss Lower House Rejects UBS Pact
by: Deborah
Ball
Jun 09, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: IRS,
Tax Avoidance, Tax Evasion, Tax Havens, Taxation
SUMMARY: "Last
August, the U.S. and Switzerland reached a deal to settle a case involving
hidden offshore accounts at the banking giant. The U.S. accused UBS of
having helped thousands of Americans avoid paying taxes at home by setting
up the offshore accounts. UBS admitted wrongdoing and agreed to hand over
the names of 4,450 American account holders to the U.S. Internal Revenue
Service by August." Switzerland's lower house has now rejected "..a bill
that would have allowed the government to provide the U.S. with the names of
UBS account holders allegedly dodging American taxes." Previously, the Swiss
Senate approved such a bill. The original agreement with UBS arose after a
former UBS executive, Bradley Birkenfeld, told U.S. officials that the bank
allegedly began telling American customers in 2002 it wasn't required to
disclose their identities to the Internal Revenue Service, as described in
the second related article.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article is useful in tax classes to discuss tax avoidance versus tax evasion
and offshore tax havens.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Advanced)
What is the difference between tax avoidance and tax evasion?
2. (Introductory)
What is the nature of the Swiss banking industry that makes the U.S. IRS
want to access names of U.S. citizens with Swiss bank accounts in a search
for tax evaders?
3. (Advanced)
How are this IRS investigation and the agreement between UBS and the IRS
likely to impact the Swiss banking industry?
4. (Advanced)
Why do you think that the Swiss legislature voted as it did during the week
of June 7, 2010?
5. (Introductory)
What options are left for the IRS if the proposed law does not pass the
Swiss legislative authority?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
Related: Swiss Report Slams Government Over UBS Crisis
by Katharina Bart
Jun 01, 2010
Online Exclusive
Swiss Bank to Give Up Depositors' Names to Prosecutors
by Evan Perez and Carrick Mollenkamp
Feb 19, 2009
Page: A1
Bob Jensen's Fraud Updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Humor
Between June 1 and June 30, 2010
Ray Stevens - Illegal Immigrants Assistance Program
---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WgOHOHKBEqE
Jagdish Gangolly clued me in on this link
Tom Lehrer on the great Russian mathgematician Lobachevsky:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNC-aj76zI4&feature=related
Forwarded by Gene and
Joan
A SpanishTeacher was explaining to her class that in Spanish, unlike English,
nouns are designated as either masculine or feminine.
'House' for instance, is feminine: 'la casa.' 'Pencil,' however, is
masculine: 'el lapiz.'
A student asked, 'What gender is 'computer'?'
Instead of giving the answer, the teacher split the class into two groups,
male and female, and asked them to decide for themselves whether computer'
should be a masculine or a feminine noun. Each group was asked to give four
reasons for its recommendation.
The men's group decided that 'computer' should definitely be of the feminine
gender ('la computadora'), because:
1. No one but their creator understands their internal logic;
2. The native language they use to communicate with other computers is
incomprehensible to everyone else;
3. Even the smallest mistakes are stored in long term memory for possible
later retrieval; and
4. As soon as you make a commitment to one, you find yourself spending half
your paycheck on accessories for it.
(THIS GETS BETTER!)
The women's group, however, concluded that computers should be Masculine ('el
computador'), because:
1. In order to do anything with them, you have to turn them on;
2. They have a lot of data but still can't think for themselves;
3. They are supposed to help you solve problems, but half the time they ARE
the problem; and
4. As soon as you commit to one, you realize that if you had waited a little
longer, you could have gotten a better model.
The women won.
Send this to all the smart women you know...and all the men that have a sense
of humor.
Comedy Video
on Financial Crises
I'm beginning to think these are not perfect storms. I'm beginning to think
these are regular storms and we just have a sh**ty boat.
Jon Stewart ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/2010/05/jon-stewart-takes-on-perfect-storms.html
Groups of free riders
on the Paris Metro have created informal insurance pools that pay the fine when
riders get caught. The groups call themselves mutuelles des fraudeurs --
fraudster mutuals.
NPR ---
http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2010/05/dont_pay_your_fare_on_the_subw.html
Jensen Comment
One issue not considered in the above article is how many misdemeanors it takes
for the sum to become a felony.
Also could
these frauds affect credit scores?
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
Awful Puns For the Educated
1. King Ozymandias of Assyria was running low on cash after years of war with
the Hittites. His last great possession was the Star of the Euphrates, the most
valuable diamond in the ancient world. Desperate, he went to Croesus, the
pawnbroker, to ask for a loan.
Croesus said, "I'll give you 100,000 dinars for it."
"But I paid a million dinars for it," the King protested. "Don't you know who
I am? I am the king!"
Croesus replied, "When you wish to pawn a Star, makes no difference who you
are."
2. Evidence has been found that William Tell and his family were avid
bowlers. Unfortunately, all the Swiss league records were destroyed in a fire,
...and so we'll never know for whom the Tells bowled.
3. A man rushed into a busy doctor's office and shouted, "Doctor! I think I'm
shrinking!" The doctor calmly responded, "Now, settle down. You'll just have to
be a little patient."
4. A marine biologist developed a race of genetically engineered dolphins
that could live forever if they were fed a steady diet of seagulls. One day, his
supply of the birds ran out so he had to go out and trap some more. On the way
back, he spied two lions asleep on the road. Afraid to wake them, he gingerly
stepped over them. Immediately, he was arrested and charged with-- transporting
gulls across sedate lions for immortal porpoises.
5. Back in the 1800's the Tate's Watch Company of Massachusetts wanted to
produce other products, and since they already made the cases for watches, they
used them to produce compasses. The new compasses were so bad that people often
ended up in Canada or Mexico rather than California. This, of course, is the
origin of the expression -- "He who has a Tate's is lost!"
6. A thief broke into the local police station and stole all the toilets and
urinals, leaving no clues. A spokesperson was quoted as saying, "We have
absolutely nothing to go on."
7. An Indian chief was feeling very sick, so he summoned the medicine man.
After a brief examination, the medicine man took out a long, thin strip of elk
rawhide and gave it to the chief, telling him to bite off, chew, and swallow one
inch of the leather every day. After a month, the medicine man returned to see
how the chief was feeling. The chief shrugged and said, "The thong is ended, but
the malady lingers on."
8. A famous Viking explorer returned home from a voyage and found his name
missing from the town register. His wife insisted on complaining to the local
civic official who apologized profusely saying, "I must have taken Leif off my
census."
9. There were three Indian squaws. One slept on a deer skin, one slept on an
elk skin, and the third slept on a hippopotamus skin. All three became pregnant.
The first two each had a baby boy. The one who slept on the hippopotamus skin
had twin boys. This just goes to prove that... the squaw of the hippopotamus is
equal to the sons of the squaws of the other two hides. (Some of you may need
help with this one).
10. A skeptical anthropologist was cataloging South American folk remedies
with the assistance of a tribal Brujo who indicated that the leaves of a
particular fern were a sure cure for any case of constipation. When the
anthropologist expressed his doubts, the Brujo looked him in the eye and said,
"Let me tell you, with fronds like these, you don't need enemas."
Digital Comic Museum ---
http://digitalcomicmuseum.com/
Forwarded from Romania by Dan Gheorghe Somnea
[dan_somnea@yahoo.com]
AMAZING
ANAGRAMS
Someone out there
Must be "deadly" at
Scrabble..
(Wait till you see the
last one)!
PRESBYTERIAN:
When you
rearrange the letters:
BEST IN
PRAYER
ASTRONOMER:
When you
rearrange the letters:
MOON STARER
DESPERATION:
When you
rearrange the letters:
A ROPE ENDS
IT
THE EYES:
When you
rearrange the letters:
THEY SEE
GEORGE
BUSH:
When you
rearrange the letters:
HE BUGS
GORE
THE MORSE
CODE:
When you
rearrange the letters:
HERE COME
DOTS
DORMITORY:
When you
rearrange the letters:
DIRTY ROOM
SLOT
MACHINES:
When you
rearrange the letters:
CASH LOST
IN ME
ANIMOSITY:
When you
rearrange the letters:
IS NO AMITY
ELECTION
RESULTS:
When you
rearrange the letters:
LIES -
LET'S RECOUNT
SNOOZE
ALARMS:
When you
rearrange the letters:
ALAS! NO
MORE Z 'S
A DECIMAL
POINT:
When you
rearrange the letters:
I'M A DOT
IN PLACE
THE
EARTHQUAKES:
When you
rearrange the letters:
THAT QUEER
SHAKE
ELEVEN PLUS
TWO:
When you
rearrange the letters:
TWELVE PLUS
ONE
AND FOR THE
GRAND FINALE:
MOTHER-IN-LAW:
When you
rearrange the letters:
WOMAN HITLER
======
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
More Reasons to have a bottle or two in the house! ! ! !
Who Knew???
1. To remove a bandage painlessly, Saturate the bandage with vodka. The stuff
dissolves adhesive.
________________________________________
2. To clean the caulking around bathtubs and showers, Fill a trigger-spray
bottle with vodka, spray the caulking, Let set five minutes and wash clean.
The alcohol in the vodka kills mold and mildew.
________________________________________
3. To clean your eyeglasses, Simply wipe the lenses with a soft, Clean cloth
dampened with vodka. The alcohol in the vodka cleans the glass and kills germs.
________________________________________
4. Prolong the life of razors by filling a cup with vodka And letting your
safety razor blade Soak in the alcohol after shaving. The vodka disinfects the
blade and prevents rusting.
________________________________________
5. Spray vodka on wine stains, Scrub with a brush, and then blot dry.
________________________________________
6. Using a cotton ball, apply vodka to your face As an astringent to
cleanse the skin and tighten pores.
________________________________________
7. Add a jigger of vodka to a 12-ounce bottle of shampoo. The alcohol
cleanses the scalp,removes toxins from hair, And stimulates the growth of
healthy hair.
________________________________________
8. Fill a sixteen-ounce trigger-spray bottle with vodka And spray bees
or wasps to kill them.
________________________________________
9 Pour one-half cup vodka And one-half cup water into a Ziploc freezer bag
And freeze for a slushy, refreshing ice pack for aches, Pain or black eyes.
________________________________________
10. Fill a clean, used mayonnaise jar With freshly packed lavender flowers,
Fill the jar with vodka, seal the lid tightly And set in the sun for three days.
Strain liquid through a coffee filter, Then apply the tincture to aches and
pains.
________________________________________
11. To relieve a fever, use a washcloth To rub vodka on your chest and
back as a liniment.
________________________________________
12. To cure foot odor, Wash your feet with vodka.
________________________________________
13 Vodka will disinfect And alleviate a jellyfish sting.
________________________________________
14. Pour vodka over an area affected with poison ivy To remove the
POISON IVY oil from your skin.
________________________________________
15. Swish a shot of vodka over an aching tooth. Allow your gums to absorb
some of the alcohol to numb the pain.
________________________________________
And silly me! I used to just drink it !
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
Senior personal ads from Florida newspaper
Who says seniors don't have a sense of humour?
FOXY LADY: Sexy, fashion-conscious blue-haired beauty, 80's, slim, 5'4" (used
to be 5'6"), Searching for sharp-looking, Sharp-dressing companion. Matching
white shoes and belt a plus.
LONG-TERM COMMITMENT: Recent widow who has just buried fourth husband, And am
looking for someone to Round out a six-unit plot. Dizziness, fainting, shortness
of breath Not a problem.
SERENITY NOW: I am into solitude, long walks, Sunrises, the ocean, yoga and
meditation. If you are the silent type, let's get together, Take our hearing
aids out and enjoy quiet times.. BEATLES OR STONES? I still like to rock, Still
like to cruise in my Camaro on Saturday nights And still like to play the
guitar. If you were a groovy chick, Or are now a groovy hen, let's get together
And listen to my eight-track tapes.
WINNING SMILE: Active grandmother with original teeth Seeking a dedicated
flosser to share rare steaks, Corn on the cob and caramel candy
MEMORIES: I can usually remember Monday through Thursday. If you can remember
Friday, Saturday and Sunday, let's put our two heads together.
MINT CONDITION: Male, 1932, high mileage, Good condition, some hair, Many new
parts including hip, knee, cornea, valves. Isn't in running condition, but walks
well.
Forwarded by Maureen
A little boy got on the bus, sat next to a man reading a book, and noticed he
had his collar on backwards. The little boy asked why he wore his collar
backwards.
The man, who was a priest, said, 'I am a Father.'
The little boy replied, 'My Daddy doesn't wear his collar like that.'
The priest looked up from his book and answered, ''I am the Father of many.'
The boy said, ''My Dad has 4 boys, 4 girls and two grandchildren and he
doesn't wear his collar that way!'
The priest, getting impatient, said. 'I am the Father of hundreds', and went
back to reading his book.
The little boy sat quietly thinking for a while, then leaned over and said,
'Maybe you should wear a condom and put your pants on backwards instead of your
collar.'
"GMAT will replace an essay with sets of problems requiring different
forms of analysis. Will this fend off competition from the GRE?" by
Scott Jaschick, Inside Higher Ed, June 25, 2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/06/25/gmat
Jensen Comment
GMAT testing officials were among the first to adopt computer grading rather
than human grading of essays. I guess that will no longer be the case since the
essay will disappear on the GMAT. However, perhaps the GMAT will still have some
shorter essay questions.
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm#ComputerBasedAssessment
"BP spoof video is runaway hit for UCB website," MIT's Technology
Review, June 25, 2010 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/wire/25663/?nlid=3166&a=f
The most memorable comedic take on the oil spill
disaster in the Gulf of Mexico hasn't come from "Saturday Night Live," ''The
Daily Show" or a late-night monologue.
Instead, a cheaply made video by an unlikely New
York improv troupe has created the only commentary that has truly resonated
online: a three-minute spoof that shows BP executives pathetically trying to
clean up a coffee spill.
In the video, BP execs are in the middle of a
meeting when someone overturns a coffee cup. The liquid oozes across the
conference table. One exec says it will "destroy all the fish" (his sushi
lunch); another says it's encroaching on his map of Louisiana. They try to
contain the coffee spill by wrapping their arms around the perimeter,
dumping garbage on top to absorb the liquid, clipping hair over it and other
stupid human tricks.
Three hours later, the spill remains with all the
mess left from attempts to contain it: paper, hair, soil, plants, etc.
Finally, they get Kevin Costner on the phone.
"He'll know what to do for sure," an exec says with
great hope.
"Do you have a golf ball?" Costner asks. No. A
pingpong ball? Yes. Costner tells them to throw it at the spill. They do.
Nothing happens. Then: 47 days later. The spill and the mess are still there
with BP execs no closer to a solution.
In the last two weeks, the video has been watched
by nearly 7 million people on YouTube. By the count of Viral Video Chart,
it's been shared some 300,000 times on blogs, Facebook pages and Twitter
feeds.
The video was dreamed up by the writers for the
sketch show "Beneath Gristedes," a monthly stage show at the Upright
Citizens Brigade Theatre in New York. While meeting to work on the show, a
germ of the concept came to Erik Tanouye, who worked out the script with
fellow writers John Frusciante, Gavin Spieller and Eric Scott.
They shot it two days later and within a week, it
was up on UCBComedy.com. The site has had some viral hits -- a parody of a
Google ad, a spoof of the "David After the Dentist" video -- but nothing on
this level. UCBComedy.com's servers immediately crashed under the traffic.
"I couldn't do my day job," said Tanouye, 32, who
is the director of student affairs for the UCB training center.
It's been the biggest hit yet for UCBComedy.com,
which was founded in 2007 to give its performers an online outlet. The
Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre, which has popular theaters in New York and
Los Angeles, was co-founded by Amy Poehler.
For more than a decade, it has regularly churned
out exciting young comic talent, including "SNL" players Bobby Moynihan and
Jenny Slate, and "Office" regular Zach Woods. Young audiences line up on a
nightly basis to pack the 300-seat New York theater, which has a youthful,
collegiate vibe.
"What we're trying to do with videos is get out
there to the general public the talent that we have," says Todd Bieber, 30,
the website's director of content and production. "We can reach New York and
L.A. audiences pretty easily, but there's a whole world out there that we
can't reach through the theaters."
The boost in visitors to the site has been
considerable. From May 21-June 21 last year, the site drew just under
43,000; the same period this year has attracted more than 450,000.
But Bieber, who formerly worked at the Onion News
Network, is the only one being paid to work full time on the site. Videos
don't have anything like the budgets of the Onion News Network, which shoots
in the style of real news broadcasts.
UCBComedy.com includes a lot of footage of improv
performances, which typically have much more energy in person, where the
thrill of instant creation is immediate. But the dozens of UCB performers --
who are graduates of the theater's improv training classes -- have learned
to fashion their comedy to the Web.
"Beta teams" -- performers dedicated to producing
content for the site -- were formed in January. Original series have been
created, including one called "Blackouts," which are short 30-second bites,
one punch line at a time.
Bieber says that a viral sensation such as "BP
Spills Coffee" can "energize the UCB community" in creating video for the
website. Having so much talent at the ready makes UCBComedy.com a little
like an amateur version of FunnyOrDie.com, the comedy site co-founded by
Will Ferrell and Adam McKay, which pulls contributions from famous
comedians.
"That's the hope," says Bieber. "There are so many
terribly ridiculous things going on in the world that there's plenty of room
for commentary. If we can be looked in the same way as FunnyOrDie, that
would be terrific. We'd love to get the hits that they do."
There's plenty of competition when it comes to
topical humor, though, and the oil spill has been a common topic. The
slow-motion horror of the spill is utterly serious, but people have long
turned to comics to give voice to rage. BP, which is said to have mismanaged
the spill, has been an easy target.
David Letterman, Jay Leno and other late-night
hosts have made BP jokes practically a nightly feature. Conan O'Brien,
perhaps feeling like he was missing out, recently tweeted: "The past 2
months I've been on tour and haven't followed the news. What's with all the
photos of chocolate pelicans?"
"The Colbert Report" and "The Daily Show" have
battered the subject relentlessly. Mixing comedy with activism, Colbert
Nation has launched a "Gulf of America Fund" to raise donations for the
recovery efforts. "SNL" is off for the summer and so has missed the
opportunity to lampoon BP.
One of the more interesting Internet-based parodies
has been a mock Twitter feed, purporting to be from BP's public relations
department: http://twitter.com/BPGlobalPR. It has more than 175,000
followers. One example: "Investing a lot of time & money into cleaning up
our image, but the beaches are next on the to-do list for sure."
But the success of the UCB's video could well be a
firm foothold in the world of online comedy, and boost the troupe's national
presence.
"People can see these amazing talents come up,"
says Bieber. "As awesome as the theater is, at the end of the day, that
sketch would have killed for 200 or 300 people, not 6 or 7 million."
Jensen Links to Some Other BP Videos
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2AAa0gd7ClM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPbZe43pTC8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40kYQd7ybRA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MLdAJn7YxeE
After the June 23 loss of the containment cap, 60,000 barrels per day
are gushing out
This is no joking matter
David Albrecht has some YouTube recommendations at
http://profalbrecht.wordpress.com/2010/06/25/bp-in-social-commentary/
Bob Jensen's threads on Enron humor ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#Humor
Humor Between June 1 and June 30, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q2.htm#Humor063010
Humor Between
May 1 and May 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q2.htm#Humor053110
Humor Between April 1 and April 30, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q2.htm#Humor043010
Humor Between March 1 and March 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q1.htm#Humor033110
Humor Between February 1 and February 28, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q1.htm#Humor022810
Humor Between January 1 and January 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book09q1.htm#Humor013110
And that's
the way it was on June 30, 2010 with a little help from my friends.
Bob
Jensen's gateway to millions of other blogs and social/professional networks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Bob
Jensen's Threads ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/threads.htm
Bob
Jensen's Blogs ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JensenBlogs.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
New Bookmarks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Tidbits ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Bob Jensen's past
presentations and lectures ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/resume.htm#Presentations
Free
Online Textbooks, Videos, and Tutorials ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
Free Tutorials in Various Disciplines ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob2.htm#Tutorials
Edutainment and Learning Games ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Edutainment
Open Sharing Courses ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#OKI
Bob
Jensen's Resume ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Resume.htm
Bob
Jensen's Homepage ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/
Concerns That Academic Accounting Research is Out of Touch With Reality
I think leading academic researchers avoid applied research for the
profession because making seminal and creative discoveries that
practitioners have not already discovered is enormously difficult.
Accounting academe is threatened by the
twin dangers of fossilization and scholasticism (of three types:
tedium, high tech, and radical chic) From
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm
“Knowledge and competence increasingly developed out of the internal
dynamics of esoteric disciplines rather than within the context of
shared perceptions of public needs,” writes Bender. “This is not to
say that professionalized disciplines or the modern service
professions that imitated them became socially irresponsible. But
their contributions to society began to flow from their own
self-definitions rather than from a reciprocal engagement with
general public discourse.”
Now, there is a definite note of sadness in Bender’s narrative – as
there always tends to be in accounts
of the
shift from Gemeinschaft to
Gesellschaft. Yet it is also
clear that the transformation from civic to disciplinary
professionalism was necessary.
“The new disciplines offered relatively precise subject matter and
procedures,” Bender concedes, “at a time when both were greatly
confused. The new professionalism also promised guarantees of
competence — certification — in an era when criteria of intellectual
authority were vague and professional performance was unreliable.”
But in the epilogue
to Intellect and Public Life,
Bender suggests that the process eventually went too far.
“The risk now is precisely the opposite,” he writes. “Academe is
threatened by the twin dangers of fossilization and scholasticism
(of three types: tedium, high tech, and radical chic).
The agenda for the next decade, at least as I see it, ought to be
the opening up of the disciplines, the ventilating of professional
communities that have come to share too much and that have become
too self-referential.”
What went wrong in accounting/accountics research?
How did academic accounting research become a pseudo science?
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
|
Accountancy, Tax, IFRS, XBRL, and Accounting History News Sites
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Accounting
Professors Who Blog ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Cool
Search Engines That Are Not Google ---
http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/06/coolsearchengines
Free
(updated) Basic Accounting Textbook --- search for Hoyle at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
CPA
Examination ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cpa_examination
Free CPA Examination Review Course Courtesy of Joe Hoyle ---
http://cpareviewforfree.com/
Bob
Jensen's Personal History in Pictures ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/PictureHistory/
Bob
Jensen's Homepage ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/

May 31, 2010
Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on
May 31, 2010
Bob Jensen at
Trinity University
For
earlier editions of Fraud Updates go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
For earlier editions of Tidbits go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
For earlier editions of New Bookmarks go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter ---
Search Box in Upper Right Corner.
For example if you want to know what Jensen documents have the term "Enron"
enter the phrase Jensen AND Enron. Another search engine that covers Trinity and
other universities is at
http://www.searchedu.com/
Bob
Jensen's Blogs ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JensenBlogs.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
New Bookmarks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Tidbits ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Accountancy, Tax, IFRS, XBRL, and Accounting History News Sites
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Accounting
Professors Who Blog ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Cool
Search Engines That Are Not Google ---
http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/06/coolsearchengines
Accounting
program news items for colleges are posted at
http://www.accountingweb.com/news/college_news.html
Sometimes the news items provide links to teaching resources for accounting
educators.
Any college may post a news item.
How to
author books and other materials for online delivery
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
How Web
Pages Work ---
http://computer.howstuffworks.com/web-page.htm
Bob
Jensen's essay on the financial crisis bailout's aftermath and an alphabet soup
of appendices can be found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm
Federal
Revenue and Spending Book of Charts (Great Charts on Bad Budgeting)
---
http://www.heritage.org/research/features/BudgetChartBook/index.html
The Master
List of Free
Online College Courses
---
http://universitiesandcolleges.org/
Free
Online Textbooks, Videos, and Tutorials ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
Free Tutorials in Various Disciplines ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob2.htm#Tutorials
Edutainment and Learning Games ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Edutainment
Open Sharing Courses ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#OKI
The Master List of Free
Online College Courses ---
http://universitiesandcolleges.org/
Bob
Jensen's threads for online worldwide education and training alternatives ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Crossborder.htm
"U. of
Manitoba Researchers Publish Open-Source Handbook on Educational Technology," by
Steve Kolowich, Chronicle of Higher Education, March 19, 2009 ---
http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/index.php?id=3671&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
Social
Networking for Education: The Beautiful and the Ugly
(including Google's Wave and Orcut for Social Networking and some education uses
of Twitter)
Updates will be at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Pete Wilson provides some great videos on how to make accounting judgments ---
http://www.navigatingaccounting.com/
FEI Second
Life Video (thank you Edith) ---
If I Were an Auditor ---
http://www.youtube.com/user/feiblog#p/a/u/0/Q-FR_fkTFKY
Teaching History With Technology ---
http://www.thwt.org/
Some these ideas apply to accounting history and accounting education in general
"U. of Manitoba
Researchers Publish Open-Source Handbook on Educational Technology,"
by Steve Kolowich, Chronicle of Higher Education, March 19, 2009 ---
http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/index.php?id=3671&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
Bob
Jensen's threads on accounting novels, plays, and movies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNovels.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on tricks and tools of the trade ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on education technology ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Video on IOUSA
Bipartisan Solutions to Saving the USA
If you missed CNN’s two-hour IOUSA Solutions broadcast, you can watch a 30-minute
version at
http://www.pgpf.org/newsroom/press/IOUSA-Solutions-Premiers-on-CNN/
(Scroll Down a bit)
Note that great efforts were made to keep this a bipartisan panel along with the
occasional video clips of President Obama discussing the debt crisis. The
problem is a build up over spending for most of our nation’s history, It landed
at the feet of President Obama, but he’s certainly not the cause nor is his the
recent expansion of health care coverage the real cause.
One take home from
the CNN show was that over 60% of the booked National Debt increases are funded
off shore (largely in Asia and the Middle East).
This going to greatly constrain the global influence and economic choices of the
United States.
By 2016 the interest
payments on the National Debt will be the biggest single item in the Federal
Budget, more than national defense or social security. And an enormous portion
of this interest cash flow will be flowing to foreign nations that may begin to
put all sorts of strings on their decisions to roll over funding our National
Debt.
The unbooked entitlement obligations that are not part of the National Debt are
over $60 trillion and exploding exponentially. The Medicare D entitlements to
retirees like me added over $8 trillion of entitlements under the Bush
Presidency.
Most of the problems
are solvable except for the Number 1 entitlements problem --- Medicare.
Drastic measures must be taken to keep Medicare sustainable.
I thought the show
was pretty balanced from a bipartisan standpoint and from the standpoint of
possible solutions.
Many of the possible
“solutions” are really too small to really make a dent in the problem. For
example, medical costs can be reduced by one of my favorite solutions of
limiting (like they do in Texas) punitive damage recoveries in malpractice
lawsuits. However, the cost savings are a mere drop in the bucket. Another drop
in the bucket will be the achievable increased savings from decreasing medical
and disability-claim frauds. These are is important solutions, but they are not
solutions that will save the USA.
The big possible
solutions to save the USA are as follows (you and I won’t particularly like
these solutions):
-
Extend retirement age significantly
(75 years maybe?).
When Social Security was enacted, life expectancy was slightly over 65 years
of age.
Now it is well over 75 years of age.
-
Hit Medicare retirees like me with
higher fees for physicians, hospital services, and Medicare D drug payments.
Perhaps this should be on a scale based upon wealth/income levels such that
people, like me, who can afford to pay more must pay more.
-
Greatly curb the biggest cost of
Medicare --- keeping dying people alive in expensive hospitals for a few
weeks or maybe even a few months. Sometimes dying people must be kept alive
in ICU units costing over $10,000 per day when there is no hope of recovery.
There was not any hint of suggesting euthanasia as an alternative. But dying
people can be allowed to die more naturally and pain free.
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5737437n&tag=mncol;lst;3
(wait for the commercials to play out)
-
Limit the National Debt is some way.
It’s now more common in Europe to limit national debt to 60% of GDP. Various
other means of constraining our National Debt were discussed in the CNN
longer version of the IOUSA Solutions video.
Watch for
the other possible solutions in the 30-minute summary video ---
http://www.pgpf.org/newsroom/press/IOUSA-Solutions-Premiers-on-CNN/
(Scroll Down a bit)
Here is the original (and somewhat dated video
that does not delve into solutions very much)
IOUSA (the most frightening movie in American history) ---
(see a 30-minute version of the documentary at
www.iousathemovie.com )
Now the IOUSA Bipartisan Solutions
I suggest that as many people as possible divert their attention from the Tiger
Woods at the Masters Tournament today (April 11) to watch bipartisan proposals
(‘Solutions”) on how to delay the Fall of the United States Empire. By the way,
Bill Bradley was one of the most liberal Democratic senators in the History of
the United States Senate.
Watch the World Premiere
of I.O.U.S.A.: Solutions on CNN
Saturday, April 10, 1:00-3:00 p.m. EST or Sunday, April 11, 3:00-5:00 p.m. EST
 |
Featured Panelists
Include:
-
Peter G. Peterson, Founder and Chairman, Peter G. Peterson
Foundation
-
David Walker, President & CEO, Peter G. Peterson Foundation
-
Sen. Bill Bradley
-
Maya MacGuineas, President of the Committee for a Responsible
Federal Budget
-
Amy Holmes, political contributor for CNN
-
Joe Johns, CNN Congressional Correspondent
-
Diane Lim Rodgers, Chief Economist, Concord Coalition
-
Jeanne Sahadi, senior writer and columnist for CNNMoney.com
|
Watch for
the other possible solutions in the 30-minute summary video ---
http://www.pgpf.org/newsroom/press/IOUSA-Solutions-Premiers-on-CNN/
(Scroll Down a bit)
CBS
Sixty minutes has a great video on the enormous cost of keeping dying people
artificially alive:
High Cost of Dying ---
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5737437n&tag=mncol;lst;3
(wait for the commercials to play out)
Humor Between
May 1 and May 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q2.htm#Humor053110
Humor Between April 1 and April 30, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q2.htm#Humor043010
Humor Between March 1 and March 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q1.htm#Humor033110
Humor Between February 1 and February 28, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q1.htm#Humor022810
Humor Between January 1 and January 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book09q1.htm#Humor013110
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting humor ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#Humor
Fraud
Updates have been posted up to December 31, 2009 ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Also see
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm
"So you
want to get a Ph.D.?" by David Wood, BYU ---
http://www.byuaccounting.net/mediawiki/index.php?title=So_you_want_to_get_a_Ph.D.%3F
Do You
Want to Teach?
---
http://financialexecutives.blogspot.com/2009/05/do-you-want-to-teach.html
Jensen
Comment
Here are some added positives and negatives to consider, especially if you are
currently a practicing accountant considering becoming a professor.
Accountancy Doctoral Program Information from Jim Hasselback ---
http://www.jrhasselback.com/AtgDoctInfo.html
Why must
all accounting doctoral programs be social science (particularly econometrics)
"accountics" doctoral programs?
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
What went
wrong in accounting/accountics research?
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
"The
Accounting Doctoral Shortage: Time for a New Model,"
by Neal Mero, Jan R. Williams and George W. Krull, Jr. .
Issues in Accounting Education 24 (4)
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=IAEXXX000024000004000427000001&idtype=cvips&gifs=Yes&ref=no
ABSTRACT:
The crisis in supply versus demand for doctorally qualified faculty members in
accounting is well documented (Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of
Business [AACSB] 2003a, 2003b; Plumlee et al. 2005; Leslie 2008). Little
progress has been made in addressing this serious challenge facing the
accounting academic community and the accounting profession. Faculty time,
institutional incentives, the doctoral model itself, and research diversity are
noted as major challenges to making progress on this issue. The authors propose
six recommendations, including a new, extramurally funded research program aimed
at supporting doctoral students that functions similar to research programs
supported by such organizations as the National Science Foundation and other
science-based funding sources. The goal is to create capacity, improve
structures for doctoral programs, and provide incentives to enhance doctoral
enrollments. This should lead to an increased supply of graduates while also
enhancing and supporting broad-based research outcomes across the accounting
landscape, including auditing and tax. ©2009 American Accounting Association
Bob
Jensen's threads on accountancy doctoral programs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
Amazing Disgrace
I have written repeatedly about the virtual lack of validity checking of
research published in the academy's leading accounting research journals ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
Validity checking is probably highest for articles published in physical
science research journals and is improving for social science research journals.
There also is aggressive validity checking in some areas of humanities, notably
history.
"Amazing Disgrace," by Scott McLemee, Inside Higher Ed, May 19,
2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/mclemee/mclemee290
Accounting Jobs Information (free site) ---
http://www.accountingjobshelp.com/
Thank you Kim Eaves for the heads up.
Bob Jensen's career helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob1.htm#careers
Adobe's Creative Suite 5 Ships (with educational discounts) ---
http://thejournal.com/articles/2010/04/30/creative-suite-5-ships.aspx
Only a small percentage of college students are "very interested" in buying
and iPad and the competition will soon heat up
"Minor Bumps for iPad," by Steve Kolowich, Inside Higher Ed, April
23, 2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/04/23/ipad
Bob Jensen's threads on electronic book readers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/eBooks.htm
Of course the iPad is more than an electronic book reader, although this is one
of its major features.
I filed this under "Things That Rankle Tax Professor Amy Dunbar at the
University of Connecticut"
"Supreme Court Declines to Hear Textron Work Product Privilege Case,"
Journal of Accountancy, June 2006 ---
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Web/20102952.htm
Another item filed under "Things That Rankle Tax Professor Amy Dunbar at the
University of Connecticut" is the announced retirement of Brooks and Dunn ---
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/2047767/boot_scootin_boogie_hitmakers_brooks.html?cat=33
Boot Scootin' Boogie ---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d05tQrhNMkA
Tax Professor Amy Dunbar Loves Google Docs
May 31, 2010 message from Amy Dunbar
[Amy.Dunbar@BUSINESS.UCONN.EDU]
I just finished the first week of a 12-week MSA
online tax course at UConn. I put students in groups and I ask them to work
fairly lengthy quizzes (homework) independently, putting their answers in an
Excel spreadsheet, and then they meet in chats to discuss their differences.
When they can’t resolve a question, they invite me into chat. This week a
student introduced me to Google docs, and I was swept off my feet by the way
this tool could be used in my class. I love it! I created a video on the fly
on Thursday to illustrate how to create a spreadsheet and share it with
other group members. I may be the last to the party on this tool, but in
case some of you aren’t aware of it, I am posting the video.
http://users.business.uconn.edu/adunbar/videos/GoogleDocs/GoogleDocs.html
If anyone wants the “quiz” that the students
worked, send me an email (not AECM), and I will send you the file.
Amy
Amy Dunbar University of Connecticut School of
Business Department of Accounting 2100 Hillside Road Unit 1041 Storrs, CT
06269-1041
cell 860-208-2737
amy.dunbar@business.uconn.ed
Interactive (online or offline) Homework and Other Student-Friendly
Features of Google Apps
Google Docs has added an equation editor so students
can actually complete math problems within a document, allowing students to not
only write papers that include numbers and equations but also take notes from
quantitative classes using Google Docs. Google has also added the ability to
insert superscripts and subscripts, which can be useful for writing out chemical
compounds or algebraic expressions.
"Google Docs Become More Student-Friendly," by Lena Rao, TechCrunch.com via The
Washington Post, September 28, 2009 ---
Click Here
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/09/28/AR2009092802665.html?wpisrc=newsletter
Google has been aggressively marketing Google Apps
to schools, recently
launching a
centralized site designed to recruit universities and colleges. Now, Google
is
tweaking Google Docs, which is a part of Google
Apps' productivity suite, by adding a few student-friendly features.
Google Docs has added an equation editor so
students can actually complete math problems within a document, allowing
students to not only write papers that include numbers and equations but
also take notes from quantitative classes using Google Docs. Google has also
added the ability to insert superscripts and subscripts, which can be useful
for writing out chemical compounds or algebraic expressions.
Google is also trying to
make Docs appealing to those humanities majors out there by letting users to
select from various bulleting styles for creating outlines and giving
students ability to print footnotes as endnotes for term papers. And a few
weeks ago, Google
launched a translation feature in Google Docs.
As we've written in the
past, Google is wise to recruit educational institutions because that's
where many people get trained, start relying on, and form brand allegiances
to productivity apps. Drawing from Apple's strategy, Google knows that brand
loyalty is definitely forged at these schools and is steadily developing its
products to become more appealing to students. Rival Microsoft is also
launching web-based versions of its Office
products aimed at the student audience. And startup
Zoho offers a free web-based productivity suite.
May 31, 2010 reply from Rick Lillie
[rlillie@CSUSB.EDU]
Hi Amy,
I use Google Docs and Spreadsheets with all of my courses. It's free,
includes most of the Microsoft Office features, and makes it easy for
students to collaborate on team projects. It also makes it easy to submit
the final document in various formats (e.g., .pdf format).
My students use two communication tools in conjunction with Google Docs and
Spreadsheets (i.e., TokBox and Skype). To use these tools, they need a
headset/microphone and webcam.
TokBox (http://www.tokbox.com)
is a free, hosted video messaging service. You can record up to a 10 minute
video clip that can be shared by URL link. TokBox also includes a video
chat feature that enables multiple people to video conference. This feature
works great with study teams.
Skype (http://www.skype.com)
includes chat, audio and video-conferencing. The chat feature works
probably better than what you have been using. With a headset/microphone,
you can have up to 10+ people in a audio conference call.
Video-conferencing is 1:1 and includes a great screen sharing feature.
You can really change the nature of team collaboration when you combine
Google Docs and Spreadsheets with TokBox and/or Skype. Following is an
example of how to do this.
EXAMPLE
Students use Google Docs to create a shared workspace for writing a paper.
One student sets up the workspace and invites team members into the space
through an email link. Each team member is given editor rights.
Using a headset/microphone and webcam, students use TokBox to host a group
video conference call. This enables students to brainstorm and get a
project running.
During the work process, each team member adds/changes the paper in the
common workspace in Google Docs.
When it is time to pull the paper together and do final editing, students
use the audio conference call feature to talk with each other. While all
are online in Skype, each team member logs into the Google Docs paper and
views it on his/her computer screen. One or more students act as the
editor. All see changes as they are made.
When editing is finished, one student exports the final assignment document
in .pdf format to his/her hard drive. The student then submits the document
for grading (e.g., student uploads the paper through the Digital Drop Box in
Blackboard).
OUTCOME
By combining the features of Google Docs and Spreadsheets with communication
tools like TokBox and Skype, students learn how to use technology to get
things done. Major companies pay a fortune to do what your students can do
for free. Purchasing a headset/microphone and webcam is relatively
inexpensive. The experience students get is priceless.
I use this approach and technology tools with face-2-face, blended, and
online classes. It works great. The approach changes the nature of how
students and instructor interact in the teaching-learning experience.
Rick Lillie, MAS,
Ed.D., CPA
Assistant Professor of Accounting
Coordinator, Master of Science in Accountancy
CSUSB, CBPA, Department of Accounting & Finance
5500 University Parkway, JB-547
San Bernardino, CA. 92407-2397
Email:
rlillie@csusb.edu
Telephone: (909) 537-5726Skype (Username): ricklillie
On the last day of
class, I would love to hear my students say:
“I never thought I could work so hard. I never thought I could learn so
much. I never thought I could think so deeply. And, it was actually fun.”
(Joe Hoyle)
Bob Jensen's threads on Tricks and Tools of the Trade are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
Innovation in Website Design
"Bucknell U. Wins Webby Award for Virtual Tour," by Andrea Fuller,
Chronicle of Higher Education, May 6, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/Bucknell-U-Wins-Webby-Award/23740/?sid=wc&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
What do Roger Ebert and Jim Carrey have in common
with Bucknell University? They all just won Webby Awards from the
International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences, picked from over 10,000
entries.
Bucknell won in the category of best school or
university Web
site. The academy specifically praised Bucknell's
virtual tour.
Visitors to the site can click buttons to complete
sentences that describe their interests and characteristics. The site then
shows visitors a campus map, with arrows pointing to programs and areas at
the university in which those interests might be developed. Visitors can
then read related blurbs about Bucknell and click on mutimedia describing
the Bucknell experience.
Bob Jensen's updates on education technology ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Nobel Laureate Gary Becker and Judge Richard Posner disagree over prospects
of a VAT tax ---
Becker:
http://uchicagolaw.typepad.com/beckerposner/2010/04/should-the-us-introduce-a-value-added-tax-becker.html
Posner:
http://uchicagolaw.typepad.com/beckerposner/2010/04/should-the-united-states-institute-a-federal-valueadded-tax-posner.html
Jensen Comment
I'm will Posner on this!
"The Web Shatters Focus, Rewires Brains," by Nicholas Carr, Wired
Magazine, June 2010 ---
http://www.wired.com/magazine/2010/05/ff_nicholas_carr/all/1
During the winter of 2007, a UCLA professor of
psychiatry named Gary Small recruited six volunteers—three experienced Web
surfers and three novices—for a study on brain activity. He gave each a pair
of goggles onto which Web pages could be projected. Then he slid his
subjects, one by one, into the cylinder of a whole-brain magnetic resonance
imager and told them to start searching the Internet. As they used a
handheld keypad to Google various preselected topics—the nutritional
benefits of chocolate, vacationing in the Galapagos Islands, buying a new
car—the MRI scanned their brains for areas of high activation, indicated by
increases in blood flow.
The two groups showed marked differences. Brain
activity of the experienced surfers was far more extensive than that of the
newbies, particularly in areas of the prefrontal cortex associated with
problem-solving and decisionmaking. Small then had his subjects read normal
blocks of text projected onto their goggles; in this case, scans revealed no
significant difference in areas of brain activation between the two groups.
The evidence suggested, then, that the distinctive neural pathways of
experienced Web users had developed because of their Internet use.
The most remarkable result of the experiment
emerged when Small repeated the tests six days later. In the interim, the
novices had agreed to spend an hour a day online, searching the Internet.
The new scans revealed that their brain activity had changed dramatically;
it now resembled that of the veteran surfers. “Five hours on the Internet
and the naive subjects had already rewired their brains,” Small wrote. He
later repeated all the tests with 18 more volunteers and got the same
results.
When first publicized, the findings were greeted
with cheers. By keeping lots of brain cells buzzing, Google seemed to be
making people smarter. But as Small was careful to point out, more brain
activity is not necessarily better brain activity. The real revelation was
how quickly and extensively Internet use reroutes people’s neural pathways.
“The current explosion of digital technology not only is changing the way we
live and communicate,” Small concluded, “but is rapidly and profoundly
altering our brains.”
What kind of brain is the Web giving us? That
question will no doubt be the subject of a great deal of research in the
years ahead. Already, though, there is much we know or can surmise—and the
news is quite disturbing. Dozens of studies by psychologists,
neurobiologists, and educators point to the same conclusion: When we go
online, we enter an environment that promotes cursory reading, hurried and
distracted thinking, and superficial learning. Even as the Internet grants
us easy access to vast amounts of information, it is turning us into
shallower thinkers, literally changing the structure of our brain.
Back in the 1980s, when schools began investing
heavily in computers, there was much enthusiasm about the apparent
advantages of digital documents over paper ones. Many educators were
convinced that introducing hyperlinks into text displayed on monitors would
be a boon to learning. Hypertext would strengthen critical thinking, the
argument went, by enabling students to switch easily between different
viewpoints. Freed from the lockstep reading demanded by printed pages,
readers would make all sorts of new intellectual connections between diverse
works. The hyperlink would be a technology of liberation.
By the end of the decade, the enthusiasm was
turning to skepticism. Research was painting a fuller, very different
picture of the cognitive effects of hypertext. Navigating linked documents,
it turned out, entails a lot of mental calisthenics—evaluating hyperlinks,
deciding whether to click, adjusting to different formats—that are
extraneous to the process of reading. Because it disrupts concentration,
such activity weakens comprehension. A 1989 study showed that readers tended
just to click around aimlessly when reading something that included
hypertext links to other selected pieces of information. A 1990 experiment
revealed that some “could not remember what they had and had not read.”
Even though the World Wide Web has made hypertext
ubiquitous and presumably less startling and unfamiliar, the cognitive
problems remain. Research continues to show that people who read linear text
comprehend more, remember more, and learn more than those who read text
peppered with links. In a 2001 study, two scholars in Canada asked 70 people
to read “The Demon Lover,” a short story by Elizabeth Bowen. One group read
it in a traditional linear-text format; they’d read a passage and click the
word next to move ahead. A second group read a version in which they had to
click on highlighted words in the text to move ahead. It took the hypertext
readers longer to read the document, and they were seven times more likely
to say they found it confusing. Another researcher, Erping Zhu, had people
read a passage of digital prose but varied the number of links appearing in
it. She then gave the readers a multiple-choice quiz and had them write a
summary of what they had read. She found that comprehension declined as the
number of links increased—whether or not people clicked on them. After all,
whenever a link appears, your brain has to at least make the choice not to
click, which is itself distracting.
Continued in article (including hot links not provided above)
Why must we worry about the hiring-away pipeline?
Credit Rating Agencies ----
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_rating_agency
A credit rating agency (CRA) is a
company that assigns
credit ratings for
issuers of certain types of
debt obligations as well as the debt instruments
themselves. In some cases, the servicers of the underlying
debt are also given ratings. In most cases, the
issuers of
securities are companies,
special purpose entities, state and local
governments,
non-profit organizations, or national governments
issuing debt-like securities (i.e.,
bonds) that can be traded on a
secondary market. A credit rating for an issuer
takes into consideration the issuer's
credit worthiness (i.e., its ability to pay back a
loan), and affects the
interest rate applied to the particular security
being issued. (In contrast to CRAs, a company that issues
credit scores for individual credit-worthiness is
generally called a
credit bureau or
consumer credit reporting agency.) The value of
such ratings has been widely questioned after the 2008 financial crisis. In
2003 the
Securities and Exchange Commission submitted a
report to Congress detailing plans to launch an investigation into the
anti-competitive practices of credit rating agencies and issues including
conflicts of interest.
Agencies that assign credit ratings for
corporations include:
How to Get AAA Ratings on Junk Bonds
- Pay cash under the table to credit rating agencies
- Promise a particular credit rating agency future multi-million
contracts for rating future issues of bonds
- Hire away top-level credit rating agency
employees with insider information and great networks inside the credit
rating agencies
By now it is widely known that the big credit rating agencies (like Moody's,
Standard & Poor's, and Fitch) that rate bonds as AAA to BBB to Junk were
unethically selling AAA ratings to CDO mortgage-sliced bonds that should've been
rated Junk. Up to now I thought the credit rating agencies were merely selling
out for cash or to maintain "goodwill" with their best customers to giant Wall
Street banks and investment banks like Lehman Bros., AIG., Merrill Lynch, Bear
Stearns, Goldman Sachs, etc. ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#Sleaze
But it turns out that the credit rating agencies were also in that "hiring-away"
pipeline.
Wall
Street banks and nvestment banks were employing a questionable tactic used by
large clients of auditing firms. It is common for large clients to hire away the
lead auditors of their CPA auditing firms. This is a questionable practice,
although the intent in most instances (we hope) is to obtain accounting experts
rather than to influence the rigor of the audits themselves. The tactic is much
more common and much more sinister when corporations hire away top-level
government employees of regulating agencies like the FDA, FAA, FPC, EPA, etc.
This is a tactic used by industry to gain more control and influence over its
regulating agency. Current regulating government employees
who get too tough on industry will, thereby, be cutting off their chances of
getting future high compensation offers from the companies they now regulate.
The
investigations of credit rating agencies by the New York Attorney General and
current Senate hearings, however, are revealing that the hiring-away tactic was
employed by Wall Street Banks for more sinister purposes in order to get AAA
ratings on junk bonds. Top-level employees of the credit rating agencies were
lured away with enormous salary offers if they could use their insider networks
in the credit rating agencies so that higher credit ratings could be stamped on
junk bonds.
"Rating Agency Data Aided Wall Street in
Deals," The New York Times, April 24, 2010 ---
http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/24/rating-agency-data-aided-wall-street-in-deals/#more-214847
One of the mysteries of the financial crisis is how
mortgage investments that turned out to be so bad earned credit ratings that
made them look so good, The New York Times’s Gretchen Morgenson and Louise
Story
report. One answer is that Wall Street was given
access to the formulas behind those magic ratings —
and hired away some of the very people who had devised
them.
In essence, banks started with the answers and
worked backward, reverse-engineering top-flight ratings for investments that
were, in some cases, riskier than ratings suggested, according to former
agency employees.
Read More »
"Credit rating agencies
should not be dupes," Reuters, May 13, 2010 ---
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE64C4W320100513
THE PROFIT INCENTIVE
In fact, rating agencies sometimes discouraged
analysts from asking too many questions, critics have said.
In testimony last month before a Senate
subcommittee, Eric Kolchinsky, a former Moody's ratings analyst, claimed
that he was fired by the rating agency for being too harsh on a series of
deals and costing the company market share.
Rating agencies spent too much time looking for
profit and market share, instead of monitoring credit quality, said David
Reiss, a professor at Brooklyn Law School who has done extensive work on
subprime mortgage lending.
"It was incestuous -- banks and rating agencies had
a mutual profit motive, and if the agency didn't go along with a bank, it
would be punished."
The Senate amendment passed on Thursday aims to
prevent that dynamic in the future, by having a government clearinghouse
that assigns issuers to rating agencies instead of allowing issuers to
choose which agencies to work with.
For investigators to portray rating agencies as
victims is "far fetched," and what needs to be fixed runs deeper than banks
fooling ratings analysts, said Daniel Alpert, a banker at Westwood Capital.
"It's a structural problem," Alpert said.
Continued in article
Also see
http://blogs.reuters.com/reuters-dealzone/
Jensen Comment
CPA auditing firms have much to worry about these investigations and pending new
regulations of credit rating agencies.
Firstly, auditing firms are at the higher end
of the tort lawyer food chain. If credit rating agencies lose class action
lawsuits by investors, the credit rating agencies themselves will sue the bank
auditors who certified highly misleading financial statements that greatly
underestimated load losses. In fact, top level analysts are now claiming that
certified Wall Street Bank financial statement were pure fiction:
"Calpers
Sues Over Ratings of Securities," by Leslie Wayne, The New York Times,
July 14, 2009 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/15/business/15calpers.html
Secondly, the CPA profession must begin to question the ethics of allowing
lead CPA auditors to become high-level executives of clients such as when a lead
Ernst & Young audit partner jumped ship to become the CFO of Lehman Bros. and as
CFO devised the questionable Repo 105 contracts that were then audited/reviewed
by Ernst & Yound auditors. Above you read that: "In
fact, rating agencies sometimes discouraged analysts from asking too many
questions, critics have said." We must also
worry that former auditors sometimes discourage current auditors from asking too
many questions.
http://retheauditors.com/2010/03/15/liberte-egalite-fraternite-lehman-brothers-troubles-for-ernst-young-threaten-the-big-4-fraternity/
Credit rating of CDO mortgage-sliced bonds
turned into fiction writing by hired away raters!
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!
At the height of the mortgage boom, companies like
Goldman offered million-dollar pay packages to
(credit agency) workers like Mr. Yukawa
who had been working at much lower pay at the rating agencies, according to
several former workers at the agencies.
In some cases, once these (former credit
agency) workers were at the banks, they had dealings
with their former colleagues at the agencies. In the fall of 2007, when banks
were hard-pressed to get mortgage deals done, the Fitch analyst on a Goldman
deal was a friend of Mr. Yukawa, according to two people with knowledge of the
situation.
"Prosecutors Ask if 8 Banks Duped Rating Agencies," by Louise Story,
The New York Times, May 12, 2010 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/13/business/13street.html
The New York attorney general has started an
investigation of eight banks to determine whether they provided misleading
information to rating agencies in order to inflate the grades of certain
mortgage securities, according to two people with knowledge of the
investigation.
The investigation parallels federal inquiries into
the business practices of a broad range of financial companies in the years
before the collapse of the housing market.
Where those investigations have focused on
interactions between the banks and their clients who bought mortgage
securities, this one expands the scope of scrutiny to the interplay between
banks and the agencies that rate their securities.
The agencies themselves have been widely criticized
for overstating the quality of many mortgage securities that ended up losing
money once the housing market collapsed. The inquiry by the attorney general
of New York,
Andrew M. Cuomo,
suggests that he thinks the agencies may have been duped by one or more of
the targets of his investigation.
Those targets are
Goldman Sachs,
Morgan Stanley,
UBS,
Citigroup, Credit Suisse,
Deutsche Bank, Crédit Agricole and
Merrill Lynch, which is now owned by
Bank of America.
The companies that rated the mortgage deals are
Standard & Poor’s,
Fitch Ratings and
Moody’s Investors Service. Investors used their
ratings to decide whether to buy mortgage securities.
Mr. Cuomo’s investigation
follows an article in The New York Times that
described some of the techniques bankers used to get more positive
evaluations from the rating agencies.
Mr. Cuomo is also interested in the revolving door
of employees of the rating agencies who were hired by bank mortgage desks to
help create mortgage deals that got better ratings than they deserved, said
the people with knowledge of the investigation, who were not authorized to
discuss it publicly.
Contacted after subpoenas were issued by Mr.
Cuomo’s office notifying the banks of his investigation, representatives for
Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse, UBS and Deutsche Bank declined to comment.
Other banks did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
In response to questions for the Times article in
April, a Goldman Sachs spokesman, Samuel Robinson, said: “Any suggestion
that Goldman Sachs improperly influenced rating agencies is without
foundation. We relied on the independence of the ratings agencies’ processes
and the ratings they assigned.”
Goldman, which is already under investigation by
federal prosecutors, has been defending itself against civil fraud
accusations made in a complaint last month by the
Securities and Exchange Commission. The deal at
the heart of that complaint — called Abacus 2007-AC1 — was devised in part
by a former Fitch Ratings employee named Shin Yukawa, whom Goldman recruited
in 2005.
At the height of the mortgage boom, companies like
Goldman offered million-dollar pay packages to workers like Mr. Yukawa who
had been working at much lower pay at the rating agencies, according to
several former workers at the agencies.
Around the same time that Mr. Yukawa left Fitch,
three other analysts in his unit also joined financial companies like
Deutsche Bank.
In some cases, once these workers were at the
banks, they had dealings with their former colleagues at the agencies. In
the fall of 2007, when banks were hard-pressed to get mortgage deals done,
the Fitch analyst on a Goldman deal was a friend of Mr. Yukawa, according to
two people with knowledge of the situation.
Mr. Yukawa did not respond to requests for comment.
A Fitch spokesman said Thursday that the firm would cooperate with Mr.
Cuomo’s inquiry.
Wall Street played a crucial role in the mortgage
market’s path to collapse. Investment banks bundled mortgage loans into
securities and then often rebundled those securities one or two more times.
Those securities were given high ratings and sold to investors, who have
since lost billions of dollars on them.
. . .
At Goldman, there was even a phrase for the way
bankers put together mortgage securities. The practice was known as “ratings
arbitrage,” according to former workers. The idea was to find ways to put
the very worst bonds into a deal for a given rating. The cheaper the bonds,
the greater the profit to the bank.
The rating agencies may have facilitated the banks’
actions by publishing their rating models on their corporate Web sites. The
agencies argued that being open about their models offered transparency to
investors.
But several former agency workers said the practice
put too much power in the bankers’ hands. “The models were posted for
bankers who develop C.D.O.’s to be able to reverse engineer C.D.O.’s to a
certain rating,” one former rating agency employee said in an interview,
referring to
collateralized debt obligations.
A central concern of investors in these securities
was the diversification of the deals’ loans. If a C.D.O. was based on mostly
similar bonds — like those holding mortgages from one region — investors
would view it as riskier than an instrument made up of more diversified
assets. Mr. Cuomo’s office plans to investigate whether the bankers
accurately portrayed the diversification of the mortgage loans to the rating
agencies.
Question
Can any of you identify the mystery "Fraud Girl" who will be writing a weekly
(Sunday) column for Simoleon Sense?
Hint
She seems to have a Chicago connection and seems very well informed about the
blog posts of Francine McKenna.
http://retheauditors.com/
But I really do know know who is the mystery "Fraud Girl."
"Guest Post: Fraud Girl Says, “Regulators, Ignore the Masses — It’s Your
Responsibility!!”
(A New SimoleonSense Series on Fraud, Forensic Accounting, and Ethics)
Simoleon Sense, April 25, 2010 ---
Click Here
http://www.simoleonsense.com/guest-post-fraud-girl-says-regulators-ignore-the-masses-it%e2%80%99s-your-responsibility-must-follow-series-on-fraud-forensic-accounting-and-ethics/
I’m exceptionally proud to introduce you to Fraud
Girl, our new Sunday columnist. She will write about all things corp
governance, fraud, accounting, and business ethics. To give you some
background (and although I can not reveal her identity). Fraud girl recently
visited me in Chicago for the Harry Markopolos presentation to the local
CFA. We were incredibly lucky to meet with Mr. Markopolos and enjoyed 3
hours of drinks and accounting talk. Needless to say Fraud Girl was leading
the conversation and I was trying to keep up. After a brainstorm session I
persuaded her to write for us and teach us about wall street screw-ups.
So watch out, shes smart, witty, and passionate
about making the world a better place. I think Sundays just got a lot
better…
Miguel Barbosa
Founder of SimoleonSense
P.S. For Questions or Comments: Reach fraud girl at:
FraudGirl@simoleonsense.com
Regulators, Ignore the Masses — It’s Your Responsibility
Men in general judge more by the sense of
sight than by the sense of touch, because everyone can see but only
a few can test feeling. Everyone sees what you seem to be, few know
what you really are; and those few do not dare take a stand against
the general opinion, supported by the majesty of the government. In
the actions of all men, and especially of princes who are not
subject to a court of appeal, we must always look to the end. Let a
prince, therefore, win victories and uphold his state; his methods
will always be considered worthy, and everyone will praise them,
because the masses are always impressed by the superficial
appearance of things, and by the outcome of an enterprise. And the
world consists of nothing but the masses; the few have no influence
when the many feel secure.
-Niccolo Machiavelli,
The Prince
Why are Machiavelli’s words so astonishingly
prophetic? How does a 500 year old quote explain contagion, bubbles, and
Ponzi schemes? Do financial decision makers consciously overlook reality or
do they merely postpone due diligence? That is the purpose of this series —
to analyze financial fraud(s) and question business ethics.
Recent accounting scandals i.e. Worldcom, Enron,
Madoff, reveal a variety of methods for boosting short term performance at
the expense of long run shareholder value. WorldCom recorded bogus revenue,
Enron boosted their operating income through improper classifications, and
Madoff ran the largest Ponzi scheme in history. Sure these scandals were
unethical, deceived the public, and made a ton of money. But what is the
most striking similarity? Each of these companies was seen as the golden
goose egg; an indestructible force that could never fail. Of course, the key
word is “seen”, regulators, attorneys, financial analysts, and auditors
failed to see reality. But why?
Fiduciaries are entrusted with protecting the
public and shareholders from crooks like Skilling, Pavlo, and Schrushy. An
average shareholder lacks the knowledge and expertise of a prominent
regulator, right? Shareholders don’t perform the company’s annual audit,
review all legal documentation, or communicate with top executives. No,
shareholders base their decisions off information that is “accurate” and
“meticulously examined”.
Unfortunately in each of these instances regulators
failed to take a stand against consensus and became another ignorant face in
the crowd. “Everyone sees what you seem to be, few know what you really are;
and those few do not dare take a stand against the general opinion”. Who are
the few that really know who these companies are? The answer should be
evident. What isn’t clear is why these cowardly few are in charge of
overseeing our financial markets.
When Auditors Look The Other Way
A week ago, I came across this article:
Ernst & Young defends its Lehman work in letter to clients.
I chuckled as I was reading it, remembering Roxie Hart
from the play Chicago shouting the words “Not Guilty” to anyone who would
listen. Like Roxie, the audit team pleaded that the media was inaccurate. In
recording Lehman’s Repo 105 transactions, they claimed compliance with GAAP
and believed the financial statements were ‘fairly represented’. But, fair
reporting is more than complying with GAAP. Often auditors are “compliant”
while cooking the books (a mystery that still eludes me). In this case, the
auditors blatantly covered their eyes and closed their ears to what they
must have known was deliberate misrepresentation of Lehman Brother’s
financial statements.
We will explore the Lehman Brothers fiasco in next
week’s post…but here’s the condensed version. Days prior to quarter end,
Lehman Brothers used “Repo 105” transactions, which allowed them to lend
assets to others in exchange for short-term cash. They borrowed around $50
Billion; none of which appeared on their balance sheet. Lehman instead
reported the debt as sales. They used the borrowed cash to pay down other
debt. This reduced both their total liabilities and total assets, thereby
lowering their leverage ratio.
This was allegedly in compliance with SFAS 140,
Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and
Extinguishments of Liabilities that allowed Lehman to move the $50 Billion
of assets from its balance sheet. As long as they followed the rules,
auditors could stamp [the] financial statements with a “Fairly Represented”
approval and issue an unqualified opinion.
Clearly in this case complying was unethical and
probably illegal.
Howard Schilit, the author of Financial Shenanigans:
How to Detect Accounting Gimmicks & Fraud in Financial Reports,
once said, “You [the auditor] work for the investor, even though you are
paid by someone else”. He insists that auditors should look beyond the
checklists and guidelines and should instead question everything. Auditors
are the first line of defense against fraud and the shareholders are
dependent upon the quality of their services. So I ask again, with respect
to Lehman Brothers, were the auditors working for the investors or where
they in the pockets of senior management?
What can we do?
An admired value investor believes in a similar
tactic for confirming the honesty of companies. It’s known as “killing the
company”, where in his words, “we think of all the ways the company can die,
whether it’s stupid management or overleveraged balance sheets. If we can’t
figure out a way to kill the company, then you have the beginning of a good
investment”. Auditors must think like this, they must kill the company, and
question everything. If you can’t kill a company, then (and only then) are
the financial statements truly a fair representation of the firms
operations.
There was no “killing” going on when the lead
auditing partner said that his team did not approve Lehman’s Accounting
Policy regarding Repo 105s but was in some way comfortable enough with them
to audit their financial statements. This engagement team failed in looking
beyond SFAS 140 and should have realized what every law firm (aside from one
firm in London) was stating; that the accounting methods Lehman Brothers
used to record Repo 105s were a deliberate attempt to defraud the public.
So I repeat: Ignoring reality is not an option.
Ignoring the crowd, however, is an obligation.
See you next week….
-Fraud Girl
Bob Jensen's threads on fraud are linked at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm
Bob Jensen's Fraud Updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting news are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
"Guest Post: Fraud Girl – When The Financial Industry’s “Astrologers” Fail
Us… Who’s Left To Analyze Credit Risk?" Fraud Girl, Simoleon Sense, May 30,
2010 ---
Click Here
http://www.simoleonsense.com/guest-post-fraud-girl-when-the-financial-industry%e2%80%99s-%e2%80%9castrologers%e2%80%9d-fail-us%e2%80%a6-whos-left-to-analyze-credit-risk/
In light of Buffet
testifying
before the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, it’s
only fitting to discuss the credit rating agencies and how Congress is
considering fixing their “moral hazards”.
The Start of It
All: “Doing it for the Money”
At the peak of the
housing boom, credit rating agencies began reevaluating their AAA debt
ratings. In 2006, agencies like S&P and Moody’s were forced to redo their
models but nothing was significantly changed. At the height of the crisis,
it was apparent that these ratings were incorrect and as a result a
“whopping 91% of AAA-rated mortgage securities were downgraded to junk
status”. Because these credit agencies are so highly relied upon by Wall
Street, a shock spread across the market. It wasn’t long before the entire
financial system was in midst of a collapse.
The government began an inquiry on the credit agencies
failure to properly assess credit risk. As noted in an
article
from CNN, emails began to surface that agencies
knew that the crisis was
forming but kept company’s ratings high anyway. In one email, and employee
wrote:
“This is
frightening. It wreaks of greed, unregulated brokers, and ‘not so prudent’
lenders”
Why weren’t the
agencies doing their jobs? They had no incentive to. Agencies get paid from
the company’s they rate. If an agency downgrades their reliability, the
company will stop paying for the ratings.
Ideas on How to
Fix the Problem
I found a post via The Baseline Scenario blog:
Reforming Credit Rating Agencies.
Former analyst and then managing director at Moody’s
Investors Service, Gary Witt, discusses what Congress wants to implement to
resolve the credit agency issues as well as his opinion on the matter.
The Financial Stability
Act of 2010 addresses what Congress believes should be done… including
making the SEC responsible for examining the agencies at least once a year
and making key findings public. It will also give the SEC the power to fine
agencies for any wrongdoing they find.
Witt addresses the same
concerns I do. He believes that having the SEC oversee the credit agencies
is necessary but is uncertain as to whether they have the right
qualifications to take that responsibility. We have seen what damage can
occur when employees not experienced in Wall Street attempt to regulate the
market (i.e. Bernie Madoff). We have learned that regulators aren’t asking
the right questions and until they are educated enough as to how to ask
those questions, they should not be asked to hold responsibility for our
financial markets. If the SEC is going to take over, they are going to need
well-experienced rating agents and must provide them with an incentive to
work there.
Witt first suggests
that we eliminate AAA ratings. How could anyone be sure that an instrument
is 100% riskless? Witt instead believes there should be five simple
categories to rate credit risk:
“A for securities
expected to lose under 0.1%, B for expected losses between 0.1% and 1%, C
for expected losses from 1% to 5%, D for expected losses from 5% to 10% and
F for securities expected losses between 10% and 20%.”
If a credit agency
performs poorly (i.e. rates credit an A that ended up in a loss), then the
SEC can fine them. Though the agencies are still being paid by the companies
themselves, they have more of an incentive to make accurate predictions.
Another option is to
get rid of the agencies. I find this option more appealing.
The financial industry
has placed too much trust in these agencies. Credit agencies are simply
financial astrologists attempting to predict the future. An agency telling
you an instrument is AAA rated does not mean that you should believe it.
Always ask the right
questions: Where did this information come from? How did they make their
decisions? What types of models do they use to come to these conclusions? If
these types of questions were asked prior to the collapse, many investors
would have realized that these ratings made no sense.
Individuals must
perform the necessary research in order to determine their own judgments of
risk. The problem we are having is that we have too much confidence in the
regulators, auditors, agencies, etc. when most are falling short of their
responsibilities.
Have any ideas on how to resolve the credit agency
problems? Send me an email at fraudgirl [at]
simoleonsense.com.
See you next week.
- Fraud Girl
Bob Jensen's Rotten to the Core threads on banks and investment banks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Bob Jensen's Rotten to the Core threads on credit rating agencies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#CreditRatingAgencies
Bad Role
Models for Our Children
"How Many Times Did Sen. Levin Say 'Sh**ty Deal'? by Cindy Perman,
CNBC, April 28. 2010 ---
How Many Times Did Sen. Levin Say 'Sh**ty Deal'?
No matter how you feel about Goldman's behavior, use of uncouth and filthy
language by government leaders and our media sets a low bar for decency.
Goldman's defender, Warren Buffet, thinks the Goldman deal does not even smell.
Boo to Warren on this one! Personally I don't think that Goldman's swap
construction on this one passes the smell test.
Bob Jensen's threads on the latest Goldman scandal are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
"Keeping Fraud in the Cross Hairs," by Joseph T. Wells (Interviewed) ,
Journal of Accountancy, June 2010 ---
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Issues/2010/Jun/20102852.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on fraud are linked at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm
Video: The Greek Economic Crisis
Explained ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/video-the-greek-crisis-explained/
Video Lunch with a Laureate: Famous Financial Researcher Robert Merton ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/lunch-with-a-laureate-famous-financial-researcher-robert-merton/
Phil McKinney: Hacking the Future (Fora TV) ---
http://fora.tv/2010/05/22/Phil_McKinney_Hacking_the_Future
AICPA Hotline Questions and Answers on Ethics for Your Accounting Students
"Test Your Knowledge of Professional Ethics," by Jason Evans, Journal
of Accountancy, June 2010 ---
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Issues/2010/Jun/20102778.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on professionalism in accountancy ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Professionalism
Inefficiencies in the Information Thicket
"Inefficiencies in the Information Thicket: A Case Study of Derivative
Disclosures During the Financial Crisis," by Robert P. Bartlett III, Harvard
Law School Forum, May 27, 2010 ---
http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/corpgov/2010/05/27/inefficiencies-in-the-information-thicket/
In the paper, Inefficiencies in the Information
Thicket: A Case Study of Derivative Disclosures During the Financial Crisis,
which was recently made publicly available on SSRN, I provide an empirical
examination of the effect of enhanced derivative disclosures by examining
the disclosure experience of the monoline insurance industry in 2008.
Conventional wisdom concerning the causes of the Financial Crisis posits
that insufficient disclosure concerning firms’ exposure to complex credit
derivatives played a key role in creating the uncertainty that plagued the
financial sector in the fall of 2008. To help avert future financial crises,
regulatory proposals aimed at containing systemic risk have accordingly
focused on enhanced derivative disclosures as a critical reform measure. A
central challenge facing these proposals, however, has been understanding
whether enhanced derivative disclosures can have any meaningful effect given
the complexity of credit derivative transactions.
Like AIG Financial Products, monoline insurance
companies wrote billions of dollars of credit default swaps on multi-sector
CDOs tied to residential home mortgages, but unlike AIG, their unique status
as financial guarantee companies subjected them to considerable disclosure
obligations concerning their individual credit derivative exposures. As a
result, the experience of the monoline industry during the Financial Crisis
provides an ideal setting with which to test the efficacy of reforms aimed
at promoting more elaborate derivative disclosures.
Overall, the results of this study indicate that
investors in monoline insurers showed little evidence of using a firm’s
derivative disclosures to efficiently resolve uncertainty about a monoline’s
exposure to credit risk. In particular, analysis of the abnormal returns to
Ambac Financial (one of the largest monoline insurers) surrounding a series
of significant, multi-notch rating downgrades of its insured CDOs reveals no
significant stock price reactions until Ambac itself announced the effect of
these downgrades in its quarterly earnings announcements. Similar analyses
of Ambac’s short-selling data and changes in the cost of insuring Ambac debt
securities against default also confirm the absence of a market reaction
following these downgrade announcements.
Based on a qualitative examination of how investors
process derivative disclosures, to the extent the complexity of CDOs impeded
informational efficiency, it was most likely due to the generally low
salience of individual CDOs as well as the logistic (although not
necessarily analytic) challenge of processing a CDO’s disclosures. Reform
efforts aimed at enhancing derivative disclosures should accordingly focus
on mechanisms to promote the rapid collection and compilation of disclosed
information as well as the psychological processes by which information
obtains salience.
The paper is available for download from
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1585953
Bob Jensen's tutorials on accounting for derivative financial instruments
and hedging activities ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
On May 26, 2010, the FASB issued a proposed Accounting Standards Update,
Accounting for Financial Instruments and Revisions to the Accounting for
Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities, setting out its proposed
comprehensive approach to financial instrument classification and measurement,
and impairment, and revisions to hedge accounting. Also, extensive new
presentation and disclosure requirements are proposed.
Here’s a “brief” from PwC on the new May 26 ED from the FASB ---
Click Here
http://cfodirect.pwc.com/CFODirectWeb/Controller.jpf?ContentCode=THUG-85UVWW&SecNavCode=MSRA-84YH44&ContentType=Content
PwC points out some of the major differences between these
proposed FASB revisions versus the IASB provisions.
Click Here to download the ED http://snipurl.com/fasb5-26-2010
From:
Jensen, Robert
Sent: Friday, May 28, 2010 6:39 AM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: May 26 FASB ED Mush http://snipurl.com/fasb5-26-2010
Hi again Paul,
Subject the May 26 FASB ED
http://snipurl.com/fasb5-26-2010
Thank you Paul for telling me this ED was finally released …. On second
thought a “thank you” for this mush is being too polite.
It will be interesting to compare the comment letters
sent to the FASB regarding this mush with the comment letters sent in on an
earlier (2008) ED ---
http://www.fasb.org/jsp/FASB/CommentLetter_C/CommentLetterPage&cid=1218220137090&project_id=1590-100
Some comments might be carbon copies with new dates.
But watch for the comments that change between the 2008 ED versus the new
2010 ED.
For corporations that prefer mush to standards, I predict some glowing
praise for going carte blanch on financial instruments standards.
It was late yesterday when I rushed out a reply to you
that appears at the bottom of this current update message. I corrected a
couple of bothersome typos.
Hedge accounting basically means that changes in the
fair value of the hedging derivative get charged to AOCI rather than current
earnings to eliminate earnings volatility due to hedging contracts that have
not yet net settled. For example, firms that lock in future commodity prices
or interest rates with a forward, futures, swap, or possibly an option
contract will not see earnings fluctuate wildly because they hedged cash
flows of forecasted transactions. But the AOCI can be charged only to the
extent that the hedge is effective. Ineffectiveness must be charged to
current earnings.
Those who want to see hedge effectiveness testing under
the 80-125 bright line dollar offset guide (that was written into the
original IAS 39) and implied in FAS 133 may do so at the following links:
Bob Jensen’s Amendment to the
Teaching Note prepared by Smith and Kohlbeck for the following case:
“Accounting for Derivatives and Hedging Activities Comparisons of Cash Flow
Versus Fair Value Accounting,” by Pamela A. Smith and Mark J. Kohlbeck
Issues in Accounting Education, Volume 23, Number 1, February
2008, pp. 103-118
Bob Jensen's Amendment is at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/CaseAmendment.htm
Also scroll down to the term
“Ineffectiveness” in my glossary at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm#I-Terms
Some hedges are
likely to be more effective than others. These usually include forward,
futures, and swap contracts. Purchased options are notoriously ineffective
due, in large measure, to the conservatism of commodity traders vis-à-vis
commodity options traders. Commodities contracts and commodities options
contracts are traded in separate markets. Because options are so notoriously
ineffective as hedges, most companies only charge intrinsic value
portions of price changes of options (when the options are in-the-money) to
AOCI and charge changes in time value to current earnings. Under the
80-125 dollar offset rule, purchased options would otherwise not generally
be eligible for any hedge accounting relief. The Smith and Kohlbeck case
cited above illustrates how options rarely meet the 80-125 test. Smith and
Kohlbeck simplified their case to their peril by not testing for hedge
effectiveness. Virtually all their hedges were in fact ineffective. The case
now makes a good example of what can happen if hedge effectiveness testing
is ignored.
Paragraph 146 of the original IAS 39 reads as follows:
146. A hedge is normally regarded as highly effective if, at
inception and throughout the life of the hedge, the enterprise can expect
changes in the fair value or cash flows of the hedged item to be almost
fully offset by the changes in the fair value or cash flows of the hedging
instrument, and actual results are within a range of 80 per cent to 125 per
cent. For example, if the loss on the hedging instrument is 120 and the gain
on the cash instrument is 100, offset can be measured by 120/100, which is
120 per cent, or by 100/120, which is 83 per cent. The enterprise will
conclude that the hedge is highly effective.
Delta ratio
D
= (D
option value)/ D
hedged item value)
range [.80 <
D < 1.25] or [80% <
D%
<
125%]
(FAS 133 Paragraph 85)
Delta-neutral strategies are discussed at various points (e.g., FAS 133
Paragraphs 85, 86, 87, and 89)
A hedge is normally regarded as highly effective if, at inception and
throughout the life of the hedge, the enterprise can expect changes in the
fair value or cash flows of the hedged item to be almost fully offset by the
changes in the fair value or cash flows of the hedging instrument, and
actual results are within a range of
80-125%
(IAS 39 Paragraph 146).
The FASB
requires that an entity define at the time it designates a hedging
relationship the method it will use to assess the hedge's effectiveness in
achieving offsetting changes in fair value or offsetting cash flows
attributable to the risk being hedged (FAS 133 Paragraph 62). In defining
how hedge effectiveness will be assessed, an entity must specify whether it
will include in that assessment all of the gain or loss on a hedging
instrument. The Statement permits (but does not require) an entity to
exclude all or a part of the hedging instrument's time value from the
assessment of hedge effectiveness. (FAS 133 Paragraph 63).
Hedge
ineffectiveness would result from the following circumstances, among others:
a)
difference between the basis of the hedging instrument and the hedged item
or hedged transaction, to the extent that those bases do not move in tandem.
b) differences in critical terms of the hedging instrument and hedged item
or hedged transaction, such as differences in notional amounts, maturities,
quantity, location, or delivery dates.
c) part of the change in the fair value of a derivative is attributable to a
change in the counterparty's creditworthiness (FAS 133 Paragraph 66).
Because the dollar offset
method is quite restrictive, many companies prefer accepted regression tests
of hedge effectiveness. Regression, however, often does not bring hedge
accounting relief for purchased options.
Hedge Effectiveness: The Wild Card in Accounting for Derivatives,"
by Ira C. Kawaller ---
http://www.kawaller.com/pdf/AFP-Hedge Effectiveness.pdf
Also see
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/HedgeEffectiveness.pdf
I also have a hedge effectiveness testing tutorial (in
PowerPoint) at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/JensenPowerPoint/
(click on the 06effectiveness.ppt file)
Companies have a lot of trouble both in quantitative
testing for hedge effectiveness and in meeting the guidelines for a hedge to
be effective. With a magic wave of the wand (http://snipurl.com/fasb5-26-2010
), the IASB and FASB now propose to allow “qualitative testing” which
in my viewpoint is tantamount to qualitative mush. Companies will soon be
able to declare most any hedge as effective when they say their prayers
faithfully night.
The Smith and Kohlbeck case shows what might happen in
the future if management simply declares the hedging contracts as
qualitatively effective.
Boo on that idea in
http://snipurl.com/fasb5-26-2010
I don’t mind elimination of the short-cut method,
because that was limited only to interest rate swaps and was not allowed in
general for other types of hedging contracts.
I still have not really poured over all parts of the ED
at
http://snipurl.com/fasb5-26-2010
But I will ask if turning “standards” into qualitative judgment mush is the
way to go whenever the former standards were complicated.
Is this the magical wave
of the wand for convergence of FASB and IASB standards?
At what point does qualitative judgment mush
cease to be a “standard?”
Bob Jensen
From:
AECM, Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia [mailto:AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Jensen, Robert
Sent: Thursday, May 27, 2010 7:04 PM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: The Accounting Onion
Hi Paul,
Thanks for the heads up!
I’ve really not had time yet to go through the complex May 26 ED
at
http://snipurl.com/edmay26-2010
Some things really confuse me in what I’ve seen so far. One
bothersome feature is the asymmetry between reported fair values of
financial assets versus liabilities. Suppose Company D sells 10% of a bond
issue to Company B for $850 per bond. On December 31 Company B reports the
December 31 trading price of the bond at $1,010 as the fair value of each
investment bond. Company D, however, has had no change in credit rating for
the year ended December 31. Hence, it reports a fair value of $850 for each
bond indebtedness that Company B reports as an asset worth $1,010 per bond.
Debtors must somehow factor in the change in fair value of credit rating,
whereas the investor only looks at change in trading fair value.
There’s also an issue of timing. Presumably credit rating
agencies are not going to normally change Company D’s credit rating until
after Company D releases its audited financial statements. Hence, changes in
credit rating might have an awfully long lag in terms of current fair value
adjustments to bond liabilities. This all must be as clear as mud to
investors and creditors reading financial statements.
Some other parts of the ED seem like even worse mush.
Effectiveness testing for hedge accounting seems more subjective and
ambiguous than most anything that I’ve ever seen proposed accounting
standards. It’s pure mush at this point relative to the 80-125 (egads a
bright line) guideline suggested in the original version of IAS 39. How we
can expect any kind of consistency between companies or even consistency
between different hedging contracts within the same company is a mystery to
me without some bright line guides.
Hedge effectiveness testing will essentially become more
subjective than a beauty contest. If auditors could not say no to Repo 105
debt masking, how in the world can they buck clients who rate the beauty of
their hedging contracts?
Bob Jensen
From:
AECM, Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia [mailto:AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Paul Polinski
Sent: Thursday, May 27, 2010 3:44 PM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: The Accounting Onion
Hi Bob. Late yesterday the FASB posted their financial instrument exposure
draft to their web site.
Paul
From: "Jensen, Robert" <rjensen@TRINITY.EDU>
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Sent: Thu, May 27, 2010 1:15:31 PM
Subject: Re: The Accounting Onion
The lame duck Superman zooms in to aid the SEC’s Superwoman!
"IASB Chairman Outlines Approach for Reconciling
Financial Instrument Standards,"
by Matthew G. Lamoreaux, Journal of Accountancy, June 2010 ---
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Web/20102960.htm
Jensen Comment
What interests me is the ever-changing plans for revision of IAS 39. Hedging
transactions are like staff infections that just will not go away no matter how
much Sir David Tweedie wishes upon a star.
Bob Jensen's threads on FASB-IASB standards convergence
are at
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Web/20102960.htm
Robert E. (Bob) Jensen
Trinity University Accounting Professor (Emeritus)
190 Sunset Hill Road
Sugar Hill, NH 03586
Tel. 603-823-8482
www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Why FASB and IASB convergence will be "super."
The pictures of the SEC's Mary Shapiro and the FASB's (Lame Duck) leader Sir
David Tweedie say it all regarding why convergence of IFRS and FASB standards is
inevitable with the IASB grinding U.S. GAAP into oblivion:
I thank David Albrecht for sending Sir David's lame duck picture.

"IFRS Risk: Not What You Think," by Bruce Pounder, CFO.com, May
14, 2010 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14497802/c_14497718?f=home_todayinfinance
The switch from U.S. generally accepted accounting
principles to international accounting standards is a hot topic. But CFOs of
U.S. companies are wasting time and money managing imaginary risks while
completely ignoring real ones.
Today's CFO is accustomed to managing risk. But few
financial executives in the United States accurately perceive or understand
the emerging risks that are associated with the global convergence of
financial reporting standards (convergence). As a result, CFOs across
America are wasting time and money managing imaginary risks while ignoring
the real risks associated with convergence in general and International
Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) in particular.
To separate real from imagined risks, let's start
by looking at some of the defining characteristics of the U.S. financial
reporting environment. In the United States, as in most of the developed
world, private companies outnumber public companies by a ratio of roughly
1,000 to 1. But in the United States—unlike most of the developed
world—private companies have no statutory financial reporting obligations.
No individual, organization, or governmental agency can unilaterally require
private U.S. companies to use a particular set of financial reporting
standards.
In practice, private U.S. companies frequently use
U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), and there are plenty
of good reasons for doing so. But many private companies follow GAAP only up
to a point, disclosing deviations in their financial statements. And other
private companies use alternatives to GAAP, such as cash-basis accounting,
tax-basis accounting, or some "other comprehensive basis of accounting" (OCBOA).
So among private U.S. companies, diversity in financial reporting standards
is the norm.
The relatively small number of public companies
that exist in the United States operate in a very different environment.
They are subject to statutory financial reporting obligations as determined
by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The SEC has the legal
authority to define the financial reporting standards that companies under
its jurisdiction must or may use.
Since its inception, the SEC has relied on
nongovernmental standard-setting organizations to set financial reporting
standards for its regulants. Currently, the SEC looks to the Financial
Accounting Standards Board (FASB) to set the financial reporting standards
that the SEC requires public U.S. companies to adhere to. In some cases, the
SEC has supplemented or overridden standards set by nongovernmental
standard-setters, but for more than 70 years, public companies in the United
States have had to use U.S. GAAP as set by the FASB and its predecessors for
statutory financial reporting purposes.
IFRS and Convergence IFRS is a specific, existing
set of financial reporting standards that are developed and maintained by
the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). At the standard level,
IFRS and U.S. GAAP exhibit a number of similarities-and a far greater number
of differences. There are significant similarities and differences in their
conceptual underpinnings as well.
As a nongovernmental organization, the IASB has no
authority to compel any country to require or permit the use of IFRS. Nor
does the IASB have any authority to compel any individual company to use its
standards. In short, only by developing and maintaining a set of standards
that at least some countries and companies perceive as being superior to
alternatives (such as U.S. GAAP) has the IASB achieved widespread adoption
of IFRS throughout the world.
Set-level convergence occurs when countries and/or
companies stop using country-specific financial reporting standards and
start using the same set of country-neutral standards, as has been the case
with the adoption of IFRS outside of the United States. But standard-level
convergence has also occurred in parallel with set-level convergence. Since
2002, the FASB and IASB have been working together to converge U.S. GAAP and
IFRS at the standard level, and the global financial crisis has brought even
greater pressure on the Boards to make further progress.
For the most part, the boards are developing new,
common standards designed to replace existing standards in U.S. GAAP and
IFRS. And in most cases, the standards under development differ
significantly from the standards in either U.S. GAAP or IFRS today.
Imagined Risks Many U.S. CFOs have been led to
believe that their companies, at some point in the relatively near future,
will be forced to switch from using U.S. GAAP, as we know it today, to using
IFRS, as we know it today. On top of being concerned about the cost and
effort that would likely accompany such a switch, U.S. CFOs have been
bothered by the seeming uncertainty with regard to the timing of such a
switch.
The responses of U.S. CFOs about their beliefs have
been mixed. Some have invested time and money in voicing opposition to such
a switch. Others have demanded more certainty in the timing, assuming that
they'll commit resources to the switch once they get a "date certain." Still
others, sensing both inevitability and imminence, have begun to study
current IFRS and assess the impact of converting from current U.S. GAAP to
current IFRS. But all of these represent responses to imagined risks, not
real ones.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standard setting controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
"Convergence talks accused of over-ambitious
targets: IASB and FASB give "no guarantee" they will resolve all
differences over international standards convergence," by Mario
Christodoulou, Accountancy Age, April 22, 2010 ---
http://www.accountancyage.com/accountancyage/news/2261794/convergence-talks-accused
A progress report on
international accounting convergence caused rumblings in the accounting
world last week, with fears the world’s two chief standard setters were
being overambitious in their quest to unite their two accounting codes by
June next year.
Some even suggested the
quality of international accounting rules may suffer as the international
and US standard setters move towards a June 2011 deadline.
Jeremy
Newman, chief executive officer of BDO International,
was worried that too much was being compromised by the
International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), headed
by Sir David Tweedie, as it attempts to converge its
standards with US rules. He fears a rush job may hurt
the standards though a lack of thoroughness. “My fear at
the moment is that in order for the IASB to say ‘we got
there’ it will drop so much stuff that getting there
just doesn’t mean a whole lot,” he said.
In a joint statement the IASB and
its US counterpart the Financial Accounting Standards
Board (FASB) said last week that while they were making
good progress on the vast majority of accounting rules,
there was “no guarantee” they would resolve “all, or
any, of our differences” on its
financial instruments
project.
The two
boards have been working towards a June 2011 deadline,
imposed by G20 leaders last year, to converge US and
international accounting rules. However fundamental
differences remain on their approach to the measurement
of financial instruments.
Nigel Sleigh-Johnson, head of the
financial reporting
faculty at the ICAEW, said he is
worried the quality of international standards may
suffer as respondents struggle to keep up with the
number of proposals being released this year. “The
concern is not that we have to work harder, it is that
the risk of damaging the quality of the standards is
magnified by having to address so many topics at one
time,” he said.
FASB will next month release its
full fair value proposal, which would result in all
company
assets
valued at their market price. The IASB released its
model in November 2008 incorporating a mixed-measurement
approach which allows some bank loan books to be valued
at amortized cost.
The US
standard setter’s timing has raised questions about its
“sense of urgency” to convergence. On key projects such
as on financial instruments some suggest progress is
needed soon to prevent rushing the standards at the
deadline. They say the boards need to work together
according to the same timetable, allowing constituents
the best chance to understand then comment on them.
Newman said
that FASB was travelling at a “slightly different pace”
than the IASB. “However, those of us who would like to
see adoption of a single set of high quality accounting
standards will always say progress is going too slow.”
The IASB
and FASB will issue a raft of joint reports on proposed
converged standards in coming months. The IASB plans to
release 11 exposure drafts for comment by June.
Differences with FASB remain on their divergent
treatment of financial instruments and insurance
contracts, which, the boards warn, could alter their
timetable.
Comment: In our view
Time is running out for the IASB and
the issues being debated are matters of principle which
cut to the heart of convergence. The US has a
fundamental different point of view on some key headline
standards. If these differences can’t be resolved, the
question remains will the world accept almost-converged
accounting rules. Is close enough, enough?
Jensen Comment
I don't understand claims that "time is running out." The convergence process
should take as long as possible, maybe another decade, in order to deal with all
the complicated accounting issues of the day. Why should the U.S. want to
hurriedly give up its current leverage with regard to influencing the IASB? It
will be much harder after convergence for the U.S. to get full IASB
attention to its "ambitious projects.".
Slower convergence will also help the transition
process in education and in transitioning the CPA examination.
May 6, 2010 reply from Patricia Walters
[patricia@DISCLOSUREANALYTICS.COM]
Bob:
"Time is running out" comes from the commitment of
the boards to the G20 and to the SEC by June 2011. In my view, no other
pressures would be sufficient to warrant the work plan and timetable that
the two boards are committed to.
Despite the focus of the article on the IASB (the
publicition is UK Accountancy), this is a FASB issue, too.
Pat
Bob Jensen's threads on convergence issues
are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Question
How does fair IFRS value accounting differ for financial instruments versus
derivative financial instruments?
The IASB 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.
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.
"Exposure Draft on measurement of financial liabilities," IAS Plus, May 11,
2010 ---
http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
The IASB has published for public comment an
exposure draft (ED) of proposing to amend the way the fair value option in
IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement is applied with
respect to financial liabilities. Many investors and others have said that
volatility in profit or loss resulting from changes in an entity's own
credit risk is counter-intuitive and does not provide useful information –
except for value changes relating to derivatives and liabilities held for
trading (such as short sales). The IASB is proposing, therefore, that all
gains and losses resulting from changes in 'own credit' for those financial
liabilities that an entity chooses to measure at fair value should be
recognised as a component of 'other comprehensive income', not in profit or
loss. The ED does not propose any other changes for financial liabilities.
Consequently, the proposals will affect only those entities that elect to
apply the fair value option to their financial liabilities. Importantly,
those who prefer to bifurcate financial liabilities when relevant may
continue to do so. That is consistent with the widespread view that the
existing requirements for financial liabilities work well, other than the
'own credit' issue that these proposals cover.
Unlike FAS 133, IAS 39 no longer requires bifurcation of embedded derivatives
that are not "clearly and closely related" to the host instrument.
"IASB
Addresses 'Counter-intuitive' Effects of Fair Value Measurement of Financial
Liabilities," SmartPros, May 10, 2010 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x69432.xml
The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB)
today published for public comment its proposed changes to the
accounting for financial liabilities.
This proposal follows
work already completed on the classification and measurement of
financial assets (IFRS 9 Financial Instruments).
The IASB is proposing
limited changes to the accounting for liabilities, with changes to
the fair value option. The proposals respond to the view
expressed by many investors and others in the extensive
consultations that the IASB has undertaken—that volatility in profit
or loss resulting from changes in the credit risk of liabilities
that an entity chooses to measure at fair value is counter-intuitive
and does not provide useful information to investors.
When the IASB
introduced IFRS 9 many stakeholders around the world advised the
IASB that the existing requirements for financial liabilities work
well, except for the effects of changes in the credit risk of a
financial liability (‘own credit’) that an entity chooses to measure
at fair value.
Building on that global
consultation on IFRS 9, the IASB sought the views of investors,
preparers, audit firms, regulators and others on the ‘own credit’
issue. The views received were consistent with the earlier
consultations—that volatility in profit or loss resulting from
changes in ‘own credit’ does not provide useful information except
for derivatives and liabilities that are held for trading.
The IASB is therefore
proposing that all gains and losses resulting from changes in ‘own
credit’ for financial liabilities that an entity chooses to measure
at fair value should be transferred to ‘other comprehensive income’.
Changes in ‘own credit’ will therefore not affect reported profit or
loss.
No other changes are
proposed for financial liabilities. Therefore, the proposals
will affect only those entities that choose to apply the fair value
option to their financial liabilities. Importantly, those who
prefer to bifurcate financial liabilities when relevant may continue
to do so. That is consistent with the widespread view that the
existing requirements for financial liabilities work well, other
than the ‘own credit’ issue that these proposals cover.
Commenting on the
proposals, Sir David Tweedie, Chairman of the IASB, said:
Whilst there are
theoretical arguments for treating financial assets and
liabilities in the same way it is hard to defend the accounting
as providing useful information when a company suffering
deterioration in credit quality is able to book a corresponding
large profit, especially when investors tell us that such
information is often excluded from their financial models.
The exposure
draft Fair Value Option for Financial Liabilities is open for
comment until 16 July 2010. It can be accessed via the
‘Comment on a proposal’ section on
www.iasb.org
from today.
|
Jensen Comment
What the IASB has not done is eliminate the enormous inconsistency in fair value
accounting for financial assets versus financial liabilities.
The worst part
of all this is that students, let’s call them classic sophomores, are willing to
jump to conclusions like the following:
-
1.
Historical cost accounting, even
when price-level adjusted, leads to ancient balances of assets and
liabilities that are seriously out of date with current market values
whether markets are entry or exit value markets.
-
2.
Therefore, to the extent possible
assets and liabilities should be carried at fair values (exit or entry)
with changes in fair values reported in current earnings.
What these
sophomores do not understand that fair value adjustments create utter fiction
for held-to-maturity (the IASB changed the name to "amortized cost") or other
“locked-in” items. Adjusting some assets and liabilities to fair values is utter
fiction if there is no option or intent for fair value transactions to transpire
before some shock such as contractual maturity or abandonment of a manufacturing
operation (that makes factory real estate finally available for sale). The
classic example is fixed-rate debt for which there is no embedded option to pay
off the debt prematurely or purchase it back in an open market. If the cash flow
stream is thus set in stone until maturity, any adjustments to fair value are
accounting fictions. Temporal changes in current earnings for fictional
accounting value changes are more misleading than helpful.
Creditors might
propose deals for early retirement, but they do so when it is not particularly
advantageous for the debtor. Conversely, debtors may propose deals for early
retirement, but they will do so when it is not particularly advantageous for the
creditors. Hence such debt is usually retired early only when either the debtor
or the creditor is willing to negotiate a heavy penalty. Without a willingness
to incur heavy penalties, changes in earnings for accounting fictions are highly
misleading in terms of fictional earnings volatility.
When we have
contracts that provide debtors more embedded options for premature settlements,
then we might begin to think more seriously about adjusting the debt to fair
value. Many debt contracts have embedded options for the debtor to pay the debt
off before retirement (often at some contracted penalty such as bond call back
prices). In the case of financial assets, we now have the classifications
“Hold-to-Maturity” versus “Available-for-Sale” that we apply to financial
assets.
It seems that under the proposed IAS
39 amendment, providing an option to carry debt at fair value, we could allow
debtors to similarly classify debt as “Hold-to-Maturity” versus
“Available-for-Buy-Back” where the debtor declares an intent to buy the debt
back if the fair value of the debt in the market fair value becomes attractive.
This often happens for fixed-rate marketable bonds when interest rates rise and
market values of the bonds decline. In fact, Exxon invented “in-substance
defeasance” to simulate debt buy backs when the transactional cost penalties for
actual buy backs were too high. Until FAS 125 no longer allowed removing
defeased debt from the balance sheet, this was a means by which Exxon could
report realized gains on debt value reduction and remove debt from the balance
sheet without truly abandoning payoff obligations ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
In-Substance Defeasance
In-substance defeasance used to be a ploy to take debt off the balance sheet. It
was invented by Exxon in 1982 as a means of capturing the millions in a gain on
debt (bonds) that had gone up significantly in value due to rising interest
rates. The debt itself was permanently "parked" with an independent trustee as
if it had been cancelled by risk free government bonds also placed with the
trustee in a manner that the risk free assets would be sufficient to pay off the
parked debt at maturity. The defeased (parked) $515 million in debt was taken
off of Exxon's balance sheet and the $132 million gain of the debt was booked
into current earnings ---
http://www.bsu.edu/majb/resource/pdf/vol04num2.pdf
Defeasance was thus looked upon as an alternative to outright extinguishment of
debt until the FASB passed FAS 125 that ended the ability of companies to use
in-substance defeasance to remove debt from the balance sheet. Prior to FAS 125,
defeasance became enormously popular as an OBSF ploy.
Since companies
now have the option of classifying financial assets as HTM ( (the IASB changed
the name to "amortized cost") versus AFS, it seems symmetrical in the proposed
IAS 39 amendment to allow financial liabilities to be classified as HTM versus
AVBB (available-for-buy-back). However, in both the AFS and the AVBB
classifications, the unrealized changes in fair values should be charged to AOCI
rather than current earnings. This keeps accounting fictions out of current
earnings, at least with respect to financial asset and liability value change
fictions.
One thing I
propose for the proposed IAS 39 amendment is that the mandatory value changes
for AFS financial assets not be declared optional for AVBB debt. The changes
should be mandatory (not optional) for AVBB liabilities just as they are
mandatory for AFS assets. In both instances, however, changes in value should
not impact current earnings until the changes in value are realized.
Of course the
AFS and AVBB classifications are built upon management declarations of intent.
But the IASB imposes heavy penalties on companies that renege on their HTM
classifications (that allow retention of historical cost accounting). Companies
that renege on HTM classifications may long regret not staying true to their
declared intent --- at bit like the penalty Tiger Woods is now paying for not
staying true to marriage vows.
May 16, 2010 reply from Patricia Walters
[patricia@DISCLOSUREANALYTICS.COM]
Bob:
In IFRS 9 (eff 2013), the term "held to maturity"
is gone. The classification "amortized cost" is effectively HTM, but the
criteria is more specific than "intent and ability to hold to maturity" in
IAS 39. IFRS 9 criteria are:
A financial asset shall be measured at
amortised cost if both of the following conditions are met: (a) the
asset is held within a business model whose objective is to hold assets
in order to collect contractual cash flows. (b) the contractual terms of
the financial asset give rise on specified dates to cash flows that are
solely payments of principal and interest on the principal amount
outstanding.
Pat
May 16, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
A rose by any other name is still HTM and is, I assume, still subjected
to heavy IASB penalties for reneging on “amortized cost.”
You just restored my faith in IASB sensibility regarding fact over
fiction.
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting for
financial instruments and hedging activities are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on fair value accounting
are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#FairValue
Question
To what extent should the FASB and the IASB modify accounting standards for new
theories of structured finance and securitization?
"The Economics of Structured Finance," by Joshua D. Coval, Jakub
Jurek, and Erik Stafford, Working Paper 09-060, Harvard Business School,
2008 ---
http://www.hbs.edu/research/pdf/09-060.pdf
The essence of structured finance
activities is the pooling of economic assets (e.g. loans, bonds, mortgages)
and subsequent issuance of a prioritized capital structure of claims, known
as tranches, against these collateral pools. As a result of the
prioritization scheme used in structuring claims, many of the manufactured
tranches are far safer than the average asset in the underlying pool. This
ability of structured finance to repackage risks and create “safe” assets
from otherwise risky collateral led to a dramatic expansion in the issuance
of structured securities, most of which were viewed by investors to be
virtually risk-free and certified as such by the rating agencies. At the
core of the recent financial market crisis has been the discovery that these
securities are actually far riskier than originally advertised.
We examine how the process of
securitization allowed trillions of dollars of risky assets to be
transformed into securities that were widely considered to be safe, and
argue that two key features of the structured finance machinery fueled its
spectacular growth. First, we show that most securities could only have
received high credit ratings if the rating agencies were extraordinarily
confident about their ability to estimate the underlying securities’ default
risks, and how likely defaults were to be correlated. Using the prototypical
structured finance security – the
collateralized debt
obligation (CDO) – as an example, we illustrate that issuing a capital
structure amplifies errors in evaluating the risk of the underlying
securities. In particular, we show how modest imprecision in the parameter
estimates can lead to variation in the default risk of the structured
finance securities which is sufficient, for example, to cause a security
rated AAA to default with reasonable likelihood.
A second,
equally neglected feature of the securitization process is that it
substitutes risks that are largely diversifiable for risks that are highly
systematic. As a result, securities produced by structured finance
activities have far less chance of surviving a severe economic downturn than
traditional corporate securities of equal rating. Moreover, because the
default risk of senior tranches is concentrated in systematically adverse
economic states, investors should demand far larger risk premia for holding
structured claims than for holding comparably rated corporate bonds. We
argue that both of these features of structured finance products – the
extreme fragility of their ratings to modest imprecision in evaluating
underlying risks and their exposure to systematic risks – go a long way in
explaining the spectacular rise and fall of structured finance.
For over a century, agencies such as
Moody’s, Standard and Poor’s and Fitch have gathered and analyzed a wide
range of financial, industry, and economic information to arrive at
independent assessments on the creditworthiness of various entities, giving
rise to the now widely popular rating scales (AAA, AA, A, BBB and so on).
Until recently, the agencies focused the majority of their business on
single-name corporate finance—that is, issues of creditworthiness of
financial instruments that can be clearly ascribed to a single company. In
recent years, the business model of credit rating agencies has expanded
beyond their historical role to include the nascent field of structured
finance.
From its beginnings, the market for
structured securities evolved as a “rated” market, in which the risk of
tranches was assessed by credit rating agencies. Issuers of structured
finance products were eager to have their new products rated on the same
scale as bonds so that investors subject to ratings-based constraints would
be able to purchase the securities. By having these new securities rated,
the issuers created an illusion of comparability with existing “single-name”
securities. This provided access to a large pool of potential buyers for
what otherwise would have been perceived as very complex derivative
securities.
During the past decade, risks of all
kinds have been repackaged to create vast quantities of triple-A rated
securities with competitive yields. By mid-2007, there were 37,000
structured finance issues in the U.S. alone with the top rating (Scholtes
and Beales, 2007). According to Fitch Ratings (2007), roughly 60 percent of
all global structured products were AAA-rated, in contrast to less than 1
percent of the corporate issues. By offering AAA-ratings along with
attractive yields during a period of relatively low interest rates, these
products were eagerly bought up by investors around the world. In turn,
structured finance activities grew to represent a large fraction of Wall
Street and rating agency revenues in a relatively short period of time. By
2006, structured finance issuance led Wall Street to record revenue and
compensation levels. The same year, Moody’s Corporation reported that 44
percent of its revenues came from rating structured finance products,
surpassing the 32 percent of revenues from their traditional business of
rating corporate bonds.
By 2008, everything had changed.
Global issuance of collateralized debt obligations slowed to a crawl. Wall
Street banks were forced to incur massive write-downs. Rating agency
revenues from rating structured finance products disappeared virtually
overnight and the stock prices of these companies fell by 50 percent,
suggesting the market viewed the revenue declines as permanent. A huge
fraction of existing products saw their ratings downgraded, with the
downgrades being particularly widespread among what are called “asset-backed
security” collateralized debt obligations—which are comprised of pools of
mortgage, credit card, and auto loan securities. For example, 27 of the 30
tranches of asset-backed collateralized debt obligations underwritten by
Merrill Lynch in 2007, saw their triple-A ratings downgraded to “junk”
(Craig, Smith, and Ng, 2008). Overall, in 2007, Moody’s downgraded 31
percent of all tranches for asset-backed collateralized debt obligations it
had rated and 14 percent of those nitially rated AAA (Bank of International
Settlements, 2008). By mid-2008, structured finance activity was effectively
shut down, and the president of Standard & Poor’s, Deven Sharma, expected it
to remain so for “years” (“S&P President,” 2008).
This paper investigates the
spectacular rise and fall of structured finance. We begin by examining how
the structured finance machinery works. We construct some simple examples of
collateralized debt obligations that show how pooling and tranching a
collection of assets permits credit enhancement of the senior claims. We
then explore the challenge faced by rating agencies, examining, in
particular, the parameter and modeling assumptions that are required to
arrive at accurate ratings of structured finance products. We then conclude
with an assessment of what went wrong and the relative importance of rating
agency errors, investor credulity, and perverse incentives and suspect
behavior on the part of issuers, rating agencies, and borrowers.
Manufacturing AAA-rated Securities
Manufacturing securities of a given
credit rating requires tailoring the cash-flow risk of these securities – as
measured by the likelihood of default and the magnitude of loss incurred in
the event of a default – to satisfy the guidelines set forth by the credit
rating agencies. Structured finance allows originators to accomplish this
goal by means of a two-step procedure involving pooling and tranching.
In the first step, a large collection
of credit sensitive assets is assembled in a portfolio, which is typically
referred to as a special purpose vehicle. The special purpose vehicle is
separate from the originator’s balance sheet to isolate the credit risk of
its liabilities – the tranches – from the balance sheet of the originator.
If the special purpose vehicle issued claims that were not prioritized and
were simply fractional claims to the payoff on the underlying portfolio, the
structure would be known as a pass-through securitization. At this stage,
since the expected portfolio loss is equal to the mean expected loss on the
underlying securities, the portfolio’s credit rating would be given by the
average rating of the securities in the underlying pool. The pass-through
securitization claims would inherit this rating, thus achieving no credit
enhancement.
By contrast, to manufacture a range of
securities with different cash flow risks, structured finance issues a
capital structure of prioritized claims, known as tranches, against
the underlying collateral pool. The tranches are prioritized in how they
absorb losses from the underlying portfolio. For example, senior tranches
only absorb losses after the junior claims have been exhausted, which allows
senior tranches to obtain credit ratings in excess of the average rating on
the average for the collateral pool as a whole. The degree of protection
offered by the junior claims, or overcollateralization, plays a crucial role
in determining the credit rating for a more senior tranche, because it
determines the largest portfolio loss that can be sustained before the
senior claim is impaired.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting for financial instruments and hedging
activities are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on fair value accounting are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#FairValue
"Why losers have delusions of grandeur: The less you know, the more
you think you do," by Daniel Simons and Chrostopher, Chapris, The
Washington Post, May 23, 2010 ---
Click Here
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/why_losers_have_delusions_of_grandeur_kmSEG1YrE1Uhfh1fL4tdWP
Charles Darwin observed that “ignorance more
frequently begets confidence than does knowledge.” That was certainly true
on the day in 1995 when a man named McArthur Wheeler boldly robbed two banks
in Pittsburgh without using a disguise. Security camera footage of him was
broadcast on the evening news the same day as the robberies, and he was
arrested an hour later. Mr. Wheeler was surprised when the police explained
how they had used the surveillance tapes to catch him. “But I wore the
juice,” he mumbled incredulously. He seemed to believe that rubbing his face
with lemon juice would blur his image and make him impossible to catch.
In movies, criminal masterminds often are geniuses,
James Bond villains in volcano lairs. But the stereotype doesn’t apply to
actual cons, at least not the ones who get caught.
Studies show those convicted of crimes are, on
average, less intelligent than non-criminals. And they can be spectacularly
foolish. One of us had a high school classmate who decided to vandalize the
school — by spray painting his own initials on the wall. A Briton named
Peter Addison went one step further and vandalized the side of a building by
writing “Peter Addison was here.” Sixty-six-year-old Samuel Porter tried to
pass a one-million-dollar bill at a supermarket in the United States and
became irate when the cashier wouldn’t make change for him. All of these
people seem to have been under what we call the “illusion of confidence,”
which is the persistent belief that we are more skilled than we really are —
in this case, that the criminals were so good they would not get caught.
The story of McArthur Wheeler was told by social
psychologists Justin Kruger and David Dunning in a brilliant paper entitled
“Unskilled and Unaware of It.” In a set of clever experiments, Kruger and
Dunning showed that people with the least skill are the most likely to
overestimate their abilities. For example, they measured people’s sense of
humor (psychologists have learned that almost anything can be measured) and
found that those who scored the lowest on their test still thought they had
a better-than-average sense of what is funny.
These findings help to explain why shows like
“American Idol” and “Last Comic Standing” attract so many aspiring
contestants who have no hope of qualifying, let alone winning. Many are just
seeking a few seconds of TV time and a shot at “Pants on the Ground” fame,
but some seem genuinely shocked when the judges reject them.
It turns out that the illusion of confidence can
survive even the measurement of skill.
Chess, for instance, has a mathematical rating
system that provides up-to-date, accurate and precise numerical information
about a player’s “strength” (chess jargon for ability) relative to other
players. Ratings are public knowledge and are printed next to each player’s
name on tournament scoreboards. Ratings are valued so highly that chess
players often remember their opponents better by their ratings than by their
names or faces. “I beat a 1600” or “I lost to a 2100” are not uncommon
things to hear in the hallway outside the playing room.
Armed with knowledge of their own ratings, players
ought to be exquisitely aware of how competent they are. But what do they
actually think about their own abilities? Some years ago, in a study we
conducted with our colleague Daniel Benjamin, we asked a group of chess
players at major tournaments two simple questions: “What is your most recent
official chess rating?” and “What do you think your rating should be to
reflect your true current strength?”
As expected, all of the players knew their actual
ratings. Yet 75% of them thought that their rating underestimated their true
playing ability. The magnitude of their overconfidence was stunning: On
average, these competitive chess players estimated that they would win a
match against another player with the exact same rating as their own by a
two-to-one margin — a crushing victory. Of course, the most likely outcome
of such a match would be a tie.
This tendency for the least skilled among us to
overestimate their abilities the most has more serious consequences than an
inflated sense of humor or chess ability. Everyone has encountered
obliviously incompetent managers who make life miserable for their
underlings because they suffer from the illusion of confidence. And as the
joke reminds us, the people who graduate last in their medical school class
are still doctors; what is less funny is that they probably believe they are
still the best ones.
Daniel Simons and Christopher Chabris are the authors of “The
Invisible Gorilla, and Other Ways Our Intuitions Deceive Us” (Crown). Visit
their website at
theinvisiblegorilla.com.
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
"KPMG and PwC eye rating move," by Richard Milne and Rachel Sanderson in
London, Financial Times, May 16, 2010 ---
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/d88c971e-60fd-11df-9bf0-00144feab49a.html?ftcamp=rss
KPMG and PwC, two of the world’s largest accounting
firms, have considered entering the credit rating business, in a move that
would pitch them against the current top three – and heavily criticised –
agencies Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch.
John Griffith Jones, chairman of KPMG in the UK and
co-chair in Europe, told the Financial Times it had discussed the move as –
being one of the four biggest accounting firms in the world – it had the
skills, knowledge and people to provide credit ratings.
Continued in article
The Scandals of Credit Rating Agencies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#CreditRatingAgencies
Jensen Comment
If the auditing firms move into client credit rating business, I view this as an
enormous conflict of interest.
My first objection is that auditors are supposed to have access to
confidential data of clients. How is it possible to protect this confidential
client-auditor relationship if auditors take on a credit rating service?
April 19, 2009
Dear Commissioners:
Credit rating agencies depend on audited financial
statements to evaluate company finances. If garbage arrives in the form of
erroneous audited financial statements, garbage goes out in the form of
erroneous credit ratings.
In order for any credit rating agency to function
reputably and effectively, it must have ways quickly to discipline
misbehaving auditors.
CPA auditors are supposed to provide reliable
figures to the public. But they instead have promoted the financial fiascos
of the past year. Each of these debacle companies had CPA auditors who
assured the public that the financial statements were all just fine:
AIG – PricewaterhouseCoopers
Merrill Lynch – Deloitte Touche
Lehman Brothers – Ernst Young
Fannie Mae – Deloitte Touche
Freddie Mac – PricewaterhouseCoopers
Washington Mutual – Deloitte Touche
Wachovia – KPMG
Bear Stearns – Deloitte Touche
Countrywide – KPMG
IndyMac Bank—Ernst Young
Reform of this industry requires essential reforms:
1. Fully fund the Public Company Accounting
Oversight Board.
2. Double the SEC enforcement budget.
3. Triple the FBI white collar budget. It was decimated in 2002. Theres
never been a criminal prosecution under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
4. Require CPA firms to put all their partners at risk for the misdeeds of
the firms. They should not be allowed to be Limited Liability Partnerships.
They should all be required to go back to General Partnerships, as they were
until the 1990s.
5. Encourage state boards of accountancy to discipline CPA firms. No
significant penalties have been imposed on the Big 4 auditors for years. See
below for fuller reporting.
Much more is on the website www.cpawatch.org.
Sincerely,
Carl Olson
Chairman
Fund for Stockowners Rights
P. O. Box 65563
Washington, D. C. 20035
703-241-3700
West Coast Office
P. O. Box 6102
Woodland Hills, California
818-223-8080
Auditing firms certainly had a lousy record in the subprime mortgage
scandal and now face international litigation threats to their very survival as
auditing firms ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#AuditFirms
The comparative advantages and disadvantages of auditing firms as credit
rating agencies has not been researched at all well. But my knee jerk reaction
is NO!
May 28, 2010 message from Rick Lillie
[rlillie@csusb.edu]
Good morning
Bob,
Earlier today,
I posted a question on AECM about qualifications for being an audit
professor. I hope you do not think my questions or comments are too naive.
I am interested in how accounting faculty view the issue of qualifications
for being an audit professor and teaching audit-related topics. Should an
audit professor be a CPA with practice experience? Does it matter that an
audit professor (or prospective audit professor) is not a CPA and has no
audit experience?
I guess my
questions could apply to any accounting professor. Is it important for an
accounting professor to earn professional credentials beyond the PhD (or
appropriate doctoral degree) and have at least some relevant practice
experience?
As we search
for new accounting faculty, I see more vita documents from faculty who are
not CPAs, and frankly who are not interested in earning a professional
designation. Many seem to view practice experience as irrelevant to their
success as an accounting professor.
Am I missing
something in all of this? I would appreciate your comments.
Best wishes,
Rick Lillie, MAS, Ed.D., CPA
Assistant Professor of Accounting
Coordinator, Master of Science in Accountancy
CSUSB, CBPA, Department of Accounting & Finance
5500 University Parkway, JB-547
San Bernardino, CA. 92407-2397
May 28, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Rick,
Medical schools do not
assign faculty to teach surgery courses unless those surgeons have both
expertise and experience with live patients (not just experience with dead
cadavers whose arteries won’t hemorrhage when nicked). Nor do law schools
teach key law courses with attorneys not having highly relevant courtroom
experience.
There are, of course,
philosophical levels for which practice experience may not matter as much.
For example, the current Supreme Court nominee has no judicial experience on
the bench. This may not be as important for serving on the Supreme Court as
it would be for teaching certain courses in law school where bench
experience is very important in my opinion. Former judges should, in my
opinion, be teaching some courses in virtually every law school.
Engagement experience may
be less important for financial accounting courses than auditing. For
example,
Art Wyatt was a professor of accounting at Illinois and a long time
director of accounting research at Arthur Andersen. Art had very little
engagement-level experience in public accounting and probably would not have
been a much better teacher of financial accounting with more
engagement-level experience. However, I think that, if Art had to teach
auditing at Illinois, experience as an auditor would be very important. Of
course Art’s experience fielding FASB/SEC questions from Andersen’s
engagement-level auditing managers gave him valuable experience for teaching
financial accounting, but this probably did not make him better at teaching
financial accounting relative to some of our great accounting theory
teachers who never had any private sector accounting experience.
Thus when it comes to
auditing, I think practice experience is very important unless the mission
minimizes the value of experience. Unfortunately, the main mission of some
auditing courses has only one major goal --- explaining the answers to
auditing questions on the CPA Examination. Since the CPA Examination is an
academic exam, where the arteries cannot hemorrhage when nicked, perhaps
engagement-level experience of an instructor is less important that the rote
memory ability and the course organizing ability of an instructor. Does CPA
examination answer memorization trump experience? Probably so for some
accounting, auditing, and tax courses that focus only on the CPA
Examination! (Sigh!)
Where does experience
really count for an auditing instructor?
Believe it or not, I think practice experience may be most important in
having both answers and war stories when responding to student questions.
For example, suppose an
auditing student at Notre Dame asks the following question:
“How did the PCAOB impact auditing practice at the engagement level?”
Experienced Auditor Answer:
Note that Jim now teaches auditing at Notre Dame
From:
Jim Fuehrmeyer [mailto:jfuehrme@nd.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, March 23, 2010 9:21 AM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: FW: Deloitte
Bob
I was the “Professional Practice Director”, that’s the audit quality control
guy, for Deloitte’s Chicago office for the six years prior to my retirement
in May 2007. I got to experience first-hand everything from the absorption
of AA’s people in Chicago to the advent of the PCAOB and its annual
inspection process the first few years. I don’t think most folks have any
appreciation for the very real impact the PCAOB has had on the profession.
The quality of documentation, the increased amount of partner involvement,
the added quality control processes, the expansion of detail testing – the
PCAOB has had a huge impact. Most folks also don’t have an appreciation for
the impact of 404 not only on the audit process but on corporate cultures as
well. As you pointed out a few messages ago, we do see all the failings in
the press, but what we don’t see is all the positives and all the
improvements.
Jim
Jensen Comment
As an auditor it would be reckless to ignore the PCAOB, especially in the
United States where the plaintiff’s tort lawyers are pouncing on every
weakness in an audit firm’s defense. Unlike Francine, I think that the PCAOB
has been doing its job and that the people that count have been
listening. That does not mean that the auditing firms have been pointing to
each others’ PCAOB audit deficiencies when recruiting our new graduates. But
I would not expect them to do this since the deficiencies arose on
particular audits relative many other audits that were not deficient or
caught being deficient.
In retrospect I think the auditing firms are “getting it” just like I think
worker/product safety is truly a priority in the majority of our mining and
manufacturing operations in America. But there are failures, some of them
criminal, that simply reinforce the adage that no person and no organization
is perfect all of the time. Some are just worse than others at times, and we
must strive to minimize the imperfections.
Auditing is essential for detection and prevention of many bad things in any
economic system ranging from communism to capitalism. Until people are
perfect, we will need auditors.
But like Art Wyatt and the rest of the Executive Office folks at Andersen,
perhaps the executive offices of the surviving large international
accounting firms are "not getting it" as well as they should be "getting
it." This may be what Francine has in mind, although I think she's not been
giving sufficient credit where credit is due on the great audits taking
place and the bad stuff the mere act of auditing is preventing.
But like Art Wyatt and the rest of the Executive Office folks at Enron,
perhaps the executive offices of the surviving large international
accounting firms are "not getting it" as well as they should be "getting
it." This may be what Francine has in mind, although I think she's not been
giving sufficient credit where credit is due on the great audits taking
place and the bad stuff the mere act of auditing is preventing.
Bob Jensen
PS
I forgot to mention that one of the main advantages of having
engagement-level experience is in inspiring students to major in accounting
and become auditors. War stories from experienced auditors can be invaluable
for career inspiration and motivation.
Cloud Computing ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_computing
"Learning About Everything Under The 'Cloud'," by Walter S. Mossberg,
The Wall Street Journal, May 6, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703961104575226194192477512.html?mod=WSJ_Tech_TECHEDITORSPICKS
The digital world loves to revel in its own jargon,
and one of its most popular phrases today is "cloud computing." You see the
expression everywhere new uses for the Internet are discussed. But what do
techies and companies mean when they refer to doing things in "the cloud"?
They aren't talking about meteorology, and all they see when they use the
term—which is always singular—is sunshine, not rain.
To help you navigate through the talk about cloud
computing, here's a very basic explainer. It doesn't cover every detail
current among Internet experts. But I hope it gives regular folks a better
understanding of the "cloud" products and services being offered them.
At its most basic level, the "cloud" is simply the
Internet, or the vast array of servers around the world that comprise it.
When people say a digital document is stored, or a digital task is being
performed in the cloud, they mean that the file or application lives on a
server you access over an Internet connection, via a Web browser or app,
rather than on "local" devices, like your computer or smartphone.
This isn't a new idea. For years, there have been
services that would back up your files to a distant server over the Internet
or keep your photos online. And Web-based email programs, like Yahoo Mail or
Hotmail, are familiar examples of cloud-based applications. These programs
live on servers, not your PC, and you access them through a Web browser.
What's changed is that, in recent years,
large-scale Internet-based storage has gotten cheaper, so it's possible for
programmers to create more-sophisticated remote software, and the speed and
ubiquity of Internet connections have improved. Also, some users have
expressed a desire to share and collaborate in easier and richer ways than
emailing files. Cloud-based services let many users view, comment on, and
edit the same material. All this has given a boost to cloud computing.
On top of that, computers are changing in ways that
make cloud services more desirable. Your little netbook may lack the huge
hard disk needed to hold all your music or photos, but there are ways to
keep this material in the cloud and access it at will. Your smartphone can't
run all the sophisticated programs, or store all the files, that your PC
can. But, if it's connected to cloud storage and cloud-based apps, it can do
much more than its hardware specs suggest. And, with cloud file storage and
apps that run on remote servers, you could conceivably travel without any
computer. A borrowed PC, tablet or smartphone might be all you need to log
in and do real work.
So, in recent years, a flood of cloud-based
products and services have appeared to store and share files; to keep
information on all your devices synchronized; and even to perform tasks like
editing photos, or creating and editing long documents or large
spreadsheets.
For instance, I wrote parts of this column in a
private test edition of a cloud-based version of Microsoft Word that the
company will release soon. In fact, Microsoft will be making its entire
Office suite available free in the cloud. Google and others already have
such cloud-based productivity suites. Another example: Many of the 200,000
apps for Apple's iPhone are merely small programs that tap data or services
stored in the cloud to provide everything from restaurant choices to driving
directions.
There are other good examples. At Picnik.com,
you'll find an elegant, versatile cloud-based photo editor that can work on
pictures from a wide variety of Web-based photo sites as well as those on
your own hard disk. At Zoho.com, you'll find a cornucopia of cloud-based
apps that interact with both the Web and your local hard disk. You can track
your finances using a cloud-based program called Mint, which is available
from a PC browser, or from an iPhone or Android-based phone.
Of course, clever readers will have noticed that
this trend toward cloud computing has an obvious flaw. If you aren't
connected to the Internet—or are saddled with a poor connection—you could be
left high and dry when you want access to an important file stored remotely,
or need to use a cloud-based program. Google, which is building an entire
cloud-based operating system, and other companies have come up with ways to
store some remote material on your local device. But these solutions aren't
yet comprehensive, so wise users will make sure that the tools and files
they need most are still available on their devices.
Some products get around this by offering hybrid
cloud and local services. One of my favorites in this category is SugarSync,
which backs up key folders you select to the Web and synchronizes them to
the hard disks on your PCs or Macs, so you always have the freshest copies
handy, whether you have a connection or not. Another problem is privacy.
Many of these cloud services have good security, but prying hackers are
relentless and smart, so consumers should be careful about what they store
in the cloud. You may not care if a family photo is swiped, but your Social
Security number is a different matter.
Cloud computing is here, and growing, and quite
useful. It will only get better and better.
COSO
Releases Latest Fraud Study.
May 21, 2010 ---
http://financialexecutives.blogspot.com/2010/05/sec-fasb-pcaob-testimony-posted-for.html
Yesterday, COSO
announced
the release of a new research study,
Fraudulent Financial Reporting: 1998-2007, that
examines 347 alleged accounting fraud cases identified by a review of U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Accounting and Auditing Enforcement
Releases (AAER's) issued over a ten-year period ending December 31, 2007.
The COSO Fraud Study updates COSO's previous 10-year
study of fraud and was led by the same core academic research team as COSO's
previous Fraud Study.
COSO's Fraud Study provides an in-depth analysis of the nature, extent and
characteristics of accounting frauds occurring throughout the ten years, and
provides helpful insights regarding new and ongoing issues needing to be
addressed.
COSO is more formally known as The Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of
the Treadway Commission, and the five sponsoring organizations are the
AAA,
AICPA,
FEI, IIA, and
IMA. More
COSO info is available on their website,
www.coso.org.
Bob Jensen's fraud updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on fraud are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm
"UK audits beyond reach of US regulators: US audit regulator publishes
list of companies it is being blocked from inspecting," by Mario
Christodoulou, Accountancy Age, May 19, 2010 ---
http://www.accountancyage.com/accountancyage/news/2263271/uk-audits-beyond-reach
Thank you John Anderson for the heads up.
US authorities are being blocked from inspecting
the audits of more than 60 UK-based multinational companies, amid fears
American investors are being put at risk.
The US audit regulator, the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB), set up in the wake of the Enron scandal,
inspects the auditors of US registered companies. The board, however, has
been blocked from inspecting overseas auditors, which have US registrants as
their clients, owing to a dispute over information sharing.
The PCAOB said no legal obstacle prevents a non-US
regulator from coming to the United States to inspect a US audit firm and
that it would will assist them, “to the extent of our authority”. However it
is restricted by law from handing over internal working papers.
Reforms are currently being put before the US
congress to free the PCAOB to share its papers with authorised authorities -
including foreign regulators.
Today, the PCAOB raised the stakes publishing a list of more than 400
companies whose audits it has been unable to inspect.
The UK contained one of the largest proportions of
companies, second only to China and Hong Kong.
In a statement the board said it published the list
to alert investors of companies whose audits are not subject to US
oversight.
“As long as those obstacles persist, however,
investors in US markets who rely on those firms' audit reports are deprived
of the potential benefits of PCAOB inspections of those auditors,” the board
said in a statement.
Among the UK companies are Vodafone, BHP Billiton,
HSBC, Barclays and BT. The PCAOB is hoping new legislation, traveling
through congress as part of the vast US financial reform bill, will allow it
to share information with its EU counterparts.
If a solution can not be reached the PCAOB has the
option to revoke the licenses of overseas audit firms, which will stop them
from auditing US registrants.
Bob Jensen's threads on auditor independence and professionalism are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Professionalism
Lease Accounting and IFRS
PwC contends that one of the most significant impacts of IFRS in the U.S.
will be the newer and highly controversial lease proposals will be in the
financial statements of retailers ---
http://www.pwc.com/gx/en/retail-consumer/pdf/lease-accounting-thoughts.pdf
Also see
http://cfodirect.pwc.com/CFODirectWeb/Controller.jpf?ContentCode=FSAE-85LMVC&ContentType=Content
You Rent It, You Own It (at least while you're renting it)
Not surprisingly, such companies are not overly
enthusiastic about the preliminary leanings of FASB and the International
Accounting Standards Board toward overhauling FAS 13. The rule update could,
by some predictions, move hundreds of billions of dollars in assets and
obligations onto their balance sheets. Many of them are hoping they can at
least convince the standard-setters that the rule doesn't have to encompass
all leases. Under the current rule, companies distinguish between capital
lease obligations, which appear on the balance sheet, and operating leases
(or rental contracts), which do not. Based on FASB's and IASB's discussion
paper on the topic, released earlier this year, the new rule will likely
require companies to also capitalize assets that have traditionally fallen
under the "operating lease" category, making them appear more highly
leveraged.
Sarah Johnson, "Companies: New Lease Rule Means Labor Pains," CFO.com, July
21, 2009 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14072875/c_2984368/?f=archives
Jensen Comment
One of the big controversies is lease renewal of relatively short term leases
that under old standards were typically operating leases with no chance of ever
owning the leased property. For example, those tiny, tiny retail "benches" in
the middle of walkways in a Galleria mall may have leased 60 square feet of
space for six months. There is no hope that those tiny retailers like cell phone
vendors will ever be deeded ownership of 100 square feet of the walkway of a
Galleria mall. And the present value of six month lease is relatively small
relative to the plan of a retailer to renew the lease ad infinitum. Therein lies
a huge problem of deciding how far to extend the cash flow horizon. Retailers
are concerned over how lease renewal options will be accounted for, especially
those options that can be broken with relatively small penalty payments by the
Galleria management. The retailer may intend to stay in this walkway for over 20
years but the Galleria might renege on renewal options for a pittance.
Bob Jensen's somewhat neglected threads on leases are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#Leases

Speech by SEC Chairman: Remarks at CFA Institute 2010 Annual Conference,
May 18, 2010 ---
http://www.sec.gov/news/speech/2010/spch051810mls.htm
"SEC’s Shapiro on Accounting," by David Albrecht, The Summa,
May 20, 2010 ---
http://profalbrecht.wordpress.com/2010/05/20/secs-schapiro-on-accounting/
Thanks to Rick Telberg at CPATrendlines, I
am now aware of
Mary Schapiro’s latest comments on accounting (to
the CFA Institute 2010 Annual Conference in Boston, Mass.). We now have
proof that the spirit of Professor Philip Barbay is alive and well inside
the beltway. You don’t remember Professor Philip Barbay? He was the fool
to Thornton Melon (played by Rodney Dangerfield) in the 1986 classic,
Back to
School. Here’s the scene I best remember:
Watch the Back to School video clip
Continued in article
Jim Peterson's critical take on Shapiro's speech ---
http://snipurl.com/petersonshapiro
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
"A One-Two Accounting Punch? Next year U.S. public companies will find out
if they have to adopt international accounting standards – just as they are
implementing a host of new FASB rules," by Marie Leonem CFO.com, May
21, 2010 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14496195/c_14499425?f=home_todayinfinance
Will American companies have to go through a major
accounting-standards overhaul twice? Some finance executives think so. They
say the project to converge American and international standards is at odds
with the push to introduce a host of new U.S. accounting rules over the next
year, and warn that chaos could result.
That alarming prospect was raised last month during
a panel discussion at a conference held by Pace University's Lubin School of
Business. The problem will become more apparent in mid-2011, when American
companies will be digesting at least 10 major new generally accepted
accounting principles issued as joint projects of the Financial Accounting
Standards Board and the International Accounting Standards Board. The areas
covered include fair value measurement, accounting for financial
instruments, leases, and revenue recognition (see list below).
Around the same time, the Securities and Exchange
Commission is expected to announce whether public companies will have to
abandon U.S. GAAP and adopt international financial reporting standards. If
the answer is yes, it's likely that the regulator will require American
companies to make the switch in 2016, just a few years after adopting the
changes to U.S. GAAP.
Such a one-two punch would be costly and
time-consuming, noted panelist Aaron Anderson, director of IFRS policy and
implementation at IBM. Anderson hoped the SEC would allow companies to make
the switch early and avoid the GAAP changes. The computer giant already
reports results using IFRS at some of its subsidiary companies, Anderson
said.
John McGinnis, chief accountant at HSBC North
America, said that while he understood the need for "due process," he also
believed that "early adoption [of IFRS] would be very helpful." Several HSBC
subsidiaries already use IFRS, he said.
Regardless of the call from companies and foreign
regulators to allow early adoption of IFRS, the SEC is not about to rush its
decision. SEC chief accountant James Kroeker, who also spoke at the
conference, said it was "too early" to comment on the progress of the
commission's decision whether or not to abandon U.S. GAAP, although the SEC
has promised to provide periodic updates starting in October.
Other groups publicly oppose the rapid pace of
rulemaking and what a Financial Executives International committee
characterizes as the "quality versus speed trade-off." In a letter to FASB,
members of FEI's Committee on Private Company Standards said they were
worried about private-company executives becoming "overwhelmed" by poring
over exposure drafts while doing their day jobs.
Aware of the burden that both public and private
companies face, FASB is considering "staggering" the rule implementation
dates so the changes are rolled out more slowly, noted FASB technical
director Russ Golden while speaking at an April industry meeting sponsored
by the Zicklin School of Business at Baruch College.
"No one standard is an issue in and of itself,"
says Kelley Wall, senior consultant at accounting and financial advisory
firm RoseRyan. "But the timing of all of them being issued in such a short
time frame would be a significant strain on companies." Adds Jay Hanson,
McGladrey & Pullen national director of accounting, "For companies that
thought that [Sarbanes-Oxley] implementation was hard, implementing the new
FASB rules will be even worse."
But Wall isn't too concerned about switching to
IFRS after FASB issues its collection of new rules. She points out that all
10 rules currently in the exposure-draft stage are part of the IASB-FASB
joint convergence project, meaning that in most cases, the IASB would be
issuing a standard similar to the new FASB rules.
In fact, she believes the flood of new FASB rules
may be in response to the SEC's notion that convergence should be complete
before it decides whether to switch the country to IFRS. "Although
implementing a host of new accounting standards in such a short time frame
would be painful, it would make the eventual adoption of IFRS in the U.S.
easier," says Wall.
The Joint Projects Are Jumpin' |
Joint FASB/IASB Projects (Final rules
due first half of 2011, unless otherwise noted) |
Fair value measurement (due Q4 2010) |
Consolidation: Policy and procedures |
Accounting for financial instruments |
Financial instruments with
characteristics of equity |
Financial statement presentation |
Insurance contracts |
Leases |
Revenue recognition |
Statement of comprehensive income |
Reporting discontinued operations |
Balance sheet offsetting |
Emissions trading schemes (due date TBA) |
Source: FASB Website, May
2010 |
Bob Jensen's threads on IFRS-FASB standards convergence are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
The Hazards of Financial Contract Creativity
Keywords
Financial Innovation; Raghuram Rajan; Junk Bonds; Credit-Default Swaps;
Securitization; Index Funds; Currency Swaps
Read more:
http://www.newyorker.com/talk/financial/2010/05/17/100517ta_talk_surowiecki#ixzz0o7msp3sa
"Too Clever by Half?" by James Surowiecki, The New Yorker, May
17, 2010 ---
http://www.newyorker.com/talk/financial/2010/05/17/100517ta_talk_surowiecki
Innovate or die. The phrase, popularized in Silicon
Valley in the nineteen-nineties, has since become a mantra throughout the
business world, and nowhere has it been more popular than on Wall Street,
which in recent years has churned out a seemingly endless stream of new ways
to manage capital and slice and dice risk. But, while Silicon Valley’s
innovations have brought enormous benefits to society, the value of Wall
Street’s innovations seems a lot less clear. (The former Fed chair Paul
Volcker has said, for instance, that the last valuable new product in
banking was the A.T.M.) The Valley gave us the microprocessor, Google, and
the iPod. The Street gave us the C.D.O., the A.B.S., and the C.D.S.—not to
mention the kind of computerized trading that enabled last week’s
stock-market nosedive. Not surprisingly, then, the whole notion of
“financial innovation” is being looked at with a gimlet eye, and Congress is
now considering various ways to rein in the banking industry’s excesses.
Given the tumult of the past few years, the barter system is starting to
look good.
Not all of Wall Street’s concoctions have been
pointless or destructive, of course. Take junk bonds, whose use Michael
Milken pioneered in the nineteen-eighties. They got a bad name when Milken
went to prison for securities fraud. But his insight that high-yield bonds
could be a good investment—that, historically, the rewards outweighed the
risks—allowed new companies, including eventual giants like Turner
Broadcasting and M.C.I., as well as countless smaller businesses, to raise
billions in capital that previously would have been out of their reach.
Today, almost two hundred billion dollars’ worth of junk bonds is sold every
year; they’re an integral part of the way Wall Street does what it’s
supposed to do: channel money from investors to productive enterprises.
There are plenty of comparable examples, as Robert
Litan, a scholar at the Brookings Institution, showed in a recent essay.
Currency and interest-rate swaps, for instance, allow global corporations to
focus on their businesses without having to worry about wild swings in
currency values. Index funds have given individual investors a low-cost way
of putting their money to work. Venture capital provides startups with
access to tens of billions of dollars every year. Raghuram Rajan, a former
chief economist at the I.M.F. and a finance professor at the University of
Chicago, says, “There’s a lot of stuff that does a lot of good that we take
for granted, because it’s just become part of our everyday financial lives.”
Unfortunately, the benefits of good financial
innovations have, of late, been swamped by the costs of the ones that went
bad. Things like “structured investment vehicles,” for instance, were
designed to evade regulations and make bank balance sheets look safer than
they were. Subprime loans, which offered lower-income Americans a rare
chance to accumulate wealth, ended up inflating the housing bubble and
leaving these same people with debts they couldn’t pay. Credit-default
swaps, which are a useful way for investors to protect themselves against
unavoidable risks, became a way for institutions like A.I.G. to make easy
money in the short term while piling up billions of dollars in potential
obligations that taxpayers ended up paying for. And securitization—the
packaging of many loans into a single complex financial product—led
investors to neglect the quality of the actual loans that were being made.
Some of these ideas, as it happens, were reasonable
ones, within limits. But limits aren’t something that Wall Street knows much
about: in recent years, it has shown an uncanny knack for taking reasonable
ideas to unreasonable extremes. The economists Nicola Gennaioli, Andrei
Shleifer, and Robert Vishny argue in a recent paper that financial
innovation often leads to financial instability: investors get interested in
a new product that seems to offer high returns, and, precisely because it’s
new, underestimate the chance that this product will eventually blow up.
They pour more and more money into the market, until things start to go
wrong, at which point they panic en masse. The complex financial engineering
that went into creating products like C.D.O.s exacerbated the problem by
making the risks of those investments opaque. If investors had known the
risks they were taking in the pursuit of greater returns, they would have
been more prepared for failure—and would presumably have put less money into
the housing market. Instead, they thought that financial wizardry had
engineered all the danger out of the system. As Rajan argued in a prescient
2005 paper, financial development, which was supposed to make the system
safer, could in fact make it riskier. The fundamental problem with
innovation was that it made investors and executives forget the need to
think for themselves.
Read more:
http://www.newyorker.com/talk/financial/2010/05/17/100517ta_talk_surowiecki#ixzz0o7nchYvD
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
I added the following to my blog to my list of professors who blog ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListServRoles.htm
Paul Caron's Tax Prof Blog (Cincinnati College of
Law) ---
http://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/
Ensuring Insurance: Colleges Investigating Fraudulent Medical Insurance
Coverage “Dependents”
Question
Note that a major part of financial auditing is external verification of
accounts and notes receivables.
I wonder how many CPA audits are also test checking eligibility for benefits in
business firms?
"Ensuring Insurance," by Doug Lederman, Inside Higher Ed, May 24, 2010
---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/05/24/insurance
With their revenues
declining and prospects for replacing them fading, colleges and universities
around the country are embracing
a series of tactics aimed at lowering their costs,
such as
redesigning entry-level courses and
pruning unproductive research institutes. The
measures aren't always popular, especially when they are perceived as taking
cherished benefits away from employees.
That's the case in Georgia,
where the state's public college system has
undertaken an audit designed to ensure that health
insurance coverage goes only to those who are qualified to receive it -- and
to shave as much as $4.6 million off the $290 million that the University
System of Georgia spends each year on employer-provided benefits. The
so-called dependent eligibility audit, after an "amnesty period," requires
all employees whose dependents are covered under the health insurance policy
to submit documents (such as marriage licenses, birth certificates and tax
returns) proving that their spouses and children warrant such coverage.
Similar audits are underway or planned at the
University of Michigan, the University of Kentucky, and the University of
Colorado System.
Employee groups in the Georgia system have not
taken kindly to the audit. Viewed in isolation, said Hugh Hudson Jr., a
Georgia State University historian who heads the state chapter of the
American Association of University Professors, the idea of requiring faculty
and staff members to prove that they're following the system's current
policy may seem like no big deal.
But much else is happening in Georgia, Hudson said.
State political leaders are imposing major budget cuts on public colleges,
promising furloughs and threatening layoffs of tenured faculty members (a
threat from which the university has since backed off), and legislators have
taken aim at what they perceive to be the inappropriate research interests
of some professors.
In that context, "we're told, 'Prove to me that you
haven't been cheating.' This is the proverbial straw breaking the camel’s
back." It's hard not to view the current review of benefits, Hudson said, as
"part of a larger sense of growing hostility toward the value of higher
education and the faculty."
Officials of the Georgia system insist that such a
view seriously misreads their intent. While such audits typically find that
between 5 and 10 percent of enrolled dependents should not be covered, the
overwhelming majority are enrolled because of mistakes or incomplete
understanding, not ill intent.
And it is just good fiduciary practice to limit
health insurance to those who are actually qualified to receive it, they say
-- a point of view shared by the increasing numbers of colleges and
universities that are undertaking such audits.
“Many colleges and universities have recently
conducted similar audits and are realizing significant annual cost savings
-- some in the millions of dollars per year," Andy Brantley, president and
chief executive officer of the College and University Professional
Association for Human Resources, said via e-mail. "These kinds of audits are
not meant to be an invasion of privacy and are only conducted to verify
information previously submitted by the employee.... All institutions should
regularly conduct these types of audits as a standard business practice.“
The university system's Board of Regents approved
the audit in March, as one of a series of changes it had undertaken in the
preceding months (at large part at the direction of its new chairman, Robert
F. Hatcher) to shave costs from its health care programs.
"What we're trying to do is to preserve our health
care plan for the people on the plan," said Wayne Guthrie, vice chancellor
for human resources for the Georgia system. The dependent care audit is one
way to do that, system officials said in documents explaining the plan,
since "[covering individuals who are not eligible dependents raises our cost
for health coverage which is reflected in the annual premiums."
The audit is being conducted by Chapman Kelly, an
Indiana-based firm to which the regents agreed to pay about $300,000. (The
expenditure of funds to an outside company given the state's tight budgets
has also raised faculty hackles, said Hudson of the AAUP. "Is there no
agency in the state that could do this work?") The review includes a
weeks-long “amnesty period ... in which employees may voluntarily remove
ineligible dependents with no penalties," the system told employees in its
communications to them. (Employees were
notified of the amnesty phase on March 29 and
given until April 21.)
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
Bob Jensen's Fraud Updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Question
What causes asset price bubbles?
Something
to consider in fair value accounting theory.
"Asset-Price Bubbles," by Richard Posner, Becker-Posner Blog, May 16,
2010 ---
http://uchicagolaw.typepad.com/beckerposner/2010/05/assetprice-bubblesposner.html
"Social Interactions and Bubbles," by Nobel Laureate Gary Becker,
Becker-Posner Blog, May 16, 2010 ---
http://uchicagolaw.typepad.com/beckerposner/2010/05/social-interactions-and-bubbles-becker.html
Bob Jensen's threads on fair value accounting ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#FairValue
Bob Jensen's threads on alternative asset valuation theories ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#BasesAccounting
The second is the comment that Joan
Robinson made about American Keynsians: that their theories were so flimsy that
they had to put math into them. In accounting academia, the shortest path to
respectability seems to be to use math (and statistics), whether meaningful or
not.
Professor Jagdish Gangolly, SUNY
Albany
I don't think it's ready for IFRS prime time with the quants, but
improvements are being suggested for Black Swan fat tails.
The quants are more desperate at Senator Spector (now a lame duck) running
to save their jobs.
We might facetiously assert that its all for the birds.
Do we forecast? You bet. Do we have
confidence in our forecasts? Never! Confidence about a non-linear chaotic system
can only come in degrees, and even those degrees of confidence are guesses. Not
all hope is lost. There are times when it seems our ability to predict is better
than others. Thus we need to take advantage of it if we see it. Trading ranges,
pivot points, support and resistance, and the like can help, and do help the
trader.
Michael Covel, Trading Black Swans,
September 2009 ---
http://www.michaelcovel.com/pdfs/swan.pdf
"A Finer Formula for Assessing Risk," by Martin Hutchinson, The New
York Times, May 10, 2010 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/11/business/11views.html?src=busln
The credit crisis would not have been as bad if
investment banks’ risk management systems worked well. But the systems rely
on sophisticated mathematical models that have a fundamental flaw: they
grossly underestimate a factor called “tail risk.” This problem can be
solved fairly easily.
In a way, this is a highly technical dispute about
the arcane details of the calculation of Value at Risk, the prime measure of
the riskiness of trading books.
To nonmathematicians, the possible answers sound
daunting: Gaussian, Cauchy and Pareto-Levy. But the underlying question is
straightforward: how often and how badly do markets blow up?
On a day to day basis, financial asset prices seem
to go up and down at random, or in response to news. But the rocket
scientists of finance analyze thousands of movements to identify patterns.
The answer is what is known as a stable “Paretian
distribution.” Picture a curve that looks like a cross-section of a hat,
with a brim that is wide and thin and a great big crown in the middle.
The crown represents the days that prices don’t
move very much. It is high because most days are like that. On those calm
days, holders cannot lose much money. The brim represents the days of big
losses or gains. The further from the center of the crown, the bigger the
loss or gain. The wider the brim, the more often the big moves occur.
The argument is about the shape of the hat brim.
The standard model employed by banks — named for the German mathematician
Carl Friedrich Gauss — is one in which really bad days happen rarely and
horrible days almost never.
How rarely? Well, in August 2007 David Viniar, the
chief financial officer of Goldman Sachs, said, “We were seeing things that
were 25 standard deviation moves, several days in a row.”
Standard deviations are a measure of the distance
from the center of the hat, or, to use the common image in the trade, the
length of the tail. If those days were really 25 standard deviations away,
they would not be expected to come around in the lifetime of a billion
universes.
But the 2007-style collapse had many precedents in
the last few centuries, well within the life of this one universe.
The Gaussian model is too optimistic about market
stability, because it uses an unrealistically high number for the key
variable, the exponential rate of decay, known to its friends as alpha (not
the alpha of performance measurement).
Gauss is at 2. If markets worked with an alpha of
zero — known as the Cauchy distribution for its founder, Augustin-Louis
Cauchy — the 2007 days would come around every 2.5 months. That is
unrealistic in the other direction.
In 1962, the mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot
demonstrated that an alpha of 1.7 provided the best fit with a 100-year
series of cotton prices.
More recent market history — the 1987 crash, the
Long Term Capital Management debacle and the 2007-8 crisis — suggest big bad
events occur about once a decade.
That goes better with an alpha of 0.5, the
Pareto-Levy distribution. This is the model used by the Options Clearing
Corporation to assess option trading counterparty risk for margin purposes.
The Clearing Corporation has no incentive to allow
counterparty risk to build up. But for investment banks, more conservative
measures of the chance of big market drops would reduce returns on capital,
because they would have to put aside more capital to protect against the
possibility.
The lure of maximizing trading positions, profits
and bonuses in noncrash years could well distort the experts’ judgment.
Indeed, one way to look at the exotic financial instruments that have
proliferated in recent years is as a sort of statistical arbitrage.
If alpha were calculated correctly, the tails for
portfolios of complex derivatives and the like would be fat and long — more
gains in the good times and bigger losses in the bad — and more capital
would be needed. But the measure that is actually used, the Gaussian alpha,
hides the actual risk.
Regulators should get a better handle on that risk,
but by using less Gauss and more Pareto-Levy. That would reduce the chance
that a pretty predictable market blowup wrecks the entire financial system.
Bob Jensen's threads on Black Swan fat tails are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#EMH
"Big (Accountnacy) Firms Exit Hawaii Market," by Rick Telberg, CPA
Trendlines, May 17, 2010 ---
http://cpatrendlines.com/2010/05/17/big-firms-exit-hawaii-market/
Jensen Comment
One of the things the departing accountants will really miss: In Hawaii
you're out of uniform unless you're wearing a Hawaiian shirt or Hawaiian dress.
Departing male accountants might have to relearn how to tie a necktie.
Jerry Trites clued me into some new materials from Ernst & Young on risk
management ---
http://www.ey.com/CA/en/Issues/Managing-risk
This is a Good Summary of Various Forms of Business Risk
---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risk_management
-
Enterprise Risk Management
-
Credit Risk
-
Market Risk
-
Operational Risk
-
Business Risk
-
Other Types of Risk?
Before reading this May 4, 2009 article you may want to read some introductory
modules about Overstock.com at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overstock.com
"Overstock.com and PricewaterhouseCoopers: Errors in Submissions to SEC Division
of Corporation Finance," White Collar Fraud, May 19, 2008 ---
http://whitecollarfraud.blogspot.com/2008/05/overstockcom-and-pricewaterhousecoopers.html
"To Grant Thornton, New Auditors for Overstock.com," White Collar Fraud,
March 30, 2009 ---
http://whitecollarfraud.blogspot.com/2009/03/to-grant-thornton-new-auditors-for.html
"Overstock.com's First Quarter Financial Performance Aided by GAAP Violations,"
White Collar Fraud, May 4, 2009 ---
http://whitecollarfraud.blogspot.com/2009/05/overstockcoms-first-quarter-financial.html
"Auditor Merry Go Round at Overstock.com," Big Four Blog, January
8, 2010 ---
http://www.bigfouralumni.blogspot.com/
"Overstock Back on Solid Footing With Help from KPMG ," The Big
Four Blog, May 13. 2010 ---
http://www.bigfouralumni.blogspot.com/
We had blogged earlier about Overstock.com, which
had changed three auditors in 2008-2009, from PricewaterhouseCoopers to
Grant Thornton to KPMG, all in a space of about a year, and been in trouble
with Nasdaq for filing unaudited financials.
See our earlier posts for all the drama with the
company and its erstwhile auditors taking three disparate viewpoints on
restatements, ownership and reporting.
However, over the last few months in 2010, things
seem to have become much better for the company, and the online retailer
seems to have put its heart back into retailing and put away the distraction
of accounting from previous months.
Here’s a chronology of events:
Dec 29, 2009 Overstock.com Engages KPMG as the
company's independent registered public accounting firm of record for the
fiscal year ending December 31, 2009. KPMG will conduct an integrated audit
of the company's 2009 financial statements, including review of the
company's quarterly information for the periods ending March 31, 2009, June
30, 2009 and September 30, 2009.
KPMG is hired after a lot of back and forth with
previous auditors, Grant Thornton.
March 31, 2010 Overstock.com Reports Restated FY
2009 Results with Revenue: $876.8M in FY 2009 vs. $829.9M in FY 2008 (6%
increase); Gross margin: 18.8% vs. 17.4% (140 basis point improvement);
Gross profit: $164.8M vs. $144.2M (14% increase); Contribution (non-GAAP
measure): $109.2M vs. $86.6M (26% increase); Net income (loss) attributable
to common shares: $7.7M vs. $(11.1M) ($18.8M increase in net income); and
Diluted EPS: $0.33/share vs. $(0.48)/share ($0.81/share improvement)
Overstock.com ranked for the second year in a row,
number 2 in the NRF/Amex survey of American consumers, behind only LL Bean
and ahead of Amazon, Zappos, eBay, Nordstrom, and many other fine firms.
Patrick M. Byrne said, “As you may know, at the end
of Q4 we engaged KPMG as our independent auditors, and announced that we
were restating our FY 2008 and Q1, Q2 and Q3 2009 financial statements. I
thank you for being patient with us as we worked through the questions
raised by the SEC, the transition to the KPMG team, and the extra time it
took to ensure that our financial statements are accurate.”
KPMG passed the actual audit of the company without
adverse opinion, saying “In our opinion, the consolidated financial
statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the
financial position of Overstock.com, Inc. and subsidiaries as of December
31, 2009, and the results of their operations and their cash flows for the
year ended December 31, 2009, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted
accounting principles. Also in our opinion, the related financial statement
schedule, when considered in relation to the basic consolidated financial
statements taken as a whole, presents fairly, in all material respects, the
information set forth therein.”
But they did qualify that Overstock.com’s internal
audit over financial reporting was not up to standards and provided an
adverse opinion on internal controls. The company’s Audit Committee
initiated strong steps to enhance internal audit by hiring competent
professionals and instituting appropriate processes.
Overstock.com did restate its FY 2008 and Q1-2009
to Q3-2009 financial statements to account for a number of auditing issues
and concerns.
A nice event, with all the accounting restatements
done and good results to boot compared to FY 2008.
April 5, 2010 Overstock.com Regains Compliance with
NASDAQ Listing Rules, receiving a notice from the NASDAQ Stock Market that
the company is in compliance with the periodic filing requirement and this
matter has been closed. Earlier, Overstock.com had received a letter on
November 19, 2009 from the NASDAQ notifying the company that it had violated
NASDAQ Listing Rule 5250(c)(1) when it filed its Quarterly Report on Form
10-Q for the period ended September 30, 2009 because the filing wasn't
reviewed in accordance with Statement of Auditing Standards No. 100. In
response to a compliance plan submitted by the company, NASDAQ granted an
exception to enable the company to regain compliance by May 17, 2010.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on KPMG are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
"Silencing the Whistleblowers: Financial reform won’t prevent
another bubble if banks bulldoze their internal warning systems," by Michael
W. Hudson, The Big Money (Slate), May 9, 2010 ---
http://www.thebigmoney.com/articles/judgments/2010/05/07/silencing-whistleblowers
In early 2006, Darcy Parmer began to worry about
her job. She was a mortgage fraud investigator at Wells Fargo Bank. Her
managers weren’t happy with her. It wasn’t that she wasn’t doing a good job
of sniffing out questionable loans in the bank’s massive home-loan program.
The problem, she said, was that she was doing too good a job.
The bank’s executives and mortgage salesmen didn’t
like it, Parmer later claimed in a lawsuit, when she tried to block loans
that she suspected were underpinned by paperwork that exaggerated borrowers’
incomes and inflated their home values. One manager, she said, accused her
of launching “witch hunts” against the bank’s loan officers.
One of the skirmishes involved a borrower she later
referred to in court papers as “Ms. A.” An IRS document showed Ms. A earned
$5,030 a month. But Wells Fargo’s sales staff had won approval for Ms. A’s
loan by claiming she made more than twice that—$11,830 a month. When Parmer
questioned the deal, she said, a supervisor ordered her to close the
investigation, complaining, “This is what you do every time.”
Amid the frenzy of the nation’s mortgage boom, the
back-of-the-hand treatment that Parmer describes wasn’t out of the ordinary.
Parmer was one of a small band of in-house gumshoes at various financial
institutions who uncovered evidence of corruption in the mortgage
business—including made-up addresses, pyramid schemes, and organized
criminal rings—and tried to warn their employers that this wave of fraud
threatened consumers as well as the stability of the financial system.
Instead of heeding their warnings, they say, company officials ignored them,
harassed them, demoted them, or fired them.
In interviews and in court records, 10 former fraud
investigators at seven of the nation’s biggest banks and lenders—including
Wells Fargo (WFC), IndyMac Bank, and Countrywide Financial—describe
corporate cultures that allowed fraud to thrive in the pursuit of loan
volume and market share. Mortgage salesmen stuck homeowners into loans they
couldn’t afford by exaggerating borrowers’ assets and, in some cases,
forging their signatures on disclosure documents. In other instances, banks
opened their vaults to professional fraudsters who arranged millions of
dollars in loans using “straw buyers,” bogus identities, or, in a few
instances, dead people’s names and Social Security numbers.
Corporate managers looked the other way as these
practices flourished, the investigators say, because they didn’t want to
crimp loan sales. The investigators discovered that they’d been hired not so
much to find fraud but rather to provide window dressing—the illusion that
lenders were vetting borrowers before they booked loans and sold them to
Wall Street investors. “You’re like a dog on a leash. You’re allowed to go
as far as a company allows you to go,” recalled Kelly Dragna, who worked as
a fraud investigator at Ameriquest Mortgage Co., the largest subprime lender
during the home-loan boom. “At Ameriquest, we were on pretty short leash. We
were there for show. We were there to show people that they had a lot of
investigators on staff.”
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on the subprime sleaze ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#Sleaze
Bob Jensen's threads on how whistle blowing is not rewarded ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#WhistleBlowing
Benford's Law: How a mathematical phenomenon can help CPAs uncover fraud
and other irregularities
Benford's Law: It's interesting to read the "Silly" comments that
follow the article.
"Benford's Law And A Theory of Everything: A new relationship
between Benford's Law and the statistics of fundamental physics may hint at a
deeper theory of everything," MIT's Technology Review, May 7, 2010
---
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/25155/?nlid=2963
In 1938, the physicist Frank Benford made an
extraordinary discovery about numbers. He found that in many lists of
numbers drawn from real data, the leading digit is far more likely to be a 1
than a 9. In fact, the distribution of first digits follows a logarithmic
law. So the first digit is likely to be 1 about 30 per cent of time while
the number 9 appears only five per cent of the time.
That's an unsettling and counterintuitive
discovery. Why aren't numbers evenly distributed in such lists? One answer
is that if numbers have this type of distribution then it must be scale
invariant. So switching a data set measured in inches to one measured in
centimetres should not change the distribution. If that's the case, then the
only form such a distribution can take is logarithmic.
But while this is a powerful argument, it does
nothing to explan the existence of the distribution in the first place.
Then there is the fact that Benford Law seems to
apply only to certain types of data. Physicists have found that it crops up
in an amazing variety of data sets. Here are just a few: the areas of lakes,
the lengths of rivers, the physical constants, stock market indices, file
sizes in a personal computer and so on.
However, there are many data sets that do not
follow Benford's law, such as lottery and telephone numbers.
What's the difference between these data sets that
makes Benford's law apply or not? It's hard to escape the feeling that
something deeper must be going on.
Today, Lijing Shao and Bo-Qiang Ma at Peking
University in China provide a new insight into the nature of Benford's law.
They examine how Benford's law applies to three kinds of statistical
distributions widely used in physics.
These are: the Boltzmann-Gibbs distribution which
is a probability measure used to describe the distribution of the states of
a system; the Fermi-Dirac distribution which is a measure of the energies of
single particles that obey the Pauli exclusion principle (ie fermions); and
finally the Bose-Einstein distribution, a measure of the energies of single
particles that do not obey the Pauli exclusion principle (ie bosons).
Lijing and Bo-Qiang say that the Boltzmann-Gibbs
and Fermi-Dirac distributions distributions both fluctuate in a periodic
manner around the Benford distribution with respect to the temperature of
the system. The Bose Einstein distribution, on the other hand, conforms to
benford's Law exactly whatever the temperature is.
What to make of this discovery? Lijing and Bo-Qiang
say that logarithmic distributions are a general feature of statistical
physics and so "might be a more fundamental principle behind the complexity
of the nature".
That's an intriguing idea. Could it be that
Benford's law hints at some kind underlying theory that governs the nature
of many physical systems? Perhaps.
But what then of data sets that do not conform to
Benford's law? Any decent explanation will need to explain why some data
sets follow the law and others don't and it seems that Lijing and Bo-Qiang
are as far as ever from this.
It's interesting to read the "Silly" comments
that follow the article.
"I've Got Your Number: How a mathematical phenomenon can help CPAs
uncover fraud and other irregularities," by Mark J. Nigrini, Journal of
Accountancy, May 1999 ---
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Issues/1999/May/nigrini.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
The Dark Side: Hiring Secrets of the
Big 4
The suit claims Ernst & Young offers job contracts to
graduating college seniors that “compel” them “to work for EY to the exclusion
of all other employers,” but allow the company “to legally renege or cancel the
offer of employment” if the senior does not maintain a vague “strong academic
standing.”
"Taking a Louisville Slugger: Lawsuits
Against E&Y, PwC Show Ugly Side of Big 4,″ written for Going Concern
magazine by Francine McKenna, re: theAuditors, May 13, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/05/13/going-concern-taking-a-louisville-slugger-lawsuits-against-ey-pwc-show-ugly-side-of-big-4/
With a video clip from The Untouchables
Robert DeNiro as Al Capone
in The Untouchables:
“A man becomes
preeminent, he’s expected to have enthusiasms. Enthusiasms, enthusiasms…
What are mine? Baseball! A man stands alone at the plate. This is the
time for what? For individual achievement. There he stands alone. But in
the field, what? Part of a team. Teamwork…”
It must be heartbreaking to
one day feel you’re part of a team, a big wonderful, eminent, respectable
team and the next get cold-cocked.
Two new Big 4 lawsuits – one
against Ernst & Young and the other against PwC – reminded me how many times
professionals have written to say their firm had just knocked the stuffing
out of them. They had been fired suddenly or a student’s offer was pulled at
the last minute.
They were crushed.
Humiliated. Confused. Betrayed.
It must be
heartbreaking to one day feel you’re part of a team, a big wonderful,
eminent, respectable team and the next get
cold-cocked.
Two new Big 4 lawsuits – one
against Ernst & Young and the other against PwC – reminded me how many times
professionals have written to say their firm had just knocked the stuffing
out of them. They had been fired suddenly or a student’s offer was pulled at
the last minute. They were crushed. Humiliated. Confused. Betrayed.
Ms. Yunjung
Gribben, 43, is the lead plaintiff in a class
action lawsuit against EY in California. Ms. Gribben says Ernst & Young
offered her a job with a starting annual salary of $50,000, then pulled the
offer, after she graduated, because of “a couple of C grades she had
received in accounting during her senior year at CSUF.” Ms. Gribben says she
graduated from Cal State Fullerton with a 3.6 grade point average. The case
seems to be more about age discrimination – she says younger candidates kept
their jobs – than it is about contracts.
The suit claims Ernst &
Young offers job contracts to graduating college seniors that “compel” them
“to work for EY to the exclusion of all other employers,” but allow the
company “to legally renege or cancel the offer of employment” if the senior
does not maintain a vague “strong academic standing.”
I’ve written about the
one-sided contracts and the
high pressure recruiting tactics of the Big 4
audit firms at re: The Auditors. When the economy started to turn in
2007, the Big 4 began to
slow the pipeline of recruits by offering fewer
internships, offering fewer interns full time jobs, delaying start dates,
and rescinding offers for vague, supposed breaches of their one sided
agreements.
Candidates felt
helpless since, like Ms. Gribben, once they had decided amongst all offers –
many of the best students used to have a choice of all four
of the largest firms and more – they were left with
few choices if their selected firm reneged. Not only had the other firms
moved on and given their slot to someone else, but the taint of having their
offer fall through intimidates many students. Complaining might end up on
their
“permanent
record” and
“blacklist” them for the rest of their career.
Many were locked in a stasis that sometimes only corrected itself
after a call or email to me.
I have spoken to former Big
4 partners. They tell me getting fired after twenty years, their whole
post-undergraduate degree career, is like getting whacked in the knees with
a baseball bat. One day you’re leading engagements at prestigious Fortune
500 clients, smoking cigars and drinking single-malt scotch at parties,
buying the McMansion in a “better” suburb and putting the BMW in the
driveway and the next day you’re putting a profile together on “Linked In”
and setting up an LLC in case you have to do independent consulting for an
extended period.
Read the rest of the article at
http://goingconcern.com/2010/05/taking-a-louisville-slugger-lawsuits-against-ey-pwc-show-an-ugly-side-of-the-big-4/
Bob Jensen's threads on lawsuits and
settlements of CPA firms ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
What if the
mezzanine has more square feet than the rest of the hotel?
Or put another way,
what if neither the investor in a bond nor the borrower has the power to convert
the debt into equity?
In other words, what if Big Brother holds the sledge hammer?
Here's what Tom
Selling has to say about this.
Accounting for a Sweet Co-Co
Posted: 13 May 2010 11:23 PM PDT
Prof. Robert Bloomfield of Cornell University posted an interesting
accounting question on the
FASRI
(FASB Research Initiative) blog. I'm taking the liberty of repeating
it here in its entirety:
A policy proposal
floating
around
these days is to require banks to issue contingent convertible debt:
My [Mankiw's] favorite proposal is to require banks, and perhaps a
broad class of financial institutions, to sell contingent debt that
can be converted to equity when a regulator deems that these
institutions have insufficient capital. This debt would be a form of
preplanned recapitalization in the event of a financial crisis, and
the infusion of capital would be with private, rather than taxpayer,
funds. Think of it as crisis insurance.
A lawyer
asks
how these might be structured. This accountant asks: how would you
account for them? Note that unlike many contingent convertible
securities, the event on which conversion is contingent is a
regulatory action.
I am attracted to the accounting question because I think the policy
proposal itself is a brilliant idea; and because it dovetails nicely
with my last post on the FASB/IASB deliberations on
liabilities/equity classification. For the sake of the points I
would like to make, I'm going to make three questions out of Rob's
single question:
1.
How would the contingent convertible debt (known in the trade as a
Co-Co) be accounted for under current GAAP?
2.
Would the answer change if current FASB proposals became final
rules?
3.
How
should the Co-Co be accounted for?
Current GAAP
I could not find specific GAAP for a Co-Co, but I can't be sure that
none exists -- in part because the FASB's Accounting Standards
Codification is so darn hard to read! There are many redeeming
qualities of the Codification; however, it seems to sacrifice
readability for systematic presentation. I used to think that some
of the pre-codification Original Pronouncements read like gibberish;
but now, alas, I pine for them.
So, here goes nothing. I surmise that GAAP does not make a
distinction between regulatory events and other events triggering
conversion. Thus, it would require that this particular Co-Co be
accounted for as straight debt until conversion actually occurred.
That accounting actually seems reasonable until we have a bank whose
financial condition may actually be getting to the point where the
regulator would flip the switch to convert the debt to equity. For
simplicity, let's assume the debt was issued at par. Upon conversion
that entire amount would have to be transferred to shareholders
equity (probably through net income) in one fell swoop as of the
date of conversion.
A big one-time credit to equity smacks of a rule devoid of any
intent to provide timely information to investors. The economic
value of the debt would have been declining as conversion inexorably
approached, and current GAAP wouldn't have cared less. So, in the
period that the regulator flips the debt over to equity, the huge
cumulative catch-up adjustment to the debt could swamp the operating
losses of the current period, which surely must be occurring. If the
debt had been marked to market whie the bank was heading toward its
nadir, the trends in the earnings available to the pre-conversion
equity holders would have been reflected in a more timely and
relevant fashion.
Future GAAP
Of the accounting that would occur if certain current FASB projects
came to fruition as planned, I am more certain. Starting with the
fair value project, the debt would be fair valued each period.
That's a good thing, but the Co-Co also exposes a yet another (see
my previous
post)
hole in the rules-based liability/equity project.
Let's take a bank that has the following components to its capital
structure: the Co-Co, call options on its common shares (which may
only be settled by issuing common shares), and common shares.
According to the FASB's current
position,
the options will be classified as equity; but the Co-Co, which also
contains a conversion option) will be classified as debt unless
converted. Although the Co-Co would be fair valued each period, such
treatment will be inconsistent with the treatment of the call
option, the opening value of which will sit in the equity section of
the balance sheet like cream cheese on a bagel forevermore. The
economic events that could cause a change in both the fair value of
the Co-Co and the option would be ignored as to their impact on the
option, but the impact on the Co-Co would be recognized.
The accounting treatment for the option and the Co-Co would differ
for no good reason. Both would affect the economic position of the
current shareholders, but only the effect caused by the change in
the value of the Co-Co would be recognized. This is just one of
many reasons why the FASB should revert to its recently abandoned
principled stance: it should classify all financial instruments as
either assets or liabilities, except for common stock.
Accounting Onion GAAP
Rob Bloomfield correctly observes that lawyers would have to be
consulted to precisely specify the Co-Co that Mankiw and others have
envisaged. When considering current or future GAAP, I risked putting
the cart before the horse by not anticipating key terms of the
arrangement. That's because one of the huge problems with
rules-based accounting (especially for financial instruments) is
that the standards promulgators must ever be on the ready to publish
new rules as those pesky financial engineers devise clever ways to
circumvent those already in effect. But, as I will demonstrate,
there is no danger that a new financial instrument will threaten the
sufficiency of truly principles-based standards.
First, the Co-Co liability –and for that matter, all other financial
instruments other than common shares—would be measured at an
investor's replacement cost. (Thus, no inactive markets problem for
determining the exit price; even if there are no current buyers,
there are always sellers for the right price.)
Second, any changes in replacement cost are to be reported through
net income.
Third, upon conversion, I would derecognize the Co-Co, increase
paid-in capital for the market value of common stock immediately
prior to the conversion, and record any difference in these two
amounts in equity through net income. That's the amount that the
holders of basic ownership interests gained or lost when the
government pulled the trigger on its conversion option.
Any questions? I have one: when is the FASB going to get some
principles? Any and all changes that would make the Codification
easier to read would be much appreciated!
Off Topic -- Tom on the Hot Seat
I had the honor of responding to questions from participatns during
a recent hour-long FASRI Roundtable dubbed "Perspectives on Standard
Setting." You can listen/watch a Second Life recording of my being
grilled by some really smart folks slinging some really tough
questions here.
Article continued at
Accounting for a Sweet Co-C
 |
Remember Crazy Eddie? ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crazy_Eddie
"Guest Post: Fraud Girl Interviews Convicted Financial Felon Sam Antar,"
Simoleon Sense, May , 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/guestpost-fraud-girl-interviews-convicted-financial-felon-sam-antar/
Hello Again –
On Monday, I had the pleasure of speaking with Sam
E. Antar, the former CFO of Crazy Eddie who, in the 1980s, helped mastermind
one of the largest securities frauds of its time. He eventually pleaded
guilty to three felonies: conspiracy to commit securities fraud, conspiracy
to commit mail and wire fraud, and obstruction of justice.
The following conversation involves a series of
questions relating to fraud investigation and the misconceptions of
white-collar criminals.
Do you have any additional questions for Sam Antar?
Send me an email at
fraudgirl@simoleonsense.com .
See you next week…
-Fraud Girl
Copyright 2010 Fraud Girl @ SimoleonSense
You mention the quote “It takes one to know one”
on your website and on your blog. Most people in the fraud catching industry
are honest and good people. How can honest people shield themselves from
believing the lies of these criminals?
It’s hard because you don’t know what a lie is
until you’ve been exposed to it or until you’ve done it, and hopefully
you don’t get exposed to it. Let me just say this. To discuss crime I
have to be a little bit politically incorrect, so don’t get offended,
alright?
Females for instance. Females are lied to more
than men. It’s just a fact of the matter. Think of it this way, if
you’ve gone out on dates with more than one guy, how many guys have told
you anything, “You’re beautiful, you’re lovely, you’re smart, you’re
intelligent. I want to spend the rest of my life with you”? No sex. Just
to get to first base. I’m not saying you specifically; you can ask a lot
of females that. Again, I’m not trying to be male chauvinist but that’s
just the way it is.
Criminals themselves are charmers. We use
deceit and charm to get what we want. In a lot a ways criminals are like
some of the females I’ve had in my life too, they used deceit and charm.
Most of the forensic accountants I know are
females. Generally speaking female forensic accountants, barring the
fact they’re not criminals, are generally better than males. Women by
nature are much more cynical and skeptical than men because women are
taken advantage of in many ways in our society more than men.
I don’t know if you know Tracy Coenen, she
writes on
Fraud Files blog.
She’s probably one of the best in the business.
The only handicap she has is that she’s not a criminal, former criminal,
ex-criminal, or retired criminal. I travel a lot and I meet a lot of
people, and I find that generally females are just better forensic
accountants because they’ve experienced being lied to more often than
men.
If you lead a life where you live in a bubble,
how can you expect to catch the crooks? At the next level up, who better
then the people who commit the crimes?
Drug addicts, for example, are either in
recovery or they are active, but they’re always drug addicts. And the
best drug counselors are former addicts. If you take it one level
further, the government does a lot of work with convicted felons. I do a
lot of work for them. The government also uses criminals to help catch
other criminals. It’s not very well publicized; the only movie that was
ever done about it was “Catch Me If You Can”. But it’s kind of like a
partnership between former evil and justice against current evil.
How can people go acquire the experience to
really understand financial criminals? Do courses help? Is it just real life
experience? What will help forensic accountants get through it?
It’s a combination of both. For example, The
Going Concern blog recently did a thing about what is takes to become a
forensic accountant. The problem is before you even get to the skill set
necessary to be a good forensic accountant you need to get a double set
of iron clad balls and triple thick skin because criminals fight back.
We don’t play fair. We have no respect for you. We have no respect for
your laws. We don’t have respect for your customs. In fact, your laws
and customs make it easier for us to commit our crimes. It’s a paradox.
The more humane the society is, the easier it is for criminals to commit
their crimes. Humanity limits your behavior but it doesn’t limit our
behavior because we’re immoral human beings.
You have to understand that to combat
criminality, you have to have that set of iron balls. The rest of the
stuff, double-check this, cross check that; that’s textbook stuff,
anybody could learn it. What you’re asking me is, “Well how do we do
it?” There are some people that are just wired in to do it. And again,
I’m not trying to appear male chauvinist but if I am I don’t care
anyway. But the point is that females are more, as a group, generally
more wired to be forensic accountants, than men are. So if you know any
females that are former criminals, or retired criminals they would make
the best forensic accountants. And they would have the combination of on
hand experience and genetics.
Why is our society built upon the “innocent
until proven guilty”, “benefit of the doubt”, “trust and then verify”
mentality?
I actually did worse than that. I was a
fraudster, matchmaker, and a pimp. The point being is distraction. Magic
doesn’t really exist. We all know that you can’t really do magic. But
what is magic really based on? Magic is based on distraction.
Distracting somebody’s attention from something that is really going on.
Small talk is very, very important. It distracts people. You see how
politicians change the subject? That distracts people. We see how they
argue on TV more about personalities than policy. That’s distraction.
There are many ways to distract people. The easiest way to distract
somebody is really with a smile because with a smile people increase
their comfort level because you appear friendly to them. You appear
charming to them.
The three rules of criminality: white color
criminals consider your humanity as a weakness to be exploited in the
execution of their crimes, we measure our effectiveness by the comfort
level of our victims, and in order to increase our victim’s comfort
level we have to build walls of false integrity around ourselves.
When we look at humanity with the presumption
of innocence until proven guilty, that’s a Judeo-Christian tradition.
That is giving somebody a benefit of the doubt. When you give somebody
the benefit of the doubt, the criminal has the freedom of action. Your
ethics limit your actions. It might make you into a better person, but
it also makes it easier for criminals that commit their crimes.
The second part is comfort level; criminals
measure their effectiveness by the comfort level of their victims. What
did Bernie Madoff do? He was the president of NASDAQ, he was involved in
a lot of so-called reform and regulation. People were comfortable with
Bernie Madoff.
The third thing is that criminals build walls
of false integrity around them to increase the comfort level of their
victims. You got Bernie Madoff again, being the president of NASDAQ.
These combinations set the stage for most of the crimes.
Colleges don’t teach people how they’re going
to get screwed. They teach people how to succeed. Society doesn’t teach
people how they’re going to get screwed. We don’t teach people what
happens when the shit hits the fan (excuse the language).
We teach people how to earn a living and how to
become better in their careers. We teach people more on a positive end
but we don’t teach people too much on the defensive end. That’s
something you learn from the streets. That’s the unfortunate part that
we have today. We don’t have enough studies on criminal psychology.
We learn about psychology in general. Pavlov
the dog, throws the food in front of the dog, saliva comes out of his
mouth. It’s like a reflective instinct, or whatever.
We don’t know enough about the criminal
psychology and how criminals play on your humanity. An example of the
way that we play with your humanity is found in the movie, “The Devil’s
Advocate.” See the movie “The Devil’s Advocate” with Al Pacino. The
devil’s favorite sin is vanity. We all have vanity. We criminals really
make you feel good about your self-esteem in many cases. “You’re smart.
You’re beautiful. You’re a great investor. You’re smart enough to make
this decision”.
White collar crime is psychological warfare.
Most of it’s really done on the personal level and the major problem I
see is not so much the techniques. Anybody can learn them. The problem
is applying those techniques and part of applying those techniques is to
get into the psychology of criminals so you can become more skeptical
and cynical.
For most people, including myself, the first
instinct is to trust the person. But it seems that we cannot put trust in
anyone.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's Fraud Updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
"Sen. Sherrod Brown Prods SEC/FASB to Fix Accounting Standards," by
David Albrecht, The Summa, May 11, 2010 ---
http://profalbrecht.wordpress.com/2010/05/11/sen-sherrod-brown-prods-sec-fasb-to-fix-acct-standards/
Freshman Senator Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), on May 5,
2010, offered an amendment to S. 3217: Restoring American Financial
Stability Act of 2010. On May 7, 2010, a joint letter from seven prominent
organizations was sent to the Senate, objecting the Brown’s excursion into
accounting standard setting.
What’s going on, Prof Albrecht?
Thanks for asking. I’ll lay it out for you. Senator
Brown is a voice of reason on this issue and the seven prominent
organizations are blowing smoke.
First, let’s start with Senator Brown’s proposed
amendment, SA 3853. It is co-sponsored by Senator Edward Kaufman
(D-Delaware). It deals with the accounting for financial investments and
off-balance sheet liabilities, which has led some to speculate that Senator
Brown would be interested in chairing the FASB after Robert Herz gets done
mucking it up. SA 3853 reads:
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on the controversies in setting accounting standards
are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Great Nova Video: Can a market of irrational people be a "rational
market?"
PBS Nova Videp: "Mind Over Money,"
http://video.pbs.org/video/1479100777
Jensen Question
This seems to beg the question of how accountants can contribute information to
irrational people with an underlying goal of helping their markets themselves be
more rational.
Of course many scholars argue that markets themselves are not " rational" ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Fox
Behavioral Economics ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behavioral_economics
Bounded Rationality ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bounded_rationality
Rationality in Economics
Peter J. Hammond
Department of Economics, Stanford
University, CA 94305-6072, U.S.A.
e-mail:
hammond@leland.stanford.edu
http://www.warwick.ac.uk/~ecsgaj/ratEcon.pdf
1 Introduction and Outline
Rationality is one of the most
over-used words in economics. Behaviour can be rational, or irrational. So
can decisions, preferences, beliefs, expectations, decision procedures, and
knowledge. There may also be bounded rationality. And recent work in game
theory has considered strategies and beliefs or expectations that are “rationalizable”.
Here I propose to assess how
economists use and mis-use the term “rationality.”
Most of the discussion will concern
the normative approach to decision theory. First, I shall consider single
person decision theory. Then I shall move on to interactive or multi-person
decision theory, customarily called game theory. I shall argue that, in
normative decision theory, rationality has become little more than a
structural consistency criterion. At the least, it needs supplementing with
other criteria that reflect reality. Also, though there is no reason to
reject rationality hypotheses as normative criteria just because people do
not behave rationally, even so rationality as consistency seems so demanding
that it may not be very useful for practicable normative models either.
Towards the end, I shall offer a
possible explanation of how the economics profession has arrived where it
is. In particular, I shall offer some possible reasons why the rationality
hypothesis persists even in economic models which purport to be descriptive.
I shall conclude with tentative suggestions for future research —about where
we might do well to go in future.
2 Decision Theory with Measurable Objectives
In a few cases, a decision-making
agent may seem to have clear and measurable objectives. A football team,
regarded as a single agent, wants to score more goals than the opposition,
to win the most matches in the league, etc. A private corporation seeks to
make profits and so increase the value to its owners. A publicly owned
municipal transport company wants to provide citizens with adequate mobility
at reasonable fares while not requiring too heavy a subsidy out of general
tax revenue. A non-profit organization like a university tends to have more
complex objectives, like educating students, doing good research, etc. These
conflicting aims all have to be met within a limited budget.
Measurable objectives can be measured,
of course. This is not always as easily as keeping score in a football match
or even a tennis, basketball or cricket match. After all, accountants often
earn high incomes, ostensibly by measuring corporate profits and/or
earnings. For a firm whose profits are risky, shareholders with well
diversified portfolios will want that firm to maximize the expectation of
its stock market value. If there is uncertainty about states of the world
with unknown probabilities, each diversified shareholder will want the firm
to maximize subjective expected values, using the shareholder’s subjective
probabilities. Of course, it is then hard to satisfy all shareholders
simultaneously. And, as various recent spectacular bank failures show, it is
much harder to measure the extent to which profits are being made when there
is uncertainly.
In biology, modern evolutionary theory
ascribes objectives to genes —so the biologist Richard Dawkins has written
evocatively of the
Selfish Gene.
The measurable objective of a gene is the extent to which the gene survives
because future organisms inherit it. Thus, gene survival is an objective
that biologists can attempt to measure, even if the genes themselves and the
organisms that carry them remain entirely unaware of why they do what they
do in order to promote gene survival.
Early utility theories up to about the
time of Edgeworth also tried to treat utility as objectively measurable. The
Age of the Enlightenment had suggested worthy goals like “life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness,” as mentioned in the constitution of the U.S.A.
Jeremy Bentham wrote of maximizing pleasure minus pain, adding both over all
individuals. In dealing with risk, especially that posed by the St.
Petersburg Paradox, in the early 1700s first Gabriel Cramer (1728) and then
Daniel Bernoulli (1738) suggested maximizing expected utility; most previous
writers had apparently considered only maximizing expected wealth.
3 Ordinal Utility and Revealed Preference
Over time, it became increasingly
clear to economists that any behaviour as interesting and complex as
consumers’ responses to price and wealth changes could not be explained as
the maximization of some objective measure of utility. Instead, it was
postulated that consumers maximize unobservable subjective utility
functions. These utility functions were called “ordinal” because all that
mattered was the ordering between utilities of different consumption
bundles. It would have been mathematically more precise and perhaps less
confusing as well if we had learned to speak of an
ordinal equivalence
class of utility functions.
The idea is to regard two utility functions as equivalent if and only if
they both represent the same
preference ordering
— that is, the same
reflexive, complete, and transitive binary relation. Then, of course, all
that matters is the preference ordering — the choice of utility function
from the ordinal equivalence class that represents the preference ordering
is irrelevant. Indeed, provided that a preference ordering exists, it does
not even matter whether it can be represented by any utility function at
all.
Bob Jensen's threads on theory are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on the efficient market hypothesis ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#EMH
"Behavioralizing Finance," by Hersh Shefrin, SSRN, May 2, 2010
---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1597934
Finance is in the midst of a paradigm shift, from a
neoclassical based framework to a psychologically based framework.
Behavioral finance is the application of psychology to financial decision
making and financial markets. Behavioralizing finance is the process of
replacing neoclassical assumptions with behavioral counterparts. This
monograph surveys the literature in behavioral finance, and identifies both
its strengths and weaknesses. In doing so, it identifies possible directions
for behavioralizing the frameworks used to study beliefs, preferences,
portfolio selection, asset pricing, corporate finance, and financial market
regulation. The intent is to provide a structured approach to behavioral
finance in respect to underlying psychological concepts, formal framework,
testable hypotheses, and empirical findings. A key theme of this monograph
is that the future of finance will combine realistic assumptions from
behavioral finance and rigorous analysis from neoclassical finance.
Bob Jensen's threads on the behavioral finance or lack thereof ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#EMH
Not surprisingly this behavior has carried over to the
field of risk management, with an added twist. Like the joke about the man who
looks for his dropped keys under the street light because that is where the
light is rather than where he dropped the keys, financial economists have
focused on things that they can ‘quantify’ rather than on things that actually
matter. The latter include the structure of the financial system, the behavior
of its participants, and its actual ability to capture and aggregate
information.
"Economists’ Hubris – The Case of Risk Management," by Shahin Shojai and
George Feiger, Cantango Captial Advisors, April 29, 2010
http://www.contangoadvisors.com/pdf/Economists_hubris_risk_website.pdf
In this, our third
article in the economists’ hubris series, we look at the shortcomings of
academic thinking on financial risk management, a very topical subject. In
the previous two articles, we examined and rejected the notion that
contributions from the academic community in the fields of mergers and
acquisitions [Shojai (2009)] and asset pricing [Shojai and Feiger (2009)]
were of practical use. Economists have drifted into realms of sterile,
quasi-mathematical and a priori theorizing instead of coming to grips with
the realities of their subject. In this sense, they have stood conventional
scientific methodology, which develops theories to explain facts and tests
them by their ability to predict, on its head.
Not surprisingly this behavior has
carried over to the field of risk management, with an added twist. Like the
joke about the man who looks for his dropped keys under the street light
because that is where the light is rather than where he dropped the keys,
financial economists have focused on things that they can ‘quantify’ rather
than on things that actually matter. The latter include the structure of the
financial system, the behavior of its participants, and its actual ability
to capture and aggregate information.
A Framework for Thinking about Financial Risks
The recent (and ongoing) financial
crisis has made it clear that every participant in the financial system,
from the individual investor through banks and brokers up to central banks,
needs to think of a three-level analysis of risk:
- At the level of the individual financial
instrument.
- At the level of a financial institution
holding diverse instruments.
- At the level of the system of financial
institutions.
A
financial instrument
might be a credit card or a residential mortgage or a small business loan.
In the U.S., risks in many such instruments have been intensively studied
and have proven moderately predictable in large pools. For example, a useful
rule of thumb is to equate the default rate on national pools of seasoned
credit card balances to the national unemployment rate.
A
financial
institution holding a
diverse portfolio of such instruments might be a bank that originates them
and retains all or some, or an investing institution like a pension fund or
a hedge fund or an insurance company (or, indeed, an individual investor
with a personal portfolio).
The
system of financial institutions
is the total of these individual players, in
particular, embracing the diverse obligations of each to the others. A bank
may have loaned unneeded overnight cash to another bank or it may have
borrowed to fund its portfolio of tradable securities by overnight
repurchase agreements; a hedge fund may have borrowed to leverage a pool of
securities; an insurance company may have guaranteed another institution’s
debt, backing that guarantee by pledging part of its own holding of
securities;
and an individual may have guaranteed
a bank loan to his small business by pledging a real estate investment,
itself leveraged by a mortgage.
We would summarize the academic
approach to risk management (enthusiastically adopted by the financial
institutions themselves) as the sum of the following propositions:
- The risks of individual financial instruments
follow a stationary probability distribution;
- The enterprise risk of a financial institution
is measured by treating the institution as the portfolio of the
individual instruments that it holds; and
- As markets price instruments rationally, there
are really no systemic risk issues not captured in the pricing of
assets.
Unfortunately, recent events have
shown each of these propositions to be false.
Stationarity of Instrument Risks
This is the foundation of all risk management
modeling. As anyone who has tried to model instrument risks knows, they are
not stationary but depend on the sample period chosen, a simple fact that we
will return to again and again. This non-stationarity is not simply an
empirical observation,
it is endogenous to the way that markets operate.
The recent crisis has highlighted one fundamental cause, namely moral hazard
in the securitization process, and it is worth examining this in detail.
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
Aside from being part of a corporation name, Cantango really means ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contango
I first encountered this term in FAS 133 ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm
GPA-SAT correlations
"Psychometric thresholds for physics and mathematics," by Stephen Hsu and
James Schombert, MIT's Technology Review, May 24, 2010 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/posts.aspx?bid=354
This is a follow up to our
earlier paper on GPA-SAT correlations. Click below
for the pdf.
Non-linear Psychometric Thresholds for Physics and Mathematics
ABSTRACT
We analyze 5 years of student records at the University of Oregon to
estimate the probability of success (as defined by superior
undergraduate record; sufficient for admission to graduate school)
in Physics and Mathematics as a function of SAT-M score. We find
evidence of a non-linear threshold: below SAT-M score of roughly
600, the probability of success is very low. Interestingly, no
similar threshold exists in other majors, such as Sociology,
History, English or Biology, whether on SAT combined, SAT-R or
SAT-M. Our findings have significant implications for the demographic
makeup of graduate populations in mathematically intensive subjects,
given the current distribution of SAT-M scores.
There is clearly something different about the physics
and math GPA vs SAT distributions compared to all of the other majors we
looked at (see figure 1 in the paper). In the other majors (history,
sociology, etc.) it appears that hard work can compensate for low SAT score.
But that is not the case in math and physics.
One interesting question is whether the apparent cognitive threshold is a
linear or non-linear effect. Our data suggests that the probability of doing
well in any particular quarter of introductory physics may be linear with
SAT-M, but the probability of having a high cumulative GPA in physics
or math is very non-linear in SAT-M. See figure below: the red line is the
upper bound at 95% confidence level on the probability of getting an A in a
particular quarter of introductory physics, and the blue line is the
probability of earning a cumulative GPA of at least 3.5 or so.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
Accounting and Other Books for Sight Impaired "Readers"
"Archive Makes Over a Million Digital Books Available for Those Who Can't
Use Print," by Mary Helen Miller, Chronicle of Higher Education, May 7, 2010
---
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/Archive-Makes-Over-a-Million/23816/?sid=wc&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
With a service it started Thursday, the Internet
Archive has more than doubled the number of books available to blind people
and others who cannot read print books. The nonprofit organization, based in
San Francisco, has made more than a million digital books available free in
a format that can be downloaded to a device that reads them aloud.
The Internet Archive has been scanning books and
making them available free online since 2005, and the books in the new
format are part of the organization's collection of more than two million
texts. To make a book accessible for those unable to read print volumes, the
Internet Archive uses an automatic process to digitize it into a special
format, Daisy.
The process does not work well for textbooks or
other kinds of texts with complex formatting, said Brewster Kahle, the
archive's founder and digital librarian. Other organizations, like Bookshare,
make textbooks available for people who can't use print books, Mr. Kahle
said.
He added that the Internet Archive's collection is
useful for research. "You could find books that are now out of print that
you wouldn't find in your library," he said.
Arielle Silverman, the president of the national
association of blind students, said college students are often required to
read popular books, which they might be able to get sooner through the new
service.
"The situation right now is that for the majority
of books, if we want to obtain them, we have to negotiate with the
disabled-students office," said Ms. Silverman, who is a doctoral student at
the University of Colorado at Boulder.
Ms. Silverman said that students sometimes have to
wait months for the books they request to be provided in a digital format.
Now many more books will be available instantly, she said. Ms. Silverman
also said that the Daisy format is preferable to the traditional audio book
because it lets the user skip around easily.
The Internet Archive will make all new additions to
its library available in Daisy if the text's format allows. It is seeking
book donations, and it has promised to pay for digitization of the first
10,000 volumes it receives.
Internet Archive ---
http://www.archive.org/
Bob Jensen's threads on aids to handicapped learners ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Handicapped
For Members of the American Accounting Association
Welcome to the AAA Digital Library ---
http://aaapubs.org/
The mission of the American Accounting Association
is to promote worldwide excellence in accounting education, research, and
practice. Founded in 1916 as the American Association of University
Instructors in Accounting, its present name was adopted in 1936. The
Association is a voluntary organization of persons interested in accounting
education and research.
All full-text papers are provided in PDF format.
All PDF papers are searchable using the Find utility in Adobe Acrobat
Reader. All full-text papers provide links to references as available.
The AAA Commons gets bigger and better each
year ---
http://commons.aaahq.org/pages/home
American Accounting Association Home Page ---
http://aaahq.org/index.cfm
It's time to register for AAA Annual Meeting in San Francisco
"You Complete My Audit: Amid the tumult of Sarbanes-Oxley and thorny
auditor-client issues lie long-lasting relationships, some that have endured for
more than 50 years," by Sarah Johnson, CFO Magazine, May 1, 2010 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14493283/c_14496720?f=home_todayinfinance
The relationship between accounting firms and their
corporate clients has been shaky over the past decade, to say the least. In
the wake of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, accounting firms dumped some risky
clients, shuttered ancillary consulting arms, and raised fees. That strained
the collegial bond between firms and their clients.
More recently, as we reported last month ("Auditing
Your Auditor"),, fees have dropped and it has
become very much a buyer's market. At the same time, companies are
demonstrating a new willingness to switch auditors. Last year, 1,331 public
companies changed auditors, according to Audit Analytics; 82% of the time
the client initiated the switch, versus the auditor dropping the account.
But amid all that tumult, many unions have endured
— sometimes for more than a century. The longest-running relationship on
record is between Deloitte & Touche and Procter & Gamble, which has employed
only one primary audit firm since its incorporation in 1890. Indeed, to
crack the list of the 100 longest-lasting auditor-client relationships, your
company would need to have used the same firm for more than 50 years.
Sarbox frowned on cozy auditor-client relationships
by instituting the auditor-rotation rule, which requires lead audit partners
to move off an account after five consecutive fiscal years. Lawmakers have
occasionally toyed with the idea of also requiring companies to switch audit
firms every few years, to further increase independence. Companies and
auditors have both pushed back, arguing that the costs would outweigh the
benefits and further cramp competition by limiting an already small pool of
viable auditors. If such a rule ever did come to pass, it would spell an end
to some very long-standing relationships.
Bob Jensen's threads on auditor professionalism and independence are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Professionalism
From the Joe Hoyle's Teaching Financial Accounting Blog on May 8, 2010
---
http://joehoyle-teaching.blogspot.com/2010/05/request-for-assistance.html
If you teach financial
accounting, I have a request
for you. A friend of mine
recently gave me a list of
articles (from newspapers,
journals, and the like) that
he uses in teaching
financial accounting. I
thought it might be
interesting to create a more
complete reading list of
articles about financial
accounting or the topics
within financial accounting
that I could post for
teachers in connection with
the new Financial Accounting
textbook that I recently
wrote with CJ Skender. I am
always looking for
creative/innovative things
to add to "the package" to
make the learning process
better for teachers and
students both. Consequently,
if any of you who read this
blog have articles that you
use in teaching financial
accounting or know of
articles that might apply,
could you send them to me?
Just a list of the
publication and date would
be fine - I can dig them up
from there. Just send me a
note at
Jhoyle@richmond.edu .
Likewise, if you've ever
thought "I wish a textbook
had the following," let me
know. FlatWorldKnowledge
(the book’s publisher) has
let me do whatever I thought
might be helpful for student
learning but I'm always
limited to my own ideas. If
you have suggestions, I
would love to hear them.
I always believe that a
textbook should be more of a
community project. I would
love for you to be part of
that community in connection
with this textbook.
May 9 2010 reply from James R. Martin/University of South Florida
[jmartin@MAAW.INFO]
Joe, Check out the financial accounting
bibliography on MAAW:
http://maaw.info/FinancialReportingArticles.htm
There are about 190 pages of financial accounting
literature, some with links to the JSTOR database full text articles. Also
see MAAW's accounting theory bibliography:
http://maaw.info/AccountingTheoryArticles.htm
Jensen Comment
Although they are usually focused on intermediate and higher level financial
accounting courses, search for the six word phrase
"From The Wall Street Journal Accounting"
in the very long, slow loading document at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
You will find a lot of financial accounting teaching cases prepared by The
Wall Street Journal along with quotations of many of the answers to the case
questions.
Open Sharing Joe Hoyle provides a free updated financial accounting textbook
and he and his co-authors also provide a free CPA review course.
Search for "Hoyle" at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
US News Rankings of Universities and Colleges ---
http://www.usnews.com/rankings
Best Business Schools According to Business Week Magazine ---http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/toc/08_47/B4109best_business_schools.htm
This includes a history link on the rankings over the years.
Bob Jensen's threads on Ranking Controversies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm#BusinessSchoolRankings
How to Create 3-D Popup Books
May 21, 2010 message from Steven Hornik
[shornik@BUS.UCF.EDU]
Fun for the weekend? I just
came across an interesting site that enables creations of short (up to 10
pages currently) pop-up books. Whether or not this is useful for delivering
basic concepts to our students is debatable but is certainly another
technique to try. It also has the added fun of being an augmented reality
book, so you can use the website to read your 3-D pop book as if its resting
on your hand - neat in a very geeky way, but pedagogically I'm not so sure.
The website is at:
http://alpha.zooburst.com/index.php and is
currently in Alpha stage testing, I wrote up a blog article on it replete
with pictures, a video and of course an accounting pop-up book:
http://www.mydebitcredit.com/2010/05/21/zooburst-3d-augmented-reality-story-telling/
Let me know what you think,
Dr. Steven Hornik
University of Central Florida
Dixon School of Accounting
407-823-5739
Second Life: Robins Hermano
Twitter: shornik
http://mydebitcredit.com
yahoo ID: shornik
Jensen Comment
Steve Hornik is a pioneer in the use of Second Life in his accounting courses
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#SecondLife
Bob Jensen's threads on Tricks and Tools of the Trade ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
"Replay Telecorder for Skype: Unique way to bring guest speakers to class,"
by Rick Lillie, Thinking Outside of the Box Blog, May 21, 2010 ---
http://iaed.wordpress.com/2010/05/21/replay-telecorder-for-skype-unique-way-to-bring-guest-speakers-to-class/
Watch the Video showing how easy it works
I use
Skype with all of my classes
(i.e., face-2-face, blended, and online). At the beginning of each term, I
ask students to set up a Skype account and add me to their contacts list.
I then add them to my Skype contacts list. Using Skype changes the nature
of how I connect with students. We audio and video conference.
Skype messaging archives all messages
received and sent throughout a course. I subscribe to
Skype Voicemail which allows me to send
voicemail message to students. Likewise, students can send me a voicemail
message. Skype recently added a new
screen sharing featuring, which works
great for one-on-one tutoring sessions. All of these Skype features (and
more) changes the nature of instructor-student interaction.
Now,
Applian Technologies has created a
software tool that takes Skype to a whole new level.
Replay
Telecorder for Skype makes it
possible to record Skype audio and video calls. This provides a unique way
to bring “guest speakers” to the teaching-learning experience, especially to
the blended and online learning environment. Click the picture below to
view a short You Tube recording that demonstrates how to record a Skype call
that displays in a side-by-side format. The presentation is a little silly,
but illustrates what you can do with the program.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on Tricks and Tools of the Trade ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
A Teaching Case: The Cost of Quality Versus the Cost of Poor Quality
Two decades ago, managerial and cost accounting textbooks and courses began to
run modules on the "cost of quality" or to be more accurate the cost of poor
quality. The following case fits into these types of modules.
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on May 21, 2010
FDA Widens Probe of J&J's McNeil Unit
by:
Jonathan D. Rockoff
May 18, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Cost
Management, Product Recall, Quality Costs
SUMMARY: On
April 30, 2010, Johnson & Johnson "...recalled a number of over-the-counter
medicines for children and infants after receiving complaints from consumers
and discovering manufacturing problems. The company also closed the plant in
Fort Washington, PA, that made the recalled products until it fixes the
issues and can assure quality production....The FDA conducted a routine
inspection of the Fort Washington plant last month. Agency inspectors found
that the J&J unit received 46 complaints from consumers between June 2009
and April 2010 regarding 'foreign materials, black or dark specks' in
certain medicines.'" The FDA has now widened its investigation and the J&J
McNeil Consumer Healthcare unit that makes these products is conducting a
comprehensive quality assessment over all its manufacturing operations.
"Some parents say the recall has weakened J&J's sterling reputation for
quality. The recall has also prompted a congressional investigation of the
company's handling of consumer complaints and the adequacy of the FDA's
inspections."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: Questions
focus on concepts in the cost of quality.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
How crucial is the concept of quality to Johnson & Johnson operations and
profitability?
2. (Advanced)
Define the terms "cost of quality" or "quality cost" and related concepts of
'prevention costs" and "appraisal costs."
3. (Advanced)
Which of the categories of quality costs-prevention or appraisal-is about to
increase significantly at J&J? Explain your answer.
4. (Advanced)
Define the concepts of "internal failure costs" and "external failure
costs."
5. (Advanced)
The FDA and congress may investigate J&J's handling of consumer complaint.
Under what part of the quality control process does handling these
complaints fall under?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"FDA Widens Probe of J&J's McNeil Unit," by: Jonathan D. Rockoff,
The Wall Street Journal, May 18, 2010
The Food and Drug Administration has widened its
investigation into the recent recall of certain Johnson & Johnson children's
medicines and is now inquiring into manufacturing across the company's
consumer health-care unit.
J&J's McNeil Consumer Healthcare makes a range of
products for adults and kids, notably Benadryl, St. Joseph aspirin, Motrin,
Tylenol and Zyrtec.
On April 30, the company recalled a number of
over-the-counter medicines for children and infants after receiving
complaints from consumers and discovering manufacturing problems. The
company also closed the plant in Fort Washington, Pa., that made the
recalled products until it fixes the issues and can assure quality
production.
The recall of the liquid children's medicines was
the third by the J&J unit since last September. An FDA spokeswoman said
there had been no specific complaints about products from other McNeil
facilities. But given the history of recent recalls, the FDA wanted to make
sure there weren't any similar manufacturing problems and to identify any
steps the agency must take to prevent the problems from recurring.
Besides Fort Washington, J&J's McNeil unit has
plants in Lancaster, Pa., and Las Piedras, Puerto Rico.
"We're doing our due diligence," said FDA
spokeswoman Elaine Gansz Bobo.
The J&J unit "is conducting a comprehensive quality
assessment across its manufacturing operations and continues to cooperate
with the FDA," a company spokeswoman said.
Some parents say the recall has weakened J&J's
reputation for quality. The recall has also prompted a congressional
investigation of the company's handling of consumer complaints and the
adequacy of the FDA's inspections. The House Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform has asked J&J Chief Executive William Weldon to testify at
a hearing on May 27.
The FDA and J&J have told the committee they will
cooperate and are in the process of answering its questions, and the
committee expects that Mr. Weldon will attend, said Kurt Bardella, a
spokesman for Rep. Darrell Issa (R., Calif.), the panel's ranking
Republican.
A J&J spokesman said the company is communicating
with the committee and will respond appropriately to the panel's request but
declined to say if Mr. Weldon will appear.
The recall last month involved more than 40
different Tylenol, Benadryl, Motrin and Zyrtec products for children and
infants. Some of the medicines had higher concentrations of active
ingredient than specified, and some products may contain tiny metallic
particles left as a residue from the manufacturing process, according to
J&J's McNeil unit.
The FDA conducted a routine inspection of the Fort
Washington plant last month. Agency inspectors found that the J&J unit
received 46 complaints from consumers between June 2009 and April 2010
regarding "foreign materials, black or dark specks" in certain medicines.
The FDA also said bacteria contaminated raw materials to be used to make
several lots of Tylenol products for children.
FDA has begun to review all complaints it has
received to determine whether the recalled products caused any serious side
effects. The agency has said the chances that the recalled products could
cause harm were remote, but warned parents not to use the products as a
precaution.
The Price
of Perfection: That Straw That Saved the 10 Millionth Camel's Back
Contemplate the flip
side of my argument. A 100 percent safe car is impossible to build. As a
manufacturer approaches 100 percent safety, the manufacturing costs increase
exponentially. The real question is what is the customer (or society) willing to
pay for safety as it approaches 100 percent safe. Most consumers would be
willing to pay $20,000 for a car that is 99.8 percent safe but not $100,000 for
a car that is 99.9 percent safe. Are the customers wrong? How would they react
to Washington bureaucrats telling them they had to pay an additional $80,000 for
an incremental 1/10 of 1 percent of safety?
Armstrong Williams, "Toyota’s Deadly Secret." Townhall, March 2, 2010 ---
http://townhall.com/columnists/ArmstrongWilliams/2010/03/02/toyota%e2%80%99s_deadly_secret
Jensen Comment
I purchased a new Subaru last year in the Cash for Clunkers Program. I traded in
my father's 1989 Cadillac that looked and ran like the day it was new. It
accumulated 70,000 miles of absolutely trouble free driving. Now the Subaru cost
me $19,700 plus some extras for heated seats and the extended warranty.
Subaru is rated the
most safe car in its class, but would I have done this deal if the trade-in
price had been $87,000 for some added safety protection currently not available
on new vehicles? Probably not, even though the old Cad I traded in did not even
have air bags or various other safety features that are standard on a 2010
Subaru. Of course, up here we call it a rush hour traffic if we see two other
vehicles on I-93 at 8:00 a.m. or 6:00 p.m.
This begs the question of how much we
should be forced to pay for epsilon improvements in safety? Of course I'm not
talking about unsafe cars that lurch ahead uncontrollably or have defective
braking systems. But my old Cad was extremely tried and true with respect to not
having such severe safety hazards. In fact, the sheer complexity of my new
Subaru with all its computerized controls of almost everything make it more of a
risk in some ways as I drive to the village for milk and bread or a hair cut.
This also applies to costs of production
of goods and services. Some medical procedures now cost ten times more than in
1990 for safety benefits that may only save one life out of ten million people.
It certainly seems worth it if you're life is the one saved, but in the grand
scheme of things is this added protection really a luxury that society can no
longer afford? The same question might be raised about many of the current OSHA
requirements for working Americans. How many wannabe workers cannot find jobs
because of more stringent OSHA requirements?
Up here in the mountains, a small
construction company that does a lot of building repair work laid off all of its
full-time workers because of the cost of Workmen's Compensation Insurance. The
former workers became "independent contractors" who now negotiate their own fees
and no longer have benefits like employer-paid health insurance. Outsourced
workers are paid by the job rather than the hour such that they, in turn,
sometimes take more safety risks in their rush to finish jobs quickly.
May 21. 2010 reply from James R. Martin/University of South Florida
[jmartin@MAAW.INFO]
Bob,
Using these cases is a good
place to introduce and compare the various quality models including Juran's
Zero defects, Taguchi's Loss function, and Deming's Robust quality
philosophy.
(http://maaw.info/ConstrainoptTechs.htm#Quality
Models Compared). It also leads to the Six Sigma
approach to quality (http://maaw.info/SixSigmaSummary.htm),
many other concepts and arguments related to quality (http://maaw.info/QualityRelatedMain.htm),
and the controversy over
constrained optimization concepts in general (http://maaw.info/ConstrOptMain.htm).
Bob Jensen's threads on managerial and cost accounting are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#ManagementAccounting
"Best Business Programs by Specialty: College business students
rated their schools on a dozen disciplines, from ethics to sustainability. The
top programs include some surprises," Business Week, May 6, 2010 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/content/may2010/bs2010055_765866.htm?link_position=link1
Irish eyes are smiling on Notre Dame's
Mendoza College of Business (Mendoza
Undergraduate Business Profile). Not only is
Mendoza home to the top-ranked undergraduate business program in the nation
and the most satisfied students; it's also the most decorated school in
Bloomberg Businessweek's annual ranking of the Best
Undergraduate Business Programs by Specialty.
As part of Bloomberg Businessweek's
annual ranking of the
top undergraduate business programs, senior
business students from the 139 participating schools were asked to assign
letter grades—from A to F—to their business programs in 12 specialty areas:
quantitative methods, operations management, ethics, sustainability,
calculus, microeconomics, macroeconomics, accounting, financial management,
marketing management, business law, and corporate strategy. Based on those
grades, scores were calculated for each of the ranked schools in each area.
Not surprisingly, the top-ranked schools in the
overall ranking, published in March, have the most top-10 specialty
rankings, as well. Notre Dame leads the way, appearing on eight top-10
lists, followed by
Cornell University (Cornell
Undergraduate Business Profile) and
Babson College (Babson
Undergraduate Business Profile)—Nos.5 and 15 in
the overall ranking, respectively—with six top-10 specialty ranks
apiece.Emory University's
Goizueta School of Business
(Goizueta
Undergraduate Business Profile), the
University of Pennsylvania's
Wharton School (Wharton
Undergraduate Business Profile), and the
Kenan-Flagler Business School at the University of
North Carolina-Chapel Hill (Kenan-Flagler
Undergraduate Business Profile) each ranked near
the top of five specialty lists.
Racking Up Top Awards
Among them, the top three programs in the overall
ranking took eight of the No. 1 specialty ranks. No. 1 Notre Dame is tops in
accounting and ethics, No. 2 University of Virginia
McIntire School of Commerce (McIntire
Undergraduate Business Profile) takes the top spot
in both macroeconomics and business law, and No.3 Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Sloan School of Management (Sloan
Undergraduate Business Profile) is best in
quantitative methods, operations management, calculus, and marketing. "Sloan
requires a great deal of its students," says an MIT senior business student
responding to the Bloomberg Businessweek survey. "It's
exceedingly challenging, but that's a good thing."
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on ranking controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm#BusinessSchoolRankings
Elite Research University Online Degrees?
"Somebody is going to figure out how to deliver online education for credit and
for degrees in the quality sector—i.e., in the elite sector," said Christopher
Edley Jr., dean at Berkeley's law school and the plan's most prominent advocate.
"I think it ought to be us—not MIT, not Columbia, not Caltech, certainly not
Stanford."
Jensen Comment
Actually Stanford introduced one of the highest quality Master of Engineering
online programs in history, the ADEPT Program ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Search for the word ADEPT at the above site. The ADEPT video approach,
however is only suited to highly talented and highly motivated students. I doubt
that the ADEPT program is suited for online students in general.
"U. of California (Berkeley) Considers Online Classes, or Even
Degrees: Proposal for virtual courses challenges beliefs about what an
elite university is—and isn't," by Josh Keller and Marc Parry, Chronicle
of Higher Education, May 9, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/article/In-Crisis-U-of-California/65445/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
Online education is booming, but not at elite
universities—at least not when it comes to courses for credit.
Leaders at the University of California want to
break that mold. This fall they hope to put $5-million to $6-million into a
pilot project that could clear the way for the system to offer online
undergraduate degrees and push distance learning further into the
mainstream.
The vision is UC's most ambitious—and
controversial—effort to reshape itself after cuts in public financial
support have left the esteemed system in crisis.
Supporters of the plan believe online degrees will
make money, expand the number of California students who can enroll, and
re-establish the system's reputation as an innovator.
"Somebody is going to figure out how to deliver
online education for credit and for degrees in the quality sector—i.e., in
the elite sector," said Christopher Edley Jr., dean at Berkeley's law school
and the plan's most prominent advocate. "I think it ought to be us—not MIT,
not Columbia, not Caltech, certainly not Stanford."
But UC's ambitions face a series of obstacles. The
system has been slow to adopt online instruction despite its deep
connections to Silicon Valley. Professors hold unusually tight control over
the curriculum, and many consider online education a poor substitute for
direct classroom contact. As a result, courses could take years to gain
approval.
The University of California's decision to begin
its effort with a pilot research project has also raised eyebrows. The goal
is to determine whether online courses can be delivered at
selective-research-university standards.
Yet plenty of universities have offered online
options for years, and more than 4.6 million students were taking at least
one online course during the fall-2008 term, notes A. Frank Mayadas, a
senior adviser at the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation who is considered one of
the fathers of online learning.
"It's like doing experiments to see if the car is
really better than the horse in 1925, when everyone else is out there
driving cars," he said.
If the project stumbles, it could dilute UC's brand
and worsen already testy relations between professors and the system's
president, Mark G. Yudof.
As the system studies whether it can offer quality
classes online, the bigger question might be this: Is California's flagship
university system innovative enough to pull online off?
Going Big The proposal comes at a key moment for
the University of California system, which is in the midst of a wrenching
internal discussion about how best to adapt to reduced state support over
the long term. Measures to weather its immediate financial crisis, such as
reduced enrollment, furloughs for staff and faculty members, and sharply
rising tuition, are seen as either temporary or unsustainable.
Administrators hope the online plan will ultimately
expand revenue and access for students at the same time. But the plan starts
with a relatively modest experiment that aims to create online versions of
roughly 25 high-demand lower-level "gateway courses." A preliminary list
includes such staples as Calculus 1 and Freshman Composition.
UC hopes to put out a request for proposals in the
fall, says Daniel Greenstein, vice provost for academic planning, programs,
and coordination. Professors will compete for grants to build the classes,
deliver them to students, and participate in evaluating them. Courses might
be taught as soon as 2011. So, for a current undergraduate, that could mean
the option to choose between online and face-to-face versions of, say,
Psychology 1.
The university plans to spend about $250,000 on
each course. It hopes to raise the money from external sources like
foundations or major donors. Nobody will be required to participate—"that's
death," Mr. Greenstein said—and faculty committees at each campus will need
to approve each course.
Building a collection of online classes could help
alleviate bottlenecks and speed up students' paths to graduation. But
supporters hope to use the pilot program to persuade faculty members to back
a far-reaching expansion of online instruction that would offer associate
degrees entirely online, and, ultimately, a bachelor's degree.
Mr. Edley believes demand for degrees would be
"basically unlimited." In a wide-ranging speech at Berkeley last month, Mr.
Edley, who is also a top adviser to Mr. Yudof, described how thousands of
new students would bring new money to the system and support the hiring of
faculty members. In the long term, he said, online degrees could accomplish
something bigger: the democratization of access to elite education.
"In a way it's kind of radical—it's kind of
destabilizing the mechanisms by which we produce the elite in our society,"
he told a packed room of staff and faculty members. "If suddenly you're
letting a lot of people get access to elite credentials, it's going to be
interesting."
'Pie in the Sky' But even as Mr. Edley spoke,
several audience members whispered their disapproval. His eagerness to
reshape the university is seen by many faculty members as either naïve or
dangerous.
Mr. Edley acknowledges that he gets under people's
skin: "I'm not good at doing the faculty politics thing. ... So much of what
I'm trying to do they get in the way of."
Suzanne Guerlac, a professor of French at Berkeley,
found Mr. Edley's talk "infuriating." Offering full online degrees would
undermine the quality of undergraduate instruction, she said, by reducing
the opportunity for students to learn directly from research faculty
members.
"It's access to what?" asked Ms. Guerlac. "It's not
access to UC, and that's got to be made clear."
Kristie A. Boering, an associate professor of
chemistry who chairs Berkeley's course-approval committee, said she
supported the pilot project. But she rejected arguments from Mr. Edley and
others that faculty members are moving too slowly. Claims that online
courses could reap profits or match the quality of existing lecture courses
must be carefully weighed, she said.
"Anybody who has at least a college degree is going
to say, Let's look at the facts. Let's be a little skeptical here," she
said. "Because that's a little pie-in-the-sky."
Existing research into the strength of online
programs cannot simply be applied to UC, she added, objecting to an
oft-cited 2009 U.S. Education Department analysis that reported that "on
average, students in online learning conditions performed better than those
receiving face-to-face instruction."
"I'm sorry: I've read that report. It's
statistically fuzzy, and there's only something like four courses from a
research university," she said. "I don't think that's relevant for us."
But there's also strong enthusiasm among some
professors in the system, including those who have taught its existing
online classes. One potential benefit is that having online classes could
enable the system to use its resources more effectively, freeing up time for
faculty research, said Keith R. Williams, a senior lecturer in exercise
biology at the Davis campus and chair of the UC Academic Senate's committee
on educational policy, who stressed that he was speaking as a faculty
member, not on behalf of the Senate. "We're supportive, from the faculty
perspective, of looking into this in a more detailed way," he said.
A National Context While the University of
California plans and looks, other public universities have already acted. At
the University of Central Florida, for example, more than half of the 53,500
students already take at least one online course each year. Pennsylvania
State University, the University of Texas, and the University of
Massachusetts all enroll large numbers of online students.
UC itself enrolls tens of thousands of students
online each year, but its campuses have mostly limited those courses to
graduate and extension programs that fully enrolled undergraduates do not
typically take for credit. "Pretty pathetic," is how Mr. Mayadas described
California's online efforts. "The UC system has been a zilch."
But the system's proposed focus on for-credit
courses for undergraduates actually stands out when compared with other
leading institutions like the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Yale
University. Both have attracted attention for making their course materials
available free online, but neither institution offers credit to people who
study those materials.
Mr. Mayadas praised UC's online move as a positive
step that will "put some heat on the other top universities to re-evaluate
what they have or have not done."
Over all, the "quality sector" in higher education
has failed "to take its responsibility seriously to expand itself to meet
the national need," Mr. Greenstein said, dismissing elites' online offerings
as "eye candy."
Jensen Comments
The above article suggests that online programs make more money than onsite
programs. This is not universally true, but it can be true. The University of
Wisconsin at Milwaukee charges more for online courses than equivalent onsite
courses because online courses have become a cash cow for UWM. The reasons,
however, are sometimes dubious. Online courses are often taught with relatively
cheap adjunct specialists whereas onsite courses might be taught with more
expensive full-time faculty.
Also the above article ignores the fact that prestigious universities like
the University of Wisconsin, University of Illinois, and University of Maryland
have already been offering accredited and highly respected undergraduate and
masters degrees in online programs for years. They purportedly impose the same
academic standards on online programs vis-a-vis onsite programs. Adjunct
instructors with proper supervision need not necessarily be easy graders. In
fact they may be more responsive to grading instructions than full-time faculty
quavering in fear of teaching evaluations in their bid for tenure and
promotions.
Who's
Succeeding in Online Education?
The most respected online programs at this point in time seem to be embedded in
large university systems that have huge onsite extension programs as well as
online alternatives. Two noteworthy systems in this regard are the enormous
University of Wisconsin and the University of Texas extension programs. Under
the initial leadership of Jack Wilson, UMass Online thrives with hundreds
of online courses. I think Open University in the U.K. is the largest public
university in the world. Open University has online as well as onsite programs.
The University of Phoenix continues to be the largest private university in the
world in terms of student enrollments. I still do not put it and Open University
in the same class as the University of Wisconsin, however, because I'm dubious
of any university that relies mostly on part-time faculty.
From the University of Wisconsin
Distance Education Clearinghouse ---
http://www.uwex.edu/disted/home.html
I wonder if the day will come when we see
contrasting advertisements:
"A UC Berkeley Accounting PhD online in 5-6 Years Full Time"
"A Capella Accounting PhD online in 2 Years Full Time and no comprehensive
examinations"
Capella University is one of the better for-profit online universities in the
world. ---
http://www.capella.edu/
A Bridge Too Far
I discovered that Capella University is now offering an online Accounting PhD
Program ---
http://www.capella.edu/schools_programs/business_technology/phd/accounting.aspx
- Students with no business studies background (other than a basic
accounting course) can complete the program in 2.5 years part time or
slightly less than 2 years full-time.
- The the Capella accounting PhD curriculum is more like an MBA curriculum
and is totally unlike any other accounting PhD program in North America.
There are relatively few accounting courses and much less focus on research
skills.
- There are no comprehensive or oral examinations. The only requirements
120 quarter credits, including credits to be paid for a dissertation
- I'm still trying to learn whether there is access to any kind of
research library or the expensive financial databases that are required for
other North American accounting doctoral programs..
Although I have been recommending that accountancy doctoral programs break
out of the accountics mold, I don't think that the Capella's curriculum meets my
expectation ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
On May 4, 2010, PBS Frontline broadcast an hour-long video called College
Inc. --- a sobering analysis of for-profit onsite and online colleges and
universities.
For a time you can watch the video free online ---
Click Here
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/collegeinc/view/?utm_campaign=viewpage&utm_medium=toparea&utm_source=toparea
Even in lean times, the $400 billion business of
higher education is booming. Nowhere is this more true than in one of the
fastest-growing -- and most controversial -- sectors of the industry:
for-profit colleges and universities that cater to non-traditional students,
often confer degrees over the Internet, and, along the way, successfully
capture billions of federal financial aid dollars.
In College, Inc., correspondent
Martin Smith investigates the promise and
explosive growth of the for-profit higher education industry. Through
interviews with school executives, government officials, admissions
counselors, former students and industry observers, this film explores the
tension between the industry --which says it's helping an underserved
student population obtain a quality education and marketable job skills --
and critics who charge the for-profits with churning out worthless degrees
that leave students with a mountain of debt.
At the center of it all stands a vulnerable
population of potential students, often working adults eager for a
university degree to move up the career ladder. FRONTLINE talks to a former
staffer at a California-based for-profit university who says she was under
pressure to sign up growing numbers of new students. "I didn't realize just
how many students we were expected to recruit," says the former enrollment
counselor. "They used to tell us, you know, 'Dig deep. Get to their pain.
Get to what's bothering them. So, that way, you can convince them that a
college degree is going to solve all their problems.'"
Graduates of another for-profit school -- a college
nursing program in California -- tell FRONTLINE that they received their
diplomas without ever setting foot in a hospital. Graduates at other
for-profit schools report being unable to find a job, or make their student
loan payments, because their degree was perceived to be of little worth by
prospective employers. One woman who enrolled in a for-profit doctorate
program in Dallas later learned that the school never acquired the proper
accreditation she would need to get the job she trained for. She is now
sinking in over $200,000 in student debt.
The biggest player in the for-profit sector is the
University of Phoenix -- now the largest college in the US with total
enrollment approaching half a million students. Its revenues of almost $4
billion last year, up 25 percent from 2008, have made it a darling of Wall
Street. Former top executive of the University of Phoenix
Mark DeFusco told FRONTLINE how the company's
business-approach to higher education has paid off: "If you think about any
business in America, what business would give up two months of business --
just essentially close down?" he asks. "[At the University of Phoenix],
people go to school all year round. We start classes every five weeks. We
built campuses by a freeway because we figured that's where the people
were."
"The education system that was created hundreds of
years ago needs to change," says
Michael Clifford, a major education entrepreneur
who speaks with FRONTLINE. Clifford, a former musician who never attended
college, purchases struggling traditional colleges and turns them into
for-profit companies. "The big opportunity," he says, "is the inefficiencies
of some of the state systems, and the ability to transform schools and
academic programs to better meet the needs of the people that need jobs."
"From a business perspective, it's a great story,"
says
Jeffrey Silber, a senior analyst at BMO Capital
Markets, the investment banking arm of the Bank of Montreal. "You're serving
a market that's been traditionally underserved. ... And it's a very
profitable business -- it generates a lot of free cash flow."
And the cash cow of the for-profit education
industry is the federal government. Though they enroll 10 percent of all
post-secondary students, for-profit schools receive almost a quarter of
federal financial aid. But Department of Education figures for 2009 show
that 44 percent of the students who defaulted within three years of
graduation were from for-profit schools, leading to serious questions about
one of the key pillars of the profit degree college movement: that their
degrees help students boost their earning power. This is a subject of
increasing concern to the Obama administration, which, last month, remade
the federal student loan program, and is now proposing changes that may make
it harder for the for-profit colleges to qualify.
"One of the ideas the Department of Education has
put out there is that in order for a college to be eligible to receive money
from student loans, it actually has to show that the education it's
providing has enough value in the job market so that students can pay their
loans back," says Kevin Carey of the Washington think tank Education Sector.
"Now, the for-profit colleges, I think this makes them very nervous," Carey
says. "They're worried because they know that many of their members are
charging a lot of money; that many of their members have students who are
defaulting en masse after they graduate. They're afraid that this rule will
cut them out of the program. But in many ways, that's the point."
FRONTLINE also finds that the regulators that
oversee university accreditation are looking closer at the for-profits and,
in some cases, threatening to withdraw the required accreditation that keeps
them eligible for federal student loans. "We've elevated the scrutiny
tremendously," says Dr. Sylvia Manning, president of the Higher Learning
Commission, which accredits many post-secondary institutions. "It is really
inappropriate for accreditation to be purchased the way a taxi license can
be purchased. ...When we see any problematic institution being acquired and
being changed we put it on a short leash."
Also note the comments that follow the above text.
But first I highly recommend that you watch the video at
---
Click Here
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/collegeinc/view/?utm_campaign=viewpage&utm_medium=toparea&utm_source=toparea
May 5, 2010 reply from Paul Bjorklund
[paulbjorklund@AOL.COM]
Interesting program. I saw the first half of it and
was not surprised by anything, other than the volume of students. For
example, enrollment at University of Phoenix is 500,000. Compare that to
Arizona State's four campuses with maybe 60,000 to 70,000. The huge computer
rooms dedicated to online learning were fascinating too. We've come a long
way from the Oxford don sitting in his wood paneled office, quoting
Aristotle, and dispensing wisdom to students one at a time. The evolution:
From the pursuit of truth to technical training to cash on the barrelhead.
One question about the traditional university though -- When they eliminate
the cash flow from big time football, will they then be able to criticize
the dash for cash by the educational entrepreneurs?
Paul Bjorklund, CPA
Bjorklund Consulting, Ltd.
Flagstaff, Arizona
I wonder if the Secretary of Education watched the College Inc Frontline
PBS show? I doubt it!
"Duncan Says For-Profit Colleges Are Important to Obama's 2020 Goal," By
Andrea Fuller," by Andrea Fuller, Chronicle of Higher Education, May 11, 2010
---
http://chronicle.com/article/Duncan-Says-For-Profit/65477/
Arne Duncan, the secretary of education, expressed
support on Tuesday for the role that for-profit colleges play in higher
education at a policy forum here held by DeVry University.
For-profit institutions have come under fire
recently for their low graduation rates and high levels of student debt. A
Frontline documentary last week focused on the for-profit sector, and a
speech by Robert Shireman, a top Education Department official, was
initially reported as highly critical of for-profit colleges, even though a
transcript of Mr. Shireman's remarks showed that he actually spoke more
temperately.
Mr. Duncan said on Tuesday in a luncheon speech at
the forum that there are a "few bad apples" among actors in the for-profit
college sector, but he emphasized the "vital role" for-profit institutions
play in job training.
Those colleges, he said, are critical to helping
the nation achieve President Obama's goal of making the United States the
nation with the highest portion of college graduates by 2020. Mr. Duncan
also praised a partnership between DeVry and Chicago high schools that
allows students to receive both high-school and college credit while still
in high school.
Mr. Duncan's comments come at a time when
for-profit college officials are anxiously awaiting the release of new
proposed federal rules aimed at them. A proposal that would tie college
borrowing to future earnings has the sector especially concerned.
The rule is not yet final, but the Education
Department is considering putting a cap on loan payments at 8 percent of
graduates' expected earnings based on a 10-year repayment plan and earnings
data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Supporters of for-profit colleges say the rule
would basically force them to shut down educational programs and as a
consequence leave hundreds of thousands of students without classes.
On May 4, 2010, PBS Frontline broadcast an hour-long video called College
Inc. --- a sobering analysis of for-profit onsite and online colleges and
universities.
For a time you can watch the video free online ---
Click Here
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/collegeinc/view/?utm_campaign=viewpage&utm_medium=toparea&utm_source=toparea
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
Brainstorm on What For-Profit Colleges are Doing Right as Well as Wrong
"'College, Inc.'," by Kevin Carey, Chronicle of Higher Education,
May 10, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/College-Inc/23850/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
PBS broadcast a
documentary on for-profit higher education last
week, titled College, Inc. It begins with the slightly ridiculous
figure of
Michael Clifford, a former cocaine abuser turned
born-again Christian who never went to college, yet makes a living padding
around the lawn of his oceanside home wearing sandals and loose-fitting
print shirts, buying up distressed non-profit colleges and turning them into
for-profit money machines.
Improbably, Clifford emerges from the documentary
looking OK. When asked what he brings to the deals he brokers, he cites
nothing educational. Instead, it's the "Three M's: Money, Management, and
Marketing." And hey, there's nothing wrong with that. A college may have
deep traditions and dedicated faculty, but if it's bankrupt, anonymous, and
incompetently run, it won't do students much good. "Nonprofit" colleges that
pay their leaders executive salaries and run
multi-billion dollar sports franchises have long
since ceded the moral high ground when it comes to chasing the bottom line.
The problem with for-profit higher education, as
the documentary ably shows, is that people like Clifford are applying
private sector principles to an industry with a number of distinct
characteristics. Four stand out. First, it's heavily subsidized. Corporate
giants like the University of Phoenix are now pulling in hundreds of
millions of dollars per year from the taxpayers, through federal grants and
student loans. Second, it's awkwardly regulated. Regional accreditors may
protest that their imprimatur isn't like a taxicab medallion to be bought
and sold on the open market. But as the documentary makes clear, that's
precisely the way it works now. (Clifford puts the value at $10-million.)
Third, it's hard for consumers to know what they're
getting at the point of purchase. College is an experiential good;
reputations and brochures can only tell you so much. Fourth—and I don't
think this is given proper weight when people think about the dynamics of
the higher-education market—college is generally something you only buy a
couple of times, early in your adult life.
All of which creates the potential—arguably, the
inevitability—for sad situations like the three nursing students in the
documentary who were comprehensively ripped off by a for-profit school that
sent them to a daycare center for their "pediatric rotation" and left them
with no job prospects and tens of thousands of dollars in debt. The
government subsidies create huge incentives for for-profit colleges to
enroll anyone they can find. The awkward regulation offers little in the way
of effective oversight. The opaque nature of the higher-education experience
makes it hard for consumers to sniff out fraudsters up-front. And the fact
that people don't continually purchase higher education throughout their
lives limits the downside for bad actors. A restaurant or automobile
manufacturer that continually screws its customers will eventually go out of
business. For colleges, there's always another batch of high-school
graduates to enroll.
The Obama administration has made waves in recent
months by proposing to tackle some of these problems by implementing
"gainful
employment" rules that would essentially require
for-profits to show that students will be able to make enough money with
their degrees to pay back their loans. It's a good idea, but it also raises
an interesting question: Why apply this policy only to for-profits?
Corporate higher education may be the fastest growing segment of the market,
but it still educates a small minority of students and will for a long time
to come. There are plenty of traditional colleges out there that are mainly
in the business of preparing students for jobs, and that charge a lot of
money for degrees of questionable value. What would happen if the gainful
employment standard were applied to a mediocre private university that
happily allows undergraduates to take out six-figure loans in exchange for a
plain-vanilla business B.A.?
The gainful employment standard highlights some of
my biggest concerns about the Obama administration's approach to
higher-education policy. To its lasting credit, the administration has taken
on powerful moneyed interests and succeeded. Taking down the FFEL program
was a historic victory for low-income students and reining in the abuses of
for-profit higher education is a needed and important step.
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
The biggest question remains concerning the value of "education" at the micro
level (the student) and the macro level (society). It would seem that students
in training programs should have prospects of paying back the cost of the
training if "industry" is not willing to fully subsidize that particular type of
training.
Education is another question entirely, and we're still trying to resolve
issues of how education should be financed. I'm not in favor of "gainful
employment rules" for state universities, although I think such rules should be
imposed on for-profit colleges and universities.
What is currently happening is that training and education programs are in
most cases promising more than they can deliver in terms of gainful employment.
Naive students think a certificate or degree is "the" ticket to career success,
and many of them borrow tens of thousands of dollars to a point where they are
in debtor's prisons with their meager laboring wages garnished (take a debtor's
wages on legal orders) to pay for their business, science, and humanities
degrees that did not pay off in terms of career opportunities.
But that does not mean that their education did not pay off in terms of
life's fuller meaning. The question is who should pay for "life's fuller
meaning?" Among our 50 states, California had the best plan for universal
education. But fiscal mismanagement, especially very generous unfunded
state-worker unfunded pension plans, has now brought California to the brink of
bankruptcy. Increasing taxes in California is difficult because it already has
the highest state taxes in the nation.
Student borrowing to pay for pricey certificates and degrees is not a good
answer in my opinion, but if students borrow I think the best alternative is to
choose a lower-priced accredited state university. It will be a long, long time
before the United States will be able to fund "universal education" because of
existing unfunded entitlements for Social Security and other pension
obligations, Medicare, Medicaid, military retirements, etc.
I think it's time for our best state universities to reach out with more
distance education and training that prevent many of the rip-offs taking place
in the for-profit training and education sector. The training and education may
not be free, but state universities have the best chance of keeping costs down
and quality up.
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
Dangers in Relying Upon Regional Academic Accrediting Agencies
Standards for measuring credit hours and program length, and affirmed its
earlier critique that the commission had been too lax in its standards for
determining the amount of credit a student receives for course work.
"Inspector General Keeps the Pressure on a Regional Accreditor," by Eric
Kelderman, Chronicle of Higher Education, May 27, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/article/Inspector-General-Keeps-the/65691/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
The inspector general of the U.S. Department of
Education has reaffirmed a recommendation that the department should
consider sanctions for the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central
Association of Colleges and Schools, one of the nation's major regional
accrediting organizations. In a
report this week, the Office of Inspector General
issued its final recommendations stemming from a
2009 examination of the commission's standards for
measuring credit hours and program length, and affirmed its earlier critique
that the commission had been too lax in its standards for determining the
amount of credit a student receives for course work.
The Higher Learning Commission accredits more than
1,000 institutions in 19 states. The Office of Inspector General completed
similar reports for two other regional accreditors late last year but did
not suggest any sanctions for those organizations.
Possible sanctions against an accreditor include
limiting, suspending, or terminating its recognition by the secretary of
education as a reliable authority for determining the quality of education
at the institutions it accredits. Colleges need accreditation from a
federally recognized agency in order to be eligible to participate in the
federal student-aid programs.
In its examination of the Higher Learning
Commission, the office looked at the commission's reaccreditation of six
member institutions: Baker College, DePaul University, Kaplan University,
Ohio State University, the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, and the
University of Phoenix. The office chose those institutions—two public, two
private, and two proprietary institutions—as those that received the highest
amounts of federal funds under Title IV, the section of the Higher Education
Act that governs the federal student-aid programs.
It also reviewed the accreditation status of
American InterContinental University and the Art Institute of Colorado, two
institutions that had sought initial accreditation from the commission
during the period the office studied.
The review found that the Higher Learning
Commission "does not have an established definition of a credit hour or
minimum requirements for program length and the assignment of credit hours,"
the report says. "The lack of a credit-hour definition and minimum
requirements could result in inflated credit hours, the improper designation
of full-time student status, and the over-awarding of Title IV funds," the
office concluded in its letter to the commission's president, Sylvia
Manning.
More important, the office reported that the
commission had allowed American InterContinental University to become
accredited in 2009 despite having an "egregious" credit policy.
In a letter responding to the commission, Ms.
Manning wrote that the inspector general had ignored the limitations the
accreditor had placed on American InterContinental to ensure that the
institution improved its standards, an effort that had achieved the intended
results, she said. "These restrictions were intended to force change at the
institution and force it quickly."
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
The most successful for-profit universities advertise heavily about credibility
due to being "regionally accredited." In some cases this accreditation was
initially bought rather than achieved such as by buying up a small, albeit still
accredited, bankrupt not-for-profit private college that's washed up on the
beach. This begs the question about how some for-profit universities maintain
the spirit of accreditation acquired in this manner.
Bob Jensen's threads on assessment are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
"A New Humanities Ph.D.," by Paula Krebs, Inside Higher Ed, May
24, 2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2010/05/24/krebs
Jensen Comment
I wonder how much of the above article can be extrapolated to accounting
doctoral programs?
Bob Jensen's threads on the sad state of accounting doctoral programs are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
Gina is not amused by the cartoon cover of the May 24, 2010 edition of The
New Yorker
"Is There a Doctorate in the House?" by Gina Barreca, Chronicle of
Higher Education, May 21, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/Is-There-a-Doctorate-in-the/24202/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
Student Term Paper and/or Debate Idea
One idea for a student term paper or student debate would be to compare
consumer product protection legislation and tort litigation with auditing firm
legislation (e.g,, Sarbox) and malpractice insurance costs. This is relevant at
the moment because of the pending 2010 Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act
versus questions whether auditing firms will recover from pending lawsuits of
thousands of bank failures ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#AuditFirms
This is now especially important debate for financial auditing firms
who are possibly at risk of imploding like Andersen due to regulation and
litigation risks.
One think I would like to learn more about is the cost of auditing firm
malpractice insurance compared between different nations such as the U.S. versus
Canada versus Japan versus Germany.
Consumer Product Safety Commission ---
http://www.cpsc.gov/
The pending 2010 Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act ---
http://www.cpsc.gov/ABOUT/Cpsia/cpsia.HTML
Sarbox ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarbox
One issue of great concern is how regulation and tort liability can easily
put small businesses and small auditing firms out of business even before
lawsuits due to the mere cost of meeting regulation requirements and the
exploding cost of malpractice insurance.
A second issue extends these question to large businesses and international
auditing firms.
Students can also be assigned to debate the pros and cons of regulation and
liability protection "relief."
One important point to consider is the 2006 Texas amendment to its
constitution that limits punitive damages in medical malpractice lawsuits
without limiting damages for loss of income in medical malpractice awards.
Before this amendment may medical specialists dropped high risk services due to
the high cost of malpractice insurance. For example, my wife's great female OB/GYN
surgeon in San Antonio dropped OB services completely in 2003 because insurance
coverage and Medicaid payments did not even cover the malpractice insurance cost
for her OB services. After Texas amended its constitution, malpractice insurance
costs dropped significantly. This great GYN surgeon once again added OB to her
services after 2006.
Years ago while we were still living in San Antonio, Texas my wife had two of
her 12 spine surgeries performed by a surgeon from the South Texas Spinal Clinic.
When it came time for next surgery her surgeon turned her away saying that the
Clinic no longer accepted any Medicare patients (she was then covered under
Medicare Disability Insurance before retirement age). Purportedly the soaring
costs, especially malpractice insurance, made complicated Medicare surgeries, on
average, big money losers in for spinal surgeons in Texas. We subsequently moved
to New Hampshire where Erika had two spine surgeries from Dr. Levi at the
Concord Hospital. Erika later became so bent over that we afterwards sought out
one of the very few specialists in the nation who can perform a "Pedicle
Subtraction Osteotomity for Severe Fixed Sagittal Imbalance."
She went into a Boston hospital bent over like the Hunchback of Notre Dame
and came out walking Marine-drill erect in 2007 (but with no relief from her
chronic pain). She has hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of metal attached
to her spine from neck to hips. But since it is jointed in three places, she can
pick up a paper towel off the floor. ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Erika2007.htm
Out of curiosity in November 2009, I phoned the South Texas Spinal Clinic
and discovered it once again is accepting Medicare patients even though Erika
has no intention of returning to that Clinic. Ostensibly a major factor in
deciding to once again take on Medicare patients is the decline in malpractice
insurance costs due largely to a change in the Texas Constitution.
Interestingly, decreases in malpractice insurance costs
have been a major factor in increasing competition for physician specialists in
Texas:
Four years after Texas voters approved a
constitutional amendment limiting awards in
medical malpractice lawsuits, doctors are
responding as supporters predicted, arriving from all parts of the country
to swell the ranks of specialists at Texas
hospitals and bring professional health care to
some long-underserved rural areas. “It was hard to believe at first; we
thought it was a spike,” said Dr. Donald W. Patrick, executive director of
the medical board and a neurosurgeon and lawyer. But Dr. Patrick said the
trend — licenses up 18 percent since 2003, when the damage caps were enacted
— has held, with an even sharper jump of 30 percent in the last fiscal year,
compared with the year before.
Ralph Blumenthal, "More Doctors
in Texas After Malpractice Caps," The New York Times, October 5, 2007
---
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/05/us/05doctors.html
Under financial stress hospitals in Massachusetts have had to take huge
budget cuts. Rather than spread those cuts across the board to all departments,
some hospitals have decided to concentrate on dropping the most money-losing
departments. You probably can guess the leading candidate for being eliminated
--- the obstetrics department.
My neighbor down the road has a second home up here in the White Mountains.
However, he still practices cardiology in a Boston suburb. He says that Mass.
hospital obstetrics departments are leading candidates for elimination, in large
measure, because of the high cost of malpractice insurance covering obstetrics
services relative to insurance payment caps in Mass.
Lawyers file cookie-cutter lawsuits against doctors, nurses, and hospitals
for every defective baby irrespective of the facts in any given case. The reason
is the tendency of sympathetic juries to make multimillion dollar awards to a
mother of a defective baby irrespective of the facts in the case. Many juries
feel that fat cat insurance companies owe it to the unlucky woman (and her lucky
lawyers) who must nurture and raise a severely handicapped child. Juries make
such awards even when the doctors, nurses, and hospitals performed perfectly
under the circumstances. Paul Newman showed us how to love it when lawyers beat
the medical system in favor of the "poor and powerless" in The Verdict
---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zVZFlBJftgg
But so-called "fat cat" insurance companies adjust rates based upon financial
risks. The rates became so high for obstetrics that across most of the U.S.
(less so in states like Texas that cap punitive damages) thousands of
gynecologists dropped the obstetrics part of their services. And under then
Governor Mitt Romney's Universal Healthcare in Massachusetts some strained
hospitals dropped obstetrics services.
Canadian Malpractice Insurance Takes Profit Out Of
Coverage," by Jane Akre, Injury Board, July 28, 2009 ---
Click Here
The
St. Petersburg Times takes a look at the cost of
insurance in Canada for health care providers.
A neurosurgeon in Miami pays about $237,000 for medical malpractice
insurance. The same professional in Toronto pays about $29,200, reports
Susan Taylor Martin.
These are just some factors to consider in the debate about the pros and cons
of providing some relief from killer regulations and lawsuits for high risk
product manufacturing and high risk services.
One think I would like to learn more about is the cost of auditing firm
malpractice insurance compared between different nations such as the U.S. versus
Canada versus Japan versus Germany.
This is now an important debate for financial auditing firms who are possibly
at risk of imploding like Andersen due to regulation and litigation risks.
Bob Jensen's threads on auditing firm litigation and professionalism are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
"Viking Drama: Glitnir Bank Sues PwC for Malpractice and Negligence,"
The Big Four Blog, May 12, 2010 ---
http://bigfouralumni.blogspot.com/2010/05/viking-drama-glitnir-bank-sues-pwc-for.html
It’s not just volcanic ash that comes out of
Iceland.
We see today a large $2 billion lawsuit filed by
one of Iceland’s largest banks, now defunct, naming PricewaterhouseCoopers
as one of the defendants.
Glitnir Bank (we see in Wikipedia that Glitnir is
the hall of Forseti, the Norse god of law and justice, and the seat of
justice amongst gods and men), filed today a legal claim against Jon Asgeir
Johannesson and also PwC for malpractice and negligence in the Supreme Court
of the State of New York.
The suit against Jon Asgeir Johannesson, formerly
its principal 39% shareholder, Larus Welding, previously Glitnir's Chief
Executive, Thorsteinn Jonsson, its former Chairman, and other former
directors, shareholders and third parties associated with Johannesson,
alleges that these defendants fraudulently and unlawfully drained more than
$2 billion out of the Bank.
Former auditors PricewaterhouseCoopers are also
sued for “facilitating and helping to conceal the fraudulent transactions
engineered by Johannesson and his associates, which ultimately led to the
Bank's collapse in October 2008.”
The suits shows how a cabal of businessmen led by
Johannesson conspired to systematically loot Glitnir Bank in order to prop
up their own failing companies; how they seized control of Glitnir, removing
or sidelining experienced Bank employees; and then facilitated and concealed
their diversions from the Bank by overriding Glitner's financial risk
controls, and finally how the transactions cost Glitnir more than $2billion
and contributed significantly to the Bank's collapse.
There is in particular a sale of $1billion of Bonds
to investors located in New York and elsewhere in the United States in
September 2007, which is sure to get the attention of the very-aggressive US
regulators.
According to Steinunn Guobjartsdottir, chair of the
Glitnir Winding-Up Board, which conducted the investigation and is making
the legal claim, "There is evidence supporting the allegation that Glitnir
Bank was robbed from the inside."
In terms of PwC, the suit alleges, “Johannesson and
the other individual Defendants could not have succeeded in their schemes
without the complicity of PwC. PwC knew about Glitnir's irregular related
party exposures, reviewed and signed off on Glitnir financial statements
which grossly misrepresented these exposures, and facilitated Glitnir's
fraudulent fundraising in New York.”
According to Reuters, “Neither PwC nor Mr
Jóhannesson immediately responded to requests for comment.”
This is serious stuff, in that the bank’s own
senior management is being accused of fraudulent intent to bankrupt the
bank. Iceland’s banking system with its extraordinary regime of easy credit
has negatively impacted thousands of investors and depositers all over
Europe, but there are now government and non-governmental organizations
investigating what happened and pursuing financial claims.
This Nordic Drama is just getting started, and
likely other lawsuits will follow both in Europe and in the US. Auditors of
Icelandic banks are sure to get named in these suits as defendants and
parties to any misconduct.
"Worlds Apart But Two Of A Kind: Glitnir, Satyam And Their Auditor PwC,"
by Francine McKenna, re: The Auditors, May 17, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/05/17/worlds-apart-but-two-of-a-kind-glitnir-satyam-and-their-auditor-pwc/
Taking care of family and close friends first is
universal. Whether Irish, Italian, Kenyan, Mexican, or Tunisian… Legal,
regulatory, ethical and moral lines are often crossed in service to family
and those who are “like a brother to me…”
re: Satyam in the
New York Times January 9, 2009: “What started
as a marginal gap between actual operating profit and the one reflected
in the books of accounts continued to grow over the years. It has
attained unmanageable proportions as the size of company operations
grew,” he wrote. “It was like riding a tiger, not knowing how to get off
without being eaten.”
Mr. Raju said he had tried and failed to bridge
the gap, including an effort in December to buy two construction firms
in which the company’s founders held stakes.
The
Times of India, January 8, 2009: The country’s
fourth largest IT company—after TCS,Infosys and Wipro—was for several
years cooking its books by inflating revenues and profits,thus boosting
its cash and bank balances; showing interest income where none existed;
understating liability; and overstating debtors position (money due to
it)….[On December 16, 2008] Raju announced his ill-fated plan to
shell out $1.6 billion to acquire his sons’ companies, Maytas Properties
and Maytas Infra. It created such a furore that Raju was forced to
backtrack. It now transpires that what was seen as a move by Raju to
bail out his sons was actually a last-ditch effort to covering his
tracks through fictitious cash transfers and wriggle out of a tight
corner...There’s intense speculation as to what finally
triggered Raju’s confession of wrongdoing. It’s clearly more than
coincidence that it came hot on the heels of investment banker DSP
Merrill Lynch’s letter to the company on Tuesday evening terminating its
days-old agreement with Satyam to advise it on strategic options because
of “material accounting irregularities’’. But the beginning of the end
came when furious investors forced Raju to reverse his Maytas moves.
Contrast this scenario of cronyism run amok with
the news out of Iceland re: Glitnir:
From Kevin LaCroix’s
D&O Diary: In October 2008, in the midst of
the global financial crisis, Iceland’s Financial Services Authority took
control of Glitner. Glitner ultimately
filed a petition for bankruptcy in the U.S. under Chapter
15 of the Bankruptcy Code. According to the
May 11 complaint, creditors have filed claims exceeding $26 billion…The
May 11 complaint alleges that Jon
Asgeir Johannesson and his wife,
Ingibjorg Stefania Palmadottir , and businesses they owned or
controlled, used improper means to “wrest control” of Glitnir and to
“fraudulently drain over $2 billion out of the Bank to fill their
pockets and prop up their own failing companies.”
According to the complaint, beginning
in 2006, Johannesson “engaged in a scheme” using his “web of companies”
to take control of Glitnir in violation of Icelandic law. By April 2007,
Johannesson and his companies owned about 39% of Glitnir’s stock. As a
result, Johanneson was able to “stack” Glitnir’s board “with individuals
who had connections with companies he controlled,” and he also “had his
inexperienced hand-selected candidate” replace the existing CEO.
Having taken control of the Bank, its
board and its management, Johannesson and the other individual
defendants “used their control over the Bank and funds raised in U.S.
financial markets to issue massive ‘loans’ to, and a series of equity
transactions with, companies Johannesson controlled, in an effort to
stave off their eventual collapse,” which “placed the Bank in
extreme financial peril.
There are obvious similarities between
Satyam and Glitnir…
- Companies using loans and investments to
related entities to hide distress at main firm and funnel cash abroad.
- Glitnir sold U.S. investors $1 billion in
medium-term notes to finance their schemes. Satyam’s ADR’s were listed
on the NYSE.
- Glitnir’s CEO stacked the bank’s board of
directors with “willing accomplices” in “a sweeping conspiracy” to wrest
control of the bank.
- Satyam’s Board filled with Indian elite
industry and academic leaders who didn’t get involved in details.
- The involvement of the board,
Chaudhuri adds, was at the “strategic
level; in companies like Satyam, it is the owner/promoter/founder
who runs the show. It has to do with the ownership structure.”
- Satyam’s balance sheet included nearly $1.5
billion in non-existent cash and bank balances, accrued interest and
misstatements. It had also inflated its 2008 second quarter revenues
by$122 million, and actual operating margins were less than a tenth of
the stated $135 million.
- Per
Times of London October 25, 2009: Each of the
three big banks — Kaupthing, Landsbanki and Glitnir — loaned large sums
to their biggest shareholders on favourable terms.It has emerged that at
the time of Glitnir’s collapse, the 15 biggest creditors were all
connected to FL Group, its largest shareholder, which was controlled by
Jon Asgeir Johannesson, the boss of collapsed Icelandic retail group
Baugur.
And then there is the most telling similarity
between the two companies:
Both Satyam and Glitnir were audited by
PwC.
PwC is now named in lawsuits in New York by
shareholders and creditors of both entities.
Continued in article
"How Dangerous is the Two-Billion Dollar Suit Against PwC Over Iceland's
Glitnir Bank? The Answer is Blowin' in the Wind," by James Peterson, re:
Balance, May 12, 2010 ---
Click Here
Bob Jensen's threads on large international auditing firm survival threats
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#AuditFirms
Bob Jensen's threads on large auditing firm litigations and settlements
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
Wake Up Little Suzie, Wake Up: Big Brother's Watching at Northern
Arizona University
"University Plans to Install Electronic Sensors to Track Class Attendance," by
Karen Wilkinson, Converge Magazine, May 8, 2010 ---
http://www.convergemag.com/infrastructure/University-Plans-to-Install-Electronic-Sensors-to-Track-Class-Attendance.html
Jensen Comment
These "proximity cards" have many types of other uses, including crime
prevention and law enforcement. But there are problems, including "Don't Leave
Home Without It." "It's a trend toward a surveillance
society that is not necessarily befitting of an institution or society," said
Adam Kissel, defense program director of the Foundation for Individual Rights in
Education. "It's a technology that could easily be expanded and used in student
conduct cases."
Bob Jensen's threads on the dark side of education technology ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/theworry.htm
"Changes on Tap for Compilation and Review Standards," by Carolyn H.
McNerney, Charles E. Landes, and Michael P. Glynn, Journal of Accountancy,
May 2010 ---
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Issues/2010/May/20102466.htm
Significant changes to the standards for
compilation and review engagements will soon take effect. The AICPA’s
Accounting and Review Services Committee (ARSC) issued Statement on
Standards for Accounting and Review Services no. 19, Compilation and Review
Engagements, in December. The standard’s effective date is for compilations
and reviews of financial statements for periods ending on or after Dec. 15,
2010, with early implementation permitted for the new reporting option for
compilation engagements when the accountant’s independence is impaired. This
article discusses the major changes made by the standard.
Continued in article
Visualizing Text
May 12, 2010 message from Scott Bonacker
[lister@BONACKERS.COM]
No-one questions whether tax rules are hard to read or not, but in school
I remember wondering if I would ever use sentence diagramming again.
Who knew?
This has a lot to do with the usefulness of
http://www.tax-charts.com/ and
http://www.andrewmitchel.com/html/topic.html
A college level refresher course on the meaning of words and sentence
structure might not be a bad idea .....
Scott Bonacker CPA
Springfield, MO
May 13, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Thanks Scott,
I added this to my threads on visualization at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/352wpvisual/000datavisualization.htm
This is somewhat related to concept maps.
Questions
Has the art and science of reading faces ever been part of an auditing
curriculum?
Have there been any accountics studies of Ekman's theories as applied to
auditing behavioral experimens?
(I can imagine that some accounting doctoral students have not experimented
along these lines?)
Paul Ekman video on how to read faces and detect lying ---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IA8nYZg4VnI
This video runs for nearly one hour
Paul Ekman ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Ekman
Ekman's work on facial expressions had its starting
point in the work of psychologist
Silvan Tomkins.[Ekman
showed that contrary to the belief of some
anthropologists including
Margaret Mead, facial expressions of emotion are
not culturally determined, but universal across human cultures and
thus
biological in origin. Expressions he found to be
universal included those indicating
anger,
disgust,
fear,
joy,
sadness, and
surprise. Findings on
contempt are less
clear, though there is at least some preliminary evidence that this emotion
and its expression are universally recognized.]
In a research project along with Dr. Maureen
O'Sullivan, called the
Wizards Project (previously named the
Diogenes Project), Ekman reported on facial "microexpressions"
which could be used to assist in lie detection. After testing a total of
15,000 [EDIT: This value conflicts with the 20,000 figure given in the
article on Microexpressions] people from all walks of life, he found only 50
people that had the ability to spot deception without any formal training.
These naturals are also known as "Truth Wizards", or wizards of
deception detection from demeanor.
He developed the
Facial Action Coding System (FACS) to taxonomize
every conceivable human facial expression. Ekman conducted and published
research on a wide variety of topics in the general area of non-verbal
behavior. His work on lying, for example, was not limited to the face, but
also to observation of the rest of the body.
In his profession he also uses verbal signs of
lying. When interviewed about the Monica Lewinsky scandal, he mentioned that
he could detect that former President
Bill Clinton was lying because he used
distancing language.
Ekman has contributed much to the study of social
aspects of lying, why we lie,
and why we are often unconcerned with detecting lies.
He is currently on the Editorial Board of Greater Good magazine,
published by the
Greater Good Science Center of the
University of California, Berkeley. His
contributions include the interpretation of scientific research into the
roots of compassion, altruism, and peaceful human relationships. Ekman is
also working with Computer Vision researcher
Dimitris Metaxas on designing a visual
lie-detector.
From Simoleon Sense on May 5, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/
Research Papers Worth
Reading On Deceit, Body Language, Influence etc.. (with
links to pdfs)
Sixteen Enjoyable Emotions. – (2003)
Emotion Researcher, 18, 6-7. by Ekman, P
“Become Versed in Reading Faces”.
Entrepreneur, 26 March 2009. Ekman, P. (2009)
Intoduction: Expression Of Emotion - In RJ
Davidson, KR Scherer, & H.H. Goldsmith (Eds.) Handbook
of Afective Sciences. Pp. 411-414.Keltner, D. & Ekman, P
(2003)
Facial Expression Of Emotion. – In M.Lewis
and J Haviland-Jones (eds) Handbook of emotions, 2nd
edition. Pp. 236-249. New York: Guilford Publications,
Inc. Keltner, D. & Ekman, P. (2000)
Emotional And Conversational Nonverbal Signals.
– In L.Messing & R. Campbell (eds.) Gesture, Speech and
Sign. Pp. 45-55. London: Oxford University Press.
A Few Can Catch A Liar. - Psychological
Science, 10, 263-266. Ekman, P., O’Sullivan, M., Frank,
M. (1999)
Deception, Lying And Demeanor.- In States
of Mind: American and Post-Soviet Perspectives on
Contemporary Issues in Psychology . D.F. Halpern and
A.E.Voiskounsky (Eds.) Pp. 93-105. New York: Oxford
University Press.
Lying And Deception. – In N.L. Stein, P.A.
Ornstein, B. Tversky & C. Brainerd (Eds.) Memory for
everyday and emotional events. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates, 333-347.
Lies That Fail.- In M. Lewis & C. Saarni
(Eds.) Lying and deception in everyday life. Pp.
184-200. New York: Guilford Press.
Who Can Catch A Liar. -American
Psychologist, 1991, 46, 913-120.
Hazards In Detecting Deceit. In D. Raskin,
(Ed.) Psychological Methods for Investigation and
Evidence. New York: Springer. 1989. (pp 297-332)
Self-Deception And Detection Of Misinformation.
In J.S. Lockhard & D. L. Paulhus (Eds.) Self-Deception:
An Adaptive Mechanism?. Englewood Cliffs, NJ:
Prentice-Hall, 1988. Pp. 229- 257.
Smiles When Lying. – Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology, 1988, 54, 414-420.
Felt- False- And Miserable Smiles.Ekman, P.
& Friesen, W.V.
Mistakes When Deceiving. Annals of the New
York Academy of Sciences. 1981, 364, 269-278.
Nonverbal Leakage And Clues To Deception
Psychiatry, 1969, 32, 88-105.
"You Can't Hide Your Lying Brain (or Can You?), by Tom Bartlett,
Chronicle of Higher Education, May 6, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/You-Cant-Hide-Your-Lying/23780/
Earlier this week Wired reported that a Brooklyn
lawyer wanted to use fMRI brain scans to prove that his client was telling
the truth. The case itself is an average employer-employee dispute, but
using brains scans to tell whether someone is lying—which a few, small
studies have suggested might be useful—would set a precedent for
neuroscience in the courtroom. Plus, I'm pretty sure they did something like
this on Star Trek once.
But why go to all the trouble of scanning someone's
brain when you can just count how many times the person blinks? A study
published this month in Psychology, Crime & Law found that when people were
lying they blinked significantly less than when they were telling the truth.
The authors suggest that lying requires more thinking and that this
increased cognitive load could account for the reduction in blinking.
For the study, 13 participants "stole" an exam
paper while 13 others did not. All 26 were questioned and the ones who had
committed the mock theft blinked less when questioned about it than when
questioned about other, unrelated issues. The innocent 13 didn't blink any
more or less. Incidentally, the blinking was measured by electrodes, not
observation.
But the authors aren't arguing that the blink
method should be used in the courtroom. In fact, they think it might not
work. Because the stakes in the study were low--no one was going to get into
any trouble--it's unclear whether the results would translate to, say, a
murder investigation. Maybe you blink less when being questioned about a
murder even if you're innocent, just because you would naturally be nervous.
Or maybe you're guilty but your contacts are bothering you. Who knows?
By the way, the lawyer's request to introduce the
brain scanning evidence in court was rejected, but lawyers in another case
plan to give it a shot later this month.
(The abstract of the study, conducted by Sharon
Leal and Aldert Vrij, can be found here. The company that administers the
lie-detection brain scans is called Cephos and their confident slogan is
"The Science Behind the Truth.")
Bob Jensen's threads on visualization
Visualization of Multivariate Data (including faces) ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/352wpvisual/000datavisualization.htm
Do you suppose we could also add CEO emotions to annual reports?
Or maybe this is the dawn of emotional corporate logos!
"The New Face of Emoticons: Warping photos could help text-based
communications become more expressive," by Duncan Graham-Rowe, MIT's
Technology Review, March 27, 2007 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/Infotech/18438/
Computer scientists at the University of Pittsburgh
have developed a way to make e-mails, instant messaging, and texts just a
bit more personalized. Their software will allow people to use images of
their own faces instead of the more traditional emoticons to communicate
their mood. By automatically warping their facial features, people can use a
photo to depict any one of a range of different animated emotional
expressions, such as happy, sad, angry, or surprised.
All that is needed is a single photo of the person,
preferably with a neutral expression, says Xin Li, who developed the system,
called Face Alive Icons. "The user can upload the image from their camera
phone," he says. Then, by keying in familiar text symbols, such as ":)" for
a smile, the user automatically contorts the face to reflect his or her
desired expression.
"Already, people use avatars on message boards and
in other settings," says Sheryl Brahnam, an assistant professor of computer
information systems at MissouriStateUniversity, in Springfield. In many
respects, she says, this system bridges the gap between emoticons and
avatars.
This is not the first time that someone has tried
to use photos in this way, says Li, who now works for Google in New York
City. "But the traditional approach is to just send the image itself," he
says. "The problem is, the size will be too big, particularly for
low-bandwidth applications like PDAs and cell phones." Other approaches
involve having to capture a different photo of the person for each unique
emoticon, which only further increases the demand for bandwidth.
Li's solution is not to send the picture each time
it is used, but to store a profile of the face on the recipient device. This
profile consists of a decomposition of the original photo. Every time the
user sends an emoticon, the face is reassembled on the recipient's device in
such a way as to show the appropriate expression.
To make this possible, Li first created generic
computational models for each type of expression. Working with Shi-Kuo
Chang, a professor of computer science at the University of Pittsburgh, and
Chieh-Chih Chang, at the Industrial Technology Research Institute, in
Taiwan, Li created the models using a learning program to analyze the
expressions in a database of facial expressions and extract features unique
to each expression. Each of the resulting models acts like a set of
instructions telling the program how to warp, or animate, a neutral face
into each particular expression.
Once the photo has been captured, the user has to
click on key areas to help the program identify key features of the face.
The program can then decompose the image into sets of features that change
and those that will remain unaffected by the warping process.
Finally, these "pieces" make up a profile that,
although it has to be sent to each of a user's contacts, must only be sent
once. This approach means that an unlimited number of expressions can be
added to the system without increasing the file size or requiring any
additional pictures to be taken.
Li says that preliminary evaluations carried out on
eight subjects viewing hundreds of faces showed that the warped expressions
are easily identifiable. The results of the evaluations are published in the
current edition of the Journal of Visual Languages and Computing.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on visualization of multivariate data are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/352wpvisual/000datavisualization.htm
"Johns Hopkins Builds a B-School from Scratch: The elite research
university launches a new Global MBA program in August. On the to-do list: AACSB
accreditation, faculty, and money," by Allison Damasi, Business Week,
May 10, 2010 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/content/may2010/bs20100510_439397.htm?link_position=link2
For years, Johns Hopkins' business offerings—mostly
part-time degree and certificate programs—lingered in the shadow of the
university's internationally renowned medical and public health schools.
That all changed in 2006 when the university received a $50 million gift
from banker William Polk Carey, leading to the founding of the Johns Hopkins
Carey Business School in 2007 and a new lofty mission to become one of the
world's leading business schools. That vision will be put to the test this
August when the school launches its new Global MBA program, with a
curriculum that the school's inaugural dean, Yash Gupta, says seeks to
reinvent the modern MBA.
"Since we are the new kids, we don't have to change
culture; we are building a culture," Gupta says. "We are trying to change
the mold."
All eyes in the management education world will be
on the new B-school in the coming year, as Gupta essentially builds a new
MBA program from scratch, a daunting task that few universities have been
eager to take on in the last decades. The Carey School is seeking to
distinguish itself by designing a curriculum that will capitalize on Johns
Hopkins' strength in fields like medicine and public health, have a focus on
emerging markets and ethics, and encourage innovation and entrepreneurship.
To accomplish this, the school has recruited Gupta,
a B-school dean with a proven fundraising track record and 14 years of
experience, and installed him in leased office space in Baltimore's Harbor
East area that Carey now calls home. Gupta's most recent deanship was at the
University of Southern California's
Marshall School of Business (Marshall
Full-Time MBA Profile), where he helped raise $55
million. Since his arrival at Johns Hopkins, Gupta has spent much of his
time recruiting students, designing courses, and hiring a new cohort of top
research faculty, with the ultimate goal of putting the Carey School in a
position where it can compete with the world's top B-schools. The school is
in the process of obtaining accreditation from the Association to Advance
Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB), an essential credential that the
school will need to get students and the business school community to take
it seriously. Says Gupta: "We want to play in that sandbox."
Challenges Ahead
It's an ambitious goal for a fledgling business
school, which still faces a number of significant challenges ahead, says
John Fernandes, the AACSB president. The school already has a number of
things working in its favor, perhaps the most important being the
world-renowned Johns Hopkins brand, which will help the school establish
itself as a serious player early on, and what appears to be a unique niche
focus for its MBA program, Fernandes says. But in the next few years, the
school will have to obtain accreditation, launch a major fundraising
campaign, build up its alumni network, ramp up its career services
offerings, and continue to attract top-rate faculty. Says Fernandes: "It's
not an easy task to go from nothing to a top school in a very short period
of time."
The last large university to open a new B-school
was the University of California, San Diego, which opened the Rady School of
Management (Rady
Full-Time MBA Profile) in 2003 after receiving a
$30 million gift from businessman Ernest Rady. Robert Sullivan, the school's
inaugural and current dean, says he faced numerous challenges: hiring
faculty for a school with no track record; launching an executive education
program to help pay the bills; and raising $110 million for a new building
and other expenses, no small feat when you have no highly placed MBA alumni
to tap for cash. He even had to borrow faculty from other schools. Says
Sullivan: "It was really kind of Band-Aids for the first year."
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
This begs the question of what comparative advantage Johns Hopkins brings to the
business school world at this point in time. The main advantage of business
schools in most private colleges and universities is student recruiting. Those
that dropped or commenced to starve their business studies options for students,
like Colorado College did for a while, discover that many student applicants
really want an option to major in a quality business school or college within
the university. It would seem that because of its graduate school stellar
reputations in science, medicine, law, and political science that Johns Hopkins
is not hurting for applicants to its graduate schools.
Because so many students want to major in business, colleges of business are
often cash cows for a university. In addition, it is allegedly easier in many
instances for colleges of business to raise endowment funds from the private
sector. Somehow I just don't see this as being the case for Johns Hopkins where
medicine is king.
It may well be that Johns Hopkins just wants to become more of a
"university." In that case it is less like Brown and Princeton than it will be
like Stanford, Northwestern, Chicago, Duke, Harvard, Emory, Penn, and Dartmouth.
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies are at
http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/content/may2010/bs20100510_439397.htm?link_position=link2
Some elite schools like Brown University that do not have business schools
are bringing European business schools to their U.S. campuses
European business schools are planting their flags on American soil
"Entering the U.S. Market," by Jennifer Epstein, Inside Higher Ed, May
25, 2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/05/25/business
The law of supply and demand drove SKEMA, a French
business school, to open campuses in the emerging markets of China and
Morocco, and to start planning for expansion into India, Brazil and possibly
Russia.
But the decision to set up shop in the United
States was driven by something a bit more emotional. “For European students,
this is a dream; America is a dream for them,” says Alice Guilhon, the
school’s dean. “And it is a dream for us, to be known in the U.S.”
While Harvard Business School, the Wharton School
and the Stanford Graduate School of Business might not be the kind of
competition that most institutions would willingly seek out, well-regarded
European business schools like SKEMA have in the last few years ratcheted up
their efforts to be known and respected in the United States.
SKEMA -- created last year by the merger of ESC
Lille School of Management and CERAM Business School – is hoping to build
its global reputation by situating its new campuses near hubs of the
technology industry, and saw a venture in the United States as key to that
strategy. “To be in America is to be close to the headquarters of all the
big firms, to be where the story began,” Guilhon says. “To be well-known in
America, it is leverage for the visibility of the school in the world.”
In plans announced last week, SKEMA will begin
offering classes in English to about 300 of its own students on the Raleigh
campus of North Carolina State University, beginning in January 2011. The
school hopes to have its own 40,000 square foot building open by 2013. As
time goes on, the school may become more distinctly American, but at least
for the first few years its faculty, administrators and students will
primarily come from France and elsewhere in Europe. “It’s very important
that we build the Skema culture in the U.S.,” Guilhon said. “We need to show
it works there.”
Skema's decision to build a campus in the United
States is an unusual one, says Juliane Iannarelli, director of global
research for the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business.
"Most programs are partnerships, collaborations," she stays. "The
establishment of a campus -- constructing a building -- is pretty rare."
At least three other major European business
schools have taken recent steps that go beyond partnerships, if stopping
short of Skema's dramatic step. These new efforts are more than student and
faculty exchanges, offering substantial instruction in the United States,
and in some cases competing to attract American students from the start.
Robert F. Bruner, dean of the Darden School of
Business at the University of Virginia and chair of the AACSB's
Globalization of Management Education Task Force, says it is "an interesting
choice" to see foreign business schools enter the U.S. market. "We have an
abundance of schools here and usually the idea is to go where the
competition isn't."
The schools are driven, he says, by "a desire to
establish and succeed in the U.S. as a basis for validating their models."
Aiming to have a successful business school in the United States “is like
wanting to have your plays produced on Broadway -- the audiences are most
discerning."
After three years of planning and renovations,
Spain’s IESE Business School will open a North American facility just a
block off Broadway. An opening ceremony for
the school’s six-story New York Center, just
across 57th Street from Carnegie Hall, is set for June 3, and is intended to
be a big splash into the U.S. market.
Luis Cabral, the center’s academic director and an
economics professor who was hired away from New York University, says
expansion into the United States was a logical step in IESE’s efforts to
become known worldwide. “We’ve been in South America, Asia, Africa for quite
some time now,” he says. “But if we have the goal of being truly global,
then we have to be in the United States.”
Despite being ranked as one of Europe’s top
business schools, “we’re not as well-known in the United States as we would
like to be,” he says. “There are elements of branding here, in making
ourselves known on this side of the Atlantic.”
IESE already has reciprocity agreements in place
with a few U.S. business schools, including NYU’s Stern School of Business
and Columbia Business School. “The problem with those agreements is that
they tend to be a relatively small number of students. If they send half a
dozen, we send half a dozen,” Cabral says. But offering its own courses in
its own facilities gives IESE a chance to send a far greater number of
students to the United States. “We’re estimating 70 to 80, at least -- a
different scale altogether.”
Full-time and part-time M.B.A. students will have
the option of spending a few weeks in New York for elective courses in
industries like media, entertainment and finance. “The advantage of taking
these courses in New York is that you have a lot of guest speakers that can
just walk up to the building,” he says. “They don’t even need to take a cab.
That’s not something that most European business schools can say.”
For at least the next few years, though, the New
York Center will be an outpost of the main school in Barcelona and won’t
offer degrees. “This is just our first step,” Cabral says. “We’ll see what
we do next.”
Another Spanish school beginning its foray into the
United States is Instituto de Empresa Business School, which has campuses in
Madrid and Segovia. Though the U.S. market is saturated with business
schools and executive education programs, IE sees room to build its own
programs that will largely be offered in the United States, says David Bach,
dean of programs. “You could look at this and say you have very
sophisticated customers. You could say, if you’re a foreign school, stay
away from the U.S. market. But we want to show that we can have success in
such a competitive, difficult market.”
In March,
IE
launched a joint program with Brown University
– one of the few elite U.S. universities that doesn’t
have its own business school – to offer an executive M.B.A. program that
aims to infuse the humanities and social sciences into the typical business
curriculum. The program will include five in-person sessions, four of which
will be at Brown’s campus in Providence, R.I., and the fifth in Spain.
“We’re expecting to attract Americans,” Bach says. “A European M.B.A. is
increasingly attractive to U.S. employers who want to know they’re hiring
people who understand the world, but not everybody can come to Europe for a
year.” The degree will be awarded by IE.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
Auditing the Lepricons That Learned from Lehman ---
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_do_lepricons_have_to_do_with_Ireland
"Not To Be Twistin’ Hay… Auditors Mucking It Up In Ireland," by
Francine McKenna, re: theAuditors, May 4, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/05/04/not-to-be-twistin-hay-auditors-mucking-it-up-in-ireland/
Round trip loans. Director-approved balance sheet
manipulation. Window-dressing of accounts at period-end.
“The regulator said auditing firms needed
to pay “particular attention” to guidance that it had previously issued
on monitoring transactions taking place around year-end, as well as the
procedures expected to be followed by auditors…These standards and
guidance notes require auditors to scrutinize “material” short-term
deposits that are re-lent on broadly similar terms, and loan repayments
that are received shortly before year-end and then subsequently
re-advanced within a short timeframe.
The guidance notes emphasized that the
auditors needed experience and judgment to identify the implications of
such transactions, and assess whether they constituted attempts to
engage in the so-called “window-dressing” of accounts.”
The Sunday Business Post, March 1, 2009
If that sounds like
Lehman Brothers, it’s because the kinds of tricks
and techniques used in that case, such as Repo 105, are neither new nor
unique.
The
PCAOB, the US regulator of public accounting
firms, tried to remind the firms at the end of December 2008 of their
responsibilities in the “current economic environment.”
In an audit of internal control over
financial reporting, the auditor also should evaluate whether the
company’s controls sufficiently address the identified risks of material
misstatement due to fraud and controls intended to address the risk of
management override of controls. Controls that might address these risks
include:
- Controls over significant, unusual
transactions, particularly those that result in late or unusual
journal entries;
- Controls over journal entries and
adjustments made in the period-end financial reporting process;
- Controls over related party
transactions;
- Controls related to significant
management estimates; and
- Controls that mitigate incentives for,
and pressures on, management to falsify or inappropriately manage
financial results.
Repurchase
agreements recorded as loans are legal “round trip” financing tools, often
used to both improve liquidity as well as shuffle assets and liabilities at
period end to suit management’s objectives.
When disguised as “sales” without proper disclosure
and splashed like mud over and over in the face of a
skeptical attorney like
Anton Valukas,
Repo 105 transactions they gain high-class
call-girl-type notoriety that’s undeserved given their common whore
characteristics.
A round-trip loan was used by
Refco executives to hide uncollectible
receivables. Three of their executives, as well as an outside counsel, went
to jail for that fraud.
In 2005, Time-Warner paid a $300 million penalty,
agreed to an anti-fraud injunction and an order to comply with prior
cease-and-desist order and agreed to restate its financial results and
engage independent examiner. Their CFO, Controller and Deputy Controller
also consented to a cease-and-desist order.
From the
SEC
press release:
“Beginning in mid-2000, stock prices of
Internet-related businesses declined precipitously as, among other
things, sales of online advertising declined and the rate of growth of
new online subscriptions started to flatten. Beginning at this time, and
extending through 2002, the company employed fraudulent
round-trip transactions that boosted its online advertising revenue to
mask the fact that it also experienced a business slow-down. The
round-trip transactions ranged in complexity and sophistication, but in
each instance the company effectively funded its own online advertising
revenue by giving the counterparties the means to pay for advertising
that they would not otherwise have purchased. To
conceal the true nature of the transactions, the company typically
structured and documented round-trips as if they were two or more
separate, bona fide transactions, conducted at arm’s length and
reflecting each party’s independent business purpose…”
Time Warner Inc. and its auditor reached a $2.5 billion settlement
of the resulting securities fraud litigation. Time
Warner paid $2.4 billion, while its auditor, Ernst & Young, paid
$100 million.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on the Lehman-Ernst controversies area at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Ernst
Where were the auditors before the banks failed?
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008bailout.htm#AuditFirms
Accountics Research in Action
Question
With tort lawyers circling the wagons, are the large international accounting
firms shooting themselves in both feet by lobbying for IFRS principles-based
standards?
"GAAP's Lawsuit Buffer: The rules-based nature of U.S. generally
accepted accounting principles may actually discourage shareholder lawsuits,
says a new study," by Sarah Johnson, CFO.com, May 12, 2010 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14496423/c_14497565?f=home_todayinfinance
The debate over whether principles-based accounting
standards are better than rules-based standards has divided many
accountants, and stymied regulators who want to move U.S. accounting toward
less-prescriptive guidance.
One argument against that nearly decade-long push
has been that moving away from bright lines and layers upon layers of rules
(as is characteristic of U.S. generally accepted accounting principles)
would lead to more class-action lawsuits from shareholders second-guessing
companies' accounting decisions. Because standards more reliant on
principles (such as international financial reporting standards, or IFRS)
give users more room to make judgment calls, observers worry that adopting
such standards will open companies up to more Monday-morning quarterbacking
by auditors, regulators, and the plaintiffs' bar.
Indeed, it's long been assumed that adopting
principles-based standards would raise companies' litigation risk. For
instance, in a 2003 report encouraging a move toward more
"objectives-oriented rules," the Securities and Exchange Commission said a
new system would carry with it "litigation uncertainty." At the time, the
commission argued that litigation exposure could be minimized by companies
and their auditors properly documenting the reasoning behind their judgment
calls under a principles-based system.
Now, three university professors have gathered
empirical evidence suggesting that litigation is indeed an issue in the
principles-versus-rules discussion. Their study, "Rules-Based Accounting
Standards and Litigation," suggests that companies that violate rules-based
standards have a lower likelihood of getting sued than those that are
accused of violating more-principles-based standards.
The professors looked at securities class-action
suits alleging GAAP violations filed between 1996 and 2005, as well as 84
restatements made during that same time frame that did not result in
litigation. Rather than judge GAAP as a whole as a rules-based system, they
considered the prescriptiveness of the standards mentioned in each case,
based on four characteristics: level of bright-line thresholds, exceptions,
implementation guidance, and detail.
The standards were measured on a "rules-based
continuum" scale running from zero to four, with zero denoting the most
principles-based standards and four indicating the most rules-based
standards. Accordingly, the standard for contingent liabilities, which
requires judgment calls, scored zero, while accounting for leases scored
four.
However, the professors shied away from concluding
whether the adoption of more-principles-based standards as a whole in the
United States would invite more lawsuits for American companies. The unique
litigation system of this country, as well as the more litigious nature of
the society, makes it difficult to directly compare the U.S. system with
that of Europe or beyond, they say.
Still, over time, IFRS could become more
rules-based if demands for carve-outs and additional guidance continue as
they have in the United States, says study co-author John McInnis, an
assistant professor at the University of Texas at Austin. "Even if we adopt
a more principles-based system, I'm not sure it would stay that way," he
says. Rather, the professors believe their study provides a building block
for U.S. regulators and other researchers to consider as the merits of
adopting IFRS continue to be weighed. (The SEC plans to decide next year
whether to require U.S. companies to make a switch to the global rules,
starting in 2015.)
For now, apparently, GAAP and its inherent
complexity give U.S. companies a defense against lawsuits by allowing them
to "shield themselves behind the rules," says McInnis. "If you follow the
rules, it appears that you are protected."
Shareholders have the burden of proving that a GAAP
violation was intentional, not an easy task when many layers of rules
provide many opportunities for mistakes. "We find that firms are less likely
to be sued when they violate standards that are more rules-based, consistent
with the view that the complexity of rules-based standards provides a
credible 'innocent misstatement' presumption," the professors wrote.
The professors acknowledge several limitations of
their research. Among them is the fact that it's not possible to observe
initial shareholder claims that lawyers drop before submitting them into the
court system. Also unanswerable is whether a more principles-based system
would lead to fewer restatements, which often trigger shareholder lawsuits
in the United States if they affect the stock price.
"Rules-Based Accounting Standards and Litigation,"
by Dain C. Donelson University of Texas at Austin - McCombs School of Business
John M. McInnis University of Texas at Austin - Department of Accounting
Richard Mergenthaler Jr. University of Iowa - Henry B. Tippie College of
Business
SSRN, April 7, 2010 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1531782
In the United States we have
at a number of ways of dealing with principles-based standards that clients,
auditors, and investors are unhappy with because of just plain not knowing how
to apply the standard.
-
1.
The standard setters paint bright lines
in their own interpretations of the standard in specific contexts. Sometimes
this is done by the standard setters themselves when issuing interpretations
to supplement standards, e.g., see FIN 46-R.
-
2.
The standard setters sometimes outsource
the interpretations and implementation inquiries. The best example of this
is when the FASB formed the Derivatives Implementation Group (DIG) that
answered inquiries about how to implement FAS 133 and its amendments for
particular types of complicated contracts involving derivative financial
instruments ---
http://www.fasb.org/cs/ContentServer?c=FASBContent_C&pagename=FASB%2FFASBContent_C%2FDerivativesPage&cid=900000015389
-
3.
The standard setters build bright lines
into amended standards or new standards such as when FAS 138 added bright
lines to FAS 133.
-
4.
A large firm, particularly PwC, paints
bright lines into a massive database used both by its clients and its own
employees, but by anybody who pays for access to the database, especially
colleges and universities that teach accountancy. In the case of PwC this
database is called Comperio ---
http://www.pwc.com/gx/en/comperio/index.jhtml
Comperio in a sense paints bright lines when a particular type of contract
just does not seem to be clearly covered in the standards and the
interpretations. Of course PwC does not have standard setting authority, but
it can issue its own guidelines that others consider following.
-
5.
The SEC paints bright lines when the
FASB is slow to react such as now when the SEC is painting a bright line
banning debt masking using repo contracts as defined in FAS 140.
-
6.
In the United States common law court
decisions paint bright lines that are statutes are vague or incomplete.
Anybody that defies or ignores the common law does so at risk of losing out
in a future court decision.
The IASB uses similar means of
painting bright lines into IFRS. The one that is most problematic is the common
law. When you have standard setting jurisdiction for nearly 100 nations,
problems in common law arise due to different cultures and contracting that can
differ greatly between nations. For example, some nations rely almost entirely
on capitalization with debt and almost no equity. In the United States we are
much more dependent upon equity markets.
Bob Jensen's threads on bright lines versus principles-based standards are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#BrightLines
The Pentagon and the IRS are Deemed Unauditable by the GAO. What About
the FED?
"Alan Grayson On The Passage Of The Partial "Audit The Fed" Amendment,"
by Alan Grayson, Zero Hedge, May 12, 2010 ---
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/alan-grayson-passage-partial-audit-fed-amendment
The Senate just voted, 96-0, to audit the Federal
Reserve. Soon, we will know what the Federal Reserve did with the trillions
of dollars that it handed out during the financial crisis.
A few months ago, such a vote would have been
unthinkable. One senior Treasury official claimed he would fight to stop an
audit 'at all costs'. Senator Chris Dodd predicted that an audit would spell
economic doom, while Senator Judd Gregg attacked accountability for the Fed
as "pandering populism".
Today, both the Treasury Department and Senator
Dodd support this amendment. As for Judd Gregg, he was just on the floor of
the Senate discussing -- of all people -- 19th century populist Presidential
candidate William Jennings Bryan.
What happened?
People Power is what happened. We built a coalition
of people on the right and the left, ordinary citizens and economists,
ex-regulators and politicians, all with one question for which we demanded
an answer: "What happened to our money?"
No longer can Ben Bernanke get away with saying, "I
don't know."
Now, we're going to know who got what, and why.
Releasing this information will show that the
Federal Reserve's arguments for secrecy are -- and have always been-- a
ruse, to cover up the handing out of hundreds of billions of dollars like
party favors to the Wall Street favorites who brought the American economy
to the brink of ruin.
But our work isn't quite done. The Senate audit
provision isn't as strong as what we passed in the House. The Senate
provision has only a one-time audit, whereas what we passed in the House
would allow audits going forward. There will be a conference committee that
will merge the provisions from the two bills.
The need for audits and oversight over Fed handouts
going forward is great. The financial crisis isn't over, and neither are the
Fed's secret bailouts. Earlier this week, the Federal Reserve announced it
was going underwrite the Greek bailout by lending dollars to the central
banks of Europe, England, and Japan. The loans may never be paid back, the
Fed accepts the risk that the dollar will strengthen in the meantime, and
the interest rate charged by the Fed is very likely at below-market rates.
So such loans are in effect just a subsidy, to bail out foreigners.
The Fed has not been chastened. It is bolder and
more of a rogue actor than ever. It's clear that without full audit
authority going forward, the Fed will continue to give out "foreign aid"
without Congressional or even Executive permission.
And it will do so in secret.
So we will be fighting on to get a full audit from
the conference committee.
But let's not lose sight of what we have
accomplished so far - real independent inquiry into the Fed, and its
incestuous relationships with Wall Street banks. For the first time ever.
Our calls, emails, lobbying, blogging, and support
really mattered. We made it happen.
Today, we beat the Fed.
Courage,
Alan Grayson
Jensen Comment
It's important to trace where the bailout funds eventually ended up after being
laundered. For example, billions went to AIG that in turn sent it on to Goldman
Sachs. Without the Bailout, Goldman Sachs would've been left holding the empty
bag.
Bob Jensen's threads on the bailout are at
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/alan-grayson-passage-partial-audit-fed-amendment
Our Broken Corporate Governance Model
"Why Executive Pay is So High," by Neil Weinberg, Forbes, April
22, 2010 ---
http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2010/0510/outfront-pay-bosses-ceo-chairman-why-executives-pay-is-high.html?boxes=Homepagetoprated
How can investors reel in pay and get more out of
corporate bosses? Here's one view: Kick the chief executive out of the
boardroom.
When it comes to the way corporate boards oversee
chief executives--or, all too often, fail to--few people have as many war
stories to tell from as many vantage points as Gary Wilson. He was Walt
Disney Co. ( DIS - news - people )'s chief financial officer and, as a
director, the subject of scorn when its board was twice ranked the worst in
the country. As a Yahoo ( YHOO - news - people ) director Wilson was
targeted by investor Carl Icahn, who sought to oust the board during a 2008
failed shotgun marriage with Microsoft ( MSFT - news - people ). As a
private equity guy he led the 1989 Northwest Airlines ( NWA - news - people
) buyout along with Alfred Checchi.
So Wilson can say, with more than a little
credibility, that the boards supposedly overseeing management are instead
packed with lackeys with appalling frequency. It's a familiar complaint but
one that he believes is responsible for out-of-control pay, the short-term
greed that helped spawn the recent financial meltdown and a staggering waste
of resources. Wilson's solution: Abolish the joint role of chief executive
and chairman and install independent bosses to oversee boards.
"From what I've seen, managers are interested in
what goes into their pockets and willing to use lots of leverage to add
short-term profits, boost the stock price and sell their options," says
Wilson, 70. "Long-term shareholders risk getting screwed."
The Alliance, Ohio native has joined up with Ira
Millstein, a Wall Street attorney, and Harry Pearse, former General Motors
general counsel and Marriott Corp. director, to push for independent
chairmen. Their platform is the Millstein Center for Corporate Governance at
Yale.
Does splitting the title benefit shareholders?
Evidence is inconclusive, but here's an indicator suggesting they're on to
something: 76% of the 25 bosses who rank lowest on our annual survey
comparing compensation to shareholder return hold dual titles. Only 44% of
the best 25 hold both titles. The dual players include Richard D. Fairbank
of Capital One, Ray Irani of Occidental Petroleum ( OXY - news - people ),
David C. Novak of Yum Brands and Howard Solomon of Forest Labs. ( FRX - news
- people ) Wilson and Pearse insist that they saw boards transformed
overnight from supplicants to independents when the roles were separated at
companies where they were directors.
Boards occasionally go through spasms of
feistiness. In 1992 General Motors' board ousted Robert Stemple as chairman,
which led to similar moves at American Express ( AXP - news - people ),
Westinghouse and other companies. But today only 21% of boards are chaired
by bona fide independents, says RiskMetrics Group, a New York financial
advisory firm that owns ISS Proxy Advisory Services. In 43% of big companies
the roles are ostensibly split, but the chairman, says RiskMetrics, is an
ex-chief executive or otherwise defined as a company "insider."
In some cases nothing less than corporate survival
is at stake, Wilson argues. He points to Lehman Brothers ( LEHMQ - news -
people ), where Richard Fuld was chief executive and chairman for 15 years
and where management took the sorts of big risks that ultimately sank the
firm.
Wilson isn't against stock options but believes in
tying them to long-term returns with strike prices that rise at the rate of
inflation plus some risk premium, as he has done at some companies he has
invested in. That way management isn't rewarded just for showing up.
Independent boards might also rein in pay. In
Europe Wilson sat on KLM's advisory board and says it's no coincidence that
(a) chief executives typically run a management board, which reports up to
the separate advisory board, and (b) pay is well below U.S. levels. At many
U.S. companies, he says, the combined boss often recruits board members and
then "directors feel obligated to the CEO/chairman, make the friendliest
member chairman of the compensation committee and then hire a friendly
consultant to do an analysis that favors high management pay."
Continued in Article
Comment Letter from 80 Business and Law
Professors Regarding Corporate Governance
I submitted to the SEC yesterday a comment letter on
behalf of a bi-partisan group of eighty professors of law, business, economics,
or finance in favor of facilitating shareholder director nominations. The
submitting professors are affiliated with forty-seven universities around the
United States, and they differ in their view on many corporate governance
matters. However, they all support the SEC’s “proxy access” proposals to remove
impediments to shareholders’ ability to nominate directors and to place
proposals regarding nomination and election procedures on the corporate ballot.
The submitting professors urge the SEC to adopt a final rule based on the SEC’s
current proposals, and to do so without adopting modifications that could dilute
the value of the rule to public investors.
Lucian Bebchuk, Harvard Law School, on Tuesday August 18, 2009 ---
Click Here
Bob Jensen's threads on outrageous executive compensation (that even
rewards executives for failure) ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#OutrageousCompensation
Bob Jensen's threads on corporate governance ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Governance
"Senator Questions Another Break for Colleges: Tax-Exempt Bonds," by
Goldie Blumenstyk, The Chronicle of Higher Education, May 2, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/article/Senator-Questions-Another/65374/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
A U.S. senator with influence over federal tax
policy may now be setting his sights on a longstanding cornerstone of
colleges' financial practice: paying for new and renovated buildings by
borrowing money with tax-exempt bonds.
The attention comes as a result of a just-released
report from the Congressional Budget Office. The
report, "Tax Arbitrage by Colleges and Universities," questions the merits
of allowing nonprofit institutions to rely on taxpayer-subsidized debt while
they also benefit from investing their assets to earn them more than what
they pay out in interest on the debt.
The report says such a practice allows many
universities to benefit from what it describes as "indirect tax arbitrage"
because "holding those assets while borrowing on a tax-exempt basis is, in
effect, equivalent to using tax-exempt proceeds to invest in those
higher-yielding securities."
College advocates say the broad definition of tax
arbitrage the report uses reflects an economic argument on the merits of
tax-exempt financing but doesn't take into account the social good that
colleges provide or the current financial pressures they face.
Sen. Charles E. Grassley, who requested the
budget-office analysis in 2007 as part of a broad look at tax-exempt
organizations, said in a statement on Friday that the report raises
questions "for parents, students, and taxpayers about universities issuing
bonds and going into debt when they have money in the bank."
The study estimates that allowing colleges and
universities to borrow using tax-exempt debt will cost the federal
government about $5.5-billion in forgone revenue in 2010.
In his statement, Senator Grassley, a Republican
from Iowa, highlighted several concerns: "Issuing bonds costs money on
interest and management fees. Does the expense of debt service take money
away from student aid or academic service? Do bond issuances occur even as
universities raise tuition and build investment assets?"
But it is unclear whether the senator, who is the
senior minority member of the Senate Finance Committee, intends to propose
any changes in law in response to the report. In the statement released on
Friday evening, he says, "These are further questions to explore."
Charles A. Samuels, a lawyer for the National
Association of Health and Educational Facilities Finance Authorities, a
group of organizations that help private colleges issue bonds, said current
law already restricts colleges and other organizations from directly
profiting from their tax-exempt bond issues, or tax arbitrage. (To avoid tax
arbitrage, a college that raises money from tax-exempt bonds can reinvest it
only temporarily, and even then only in investments earning about the same
as the cost of the debt.)
"Now would be a very bad time to make it more
difficult for nonprofit organizations in this country to borrow money," Mr.
Samuels said in an interview on Sunday.
He said the Congressional Budget Office report is
"an 'academic' study in the worst sense of the word" and added that he hoped
it would not result in some new limits on tax-exempt financing.
"It isn't going to really help the cost of higher
education to restrict financing" that saves colleges money, he said.
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies are at
http://chronicle.com/article/Senator-Questions-Another/65374/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
Flagrant Foul: Call for a Forensic Accountant: Could it be a
double dribble?
"Minority Owner Sues Cuban, Calls Mavericks ‘Insolvent’," by Richard Sandimir,
The New York Times, May 11, 2010 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/12/sports/basketball/12mavericks.html?hpw
Mark Cuban’s financial management of the Dallas
Mavericks was described as reckless in a lawsuit filed Monday in Texas by a
minority investor in the team who accused Cuban of amassing net losses of
$273 million and debt of more than $200 million.
Ross Perot Jr., who sold Cuban control of the team
in 2000 but retained a small stake, said in the state court filing that the
team was essentially insolvent and lacked the revenue to pay its debts.
Perot is seeking damages, the naming of a receiver
to take over the team and the appointment of a forensic accountant to
investigate its finances. Perot said that Cuban’s actions had diminished the
value of his investment in the team and violated his and other minority
owners’ rights.
In an e-mail message to The Dallas Morning News,
Cuban said: “There is no risk of insolvency. Everyone always has been and
will be paid on time.” He added that “being in business with Ross Perot is
one of the worst experiences of my business life.”
“He could care less about Mavs fans,” Cuban
continued. “He could care less about winning.”
The lawsuit partly opened the Mavericks’ books,
showing some results and projections. Perot said the team generated a net
loss of more than $50 million in the year ended June 2009 and a net cash
flow deficit of $176 million since 2001. Looking ahead, Perot said that
internal projections showed additional losses of $92 million through 2013
and debt rising to $281 million.
Marc Ganis, a sports industry consultant, said that
Perot “seems to want to be bought out at a premium, wants to restrict
Cuban’s ability to spend money on players, or it’s personal.”
The N.B.A. does not seem to be worried by Perot’s
accusations.
Adam Silver, the deputy commissioner of the N.B.A.,
said the league had “absolutely no concern” about Cuban’s financial
situation. In an e-mail message, he said, “We are in the process of
addressing our teams’ ongoing losses through the collective bargaining
process with our players.”
Cuban acquired the Mavericks for $285 million from
Perot in the 1999-2000 season and turned it into a winning franchise that
has made the playoffs every year since 2001. The lawsuit said Cuban owned 76
percent of the team.
He has become one of the most famous and boisterous
owners in sports, sitting courtside at home games and criticizing officials,
which has accounted for much of his nearly $2 million in league fines.
Bob Jensen's fraud updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
"Deloitte India A Bomb Target?" The Big Four Blog, May 4, 2010
---
http://www.bigfouralumni.blogspot.com/
Indian papers are just reporting that Indian police
had arrested Mohammad Zia Ul Haq in the southern city of Hyderabad, who was
apparently directed by Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT)to “bomb the
Hyderabad office of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, one of the four largest
auditors in the world, and was in the process of carrying out the plan.” He
has “already procured the explosives supplied by the LeT to carry out the
attack, sources said.”
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
Audits sometimes bomb, but rarely are auditors bombed by anything other than a
martini.
"PCAOB Inspection of Deloitte Audit – 20% Error Rate?" The Big Four
Blog, May 6, 2010 ---
http://bigfouralumni.blogspot.com/2010/05/pcaob-inspection-of-deloitte-audit-20.html
In its first inspection
report of a Big Four firm in the year 2010, the PCAOB just released its 2009
inspection report of Deloitte & Touche LLP, finding quite a high percentage of
errors in the sample of audits selected to be reviewed.
The Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board on May 4, 2010 conducted an inspection of the
registered public accounting firm Deloitte & Touche LLP ("Deloitte" or "the
Firm") in 2009, and issued a report in accordance with the requirements of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
Here are some interesting
facts and numbers from this report summary:
Members of the Board's
inspection staff conducted primary procedures for the inspection from October
2008 through October 2009.
Field work was done at
Deloitte’s National Office and at 30 of its approximately 69 U.S. practice
offices, indicating about 40% of offices were covered.
The scope of this review
was determined according to the Board's criteria, and the Firm was not allowed
an opportunity to limit or influence the scope.
The inspection reviewed
aspects of 73 audits performed by Deloitte and found 15 issues (Issues A to O),
which works out to a 20% error rate, by simply dividing 15 by 73, which we would
think is quite high. Imagine that one of every five audits randomly selected and
signed off by one of the largest accounting firms on the planet has purported
errors.
We summarize below all
the 15 issues, which PCAOB calls, “audit deficiencies, including failures by the
Firm to identify or appropriately address errors in the issuer's application of
GAAP, including, in some cases, errors that appeared likely to be material to
the issuer's financial statements. In addition, the deficiencies included
failures by the Firm to perform, or to perform sufficiently, certain necessary
audit procedures.” – so quite stringent in its scope.
Issuer A The issuer's
total U.S. net federal deferred tax assets, which exceeded its stockholders'
equity at year end, included substantial U.S. income tax net operating loss
carry forwards for which no valuation allowance had been recorded. The Firm,
however, failed to give sufficient weight to relevant evidence that was more
objectively verifiable, such as the fact that the issuer had experienced losses
in seven of the last eight years (including cumulative losses in the last three
years), had experienced two successive year-over-year declines in U.S. sales
volumes, and considered the disruptions in the financial markets to be a risk
factor to its business.
Issuer B The issuer
evaluated its recorded goodwill for impairment during the third quarter of the
year and concluded that the fair value of its total assets exceeded their book
value by a small margin. The Firm failed to sufficiently evaluate the effect of
these events on its assessment of the potential impairment of goodwill at year
end.
Issuer C The Firm failed
in the following respects to obtain sufficient competent evidential matter to
support its audit opinion, in failing to perform adequate audit procedures to
test the valuation of the issuer's inventory and investments in joint ventures
(the primary assets of which were inventory). Etc.
Issuer D The Firm failed
to adequately test the valuation of the issuer's inventory and the issuer's
investments in unconsolidated entities, whose primary assets were inventory
("investments").
Issuer E The Firm failed
to adequately test an intangible asset for impairment.
Issuer F The Firm failed
to perform adequate audit procedures pertaining to a sale of a subsidiary to a
newly formed entity in which the issuer held an ownership interest.
Issuer G The Firm failed
in the following respects to obtain sufficient competent evidential matter to
support its audit opinion, in one reporting unit, the Firm failed to evaluate
whether management's use of historical results as the sole basis for its revenue
projections, without considering the issuer's future prospects or the economic
conditions, was reasonable.
Issuer H The issuer
engaged a specialist to calculate the estimated amount of a significant
contingent liability. The amount calculated by the specialist exceeded the
amount recorded by the issuer by an amount that was approximately 13 times the
Firm's planning materiality. The Firm failed to perform sufficient procedures to
test the contingent liability.
Issuer I The Firm failed
to perform adequate audit procedures to test the issuer's conclusion that
certain available-for-sale securities with unrealized losses did not require a
charge for other-than-temporary-impairment.
Issuer J The Firm failed
to evaluate the reasonableness of certain significant assumptions that the
issuer had used in developing its cash flow estimates to assess the
recoverability of certain long-lived assets etc.
Issuer L The issuer
acquired a company during the year, and this acquired company operated as a
subsidiary of the issuer after the acquisition and was the source of a
significant portion of the issuer's reported revenue. The Firm failed to test
the operating effectiveness of the controls over the acquired company's revenue
and, as a result, the Firm's testing of revenue was inadequate.
Issuer M The Firm failed
to perform adequate audit procedures to test the fair value of an embedded
derivative liability at year end.
Issuer N The Firm failed
to sufficiently test revenue and cost of goods sold.
Issuer O The Firm failed
to identify a departure from GAAP that it should have identified and addressed
before issuing its audit report.
In its response to the
PCAOB, Deloitte said, “We have evaluated the matters identified by the Board’s
inspection team for each of the Issuer audits described in Part I of the Draft
Report and have taken actions as appropriate in accordance with D&T’s policies
and PCAOB standards….none of our reports on the Issuers’ financial statements
was affected.”
A few things stand out in
this report:
First, the PCAOB is
actually providing the sample size of the inspected audits, for the first time,
enabling us to calculate an error rate
The error rate in this
situation is quite high, almost one of every five audits has errors. Obviously,
Deloitte performs thousands of audit each year and extrapolating from a small
sample is quite dangerous, nonetheless, even at half of 20%, the natural
conclusion is that one in ten audits has an error, and would have gone unnoticed
had not the PCAOB done a good post-audit on the audit.
Finally, there is a good
deal of variance in the type of errors found, ranging from lack of inventory
checking to impairment testing. Interesting to see that not all of these issues
related to accounting for financial securities.
We’ll of course be
waiting for the report on Ernst & Young to see if the PCAOB is highlighting any
accounting deficiencies relating to its audit of Lehman Brothers’ infamous Repo
105, if that were indeed in the scope of the 2009 audit.
Jensen Comment
In 2007 the PCAOB also hit Deloitte with the PCAOB's largest fine in history.
From The Wall Street
Journal on Accounting Weekly Review on December 14, 2007
Deloitte Receives $1 Million Fine
by Judith Burns
The Wall Street Journal
Dec 11, 2007
Page: C8
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB119734046614120346.html?mod=djem_jiewr_ac
TOPICS: Accounting, Audit Firms,
Auditing, Big Four, PCAOB, Public Accounting, Public Accounting
Firms
SUMMARY: The PCAOB,
the nation's audit watchdog, recently fined Deloitte & Touche $1
million and censured the firm over its work checking the books of a
San Diego-based pharmaceutical. This is the first PCAOB enforcement
case against a Big Four accounting firm.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: This
article can serve as a basis of discussion of audit firm
responsibility and the enforcement process. It also discusses the
PCAOB and a little of its history and enforcement, as well as
provides information for discussion of Deloitte's response.
QUESTIONS:
1.) What firm recently agreed to a fine imposed by the PCAOB? What
was the reason for the fine? Is this firm a large, medium, or small
firm?
2.) What is the PCAOB? What is its purpose? When was it created?
What caused the creation of the PCAOB?
3.) What is Deloitte's response to the fine? How does the firm
defend itself against the allegations? What do you think of the
firm's comments and actions?
4.) What does it mean that Deloitte settled this case "without
admitting or denying claims?" Why would that be a good tactic to
take? How could it hurt the firm/
5.) Is the PCAOB's main focus enforcement? Why or why not? What
other responsibilities does the organization have?
6.) Relatively speaking, is this a substantial or minor fine for the
firm? Will fines like this change the behavior of the firms? Why or
why not?
SMALL GROUP ASSIGNMENT:
Examine the PCAOB's website? What information is offered there? What
information are you interested in as an accounting student? What
might interest you as an investor? What would interest a
businessperson? Does the website offer extensive information or is
it general information? What information is offered regarding
enforcement? Is the website a good resource for accountants? Why or
why not? Is it a valuable resource for businesspeople? Please
explain your answers. Offer specific examples of value offered on
the website? What would you like to see detailed or offered on the
website that is not included? What did you learn from this website
that you have not seen elsewhere?
Reviewed By: Linda Christiansen, Indiana University Southeast
|
"Deloitte Receives $1 Million Fine," by Judith Burns, The Wall Street Journal,
December 11, 2007; Page C8 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB119734046614120346.html?mod=djem_jiewr_ac
In its first-ever enforcement case
against a Big Four accounting firm, the nation's audit watchdog fined Deloitte &
Touche LLP $1 million and censured the firm over its work checking the books of
a San Diego-based pharmaceutical company.
Deloitte settled the matter without
admitting or denying claims brought by the Public Company Accounting Oversight
Board that one of the firm's former audit partners failed to perform appropriate
and adequate procedures in a 2004 audit of
Ligand Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Deloitte signed off on Ligand's
books, finding they fairly presented the firm's results and complied with U.S.
generally accepted accounting principles, or U.S. GAAP.
Ligand later restated financial
results for 2003 and other periods because its recognition of revenue on product
shipments didn't comply with U.S. GAAP.
Ligand's restatement slashed its
reported revenue by about $59 million and boosted its net loss in 2003 by more
than 2½ times, the oversight board said.
First-Ever Case
The PCAOB's action against Deloitte
marked the first time since it was created in 2003 by the Sarbanes-Oxley
corporate-reform legislation that it has taken action against one of the Big
Four accounting firms -- Deloitte, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, KPMG LLP and
Ernst & Young LLP.
The PCAOB previously took
enforcement actions against 14 individuals and 10 firms, according to a
spokeswoman, although they all involved smaller firms.
Oversight-board Chairman Mark Olson
told reporters yesterday after a speech to the American Institute of Certified
Public Accountants that the board isn't looking to bring a lot of enforcement
actions but said "it is reasonable to expect that there will be others" against
Big Four firms.
Mr. Olson said in an earlier
statement that the board's disciplinary measures are needed to ensure public
confidence isn't undermined by firms or individual auditors who fail to meet
"high standards of quality and competence."
Competence was lacking in the 2003
Ligand audit, according to the regulatory body. The oversight board said former
auditor James Fazio didn't give enough scrutiny to Ligand's reported revenue
from sales of products that customers had a right to return, even though Ligand
had a history of substantially underestimating such returns.
Deloitte's Response
In a statement yesterday, Deloitte
said it is committed to ongoing efforts to improve audit quality and "fully
supports" the role of the accounting-oversight board in those efforts.
"Deloitte, on its own initiative,
established and implemented changes to its quality control policies and
procedures that directly address the PCAOB's concerns," the company said.
It added that it is confident that
Deloitte's audit policies and procedures "are among the very best in the
profession and that they meet or exceed all applicable standards."
New York-based Deloitte began
auditing Ligand in 2000 and resigned in August 2004.
Mr. Fazio, who resigned from
Deloitte in October 2005, agreed to be barred from public-company accounting for
a minimum of two years, the PCAOB said. Mr. Fazio's lawyer couldn't be reached
to comment.
The oversight board also faulted Mr.
Fazio for not adequately supervising others working on the audit and faulted
Deloitte for leaving him in place even though some managers had determined he
should be removed and ultimately asked him to resign from the firm.
Mr. Fazio remained on the job
despite the fact that questions about his performance had been raised in the
fall of 2003, the oversight board said.
In addition, the oversight board
said Deloitte had assigned a greater-than-normal risk to Ligand's 2003 audit but
failed to ensure that the partners assigned to the work had sufficient
experience to handle it.
Bob Jensen's threads on Deloitte are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Deloitte
KPMG manager took HK$300,000 bribe: ICAC
“ICAC” is the Hong Kong Independent Commission Against Corruption. They have
storefront offices all over Hong Kong at which any type of corruption of
business or government can be reported.
Saturday, 8 May 2010
South China Morning Post
Reported by Enoch Yiu
KPMG manager took HK$300,000 bribe: ICAC
The ICAC yesterday slapped an additional charge
on a senior manager of KPMG for accepting a bribe of HK$300,000 in
connection with the Hontex International Holdings' initial public offering
scandal.
Leung Sze-chit, 32, a senior manager of KPMG,
allegedly received the bribe from an unidentified person as compensation for
preparing the accountant's report in the prospectus for the global offering
of Hontex, Independent Commission Against Corruption officer Caroline Yu
said at the Eastern Court yesterday.
No plea was taken. Magistrate Bina Chainrai
adjourned the case until May 28, pending transfer to the District Court.
Leung last month was charged by the ICAC with
offering HK$100,000 to another employee of KPMG, whose identify has not been
disclosed, "for preparing the accountant's report for the global offering"
of Hontex, a Fujian sports clothing firm.
The Securities and Futures Commission in March
won a court order freezing the HK$1 billion that Hontex raised in its
initial public offering in December. The SFC alleged the firm had overstated
its financial results and misled investors about its finances in the
prospectus. The SFC ordered a suspension of trading of Hontex shares on
March 30, two months after its listing.
KPMG was the auditor responsible for ensuring
the accuracy of Hontex's prospectus in the share sale. Yesterday KPMG said
it was the one that discovered the malpractices.
"KPMG wishes to emphasise again that the alleged
payment was in fact reported through KPMG's internal hotline. After
investigation, the member of staff in question was suspended by KPMG and a
report was then made by KPMG to the relevant authority. KPMG has been, and
continues, to co-operate fully with the authorities," the company said.
Hontex, controlled by Taiwanese businessman Shao Ten-po, said in its
listing prospectus that it produces fabrics and makes garments for brands
including Decathlon, Kappa and mainland sports chain Li Ning.
Bob Jensen's threads on KPMG are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
Bob Jensen's fraud updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Ketz Me If You Can
"FASB and Repo Accounting," by: J. Edward Ketz, SmartPros, May
2010 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x69361.xml
The facts of life continue to give discomfort to
the FASB. When Anton Valukas criticized Lehman Brothers, there was plenty of
disparagement left over for the FASB and the SEC. After all, when ambiguity
exists in financial accounting rules, we shouldn't be surprised when
managers take advantage of these ambiguities.
That’s, of course, assuming there are ambiguities.
Given that Lehman’s transactions have no business purpose and were designed
merely to deceive the investment community, maybe ambiguity is not the issue
to debate.
FAS 140 dealt with accounting for the transfer of
financial resources. Essentially, the board said that such a transaction
should be treated in either of two ways. If the transfer shifted control of
the resource to another entity, then one should account for the transaction
as a sale. The cash is recorded, the financial resource is taken off the
books, and a gain or loss is recorded. If the transfer does not shift
control of the resource to another entity, then one should account for the
transaction as a secured borrowing. The cash is recorded, but the firm also
records a liability. No gain or loss is recorded; and the financial resource
stays on the books.
(As an aside, I find it frustrating that virtually
all reporters misstate the accounting issue. Consider this sentence as an
example. “The transactions allowed Lehman to temporarily remove some $50
billion in assets from its balance sheet, presenting a stronger financial
picture than existed.” If they would only use some common sense. If one
applies for a mortgage on a house he or she is buying, do you think the bank
will be impressed if they show less assets?)
FAS 140 goes on to spell out some criteria for
assessing whether control has been transferred. Paragraph 9 spells out these
criteria:
“The transferor has surrendered control over
transferred assets if and only if all of the following conditions are met:
a. The transferred assets have been isolated from
the transferor—put presumptively beyond the reach of the transferor and its
creditors, even in bankruptcy or other receivership (paragraphs 27 and 28).
b. Each transferee (or, if the transferee is a
qualifying SPE (paragraph 35), each holder of its beneficial interests) has
the right to pledge or exchange the assets (or beneficial interests) it
received, and no condition both constrains the transferee (or holder) from
taking advantage of its right to pledge or exchange and provides more than a
trivial benefit to the transferor (paragraphs 29−34).
c. The transferor does not maintain effective
control over the transferred assets through either (1) an agreement that
both entitles and obligates the transferor to repurchase or redeem them
before their maturity (paragraphs 47−49) or (2) the ability to unilaterally
cause the holder to return specific assets, other than through a cleanup
call (paragraphs 50−54).”
For me, the third condition nixes the
sale-accounting executed by Lehman. The asset was coming back to the firm,
so it should have employed the accounting for a secured borrowing.
But, Lehman Brothers treated these transactions as
sales and Ernst & Young agreed. Did E&Y screw up or did its partners believe
there was enough ambiguity in the rules to allow managers to choose gain
accounting? Either FAS 140 is ambiguous or it is not. If so, we need to
tighten the rules considerably, as I discuss below. If not, then society
needs to hold some Lehman managers and some E&Y partners accountable.
I wonder whether the FASB could save its face and
its political hide if it just simplified the accounting. It could require
business enterprises to record the transaction as a secured borrowing in all
cases where the financial asset returns to the firm and in all cases where
there is even the possibility of its return.
The SEC could help as well. It should require all
firms who account for a transfer of a financial asset as a sale and then
receives it back, in part or repackaged in any way, to issue an 8-K.
Managers would have to display for the entire world to see any and all phony
sales of financial assets, and they would have to explain why they did not
account for the transaction as a secured borrowing.
Last, let us note that the problem would be
compounded exponentially if principles-based accounting were in place in the
U.S. How could anybody fault Lehman Brothers in a regime of principles-based
accounting? The managers could always retort that they were following the
me-first principle.
Ketz Me If You Can
Here's Professor Ketz's Bombshell We've All Been Waiting For: And to Think I
Was Shocked by Repo 105s Until Ed Wrote This
"Shock over Repo 105," by J. Edward Ketz, SmartPros, April 2010
---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x69280.xml
The bankruptcy report by Anton Valukas has created
quite a stir. Given that we all knew about the demise of Lehman Brothers,
what was the surprise? Ok, he wrote about some fast and loose accounting
tricks, which are dubbed Repo 105 transactions. So what?
What I find fascinating about managers at Lehman’s
is not so much what they did, but that the public is shocked—shocked!—at
another accounting game. As if these behaviors were going to stop!
On what basis would the public believe that
corporate accounting had become the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but
the truth? Maybe they thought that Sarbanes-Oxley was the golden legislation
that solved all our problems. But, as most of the act was incremental
changes over previous dictates, that conclusion has exaggerated and
continues to exaggerate the reality.
Besides, legislation today will never focus on the
real issues of creating incentives for managers to walk the straight and
narrow, generating disincentives for those who walk astray, and making sure
these things are enforced. In today’s partisanship, what happens depends on
who is in office. If it is the Republicans, they’ll talk about ethics and
close their eyes. If it is the Democrats, they will ignore current
violations and pass new legislation as they continue to build the Great
Socialistic Society. And neither party enforces the law, unless you count
the SEC’s fining of shareholders as enforcement.
With fewer accounting tricks, as documented by USA
Today, maybe the public felt that the tide had turned. Maybe it had, but the
cycle continues. Managers find accounting chicanery easier to carry out at
some times than others. Never mistake a lull in accounting tricks as their
cessation. It is merely a rest before a return to lies, damned lies, and
accounting.
Perhaps people felt that the auditors were
ferreting out fraud. While the auditors at least have to worry about
potential lawsuits, that apparently does not mean that they are always
skeptical of management’s actions, even with a credible whistleblower.
Audits in the U.S. are better than audits in other countries, but there is
still room for improvement. Let’s not think that the auditors are always
vigilant.
Maybe with stock market prices going up after an
extended downturn, folks started believing that the economy was resurging. I
cannot share that optimism for we have so many asset bubbles yet to burst.
Even if it were true, increasing stock market prices just accent the
perverse incentives in our economy, as corporate managers and directors
attempt to maximize their own wealth through share-based compensation, and
accounting is merely a tool to accomplish their goals.
No, I don’t see much reason for accounting frauds
to cease. I laugh when I watch television programs, listen to radio
broadcasts, and read news accounts and op-ed pieces that lash out at the
rascals that dominated Lehman Brothers. What are these people thinking? Why
is anybody shocked?
The heart is deceitful above all things and
desperately wicked—who can understand it? Clearly, not those who are shocked
at the revelations by Valukas.
Bob Jensen's threads on the Lehman-Ernst scandals are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
"Derivatives Clearinghouses Are No Magic Bullet: Will the Dodd bill
create another kind of institution that's too big to fail?" by Harvard's
Mark J. Roe, The Wall Street Journal, May 6, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703871904575216251915383146.html
As the Senate finalizes its financial reform
legislation, a consensus is developing that if we could just get derivatives
traded through a centralized clearinghouse we could avoid a financial crisis
like the one we just went through. This is false. Clearinghouses provide
efficiencies in transparency and trading, but they are no cure-all. They can
even exacerbate problems in a financial crisis.
If I agree to sell you a product next month through
a clearinghouse, I'll deliver the product to the clearinghouse and you'll
deliver the cash to the clearinghouse on the due date. Let's say we both
have many trades going through the clearinghouse and we've posted collateral
to cover any single trade that fails. This is more efficient than each of us
posting collateral privately for each trade. Moreover, we're not worried
that I won't deliver or you won't pay because we both count on the
clearinghouse to deliver and pay up if one of us doesn't.
This clearing system makes trading more efficient.
If you default, the cost is spread through the clearinghouse so I don't get
hurt severely. And if the clearinghouse has enough collateral from you,
there's no loss to spread. But there's also a potential downside: The
clearinghouse reduces our incentives to worry about counterparty risk. Your
business might collapse before you need to pay up, but that's not my problem
because the clearinghouse pays me anyway. The clearinghouse weakens private
market discipline.
Still, if the clearinghouse is as good or better at
checking up on your creditworthiness as I am, all will be well. But one has
to wonder how good a clearinghouse will be, or can be.
Consider two of our biggest derivatives-related
failures—Long-Term Capital Management in 1998 and the subprime market in
2008. When Russia's ruble dropped unexpectedly, LTCM was exposed on its more
than $1 trillion in interest-rate and foreign-exchange derivatives. It could
not pay up and collapsed. Ten years later the market rapidly revalued
subprime mortgage securities, rendering several institutions insolvent. AIG
was over-exposed in credit default swaps tied to the value of subprime
mortgages.
Could a clearinghouse really have been ahead of the
curve in getting sufficient capital posted before these problems became
serious and well-known? I'm not so sure. Worse yet, major types of
derivatives have built-in discontinuities—"jump-to-default" in
derivatives-speak.
For a credit default swap, one counterparty
guarantees the debt of another company to you, in return for you paying a
fee for that guarantee. If no one goes bankrupt, the counterparty just
collects the fees from you. But if the guarantee is called because the
company you were worried about goes bankrupt, the counterparty must all of a
sudden pay out a huge amount immediately.
Yet the guarantor is often called upon to pay in a
weak economy, just when it can itself be too weak to pay. You get credit
default protection on your real-estate investments from me, just in case the
economy turns sour. But just when you need me the most, in a sour economy, I
turn out to be so overextended I can't pay up. Collateralizing and
monitoring such discontinuous obligations will not be so easy for the
clearinghouse.
Moreover, if trillions of dollars of derivatives
trading goes through a clearinghouse, we will have created another
institution that's too big to fail. Regulators worried that an
interconnected Bear or AIG could drag down the economy. Imagine what an
interconnected clearinghouse's failure could do.
AIG needed $85 billion in government cash to avoid
defaulting on its debts, including its derivatives obligations. Could one
clearinghouse meet even a fraction of that call without backup from the
U.S.? True, we could have many clearinghouses, each not too big to fail—but
then maybe each would be too small to do enough good.
The Senate bill would allow a clearinghouse to grab
new collateral out from failing derivatives-trading banks to cover old, but
suddenly toxic, debts the banks owe to the clearinghouse. This could harm
other creditors and cause the firm to suffer a run. Nevertheless, to protect
itself in a declining market, a clearinghouse would have to make those big
collateral calls. That's good if it protects the clearinghouse. But it's bad
if it starts a run on a weakened but important bank.
One key but missing element in the search for
reform has yet to gain traction in Washington. Derivatives players obtained
exceptions from typical bankruptcy and bank resolution rules in the past few
decades for their contracts with a bankrupt counterparty. This allowed them
to grab and keep collateral other creditors cannot. That gives derivatives
traders reason to pay less attention to their counterparties' riskiness and
weakens market discipline. These rules should be changed before the Senate
is done.
To say that a clearinghouse solution is very
incomplete is not to say there is an easy solution out there. We may be
unable to do more than to make incomplete improvements and muddle through.
Derivatives trades first of all should not just be
centrally cleared, but should also be taken out from the
government-guaranteed entities, such as commercial banks (or at least we
need to impose tight capital requirements on those banks that deal in
derivatives). Derivatives traders like doing business with Citibank because
they know the government won't let Citibank go down. But this puts taxpayers
at risk. It would be better to run those trades through an affiliate, not
through the bank, so counterparties realize they might not be bailed out if
the affiliate failed. If a banking affiliate's counterparty is the
clearinghouse, then the clearinghouse will have incentives to make sure that
the affiliate is well-capitalized. This is particularly so if the
clearinghouse won't get any special priority treatment in a bankruptcy.
Critics of proposals to establish separate bank
affiliates for derivatives trading complain about the large amount of
capital that would be needed for such affiliates. But the capital that might
be needed to buttress a bank affiliate indicates some level of the value
(i.e., the taxpayer subsidy) to derivatives players of trading with a
too-big-to-fail entity that they know the government will step in to save.
They are implicitly getting insurance and should pay for it.
And, since a clearinghouse is itself at risk of
being too big to fail, regulators need to police its capital and collateral
requirements. If the derivatives market sees the clearinghouse as too big to
fail, the potential for derivatives players making overly risky derivatives
trades becomes real. Clearinghouses can help manage some systemic risk if
they're run right. If not, they can become the Fannie and Freddie of the
next financial meltdown.
Mr. Roe is a professor at Harvard Law School, where
he teaches bankruptcy and corporate law.
Bob Jensen's timeline on the history of derivative financial instruments
frauds and accounting rules for derivatives contracts ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds
May 22, 2010 message from Ramesh and Nadee Fernando
[mferna073@ROGERS.COM]
Dear Prof.
Jensen and list members,
As accounting
is very research focused it would be great if all accountants had access to
other researchers in accounting. ResearchGate has lot's of various groups
from economics to physics.
I created the
Management Accountants group so that there could be access to discussion and
research in management accounting.
http://www.researchgate.net/group/Management_accountants
There is also
a financial accounting group on research net
http://www.researchgate.net/group/Financial_Accounting/
Finally there
is an Accounting Information systems group
http://www.researchgate.net/group/Accounting_Information_Systems/
May I suggest
to this list's members, if you are interested in research in accounting to
please join ResearchGate and become a member of these groups. I might add I
owe it to Economist for finding ResearchGate which mentioned ResearchGate
in their special report on Social Networks.
Regards,
Ramesh
CMA (Canada) Candidate
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Bob Jensen's threads on listservs, blogs, and social
networks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Casino Accounting: The All Events Test Versus The Economic Performance
Test
"FASB Hits the Jackpot: Question While casinos are only a small percentage
of U.S. business, an update to an accounting rule on jackpots brings a welcome
degree of uniform practice to accrual accounting," by Robert Willens,
CFO.com, May 10, 2010 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14497136/c_14497565?f=home_todayinfinance
There is apparently a
wide diversity in practice regarding the manner in which a casino operator
accounts for slot-machine and other jackpots. With the issuance of Accounting
Standards Update No. 2010-16, Accounting for Casino Jackpot Liabilities, the
Financial Accounting Standards Board has introduced a welcome degree of
uniformity to this issue.
The ASU provides that
an entity shall accrue a liability, and charge a jackpot, at the time the entity
has the obligation to pay the jackpot. Some slot machines, the ASU notes, may
contain "base" jackpots. An entity may be able to avoid the payment of a base
jackpot, for example, by removing the machine from play. Accordingly, no
liability associated with the base jackpot is recognized in such cases until the
entity has the obligation to pay the base jackpot. This is the case even if the
entity has no plan or intention of removing the machine from play and fully
expects the base jackpot to be won.
Some slot machines
include "progressive" jackpots. Those are machines in which the value of the
jackpot increases with every game played. Entities in many gaming jurisdictions
cannot avoid payment of the portion of the progressive jackpot that is
incremental to the base jackpot. That's because the gaming regulators consider
such incremental portions of prizes to be funded by customers, and therefore are
required to be paid out. In these cases, the incremental portion of the jackpot
should be accrued as a liability at the time of funding (that is, play) by its
customers.
These rules will be
operative with respect to fiscal years (and interim periods within such fiscal
years) beginning on or after December 15, 2010. Moreover, an entity shall apply
this guidance with a "cumulative effect" adjustment recorded in retained
earnings in the period of adoption of such guidance.
Tax Accounting for
Jackpots When does the jackpot liability accrue for tax purposes? This issue was
addressed by the Supreme Court in United States v. Hughes Properties, Inc., 476
US 593 (1986). There, the taxpayer owned and operated slot machines at its
casinos, including a number of progressive machines. A progressive machine pays
a fixed amount when certain symbol combinations appear on its reels. But a
progressive machine has an additional progressive jackpot which is won only when
a different combination of symbols appears. The casino initially sets these
jackpots at a minimal amount. The figure increases, progressively, as money is
gambled on the machine. The amount of the jackpot at any given time is
registered on a "payoff indicator" on the face of the machine.
At the conclusion of
each fiscal year, the taxpayer entered the total of the progressive-jackpot
amounts shown on the payoff indicators as an accrued liability. From that total,
it subtracted the corresponding figure for the preceding year to produce the
current year's increase in accrued liability. On its tax return, the taxpayer
asserted this net figure as a deduction. The Internal Revenue Service disallowed
the deduction. In its view, the taxpayer's obligation to pay a progressive
jackpot "matures" only upon a winning patron's "pull of the handle" in the
future. From the perspective of the IRS, until that event occurs, the taxpayer's
liability is merely contingent. However, both the Claims Court and the Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled in favor of the taxpayer. The Supreme
Court sided with the taxpayer as well.
The All-Events Test
The high court noted that an accrual-method taxpayer is entitled to deduct an
expense in the year in which it is incurred. The standard for determining when
an expense is incurred is the so-called all-events test: all the events must
have occurred that establish the fact of the liability, and the amount must be
capable of being determined with "reasonable accuracy." So to satisfy the
all-events test, a liability must be "final and definite" in amount, "fixed and
absolute," and "unconditional."1
The IRS argued that the
taxpayer's liability for the progressive jackpots was not "fixed and certain"
and was not "unconditional or absolute" by the end of the fiscal year, for there
existed no person who could assert any claim over those funds. It took the
position that the indispensable event is the winning of the jackpot by a
gambler.2
The effect of the
Nevada Gaming Commission's regulations3 was to fix the taxpayer's liability. The
regulations forbade reducing the indicated payoff without paying the jackpot.
The taxpayer's liability — that is, its obligation to pay the indicated amount —
was not contingent. That an extremely remote and speculative possibility existed
that the jackpot might never be won does not change the fact that, as a matter
of state law, the taxpayer had a fixed liability for the jackpot that it could
not escape.
The IRS, the court concluded, misstates the need for identification of a winning
player. That is a matter "of no relevance" for the casino operator. The
obligation is there, and whether it turns out that the winner is one patron or
another makes no conceivable difference as to basic liability. In fact, the
court acknowledged that there is always the possibility that a casino may go out
of business with the result that the amount shown on the jackpot
indicators would never be won. However, this potential nonpayment of an incurred
liability exists for every business that uses an accrual method, and it does
not prevent accrual. "The existence of an absolute liability is necessary;
absolute certainty that it will be discharged by payment is not...." 4
The Economic Performance Test
However, under the law that exists today, a liability is not incurred until the
historical all-events test is satisfied and "economic performance" occurs
with respect to the liability. As a result, the all-events test cannot be met
with respect to an item any earlier than the time that economic performance
occurs with respect to the item.5
Continued in
article
The FASB
has been named in a California civil suit:
http://www.siliconeconomics.com/pdfs/Complaint_SEI_v_FASB1.pdf
Is this kind of claim common? Can one “own” an accounting innovation or idea?
Thank you, Tammy Whitehouse, Compliance Week
Ketz Me If You Can
"Silicon Economics v. FASB, by: J. Edward Ketz, SmartPros, May
2010 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x69458.xml
There aren't enough jokes in Accounting
Land, but thanks to Joel Jameson, founder of Silicon Economics,
Inc., that has been remedied. You see, Joel believes the FASB has a
monopoly in accounting standards-setting and thinks that violates
the Sherman Anti-Trust Act.
Worse,
Joel has invented something he calls “EarningsPower Accounting,” has
applied for a patent, and claims that the FASB has infringed upon
his patent. Accordingly, he did what any blue-blood would do—he
sued the FASB.
The
complaint was filed in U.S. District Court
in San Jose on May 5, 2010. This complaint is entertaining because
it proves that legal discourse is cheap. Supply exceeds demand.
In paragraph 10 of the complaint, Mr. Jameson
states that the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 gives the SEC
authority to set accounting standards, but the SEC has delegated
that function to the FASB. Narancic & Katzman, attorneys for
Jameson, should have told their client about section 108 of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which permits the SEC to delegate
standards-setting to another appropriate body. In a
policy statement, the SEC did in fact
re-affirm its decision to rely on the FASB, as it stated in
Accounting Series Release No. 150.
Which reminds me: how many lawyers does it
take to change a light bulb? Answer: as many as the client can
afford.
Joel Jameson goes on to assert (paragraph 13)
that FASB “is far removed from industry participants and accounting
practitioners, resulting in low-quality standards that are often
divorced from reality.” Complete, utter nonsense, although it may
be evidence that Silicon Valley is still miffed that it has to
expense employee stock options. This argument shows that the only
thing more dangerous than an economist is a Silicon Valley
economist.
He next attacks fair value accounting and
repeats old mantras about the volatility of income numbers
(paragraph 18). He errs because fair value accounting does not
induce volatility; instead, it reports the volatility that
previously had been suppressed.
Jameson then provides a hint about his
“invention,” which consists of “an equation derived from the present
value equation of finance and credit/debit posting procedures to
calculate instantaneous end-of-period asset and liability incomes
and windfalls.” This sounds a lot like present value accounting and
this has been around a long time. Perhaps Mr. Jameson should take a
trip to Stanford and talk with Bill Beaver about Chapter 3 of
Beaver’s “Financial Reporting.”
Mr. Jameson prefers to allow managers the
ability to claim that assets will generate so much cash flows in the
future and then discount those cash flows. He seems unperturbed
about the distinct possibility that managers might exaggerate those
future cash flows and minimize the discount rate. Further, he must
not care whether these projections are auditable. Perhaps it is
better if they aren’t. After all, society surely can reduce
accounting scandals by preventing anybody from discovering them.
The complaint describes FASB’s alleged
wrongful conduct in paragraphs 21-26, but it is much ado about
nothing. The FASB stole nothing of value.
Let’s conclude with this observation. How
many Silicon Valley entrepreneurs does it take to change a light
bulb? None; they just have to turn on the light switch.
|
"Thousands of nonprofits may lose tax-exempt status," Yahoo News,
May 15, 2010 ---
Click Here
More than 200,000 small nonprofits across the
nation are days away from losing their tax-exempt status because they
haven't filed a new form with the Internal Revenue Service.
Many of these groups already operate on razor-thin
budgets and some worry an unexpected tax bill could force organizations to
close.
"The nonprofits in your backyards, some of them are
going to be gone," said Suzanne Coffman, a spokeswoman for GuideStar, which
tracks data on nonprofits.
It's most likely the nonprofits aren't aware of the
Monday deadline that only applies to groups that report $25,000 or less in
income, excluding churches. Those organizations may not find out until Jan.
1, 2011, when they're notified they have to pay taxes on donations they
thought were exempt. And it could be months before their nonprofit status is
restored.
Congress required the form, called a 990-N, when it
amended the tax code three years ago and groups with a fiscal year ending
Dec. 31 had until Monday to meet the deadline.
The Urban Institute's National Center for
Charitable Statistics, which conducts economic and social policy research,
estimated Friday that 214,000 nonprofit organizations haven't filed the form
as required.
Tom Pollak, program director for the center, said
organizations that lose their tax-exempt status are no longer eligible to
receive tax-deductible donations and are not likely to be awarded grants.
Donors who give to the organizations that lose
their status will be able to receive tax-deductions on gifts until January
because the revocations won't be public until then.
In Iowa, the Warren County Historical Society was
among more than 2,700 small nonprofits that hadn't submitted the form. The
group's president, Linda Beatty, said she'd never heard of a 990-N until
contacted by The Associated Press.
Beatty said she would scramble to get their
application in, but if the society lost its nonprofit status, donations
likely would drop and members would struggle to pay taxes until they could
get the situation resolved. The group maintains a small museum and
historical library in Indianola, south of Des Moines.
Stephen Baldassare, president of the Catwalk
Theatre Guild in Arvada, Colo., said loss of its tax exemption would have
endangered the college scholarships his group awards annually to two high
school students and limited other programs.
"It's huge giving those scholarships," he said.
"We'd also have to figure out how to do the rest of the functions we do. We
would have to change how we bring in money."
In West Chester, Pa., the A Cappella Pops
performing group also hadn't heard about the deadline.
Money already is a problem for the 40-member
singing group, marketing director Bruce Koepcke said, and would have been
far worse if donations dropped or the group faced a big tax bill. He said
tax-exempt donations make up 25 percent of the group's revenue.
"We break even in good years," Koepcke said. "We
can't afford to lose one iota of funding."
Bobby Zarin, an Internal Revenue Service director
who works with non-profits, said the agency sent out press releases and
letters to more than 500,000 nonprofit organizations to get the word out
about the 990-N forms. She didn't know why the change was catching so many
groups by surprise.
"I can honestly say this is the most extensive
outreach we have done," Zarin said.
Ultimately, Zarin said the requirement would be
helpful because it would eliminate defunct organizations from IRS records
and provide more transparency for the public.
"It will give us a much cleaner list of
organizations that actually do exist," Zarin said. "More organizations will
be filing, so more information will be available."
Bob Jensen's taxation helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob1.htm#010304Taxation
Humor
Between May 1 and May 31, 2010
Forwarded by Paula
The Stock Market Gets the Fast
Finger (Jon Stewart Comedy) ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/2010/05/jon-stewart-takes-on-perfect-storms.html
Ellen listens
to Gladys ---
http://www.boreme.com/boreme/funny-2007/ellen-gladys-hardy-p1.php?
Forwarded from Romania by Dan Gheorghe Somnea
[dan_somnea@yahoo.com]
AMAZING
ANAGRAMS
Someone out there
Must be "deadly" at
Scrabble..
(Wait till you see the
last one)!
PRESBYTERIAN:
When you
rearrange the letters:
BEST IN
PRAYER
ASTRONOMER:
When you
rearrange the letters:
MOON STARER
DESPERATION:
When you
rearrange the letters:
A ROPE ENDS
IT
THE EYES:
When you
rearrange the letters:
THEY SEE
GEORGE
BUSH:
When you
rearrange the letters:
HE BUGS
GORE
THE MORSE
CODE:
When you
rearrange the letters:
HERE COME
DOTS
DORMITORY:
When you
rearrange the letters:
DIRTY ROOM
SLOT
MACHINES:
When you
rearrange the letters:
CASH LOST
IN ME
ANIMOSITY:
When you
rearrange the letters:
IS NO AMITY
ELECTION
RESULTS:
When you
rearrange the letters:
LIES -
LET'S RECOUNT
SNOOZE
ALARMS:
When you
rearrange the letters:
ALAS! NO
MORE Z 'S
A DECIMAL
POINT:
When you
rearrange the letters:
I'M A DOT
IN PLACE
THE
EARTHQUAKES:
When you
rearrange the letters:
THAT QUEER
SHAKE
ELEVEN PLUS
TWO:
When you
rearrange the letters:
TWELVE PLUS
ONE
AND FOR THE
GRAND FINALE:
MOTHER-IN-LAW:
When you
rearrange the letters:
WOMAN HITLER
======
WHERE DO RED-HEADED BABIES COME FROM?
After their baby was born, the panicked father went to see the Obstetrician.
'Doctor,' the man said, 'I don't mind telling you, but I'm a little upset
because my daughter has red hair. She can't possibly be mine!!'
'Nonsense,' the doctor said. 'Even though you and your wife both have black
hair, one of your ancestors may have contributed red hair to the gene pool.'
'It isn't possible,' the man insisted.’ This can't be, our families on both
sides had jet-black hair for generations.'
'Well,' said the doctor, 'let me ask you this. How often do you have sex??? '
The man seemed a bit ashamed. 'I've been working very hard for the past year.
We only made love once or twice every six months.'
'Well, there you have it!' The doctor said confidently.
'It's rust!!'
Forwarded by Maureen
Truths For Mature Humans
1. I think part of a best friend's job should be to immediately clear your
computer history if you die.
2. Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you realize
you're wrong.
3. I totally take back all those times I didn't want to nap when I was younger.
4. There is great need for a sarcasm font.
5. How the hell are you supposed to fold a fitted sheet?
6. Was learning cursive really necessary?
7. Map Quest really needs to start their directions on # 5. I'm pretty sure I
know how to get out of my neighborhood.
8. Obituaries would be a lot more interesting if they told you how the person
died.
9. I can't remember the last time I wasn't at least kind of tired.
10. Bad decisions make good stories.
11. You never know when it will strike, but there comes a moment at work when
you know that you just aren't going to do anything productive for the rest of
the day.
12. Can we all just agree to ignore whatever comes after Blue Ray? I don't want
to have to restart my collection...again.
13. I'm always slightly terrified when I exit out of Word and it asks me if I
want to save any changes to my ten-page technical report that I swear I did not
make any changes to.
14. "Do not machine wash or tumble dry" means I will never wash this - ever.
15. I hate when I just miss a call by the last ring (Hello? Hello? Damn it!),
but when I immediately call back, it rings nine times and goes to voice mail.
What did you do after I didn't answer? Drop the phone and run away?
16. I hate leaving my house confident and looking good and then not seeing
anyone of importance the entire day. What a waste.
17. I keep some people's phone numbers in my phone just so I know not to answer
when they call.
18. I think the freezer deserves a light as well.
19. I disagree with Kay Jewelers. I would bet on any given Friday or Saturday
night more kisses begin with Miller Lite than Kay.
20. I wish Google Maps had an "Avoid Ghetto" routing option.
21. Sometimes, I'll watch a movie that I watched when I was younger and
suddenly realize I had no idea what the heck was going on when I first saw it.
22. I would rather try to carry 10 over-loaded plastic bags in each hand than
take 2 trips to bring my groceries in.
23. The only time I look forward to a red light is when I'm trying to finish a
text.
24. I have a hard time deciphering the fine line between boredom and hunger.
25. How many times is it appropriate to say "What?" before you just nod and
smile because you still didn't hear or understand a word they said?
26. I love the sense of camaraderie when an entire line of cars team up to
prevent a jerk from cutting in at the front. Stay strong, brothers and sisters!
27. Shirts get dirty. Underwear gets dirty. Pants? Pants never get dirty, and
you can wear them forever.
28. Is it just me or do high school kids get dumber & dumber every year?
29. There's no worse feeling than that millisecond you're sure you are going to
die after leaning your chair back a little too far.
30. As a driver I hate pedestrians, and as a pedestrian I hate drivers, but no
matter what the mode of transportation, I always hate bicyclists.
31. Sometimes I'll look down at my watch 3 consecutive times and still not know
what time it is.
32. Even under ideal conditions people have trouble locating their car keys in
a pocket, finding their cell phone, and Pinning the Tail on the Donkey - but
I'd bet my ass everyone can find and push the snooze button from 3 feet away,
in about 1.7 seconds, eyes closed, first time, every time !
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
If you are 30, or older, you might think this is hilarious!
When I was a kid, adults used to bore me to tears with their tedious
diatribes about how hard things were. When they were growing up; what with
walking twenty-five miles to school every morning.... Uphill... Barefoot... BOTH
ways... yadda, yadda, yadda
And I remember promising myself that when I grew up, there was no way in hell
I was going to lay a bunch of crap like that on my kids about how hard I had it
and how easy they've got it!
But now that I'm over the ripe old age of thirty, I can't help but look
around and notice the youth of today. You've got it so easy! I mean, compared to
my childhood, you live in a damn Utopia! And I hate to say it, but you kids
today, you don't know how good you've got it!
I mean, when I was a kid we didn't have the Internet. If we wanted to know
something, we had to go to the damn library and look it up ourselves, in the
card catalog!!
There was no email!! We had to actually write somebody a letter - with a pen!
Then you had to walk all the way across the street and put it in the mailbox,
and it would take like a week to get there! Stamps were 10 cents!
Child Protective Services didn't care if our parents beat us. As a matter of
fact, the parents of all my friends also had permission to kick our ass! Nowhere
was safe!
There were no MP3's or Napsters or iTunes! If you wanted to steal music, you
had to hitchhike to the record store and shoplift it yourself!
Or you had to wait around all day to tape it off the radio, and the DJ would
usually talk over the beginning and @#*% it all up! There were no CD players! We
had tape decks in our car... We'd play our favorite tape and "eject" it when
finished, and then the tape would come undone rendering it useless. Cause, hey,
that's how we rolled, Baby! Dig?
We didn't have fancy crap like Call Waiting! If you were on the phone and
somebody else called, they got a busy signal, that's it!
There weren't any freakin' cell phones either. If you left the house, you
just didn't make a damn call or receive one. You actually had to be out of touch
with your "friends". OH MY GOD !!! Think of the horror... not being in touch
with someone 24/7!!! And then there's TEXTING. Yeah, right. Please! You kids
have no idea how annoying you are.
And we didn't have fancy Caller ID either! When the phone rang, you had no
idea who it was! It could be your school, your parents, your boss, your bookie,
your drug dealer, the collection agent... you just didn't know!!! You had to
pick it up and take your chances, mister!
We didn't have any fancy PlayStation or Xbox video games with high-resolution
3-D graphics! We had the Atari 2600! With games like 'Space Invaders' and
'Asteroids'. Your screen guy was a little square! You actually had to use your
imagination!!! And there were no multiple levels or screens, it was just one
screen... Forever! And you could never win. The game just kept getting harder
and harder and faster and faster until you died! Just like LIFE!
You had to use a little book called a TV Guide to find out what was on! You
were screwed when it came to channel surfing! You had to get off your ass and
walk over to the TV to change the channel!!! NO REMOTES!!! Oh, no, what's the
world coming to?!?!
There was no Cartoon Network either! You could only get cartoons on Saturday
Morning. Do you hear what I'm saying? We had to wait ALL WEEK for cartoons, you
spoiled little rat-finks!
And we didn't have microwaves. If we wanted to heat something up, we had to
use the stove! Imagine that!
And our parents told us to stay outside and play... all day long. Oh, no, no
electronics to soothe and comfort. And if you came back inside... you were doing
chores!
And car seats - oh, please! Mom threw you in the back seat and you hung on.
If you were lucky, you got the "safety arm" across the chest at the last moment
if she had to stop suddenly, and if your head hit the dashboard, well that was
your fault for calling "shot gun" in the first place!
See! That's exactly what I'm talking about! You kids today have got it too
easy. You're spoiled rotten! You guys wouldn't have lasted five minutes back in
1980 or any time before!
Regards,
The Over 30 Crowd
A Little Odd History
There is an old Hotel/Pub in Marble Arch, London which used to have gallows
adjacent. Prisoners were taken to the gallows (after a fair trial of course) to
be hung. The horse drawn dray, carting the prisoner was accompanied by an armed
guard, who would stop the dray outside the pub and ask the prisoner if he would
like ''ONE LAST DRINK''. If he said YES it was referred to as “ONE FOR THE
ROAD”. If he declined, that prisoner was “ON THE WAGON”
So there you go. More bleeding history.. They used to use urine to tan animal
skins, so families used to all pee in a pot & then once a day it was taken &
sold to the tannery. If you had to do this to survive you were "Piss Poor". But
worse than that were the really poor folk who couldn’t even afford to buy a pot
they "Didn’t have a pot to Piss in" & were the lowest of the low.
Jensen Comment
When I was invited to lecture at the University of Alaska, the Dean had a dinner
party in his house in the evening. He'd just returned from a hunting trip and
had the hides of two elk hung over a fence. He requested after dark that the
male guests urinate on the hides. The trick was to hit the top of the fence.
Humor Between
May 1 and May 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q2.htm#Humor053110
Humor Between April 1 and April 30, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q2.htm#Humor043010
Humor Between March 1 and March 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q1.htm#Humor033110
Humor Between February 1 and February 28, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q1.htm#Humor022810
Humor Between January 1 and January 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book09q1.htm#Humor013110
And that's
the way it was on May 31, 2010 with a little help from my friends.
Bob
Jensen's gateway to millions of other blogs and social/professional networks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Bob
Jensen's Threads ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/threads.htm
Bob
Jensen's Blogs ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JensenBlogs.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
New Bookmarks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Tidbits ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Bob Jensen's past
presentations and lectures ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/resume.htm#Presentations
Free
Online Textbooks, Videos, and Tutorials ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
Free Tutorials in Various Disciplines ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob2.htm#Tutorials
Edutainment and Learning Games ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Edutainment
Open Sharing Courses ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#OKI
Bob
Jensen's Resume ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Resume.htm
Bob
Jensen's Homepage ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/
Concerns That Academic Accounting Research is Out of Touch With Reality
I think leading academic researchers avoid applied research for the
profession because making seminal and creative discoveries that
practitioners have not already discovered is enormously difficult.
Accounting academe is threatened by the
twin dangers of fossilization and scholasticism (of three types:
tedium, high tech, and radical chic) From
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm
“Knowledge and competence increasingly developed out of the internal
dynamics of esoteric disciplines rather than within the context of
shared perceptions of public needs,” writes Bender. “This is not to
say that professionalized disciplines or the modern service
professions that imitated them became socially irresponsible. But
their contributions to society began to flow from their own
self-definitions rather than from a reciprocal engagement with
general public discourse.”
Now, there is a definite note of sadness in Bender’s narrative – as
there always tends to be in accounts
of the
shift from Gemeinschaft to
Gesellschaft. Yet it is also
clear that the transformation from civic to disciplinary
professionalism was necessary.
“The new disciplines offered relatively precise subject matter and
procedures,” Bender concedes, “at a time when both were greatly
confused. The new professionalism also promised guarantees of
competence — certification — in an era when criteria of intellectual
authority were vague and professional performance was unreliable.”
But in the epilogue
to Intellect and Public Life,
Bender suggests that the process eventually went too far.
“The risk now is precisely the opposite,” he writes. “Academe is
threatened by the twin dangers of fossilization and scholasticism
(of three types: tedium, high tech, and radical chic).
The agenda for the next decade, at least as I see it, ought to be
the opening up of the disciplines, the ventilating of professional
communities that have come to share too much and that have become
too self-referential.”
What went wrong in accounting/accountics research?
How did academic accounting research become a pseudo science?
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
|
Accountancy, Tax, IFRS, XBRL, and Accounting History News Sites
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Accounting
Professors Who Blog ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Cool
Search Engines That Are Not Google ---
http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/06/coolsearchengines
Free
(updated) Basic Accounting Textbook --- search for Hoyle at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
CPA
Examination ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cpa_examination
Free CPA Examination Review Course Courtesy of Joe Hoyle ---
http://cpareviewforfree.com/
Bob
Jensen's Personal History in Pictures ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/PictureHistory/
Bob
Jensen's Homepage ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/

April 30, 2010
Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on
April 30, 2010
Bob Jensen at
Trinity University
For
earlier editions of Fraud Updates go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
For earlier editions of Tidbits go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
For earlier editions of New Bookmarks go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter ---
Search Box in Upper Right Corner.
For example if you want to know what Jensen documents have the term "Enron"
enter the phrase Jensen AND Enron. Another search engine that covers Trinity and
other universities is at
http://www.searchedu.com/
Bob
Jensen's Blogs ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JensenBlogs.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
New Bookmarks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Tidbits ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Accountancy, Tax, IFRS, XBRL, and Accounting History News Sites
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Accounting
Professors Who Blog ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Cool
Search Engines That Are Not Google ---
http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/06/coolsearchengines
Accounting
program news items for colleges are posted at
http://www.accountingweb.com/news/college_news.html
Sometimes the news items provide links to teaching resources for accounting
educators.
Any college may post a news item.
How to
author books and other materials for online delivery
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
How Web
Pages Work ---
http://computer.howstuffworks.com/web-page.htm
Bob
Jensen's essay on the financial crisis bailout's aftermath and an alphabet soup
of appendices can be found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm
Federal
Revenue and Spending Book of Charts (Great Charts on Bad Budgeting)
---
http://www.heritage.org/research/features/BudgetChartBook/index.html
The Master
List of Free
Online College Courses
---
http://universitiesandcolleges.org/
Free
Online Textbooks, Videos, and Tutorials ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
Free Tutorials in Various Disciplines ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob2.htm#Tutorials
Edutainment and Learning Games ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Edutainment
Open Sharing Courses ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#OKI
The Master List of Free
Online College Courses ---
http://universitiesandcolleges.org/
Bob
Jensen's threads for online worldwide education and training alternatives ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Crossborder.htm
"U. of
Manitoba Researchers Publish Open-Source Handbook on Educational Technology," by
Steve Kolowich, Chronicle of Higher Education, March 19, 2009 ---
http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/index.php?id=3671&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
Social
Networking for Education: The Beautiful and the Ugly
(including Google's Wave and Orcut for Social Networking and some education uses
of Twitter)
Updates will be at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Pete Wilson provides some great videos on how to make accounting judgments ---
http://www.navigatingaccounting.com/
FEI Second
Life Video (thank you Edith) ---
If I Were an Auditor ---
http://www.youtube.com/user/feiblog#p/a/u/0/Q-FR_fkTFKY
Teaching History With Technology ---
http://www.thwt.org/
Some these ideas apply to accounting history and accounting education in general
"U. of Manitoba
Researchers Publish Open-Source Handbook on Educational Technology,"
by Steve Kolowich, Chronicle of Higher Education, March 19, 2009 ---
http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/index.php?id=3671&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
Bob
Jensen's threads on accounting novels, plays, and movies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNovels.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on tricks and tools of the trade ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on education technology ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Video on IOUSA
Bipartisan Solutions to Saving the USA
If you missed Sunday
afternoon CNN’s two-hour IOUSA Solutions broadcast, you can watch a 30-minute
version at
http://www.pgpf.org/newsroom/press/IOUSA-Solutions-Premiers-on-CNN/
(Scroll Down a bit)
Note that great efforts were made to keep this a bipartisan panel along with the
occasional video clips of President Obama discussing the debt crisis. The
problem is a build up over spending for most of our nation’s history, It landed
at the feet of President Obama, but he’s certainly not the cause nor is his the
recent expansion of health care coverage the real cause.
One take home from
the CNN show was that over 60% of the booked National Debt increases are funded
off shore (largely in Asia and the Middle East).
This going to greatly constrain the global influence and economic choices of the
United States.
By 2016 the interest
payments on the National Debt will be the biggest single item in the Federal
Budget, more than national defense or social security. And an enormous portion
of this interest cash flow will be flowing to foreign nations that may begin to
put all sorts of strings on their decisions to roll over funding our National
Debt.
The unbooked entitlement obligations that are not part of the National Debt are
over $60 trillion and exploding exponentially. The Medicare D entitlements to
retirees like me added over $8 trillion of entitlements under the Bush
Presidency.
Most of the problems
are solvable except for the Number 1 entitlements problem --- Medicare.
Drastic measures must be taken to keep Medicare sustainable.
I thought the show
was pretty balanced from a bipartisan standpoint and from the standpoint of
possible solutions.
Many of the possible
“solutions” are really too small to really make a dent in the problem. For
example, medical costs can be reduced by one of my favorite solutions of
limiting (like they do in Texas) punitive damage recoveries in malpractice
lawsuits. However, the cost savings are a mere drop in the bucket. Another drop
in the bucket will be the achievable increased savings from decreasing medical
and disability-claim frauds. These are is important solutions, but they are not
solutions that will save the USA.
The big possible
solutions to save the USA are as follows (you and I won’t particularly like
these solutions):
-
Extend retirement age significantly
(75 years maybe?).
When Social Security was enacted, life expectancy was slightly over 65 years
of age.
Now it is well over 75 years of age.
-
Hit Medicare retirees like me with
higher fees for physicians, hospital services, and Medicare D drug payments.
Perhaps this should be on a scale based upon wealth/income levels such that
people, like me, who can afford to pay more must pay more.
-
Greatly curb the biggest cost of
Medicare --- keeping dying people alive in expensive hospitals for a few
weeks or maybe even a few months. Sometimes dying people must be kept alive
in ICU units costing over $10,000 per day when there is no hope of recovery.
There was not any hint of suggesting euthanasia as an alternative. But dying
people can be allowed to die more naturally and pain free.
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5737437n&tag=mncol;lst;3
(wait for the commercials to play out)
-
Limit the National Debt is some way.
It’s now more common in Europe to limit national debt to 60% of GDP. Various
other means of constraining our National Debt were discussed in the CNN
longer version of the IOUSA Solutions video.
Watch for
the other possible solutions in the 30-minute summary video ---
http://www.pgpf.org/newsroom/press/IOUSA-Solutions-Premiers-on-CNN/
(Scroll Down a bit)
Here is the original (and somewhat dated video
that does not delve into solutions very much)
IOUSA (the most frightening movie in American history) ---
(see a 30-minute version of the documentary at
www.iousathemovie.com )
Now the IOUSA Bipartisan Solutions
I suggest that as many people as possible divert their attention from the Tiger
Woods at the Masters Tournament today (April 11) to watch bipartisan proposals
(‘Solutions”) on how to delay the Fall of the United States Empire. By the way,
Bill Bradley was one of the most liberal Democratic senators in the History of
the United States Senate.
Watch the World Premiere
of I.O.U.S.A.: Solutions on CNN
Saturday, April 10, 1:00-3:00 p.m. EST or Sunday, April 11, 3:00-5:00 p.m. EST
 |
Featured Panelists
Include:
-
Peter G. Peterson, Founder and Chairman, Peter G. Peterson
Foundation
-
David Walker, President & CEO, Peter G. Peterson Foundation
-
Sen. Bill Bradley
-
Maya MacGuineas, President of the Committee for a Responsible
Federal Budget
-
Amy Holmes, political contributor for CNN
-
Joe Johns, CNN Congressional Correspondent
-
Diane Lim Rodgers, Chief Economist, Concord Coalition
-
Jeanne Sahadi, senior writer and columnist for CNNMoney.com
|
Watch for
the other possible solutions in the 30-minute summary video ---
http://www.pgpf.org/newsroom/press/IOUSA-Solutions-Premiers-on-CNN/
(Scroll Down a bit)
CBS
Sixty minutes has a great video on the enormous cost of keeping dying people
artificially alive:
High Cost of Dying ---
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5737437n&tag=mncol;lst;3
(wait for the commercials to play out)
Humor Between April 1 and April 30, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q2.htm#Humor043010
Humor Between March 1 and March 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q1.htm#Humor033110
Humor Between February 1 and February 28, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q1.htm#Humor022810
Humor Between January 1 and January 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book09q1.htm#Humor013110
Top Ten
Things David Letterman Learned From Ten Area Accountants ---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VWIlHl3j7CQ
These are so bad they will not change the public image of accountants
However, Richard Cohen talks about me
Fraud
Updates have been posted up to December 31, 2009 ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Also see
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm
Humor
Videos: Pennsylvania Wants to Show CPAs Are Funny
---
http://www.webcpa.com/news/Pennsylvania-Wants-to-Show-CPAs-Are-Funny-53291-1.html
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting humor ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#Humor
"So you
want to get a Ph.D.?" by David Wood, BYU ---
http://www.byuaccounting.net/mediawiki/index.php?title=So_you_want_to_get_a_Ph.D.%3F
Do You
Want to Teach?
---
http://financialexecutives.blogspot.com/2009/05/do-you-want-to-teach.html
Jensen
Comment
Here are some added positives and negatives to consider, especially if you are
currently a practicing accountant considering becoming a professor.
Accountancy Doctoral Program Information from Jim Hasselback ---
http://www.jrhasselback.com/AtgDoctInfo.html
Why must
all accounting doctoral programs be social science (particularly econometrics)
"accountics" doctoral programs?
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
What went
wrong in accounting/accountics research?
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
"The
Accounting Doctoral Shortage: Time for a New Model,"
by Neal Mero, Jan R. Williams and George W. Krull, Jr. .
Issues in Accounting Education 24 (4)
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=IAEXXX000024000004000427000001&idtype=cvips&gifs=Yes&ref=no
ABSTRACT:
The crisis in supply versus demand for doctorally qualified faculty members in
accounting is well documented (Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of
Business [AACSB] 2003a, 2003b; Plumlee et al. 2005; Leslie 2008). Little
progress has been made in addressing this serious challenge facing the
accounting academic community and the accounting profession. Faculty time,
institutional incentives, the doctoral model itself, and research diversity are
noted as major challenges to making progress on this issue. The authors propose
six recommendations, including a new, extramurally funded research program aimed
at supporting doctoral students that functions similar to research programs
supported by such organizations as the National Science Foundation and other
science-based funding sources. The goal is to create capacity, improve
structures for doctoral programs, and provide incentives to enhance doctoral
enrollments. This should lead to an increased supply of graduates while also
enhancing and supporting broad-based research outcomes across the accounting
landscape, including auditing and tax. ©2009 American Accounting Association
Bob
Jensen's threads on accountancy doctoral programs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
Jensen Comment
I
want to apologize for my previous neglect of Rick Lillie’s highly informative
blog. Rick is an experienced CPA who entered a doctoral program later in life.
He chose, I surmise, to get an education doctorate in part to better learn about
and do research in education and learning technology. He knows more about
education technology than almost all accounting professors and currently teaches
financial accounting with an eye to learning and education technologies ---
http://iaed.wordpress.com/about/
In any case, one blog that I will most certainly not neglect in the future is at
http://iaed.wordpress.com/
Bob Jensen's threads on professors who blog ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
"Understanding
the Web of Learning: A Work-in-Process," by Rick Lillie, Thinking Outside
the Box, November 22. 2009 ---
http://iaed.wordpress.com/2009/11/22/understanding-the-web-of-learning-a-work-in-process/
I enjoy moments where “dots connect” and I realize how “connections” cause or
influence other things. Connecting the dots between books or articles that I
read is sometimes pretty exciting.
For example, previously I read Friedman’s
The World is Flat.
While I did not agree with all of his positions,
Friedman helped me to better understand implications of globalization.
Currently, I am reading Bonk’s
The World is Open: How Web Technology Is
Revolutionizing Education.
A common thread (dot connector) between Friedman and Bonk is importance of the
internet and Web 2.0 technologies in enabling worldwide connection and
interaction.
Generally, my blog postings focus on technology tools and their uses in
teaching-learning processes. This posting steps away from technology tools per
se to connecting dots between what Friedman and Bonk have to say about how
technology is changing the ways we live, learn, communicate, and collaborate.
If you have not read these books, I suggest them to you. I think you will enjoy
the read and conclude the time well spent.
Rick Lillie (CalState San Bernardino)
Rick
Lillie's education, learning, and technology blog is at
http://iaed.wordpress.com/
Bob
Jensen's threads on professors who blog ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Congratulations to Paul Pacter for Being Appointed to the IASB
From:
AECM, Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia [mailto:AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Jensen, Robert
Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2010 9:52 AM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: Paul Pacter IASB appointment
Accounting standards and IAS Plus Webmastering are only
secondary in Paul’s life.
He's really a worldwide
photographer at heart.
Welcome to Paul's Photo Gallery ---
http://www.whencanyou.com/index.htm
His accounting standard setting assignments have taken
him to more countries than 99.999999999% of the people in the world have ever
visited.
Actually I’m just kidding about what’s primary in Paul’s
life. Since he received his PhD at Michigan State University the setting of
accounting standards has been the Number One priority of Paul’s entire career. I
had the good fortune of first meeting Paul while I was on the faculty at
Michigan State, but I do not take credit for guiding him through the doctoral
program.
One funny (in retrospect) story is how he got the only
copies of his thesis data returned after items were stolen from his car in New
Orleans (we only had main frame computers in those days and theses were typed on
typewriters). It goes something to the effect of having to pay the police to
have the thesis data returned, but I’m hazy on the details. Rumor has it that
New Orleans Police Department retirees now consult with the Russian Police on
how to master the art of getting bribes.
Accounting Age’s profile of Paul Pacter ---
Click Here
http://www.accountancyage.com/accountancyage/features/2261351/profile-paul-pacter?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+TheMostRecentFeaturesFromVnuBusinessPublications+(The+most+recent+Features+from+VNU+Business+Publications)
"WHAT’S WORKING IN TECH AT LEADING LOCAL CPA FIRMS,"
by Rick Tilberg, CPA Trendlines, April 23, 2010 ---
Click Here
http://cpatrendlines.com/2010/04/23/top-techs-in-six-key-areas-for-cpa-firms/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+cpatrendlines%2FtPxN+%28CPA+Trendlines%29
Question
What makes accounting popular as a major in college?
April 25, 2010 message from Fisher, Paul
[PFisher@ROGUECC.EDU]
I am looking for information on why students choose
accounting as a profession. I would like to take an inventory look on how
our teaching practices impact student choice and if there are some changes
we can or have made to increase interest in the accounting profession. The
Accounting Education Change Commission advanced a number of concepts a few
years ago. Have we changed our teaching? Do we know if having made those
changes (or not) actually created a difference?
Thanks for your thoughts,
pf
April 25, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Paul,
I think the importance of teaching changed greatly
from the Roaring 1990s vis-à-vis the early years of the 21st Century after
the tech bubble of the 1990s burst.
The 1980s and 1990s were the opportunity years for
computer science, computer engineering, and finance majors. Demand for good
students exceeded supply to a point in the 1990s where graduates in those
majors were getting signing bonuses and even stock options before they even
spent the first day on the job.
The point here is that during the tech bubble there
was great competition for luring top students into a major. The Big Six
accounting firms actually went to the American Accounting Association and
complained that the traditional way accounting was taught was actually
turning the top students away instead of attracting to brightest and best
into accounting. The Big 6 put its money where its mouth was and pledged $4
million if the AAA would create an Accounting Education Change Commission (AECC)
to conduct teaching and curriculum experiments for purposes of doing a
better job in attracting top students into accounting as opposed to computer
science, computer engineering, and finance.
You can read about the AECC at
http://aaahq.org/market/display.cfm?catID=7
Volume No. 13. Position and Issues Statements
of the Accounting Education Change Commission
By Accounting Education Change Commission (AECC). Published 1996, 80 pages.
During its 7-year existence the AECC adopted two position statements and six
issues statements. The purpose of this publication is to provide a
convenient resource document for all of these statements.
Members No charge–print or online
Nonmembers No charge–print or online
Volume No. 14. The Accounting Education Change
Commission Grant Experience: A Summary
Edited by Richard E. Flaherty. Published 1998, 150 pages.
Members No charge–print or online
Nonmembers No charge–print or online
Volume No. 15. The Accounting Education Change
Commission: Its History and Impact
By Gary L. Sundem. Published 1999, 96 pages.
Members No charge–print or online
Nonmembers No charge–print or online
The point here is that the large CPA firms and many,
many accounting educators thought that failings of accounting teachers and
curricula was making the profession of accounting not competitive in a hot
student market during the 1990s tech bubble.
Then the 1990s tech bubble burst. At the turn of
Century computer science and computer engineering entry-level jobs dried up
to a point where supply of top graduates in those areas greatly exceeded
demand. Not long afterwards, finance majors and MBA graduates also became a
dime a dozen.
But the job market for accounting graduates seems to
remain relatively steady across the economic cycles. This is due heavily to
the willingness of the largest accounting firms to provide entry-level jobs
to top accounting graduates. Also because of some problems caused by the
150-hour requirement, the big accounting firms solved many of our problems
by greatly expanding the widely-popular internship programs as an attraction
for students to major in accounting in spite of having to invest another
year or more to meet the 150-hour requirement.
The bottom line is that how we teach varies in
importance with respect to attracting top student to major in accounting. If
the competition for top students is hot, teaching becomes more important and
more thought is probably given to what sells. If the competition can be
largely ignored, there is less clamor for accounting education change on a
scale envisioned by the AECC.
Also the AECC experiments themselves did not lead to
widely popular changes that spread like wild fire to other colleges and
universities. Some AECC experiments can probably be deemed as failures in
bringing about change in the programs where the experiments took place.
In fairness, the AECC grants were spent before the
dawn of explosive changes in education and networking technology. We’ve seen
great changes in how college courses in general are taught and how students
communicate interactively with teachers and other students. Because of
unfortunate timing, the AECC did not surf the wave of education technology.
Now you ask why some of the best students who
probably ranked accounting at the bottom of their interest list when
arriving as first year students on campus eventually rank accounting as
their top choice as a major by the second or third year of college?
I think the answer is heavily due to factors outside
of what accounting teachers do in the classroom.
2009 Best
Places to Start/Intern According to Bloomberg/Business Week ---
Click Here
Also see the Internship and Table links at
http://www.businessweek.com/careers/special_reports/20091211best_places_for_interns.htm
The Top five rankings contain all Big Four accountancy firms.
Somehow Proctor and Gamble slipped into Rank 4 above PwC
The accountancy firms of Grant Thornton and RMS McGladrey make the top 40 at
ranks 32 and 33 respectively.
Best Places to
Intern ---
http://www.businessweek.com/managing/content/dec2009/ca2009129_394659.htm?link_position=link1
I'm waiting for Francine to throw cold water on the "ever
before" claim
Especially note the KPMG Experience Abroad module below
"Best Places to Intern: Bloomberg BusinessWeek's 2009 list shows employers
are hiring more interns to fill entry-level positions than
ever before," by Lindsey Gerdes, Business Week, December 10, 2009
---
http://www.businessweek.com/managing/content/dec2009/ca2009129_394659.htm?link_position=link1
How valuable is a
summer internship in a recession? Consider
Goldman Sachs, the leading choice for
students interested in a career on Wall Street. This year, the investment
bank hired 600 fewer entry-level employees. That's not surprising given the
stunted economy and the government bailout of banks. What is noteworthy is
nearly 90% of Goldman's new hires were former interns. The previous year,
Goldman wasn't as concerned about hiring a high percentage of students it
had already invested time and money to trainonly 58% of entry-level hires
had spent a summer at the company.
The same is true for
other employers.
KPMG, a Big Four accounting firm that finds
itself in tight competition with
Deloitte,
Ernst & Young, and
PricewaterhouseCoopers, hired nearly 900
fewer entry-level employees this year. But 91% of those full-time hires were
former interns, whereas only 71% of new hires in 2008 were interns.
Internships have long
been seen as a primary recruiting tool at many top employers—a 10-week job
tryout to see who would be the best fit for full-time employment. But with
full-time hiring down, even the largest employers are trying to maximize the
investment they've made in interns by hiring a larger percentage to fill
entry-level position than ever before. "It's true for all years, but I think
it's even more so in years like this," says Sandra Hurse, a senior executive
at Goldman who handles campus recruiting.
Evaluating Employers
With
this ranking, Bloomberg BusinessWeek
has put together its third annual guide to the best internships, providing
information on the number of interns each company recruits, how many are
offered full-time jobs, the number of interns expected to be hired next
year, even the salaries students receive.To compile our list, we judged
employers based on survey data from 60 career services directors around the
country and a separate survey completed by each employer.We also consider
how each employer fared in the annual
Best Places to Launch a Career, our
ranking of top U.S. entry-level employers released in September of each
year.
Our ranking of
the best U.S.companies for undergraduate internships
highlights employers who have put together an
outstanding experience for students.Accounting firm Deloitte tops our list,
followed by rivals KPMG (No.2) and Ernst & Young (No.3).The last of the Big
Four accounting companies, PricewaterhouseCoopers, comes in at No.5, right
behind consumer goods giant
Procter & Gamble.
The employers on our
list understand that an outstanding internship experience is their most
effective recruiting tool to snap up the top entry-level job candidates.
That's why some companies have invested a considerable amount of money in
their programs.
Microsoft, for example, estimates it spends
on average $30,000 per intern, when you factor in pay and benefits.
Considering the company hired 542 undergraduate interns in 2009, that's
roughly a $16 million investment.
Experience Abroad
Two years ago KPMG
realized it had to make a substantial investment in its internship program
if it hoped to woo top students from larger consulting and accounting firms.
So the company decided to offer interns an opportunity to gain valuable
overseas experience. KPMG lets student interns spend four weeks in the U.S.
and four weeks abroad. "It's extremely competitive [to recruit top
students], and this is a differentiator," says Blane Ruschak, executive
director of campus recruiting at KPMG.
A chance to work
overseas is precisely what appealed to Andrew Fedele, 21, an accounting and
economics double major at Pennsylvania State University. "I was sold pretty
much when I first read about [KPMG's] global internship program." He spent
four weeks in Chicago and four weeks in Johannesburg, South Africa. "South
Africa has just such an interesting history. To go there and live with the
locals and work with them was really exciting."
What did KPMG get in
return? Exactly what it hoped: Fedele accepted a full-time job almost
immediately after KPMG made its offer at the end of the summer.
Gerdes is a staff editor for
BusinessWeek in New York.
Last year's rankings were similar ---
Click Here
http://bigfouralumni.blogspot.com/search/label/Best Places to Launch a
Career
"All Big Four Firms Are
Best Companies To Work For In 2009," Big Four Blog, January 22,
2010 ---
http://bigfouralumni.blogspot.com/2010/01/all-big-four-firms-are-best-companies.html
All the Big Four firms recently made Fortune’s 2009 “100 Best Companies to
Work For” list, though not at the very top as we have become very accustomed
to seeing in BusinessWeek or Diversity or Working Mothers magazine.
Nonetheless a very creditable performance against a tough crowd of equally
impressive and quality peers. 2009 sported tougher competition as three of
the five firms dropped rank from the 2008 listing.
In addition, we are seeing a varied picture with firms actively cutting
positions to some minor increases at Deloitte and PwC from 2008 to 2009, in
line with the general decrease in business for these firms in the Americas.
Check out our January 2009 blog post on the 2008
rankings
However, tough external conditions appear to have created some welcome
bonuses for employees, either through additional holidays, a sabbatical
program or less travel.
Fortune has a rigorous process to select these top companies, and with a
large chunk of the selection process based on true employee responses, its
hard to game this list, so makes the results reliable. It conducts the most
extensive employee survey in corporate America with 347 companies in the
overall pool. Two-thirds of a company's score is based on the results of
survey sent to a random sample of employees from each company with questions
on attitudes management's credibility, job satisfaction, and camaraderie.
The other third of the scoring is based on the company's responses on pay
and benefit programs, hiring, communication, and diversity.
Continued in article
Profitability: Based on 300,000 companies,
most with annual sales under $10 million. One takeaway: Specialization pays
off
What a great Rank 1 slide for college
recruitment of accounting majors ---
http://www.forbes.com/2010/04/15/most-profitable-small-businesses-entrepreneurs-finance-sageworks_slide_21.html
The most profitable
niche of the bunch (CPA bunch) enjoys a nice mix of pricing power (everybody
needs accountants, no matter how the economy is doing), low overhead and
marketing scale, thanks to plenty of repeat clients.
Other Accounting Services comes it at Rank 3
---
http://www.forbes.com/2010/04/15/most-profitable-small-businesses-entrepreneurs-finance-sageworks_slide_19.html
Various accounting,
bookkeeping, billing and tax preparation services in any form, handled not
necessarily by a Certified Public Accountant (see No. 1 on our list).
And at Rank 5 are Tax Preparation Services
(one rank below dentist offices) ---
http://www.forbes.com/2010/04/15/most-profitable-small-businesses-entrepreneurs-finance-sageworks_slide_17.html
Who likes doing their
taxes? Exactly.
"The Most Profitable Small Businesses,"
by Brett Nelson and Maureen Farrell, Forbes, April 15, 2010 ---
http://www.forbes.com/2010/04/15/most-profitable-small-businesses-entrepreneurs-finance-sageworks.html?boxes=entrepreneurschannelinentre
The 20 Most Profitable Slide Show (The top line
has a Next button) ---
http://www.forbes.com/2010/04/15/most-profitable-small-businesses-entrepreneurs-finance-sageworks_slide.html
Bob Jensen's threads on careers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#careers
And there, in a nutshell, you have the main reason
why accounting became a much more popular major after the 1990s tech bubble
burst.
Bob Jensen
Journal of Accountancy e-Alert on April 22, 2010
> >
FASB Issues Health Care Proposals
April 16, 2010
FASB issued two exposure drafts that would change accounting for health care
organizations. One proposal would require that the measurement of charity care
for disclosure purposes by health care providers be based on the direct and
indirect costs of providing the charity care. The second proposal is aimed at
how organizations account for medical malpractice and similar liabilities and
related insurance payouts.
Jensen Comment
There are some potential cost accounting research projects here regarding cost
accounting in health care facilities.
Health care facility cost accounting may become an even
greater priority for the FASB since the government intends to regulate health
insurance premiums in the private sector. Price regulations make cost accounting
an important, if not the most important, input into price regulation.
Bob Jensen’s threads on cost and managerial accounting ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#ManagementAccounting
Bob Jensen's threads on health care controversies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/health.htm
Video: Mattel dresses up its pro forma forecasts with some toy PR ---
http://corporate.mattel.com/
This link was forwarded by David Albrecht
James
Martin's references on accounting theory courses ---
http://maaw.blogspot.com/2010/03/my-response-to-question-about.html
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory
courses ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#AccountingTheoryCourses
"A Summary of the Financial Reporting and Disclosure Implications of the
Health Care Reform Legislation," Deloitte Heads Up, IAS Plus, April
9, 2010 ---
http://www.iasplus.com/usa/headsup/headsup1004healthcare.pdf
Just the Facts!
"How the health care bill will impact individuals, businesses,"
AccountingWeb, March 23, 2010 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/topic/tax/how-health-care-bill-will-impact-individuals-businesses
"Tax Provisions of Health Care Reform Legislation Covered in Briefing by CCH,"
SmartPros, March 22, 2010 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x69050.xml
Also read the CCH Special Tax Briefing on health care reform:
http://tax.cchgroup.com/Legislation/Final-Healthcare-Reform-03-10.pdf
Health-Care Taxes Put Spotlight
on Tax-Exempt Municipal Bonds
The latest
wrinkle in the muni-verse: the health-care reform legislation signed
by President Barack Obama on Mar. 23.
One widely
discussed feature of the bill is a new Medicare tax that levies 3.8% on wages
and other kinds of income, starting in 2013. The tax would not apply to interest
on tax-exempt bonds and other forms of unearned income, such as any gain from
the sale of a principal residence, that are excluded from gross income under the
U.S. income tax code, according to a footnote in the Joint Committee on
Taxation's Technical Explanation of the revenue provisions of the Reconciliation
Act of 2010. That may seem like a no-brainer, but R.J. Gallo, senior portfolio
manager for muni bonds at Federated Investors in Pittsburgh, says he's received
calls from a few brokers asking whether munis would be exempt from the
additional tax.
David Bogoslaw, “Health-Care Taxes
Put Spotlight on Munis," Business Week, March 23. 2010 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/investor/content/mar2010/pi20100323_076507.htm?link_position=link1
"ObamaCare by the Numbers: Part 2," by John Cassidy, The New Yorker,
March 2010 ---
http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/johncassidy/2010/03/obamacare-by-the-numbers-part-2.html
Hi Scott,
Most leading sellers among
basic, intermediate, and advanced accounting textbooks have relatively minor
variations in content, although some may vary in terms of real-world
illustrations and cases at the chapter endings. The biggest variations are in
the “principles of accounting” category. There are also variations in quantity
and quality of supplements. For example, leading publishers may promise videos
for each chapter, but the videos themselves may be superficial snoozers.
Videos are lacking where they
would really count for intermediate and advanced textbooks.
Personally, I recommend the
Brigham Young University stand-alone basic accounting variable-speed videos and
textbook used in exactly the same way as they are used at BYU ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#BYUvideo
However, these may not work as well in courses with poorly motivated students.
BYU students tend to be better motivated than students in many colleges and
universities.
Most intermediate and advanced
textbook publishers are now rushing to improve IFRS content, so that is a newer
consideration. I would look for real-world IFRS cases and financial statement
illustrations.
Barnes & Noble has a pretty
good FAQ page at
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/help/cds2.asp?PID=8153
Barnes & Noble also has an easy-to find “sales rank” for each book but the
rankings are not limited to a given book category.
For example, Garrison’s managerial accounting book is probably the leading
seller in its category but has a sales rank of 8,463
Weygandt’s Principles of Accounting text is a leading seller in its category but
has a sales rank of 26,629
Horngren has a leading Cost Accounting book that has a sales rank of 46,871
Richard Sansing adopts Zimmerman’s ISBN
0078136725 with a sales rank of 550,916
(which shows that in Professor Sansing’s discerning choice there’s more to a
textbook than sales leadership)
To compare Amazon’s sales
rankings it might pay to begin at
http://www.fonerbooks.com/surfing.htm
Also note that for a given
search term like “intermediate accounting,” Amazon has a box in the upper right
that will let you sort books buy such criteria as “relevance.” “best selling,”
“price”, and “average customer reviews.” The publishers themselves often write
or otherwise influence the reviews such that reviews are dubious unless they are
very specific about particular attributes. I usually get more value added from
the one negative review relative to scores of glowing reviews.
I found that when I use the
above-mentioned Amazon search box for “best sellers,” the listings sometimes
include textbooks only slightly related to my original search term. For example,
if I click on “best sellers” under the “intermediate accounting” search term I
get such things as Horngren’s managerial accounting book and Hoyle’s advanced
accounting book listings. The “best sellers” listing is interesting, however, in
terms of being able to identify best sellers among accounting textbooks.
Keep in mind that many factors
influence sales volume. Some doctoral program graduates are loyal to faculty
authors of their alma maters and others are loyal to colleagues and friends who
write books. Some authors themselves attend sales meetings themselves and are
just better promoters than other authors. I know of one community college where
the coordinator of the basic accounting courses expects a kickback in terms of
free examination copies that he can resell --- the winning publisher’s rep may
get him 30 or more free examination copies that he can sell for up to $80 apiece to the slimy used book buyers that roam the faculty office hallways.
I still think Amazon is the
best place to begin for book research and shopping ---
http://www.amazon.com/
Amazon often has great used book bargains and purchases from used book sellers
are backed by Amazon’s guarantee of not being ripped off by a seller. Most used
textbook sellers do not buy and sell the books. Rather they are sales brokers,
and I have had great results with purchasing Amazon-brokered used books. One
problem with accounting textbooks is that there are often few used book options
for new edition releases.
When I enter “Principles of
Accounting” into Amazon’s book search I get 13,547 hits which is overwhelming.
Then you discover that most of the listings are probably not textbooks that
would be used in the first two accounting courses.
After finding a textbook of
possible interest, it may be worthwhile to look that book up in Bigwords ---
http://bigwords.com/book/
Bigwords gives some vendor and pricing options, but don’t rely much on the
reviews.
The AAA’s Issues in
Accounting Education has book reviews, but these are of limited benefit.
First, you have to pay to subscribe to IAE. Secondly, the reviews lag the
frequent new editions of accounting textbooks and do not cover all textbooks.
Thirdly, reviewers are usually not critical where they could be critical in my
viewpoint.
Some thought should also be
given to free textbooks, although it’s hard to find a free intermediate or
advanced textbook that keeps up with the constantly-changing FASB and IASB
standards. For principles of accounting there are some decent free textbook
choices and free videos ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/electronicliterature.htm#Textbooks
For the moment I recommend Joe
Hoyle’s updated basic accounting free textbook and Susan Crossan’s free
financial and managerial videos ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/electronicliterature.htm#Textbooks
(you must scroll down a bit to find the free works of Hoyle and Crossan).
Lastly I might note that some
of the best learning takes place in courses that do not have required textbooks
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/265wp.htm
And the fabulous teachers who pull this off win the highest awards like Catenach,
Croll, Barsky, and Pincus ---
http://aaahq.org/awards/awrd6win.htm
Actually, Karen Pincus may now
use her own textbook, but I don’t think any textbook is central to her
experiential learning pedagogy.
My listing of free IFRS
learning materials is at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#IFRSlearning
Textbook Handouts from Jim Peters
April 2, 2010 message from Peters, James M
[jpeters@NMHU.EDU]
Personally, I don't use published texts in most of
my classes, I write my own. After 10 years working with the cognitive
psychologists at Carnegie Mellon University and their Center for Innovations
in Learning and their Center for Teaching Excellence, I realized that
published texts are very poorly worded. I use the Socratic Method and so I
don't lecture in the classroom. However, that method assumes that students
get the explanations they need of the core material in the text. However,
texts seem to be written more as encyclopedias that tools of explanation. I
keep having to write explanations, which I termed "travelers guides" because
students needed guidance through the theory. Eventually, I expanded them
into my own text and dropped published texts. I tried to get one of my texts
published one time, but was told they were too informal because I wrote them
in a conversational style as if I were explaining the material to a student
sitting in front of me.
My students love my texts. I regularly talk to my
alumni who, even after 10 years, still have my texts on their shelves and
use them on the job. I have written auditing, accounting information
systems, and financial statement analysis texts as well as managerial
accounting chapters and chapters on not-for-profit and governmental
financial statement analysis. It is a ton of work, but my classes become
very tightly engineered around the texts and their is nothing in the text
that I don't cover in the class.
Periodically, another academic will look at them,
but I don't think any have every used one. They are designed to cover
exactly what I want to cover in a semester for my student population and to
be used with Socratic Method and case-based teaching. (I also have developed
a series of fairly comprehensive cases to go with them.) For my auditing
text, I "stole with permission" a great, but very old tool Bill Felix and
others created in the early 90's - SCAD. It is out of print and Bill told me
I was free to use it as I see fit. While it certainly isn't a commercial
piece of software, it is very simple, fast, and functional, and free.
I appreciate that this is a radical and very time
consuming approach, but, IMHO, it works (as my students keep telling me). I
have always taken the position that if you can't write the text, you should
not be teaching the class and I just help myself, literally, to that
standard.
Frankly, I think the text book industry has
commoditized education and created the impression that good teaching only
means finding the right text and using all their support materials. Their
offerings are virtually identical to each other, turn into exercises in
terminology overload, don't not explain things clearly, are way too
expensive, and are continually revised for not reason other than increasing
sales. There are some exceptions. I don't think I would try to replace Keiso
in Intermediate. However, I felt that I needed to actually think about the
material in great depth and insure that I understood it to its core
principles. I didn't think I could do that effectively unless I wrote it
down myself.
Of course, I end up spending much more time per
credit hour teaching than any other professor I have ever met in over 20
years in this business, so I doubt my approach will scale up. But I feel
comfortable that I am doing the right thing.
Jim
April 4, 2010 message from Peters, James M
[jpeters@NMHU.EDU]
Jim Peters' Course Files
The following are links to the texts I have written on
the topics shown. I can provide in-class assignments and solutions (the
Socratic Method version of class notes) as well as cases and graded
assignments for these classes on request. You can e-mail me at jpeters@nmhu.edu.
Financial Statement Analysis
Accounting Information Systems
Auditing
Managerial Accounting
Bob Jensen's threads on free textbooks. course videos, and cases ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/electronicliterature.htm#Textbook s
April 7, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Jim,
These "notes" are quite good.
I was pleased to see that you teach MS Access in
your in your AIS course.
I used two outstanding published textbooks when I
taught AIS ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5342/acct5342.htm
However, I prepared self-study videos. Especially
for students learning Access/
Students who are struggling with some of the quirks of Access might find
some of the videos helpful ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5342/
Most of the Access tutorials are called PQQ meaning "Possible Quiz
Questions"
I did not teach much Access in the classroom, but
students were assigned "Possible Quiz Questions" from the two textbooks and
from my assigned tasks that I expected them to learn.
I taught this course in an electronic classroom where every student had a
computer. I could then give quizzes and examinations where students had to
perform computer tasks like write database queries, make charts, etc.
You will also find some Excel videos, but I really
didn't teach Excel in the AIS course except for a few topics like pivot
tables and charts. I did make students do financial statement analysis using
Microsoft's annual reports that have downloadable pivot charts.
Bob Jensen
Includes Panel Member Tom Hood from the Maryland Society of CPAs
"DigitalNow 2009 Panel Discussion with Clay Shirky - Part 2 of 12,"
YouTube ---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UAMrEG4pfJc&feature=youtu.be&a
Super Teacher Joe Hoyle says the degree of student
preparation for class depends on the "payoff,"
Teaching Financial Accounting Blog, April 5, 2010 ---
http://joehoyle-teaching.blogspot.com/2010/04/whats-payoff.html
Open sharing Joe Hoyle makes his financial accounting
examinations available ---
http://joehoyle-teaching.blogspot.com/2010/04/third-test-available.html
His updated financial accounting textbook is also available for free online.
Is Our IT Future in the Clouds?
April 15, 2010 message from John Anderson
[jcanderson27@COMCAST.NET]
Francine and Scott,
I am not trying to cast either
one of you as a straw man, but I have a very strong point-of-view about many
CISA's immediately writing-off anything they can condemn as being
Cloud-related.
Although I know today that
99.9% of all IT Auditors (CISA's) would say "Nothing in the Cloud is safe"
... and therefore this is the current conventional wisdom about Cloud
Security, I feel potentially we have a flat earth society becoming all too
comfortable with that pat answer these CISA's dispense all too readily.
However, with 75% of
Microsoft's Engineers and Programmers currently working on Cloud-related
Applications, this one-size-fits-all response you are receiving is going to
have to change. In my opinion many IT Auditors
(CISA's) are resisting the
Cloud as it doesn't fit their existing Governance Models, but if we don't
solve these problems, every IT auditor in the country will be steamrolled
very soon!
Here is the best Cloud
Security overview article I have found to date: ---
Click Here
http://www.informationweek.com/news/security/management/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=224202319
The term "balanced" isn't
really appropriate, but I guess it is a pretty realistic assessment of where
we are currently at in this area at this time.
The article is right on the
money about the reticence of some Cloud Providers in sharing their SAS 70's
as I have a company which will not send me their SAS 70, but they want me to
get behind their product!
The dirty little secret is
that unless you are looking at a Trophy Target like a Fidelity Investments
or an Intelligence Organization, a lot of Commercial IT Security has chinks
in its armor. Therefore, taking an entity's data from the converted
closet/Server Room and transferring it to a
24/7 monitored and hardened
Cloud Computer Center with redundancy and a stand-by hot Recovery Site with
continuous and accessible offsite encrypted backup is often a major step
forward! After having attended many meetings with CISA's who are vehemently
opposed to the Cloud, at least part of this opposition is due to the fear
that this major step will leave them behind!
Naturally if the Data Center
site is off-shore and you are not certain of the validity of the SAS 70 or
other appraisal, these are additional concerns.
The irony is that higher we
set the bar for IT Security the easier it will be to justify outsourcing
this security for most small installations currently supporting some small
IT Support Teams. Naturally to make this new world possible, the people
holding the SAS 70's will have to have the gumption to send them out to
clients.
Finally, the client will have
to have the SAS 70 (or its evolving replacement document) competently
reviewed in order to see that the Controls discussed are adequate to cover
the risks present.
Whenever I receive this
response from one of my fellow CISA's I always do them the favor of asking
them what area concerns them most in their specific Risk Assessment. If
they then persist in using the term "the Cloud" ... smile and slowly sidle
away!
Best Regards!
John
John Anderson, CPA, CISA,
CISM, CGEIT, CITP Financial & IT Business Consultant
14 Tanglewood Road
Boxford, MA 01921
jcanderson27@comcast.net
978-887-0623 Office
978-837-0092 Cell
978-887-3679 Fax
Jensen Comment
Cloud Computing ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_Computing
The cloud is already here for some CPA firms.
"Mike Braun Takes Paperless Accounting into the Cloud: Intacct CEO reports
performance gains of 50% at CPA firms," Journal of Accountancy, July 2009
---
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Web/MikeBraun
Microsoft Cloud Services ---
Click Here
http://sharepoint.microsoft.com/businessproductivity/products/pages/cloud-services.aspx?CR_CC=100193171&WT.srch=1&WT.mc_id=Search&CR_SCC=100193171&mtag=SearBing#fbid=wl3Qhjt1FVT
Parallel Coordinates Book
I think accounting researchers are missing the boat
by not focusing more on multivariate data visualization.
One possible research vector for XBRL would be to
show how XBRL outcomes may be combined into XBRL visualization aids.
I am going to add the following message to my
threads on data visualization at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/352wpvisual/000datavisualization.htm
Robert E. (Bob) Jensen
Trinity University Accounting Professor (Emeritus)
190 Sunset Hill Road
Sugar Hill, NH 03586
. 603-823-8482
www.trinity.edu/rjensen
-----Original Message-----
From: Alfred Inselberg [mailto:aiisreal@post.tau.ac.il]
Sent: Friday, April 02, 2010 11:53 AM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: Parallel Coordinates Book
Dear Bob,
I saw some of your interesting
work on "Data Visualization" and would like to recommend
Parallel Coordinates - This
book is about visualization, systematically incorporating the fantastic
human pattern recognition into the problem-solving
...
www.springer.com/mathematics/numerical.../978-0-387-21507-5 -
which is now available. It
contains an easy to read chapter (10) on Data Mining. Among others, I
received a wonderful compliment from Stephen Hawking who also recommended
this "valuable book" to his students.
Best regards
Alfred
-- Alfred Inselberg,
Professor
School of Mathematical Sciences
Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv 69978, Israel
Tel +972 (0)528 465 888
http://www.cs.tau.ac.il/~aiisreal/
"Is Economics Art or Science?" by Evan R. Goldstein, Chronicle of
Higher Education's Chronicle Review, April 25, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/article/Is-Economics-Art-or-Science-/65188/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
It began on the op-ed page of The Wall Street
Journal. "For an economist, these are the best of times and the worst
of times," wrote Russ Roberts, a professor of economics at George Mason
University. While economic anxiety has heightened demand for economists,
Roberts noted, "there is no consensus on the cause of the crisis or the best
way forward." That got him thinking about how economics is unlike other
areas of science, which tend to progress in a more linear fashion. Not so
economics, where discredited theories regularly come back to life, and major
thinkers—Friedman, Hayek, Keynes—move in and out of vogue. "The bottom line
is that we should expect less of economists," he wrote.
Among the readers of the Roberts article was
The New York Times columnist David Brooks, who was inspired to sketch a
history of modern economics, in five acts. Brooks's account began with the
discipline's embrace of a "crude vision" of human beings as perfectly
rational, and a second act that questioned self-interest as the root of all
behavior. The third act began with the economic crisis in 2008, a moment
that, in Brooks's view, exposed the field's shortcomings. The current moment
is Act IV, in which economics is pushed in a more humanistic direction as
scholars turn to psychology, sociology, and neuroscience for insights. In
the last act, Brooks predicted, economists will "blow up their whole field"
and make it a subsection of history and moral philosophy. The future of
economics is as an art, not a science, he concluded. And that is a good
thing, because the "moral and social yearnings of fully realized human
beings are not reducible to universal laws and cannot be studied like
physics."
Where is the field of economics heading? Several
thinkers have weighed in.
N. Gregory Mankiw, professor of economics,
Harvard University: Journalists are fond of writing articles about
how recent events require a fundamental rethinking of economic theory. ...
But when they try to predict trends in academic theorizing from current
events, they are usually incorrect. In particular, I think what we teach in
economics courses is more robust than a reader of David's column would
think.
To be sure, in undergraduate economics courses,
some specific topics will need more coverage in the future. ... The role of
leverage in financial institutions is one example. Those people who study
financial institutions and their regulation have moved to the forefront of
the profession for a while, and that area of work may well get more coverage
in the undergraduate curriculum.
But I doubt there will be a fundamental change in
the field of economics. (Greg Mankiw's Blog)
Justin Fox, editorial director, Harvard
Business Review Group: David Brooks wondered ... if economists
shouldn't try to become more like historians. That was interesting to read,
given that I had just spent time with a bunch of historians (and a few other
humanities professors) who were wondering how they could become more like
economists.
The occasion was a conference on "Reputation,
Emotion and the Market," at the University of Oxford's Saïd Business School.
I was there to speak about my book on the history of financial theory, but
ended up mainly engaged in a long discussion with the 30 or so historians
(and a smattering of scholars from other humanities disciplines) on hand
about why economists had gained so much influence over the past half-century
and historians had lost so much.
One answer I offered was that economists had
managed a remarkable balancing act between making the guts of their work
totally incomprehensible—and thus forbiddingly impressive—to the outside
world while continuing to offer reasonably straightforward conclusions. ...
An academic history paper, on the other hand, is often an uninterrupted
cascade of semi-comprehensible jargon that neither impresses a lay reader
nor offers any clear conclusions.
Why does any of this matter? Mainly because the
ways in which scholars interpret the world can (with a time lag and a lot
lost in translation) have a big influence on the way the rest of us see
things. ... Economists have come to utterly dominate thinking about economic
matters and begun to insinuate themselves into lots of other fields, too.
Business education, and business advice, has certainly become much more
economics-oriented. Which isn't all bad. But even an economist would agree
that we could use more competition in the marketplace of ideas. Right? (Harvard
Business Review Online)
Sean C. Safford, assistant professor of
organizations and strategy, University of Chicago: Brooks makes it
seem like sociologists, psychologists, and the like have been waiting for
our moment. Sociology and the humanists originated the field, and we never
really went away. (It's worth remembering that Max Weber called himself an
economist; Act I in Brooks's formulation was preceded by a whole lot of
people we would today call humanists, political scientists, and sociologists
who were unpacking the nature of economic activity and action.) So one has
to ask: If we've been right all along (and I think we have been), then why
should we think that this crisis will be the one to change the game back in
our favor? ...
People who need to make decisions want a rationale
for those decisions to be conveyed with clarity. For as much as I think
sociology and our sister—humanist-oriented—disciplines come closer to
understanding reality, we nevertheless will continue to lose arguments
because of the wishy-washy way we make our arguments. There is little
interest or tolerance among economic sociologists for articulating a
coherent, prescriptive philosophy of economic action.
Until we do, I'm afraid we are always going to be
playing second fiddle. (orgtheory.net)
Barry W. Ickes, professor of economics,
Pennsylvania State University: What sells in the wider audience,
however, is not what economists are actually doing. It is a good market
response to write a popular book saying economists are stupid, or whatever.
But the professional work is getting more technical, not less. ...
Economists for the most part do not see the financial crisis as a
repudiation of their efforts. So there is no reason to re-evaluate what
economists do. I think that is how this is viewed internally. And that is
what governs the dynamics of the profession. (Ickman's Blog)
Aaron Bekemeyer, associate editor,
Consider Magazine: Perhaps, as economists "perfect" their
discipline, it won't be appropriate to call economics either a science or an
art. The sharp disciplinary divisions between the arts and sciences (and
their various subdisciplines) are a relatively recent development, only a
century or two old. Who's to say these distinctions will be around forever?
Maybe, in the not-too-distant future, we'll look back and see how silly and
artificial our distinctions between art and science have been. Some of the
disciplines we consider so vital to modern life—medicine, history, and, not
least, economics—may come to be perfect examples of activities that rely
equally on empiricism and inspiration, objectivity and intuition. (The
Conversationalist, Consider online)
Mark D. White, professor of political
science, economics, and philosophy, City University of New York's College of
Staten Island: In a social science such as economics, we have
persons, with intentions, emotions, and quirks—lots of them. Despite how
they're reflected in economists' models, their actions are not determined
solely by the forces around them, but also by the forces inside their
heads—their preferences, beliefs, values, morals, principles, biases,
prejudices, and so on. ...
If the government has already decided to spend
around $2-trillion, then economists may be able to contribute to determining
the precise amount necessary to achieve the desired end. But if the
government is deciding whether or not to spend that large amount of money at
all, or whether to nationalize health care, or bring back significant
financial regulations—massive, qualitative changes in the economy, rather
than marginal, quantitative changes—then a broader perspective is necessary,
and philosophy certainly has a lot to offer to that discussion. (Economics
and Ethics).
Jensen Comment
Sadly, some of our top accountancy teachers and researchers send accounting and
economic history to the back of the bus.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting and economic history and theory are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm
"Supreme Court Rules on Investment Adviser Fees: The high court
reaches back 70 years to reject two lower court rulings on investment adviser
compensation," by Robert Willens, CFO.com, April 19, 2010 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14491972/c_14492636?f=home_todayinfinance
Deloitte's comment letters on Draft XBRL taxonomy for the IASB ---
http://www.iasplus.com/dttletr/comment.htm
"IFRS XBRL taxonomy for 2010 is available," IAS
Plus, May 1, 2010 ---
http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
The
IASC Foundation has released the IFRS XBRL Taxonomy 2010. The 2010 taxonomy is
consistent with IFRSs and with the IFRS for Small and Medium-sized Entities (SMEs),
and for the first time both have been integrated into a single taxonomy. The
IFRS Taxonomy 2010 is a translation of IFRSs as issued at 1 January 2010 into
XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language). XBRL facilitates simpler and
faster electronic filing of financial information and comparison of IFRS
financial data by companies, regulators, investors, analysts, and other users of
financial information.
Click Here to access the IFRS Taxonomy files and accompanying materials on
the Foundation's website.
http://www.iasb.org/XBRL/IFRS+Taxonomy/IFRS+Taxonomy+2010/IFRS+Taxonomy+2010.htm
Bob Jensen's somewhat neglected threads on XBRL are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm
I just don't understand why we need sleeping medications when we've got
the tax code
The code is now 3,784,745 words long, not counting the
2009 and 2010 changes. It will get worse in the future.
John Stossel, "Lower and Simplify
Taxes!" Townhall, April 14, 2010 ---
http://townhall.com/columnists/JohnStossel/2010/04/14/lower_and_simplify_taxes!
On my FBN show tomorrow, I'll show clips of the
pandering legislators applauding themselves for offering tax credits to special
interests. The favored groups cheer their tax breaks, but the result is that
everyone else pays more, and everyone must spend more time deciphering the
rules.
John Stossel, "Lower and Simplify
Taxes!" Townhall, April 14, 2010 ---
http://townhall.com/columnists/JohnStossel/2010/04/14/lower_and_simplify_taxes!
Jensen Comment
Last week a great a great construction company put in new insulation on the
upper rim and parts of the walls (under the windows) of our cottage. They also
put in new roof vents for the kitchen stove and the four bathrooms. The total
bill was $5,244, but I only had to pay $1,244. New Hampshire Electric Power paid
$4,000 using laundered Federal money (thank you taxpayers). I paid $1,244, but
that's not the end of the story. I'll also get a tax break on my 2010
Federal Tax return for the $1,244 that I paid. But since New Hampshire does not
have an income tax I don't get any added state income tax break --- Darn!
I also got a terrific new clothes dryer vent to the outside (before the dryer
only vented into the basement). Since more cold air can now come into the
laundry room, I'm not certain how this is saving on my heating oil bill. But in
any case I thank the taxpayers for saving me the trouble of having to empty a
lint can in the basement.
This year on my 2009 return I got a tax break on the $2,419 dollars I spent
for new windows on the north and west walls of our main bedroom. The energy
experts that did my energy audit secretly revealed that new windows usually do
not save a whole lot on oil bills (unless there's a severe need for new
insulation around the edges of the windows). But our new flip-down Cadillac
windows are a lot easier to clean. Thank you taxpayers!
Which allows an American Samoan worker to have a
higher standard of living: being employed at $3.26 per hour or unemployed at a
wage scheduled to annually increase by 50 cents until it reaches federally
mandated wages at $7.25? You say, "Williams, that's a stupid question. Who would
support people being unemployed at $7.25 an hour over being employed at $3.26 an
hour?" That's precisely the outcome of Congress' 2007 increases in the minimum
wage. Chicken of the Sea International moved its operation from Samoa to a
highly automated cannery plant in Lyon, Georgia. That resulted in roughly 2,000
jobs lost in Samoa and a gain of 200 jobs in Georgia.
Walter E. Williams, "Minimum Wage
Cruelty," Townhall, April 14, 2014 ---
http://townhall.com/columnists/WalterEWilliams/2010/04/14/minimum_wage_cruelty
"The Annual Report as Sustainability's Secret Weapon," by Robert G.
Eccles. Harvard Business Review Blog, April 19, 2010 ---
http://blogs.hbr.org/hbsfaculty/2010/04/the-annual-report-as-sustainab.html?cm_mmc=npv-_-DAILY_ALERT-_-AWEBER-_-DATE
Spring brings April showers, May flowers — and a
flurry of annual reports. Mine have been arriving in the mail, and I am
always interested to see what the companies I own stock in have to say about
themselves in this ritualistic document filled with financial information,
different types of narratives,
and lots of pretty pictures.
The amount of detail and the level of complexity in
the financial section have grown considerably in response to the increasing
onslaught of accounting rules and regulations. What's more, since going
green is now red hot, a growing number of companies — especially in Europe
and Japan — are also starting to issue Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
or Sustainability reports. Sometimes these are mailed with the annual
report, but more often they have to be ordered separately or downloaded from
the company's Web site. Unfortunately, the two reports rarely add up to
something greater than the sum of their parts.
This is a huge problem. A sustainable
society requires that all companies be committed to sustainable strategies.
Increasing social expectations regarding a company's commitment to
sustainability mean that firms that ignore this do so at their own risk. BMW
Group has been a leader in recognizing this. Several years ago, it issued a
Sustainable Value Report detailing energy
consumed, water consumed, waste removed, and volatile organic compounds per
vehicle produced. Scoring high in all these categories, BMW believes that
its reputation as the world's "greenest" car company plays an important role
in brand awareness and customer satisfaction, factors that contribute to
revenue growth.
So how can shareholders and other stakeholders know
if a company's commitment to a sustainable society is contributing to a
sustainable strategy that will create value for shareholders over the long
term? The answer lies in combining the annual and CSR/sustainability reports
into something I call "One Report," which provides the essential information
on a company's financial, environmental, social, and governance performance
and shows the relationships between them. This kind of Integrated reporting
also involves leveraging the Internet to provide more detailed information
to all a company's stakeholders while also providing them with the
opportunity to engage in a virtual dialogue on these matters.
Some major corporations are starting to take the
lead in this effort, including United Technologies Corporation, Philips (the
Dutch electronics and health care giant), the German chemical company BASF,
and Danish pharmaceutical maker Novo Nordisk.
At United Technologies, whose products include Carrier air conditioners,
Otis elevators, and Pratt & Whitney aircraft engines, a recent integrated
report focused on such nonfinancial metrics as lower fuel consumption and
noise emissions in a new jet engine and a reduced carbon footprint and water
consumption in the firm's factories. The juxtaposition of information on
both operations and CSR symbolizes the company's commitment to more than
just the bottom line and its belief that both sets of data have a
significant impact on the long-term success and reputation of the company.
In UT's view, CSR is both a reality and necessity, not an addendum.
Novo Nordisk presents stockholders and other
stakeholders with
a multidimensional Web site that enables visitors
to create a customized version of their annual report, access in-depth
information about sustainability practices, contact company officers, and
even play interactive games showing the challenges and trade-offs the
company faces in making difficult decisions.
Thanks to these kinds of One Report practices,
these companies actually document their commitment to sustainability, make
better decisions based on a broader collection of data, engage more deeply
and effectively with all their stakeholders, and lower reputational risk
through a high level of transparency.
Given the importance of sustainability, I think
companies have an
ethical obligation to practice integrated
reporting, and
investors have a similar obligation
to demand it. In fact, I believe the SEC should make it a requirement. As we
all try to come up with solutions to the problems of the planet,
integrated reporting is one way to make sure that
companies are part of the process.
Robert G. Eccles was a member of the HBS faculty from 1979 until 1993,
when he left for a career in the private sector. In 2007, he returned to the
School, where he teaches in both the MBA and Executive Education programs.
His most recent book, coauthored with Michael P. Krzus, is
One Report: Integrated Reporting for a Sustainable Strategy (Wiley, 2010).
Jensen Comment
One place to look for sustainability information is in any section of an annual
report that deals with contingencies con ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#TheoryDisputes
But this contingency accounting throughout history has probably been the weakest
area of annual reporting.
Accounting for intangibles in general is a huge weakness in annual reporting.
Remember how top executives at MCI let it into bankruptcy, executives that KPMG
agreed had intangible foresight worth millions.
Accounting for intangibles in general is a huge weakness in annual reporting.
Remember how top executives at MCI let it into bankruptcy, executives that KPMG
agreed had intangible foresight worth millions.
KPMG’s “Unusual Twist”
While KPMG's strategy isn't uncommon among corporations with lots of units in
different states, the accounting firm offered an unusual twist: Under KPMG's
direction, WorldCom treated "foresight of top management" as an intangible asset
akin to patents or trademarks.
See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#WorldcomFraud
Punch Line
This "foresight of top management" led to a 25-year prison sentence for
Worldcom's CEO, five years for the CFO (which in his case was much to lenient)
and one year plus a day for the controller (who ended up having to be in prison
for only ten months.) Yes all that reported goodwill in the balance sheet of
Worldcom was an unusual twist.
Tom Selling wrote privately to
me for more information on the quotation in red below.
Hi Again Tom,
I found the original reference
KPMG’s “Unusual Twist”
While KPMG's strategy isn't uncommon among corporations with lots of units in
different states, the accounting firm offered an unusual twist: Under KPMG's
direction, WorldCom treated "foresight of top management" as an intangible asset
akin to patents or trademarks.
The potential claims against KPMG represent the most
pressing issue for MCI. The report didn't have an exact tally of state taxes
that may have been avoided, but some estimates range from $100 million to $350
million. Fourteen states likely will file a claim against the company if they
don't reach settlement, said a person familiar with the matter.
"MCI Examiner Criticizes KPMG On Tax Strategy," by Dennis
K. Berman, Jonathan Weil, and Shawn Young, The Wall Street Journal, January 27,
2004 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107513063813611621,00.html?mod=technology%5Fmain%5Fwhats%5Fnews
The
examiner in MCI's Chapter 11 bankruptcy case issued a report critical of a
"highly aggressive" tax strategy KPMG LLP recommended to MCI to avoid paying
hundreds of millions of dollars in state income taxes, concluding that MCI has
grounds to sue KPMG -- its current auditor.
MCI
quickly said the company would not sue KPMG. But officials from the 14 states
already exploring how to collect back taxes from MCI could use the report to
fuel their claims against the telecom company or the accounting firm. KPMG
already is under fire by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service for pushing
questionable tax shelters to wealthy individuals.
In a
statement, KPMG said the tax strategy used by MCI is commonly used by other
companies and called the examiner's conclusions "simply wrong." MCI, the former
WorldCom, still uses the strategy.
The
542-page document is the final report by Richard Thornburgh, who was appointed
by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court to investigate legal claims against former
employees and advisers involved in the largest accounting fraud in U.S. history.
It reserves special ire for securities firm Salomon Smith Barney, which the
report says doled out more than 950,000 shares from 22 initial and secondary
public offerings to ex-Chief Executive Bernard Ebbers for a profit of $12.8
million. The shares, the report said, "were intended to and did influence Mr.
Ebbers to award" more than $100 million in investment-banking fees to Salomon, a
unit of Citigroup Inc. that is now known as Citigroup Global Markets Inc.
In the
1996 initial public offering of McLeodUSA Inc., Mr. Ebbers received 200,000
shares, the third-largest allocation of any investor and behind only two large
mutual-fund companies. Despite claims by Citigroup in congressional hearings
that Mr. Ebbers was one of its "best customers," the report said he had scant
personal dealings with the firm before the IPO shares were awarded.
Mr.
Thornburgh said MCI has grounds to sue both Citigroup and Mr. Ebbers for damages
for breach of fiduciary duty and good faith. The company's former directors bear
some responsibility for granting Mr. Ebbers more than $400 million in personal
loans, the report said, singling out the former two-person compensation
committee. Mr. Thornburgh added that claims are possible against MCI's former
auditor, Arthur Andersen LLP, and Scott Sullivan, MCI's former chief financial
officer and the alleged mastermind of the accounting fraud. His criminal trial
was postponed Monday to April 7 from Feb. 4.
Reid
Weingarten, an attorney for Mr. Ebbers, said, "There is nothing new to these
allegations. And it's a lot easier to make allegations in a report than it is to
prove them in court." Patrick Dorton, a spokesman for Andersen, said, "The focus
should be on MCI management, who defrauded investors and the auditors at every
turn." Citigroup spokeswoman Leah Johnson said, "The services that Citigroup
provided to WorldCom and its executives were executed in good faith." She added
that Citigroup now separates research from investment banking and doesn't
allocate IPO shares to executives of public companies, saying Citigroup
continues to believe its congressional testimony describing Mr. Ebbers as a
"best customer." An attorney for Mr. Sullivan couldn't be reached for comment.
The
potential claims against KPMG represent the most pressing issue for MCI. The
report didn't have an exact tally of state taxes that may have been avoided, but
some estimates range from $100 million to $350 million. Fourteen states likely
will file a claim against the company if they don't reach settlement, said a
person familiar with the matter.
While
KPMG's strategy isn't uncommon among corporations with lots of units in
different states, the accounting firm offered an unusual twist: Under KPMG's
direction, WorldCom treated "foresight of top management" as an intangible asset
akin to patents or trademarks. Just as patents might be licensed, WorldCom
licensed its management's insights to its units, which then paid royalties to
the parent, deducting such payments as normal business expenses on state
income-tax returns. This lowered state taxes substantially, as the royalties
totaled more than $20 billion between 1998 to 2001. The report says that neither
KPMG nor WorldCom could adequately explain to the bankruptcy examiner why
"management foresight" should be treated as an intangible asset.
Continued in the article
I also still highly, highly, highly recommend the
WorldCom fraud video at
http://www.baylortv.com/streaming/001496/300kbps_str.asx
"Audit Quality and Auditor Reputation: Evidence from Japan," by
Douglas J. Skinner The University of Chicago - Booth School of Business and
Suraj Srinivasan , Harvard Business School, SSRN, Revised April 7, 2010 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1557231
Abstract:
We study events surrounding ChuoAoyama’s failed audit of Kanebo, a large
Japanese cosmetics company whose management engaged in a massive accounting
fraud. ChuoAoyama was PwC’s Japanese affiliate and one of Japan’s “Big Four”
audit firms. In May 2006, the Japanese Financial Services Agency (FSA)
suspended ChuoAoyama’s operations for two months as punishment for its role
in the accounting fraud at Kanebo. This action was unprecedented, and
followed a sequence of events that seriously damaged ChuoAoyama’s reputation
for audit quality. We use these events to provide evidence on the importance
of auditors’ reputation for audit quality in a setting where litigation
plays essentially no role. We find that ChuoAoyama’s audit clients switched
away from the firm as questions about its audit quality became more
pronounced but before it was clear that the firm would be wound up,
consistent with the importance of auditors’ reputation for delivering
quality.
Four PricewaterhouseCoopers auditors arrested in Tokyo
on criminal charges
Four certified public accountants at a Japanese
unit of the PricewaterhouseCoopers Group were arrested Tuesday for allegedly
collaborating with former executives at Kanebo Ltd. to falsify accounting
reports. The special investigation department of the Tokyo District Public
Prosecutor's Office also searched the offices of ChuoAoyama
PricewaterhouseCoopers in Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo, and the suspects' homes jointly
with the Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission, prosecutors said.
Pursuing criminal responsibility of certified public accountants in connection
with window-dressing is unusual, and the arrests have blemished the credibility
of those assigned auditing responsibilities, observers say. The accountants
under arrest were identified as Kuniaki Sato, 63, Seiichiro Tokumi, 58,
Kazutoshi Kanda, 55, and Kazuya Miyamura, 48.
The Japan Times, Sept. 14, 2005
This article was forwarded to me by Miklos A. Vasarhelyi
[miklosv@andromeda.rutgers.edu]
Here are some of Francine's posts on the Kanebo fraud:.
http://retheauditors.com/2008/08/21/pwc-s-non-announcement/
http://retheauditors.com/2007/08/01/old-pwc-japan-fades-like-lotus-blossom/
http://retheauditors.com/2007/02/21/pwcs-two-card-monte-game-in-japan-fails-update/
Bob Jensen’s threads on PwC are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#PwC
Bob Jensen's threads on auditor professionalism and independence are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Professionalism
Questions
What is the importance of the Stanford University logo on a research study that
is a political bomb shell?
What do accountancy pension experts think of this study?
"Pension Bomb Ticks Louder: California's public funds are assuming
unlikely rates of return," The Wall Street Journal, April 27, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303695604575181983634524348.html?mod=djemEditorialPage_t
The time-bomb that is public-pension obligations
keeps ticking louder and louder. Eventually someone will have to notice.
This month, Stanford's Institute for Economic
Policy Research released a study suggesting a more than $500 billion
unfunded liability for California's three biggest pension funds—Calpers,
Calstrs and the University of California Retirement System. The shortfall is
about six times the size of this year's California state budget and seven
times more than the outstanding voter-approved general obligations bonds.
The pension funds responsible for the time bombs
denounced the report. Calstrs CEO Jack Ehnes declared at a board meeting
that "most people would give [this study] a letter grade of 'F' for quality"
but "since it bears the brand of Stanford, it clearly ripples out there
quite a bit." He called its assumptions "faulty," its research "shoddy" and
its conclusions "political." Calpers chief Joseph Dear wrote in the San
Francisco Chronicle that the study is "fundamentally flawed" because it
"uses a controversial method that is out of step with governmental
accounting standards."
Those standards bear some scrutiny.
The Stanford study uses what's called a "risk-free"
4.14% discount rate, which is tied to 10-year Treasury bonds. The Government
Accounting Standards Board requires corporate pensions to use a risk-free
rate, but it allows public pension funds to discount pension liabilities at
their expected rate of return, which the pension funds determine. Calstrs
assumes a rate of return of 8%, Calpers 7.75% and the UC fund 7.5%. But the
CEO of the global investment management firm BlackRock Inc., Laurence Fink,
says Calpers would be lucky to earn 6% on its portfolio. A 5% return is more
realistic.
Last year the accounting board proposed that the
public pensions play by the same rules as corporate pensions. But unions for
the public employees balked because the changed standard would likely
require employees and employers to contribute more to the pensions,
especially in times when interest rates are low. For now, it appears the
public employee unions will prevail with the status quo accounting method.
Using these higher return rates for their pension
portfolios, the pension giants calculate a much smaller, but still
significant, $55 billion shortfall. Discounting liabilities at these higher
rates, however, ignores the probability that actual returns will fall below
expected levels and allows pension funds to paper over the magnitude of
their problem.
Instead, the Stanford researchers choose to use a
risk-free rate to calculate the unfunded liability because financial
economics says that the risk of the investment portfolio should match the
risk of pension liabilities. But public pensions carry no liability. They're
riskless. That's because public employees will receive their defined benefit
pensions regardless of the market's performance or the funds' investment
returns. Under California law, public pensions are a vested, contractual
right. What this means is that taxpayers are on the hook if the economy
falters or the pension portfolios don't perform as well as expected.
As David Crane, California Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger's adviser notes, this year's unfunded pension liability is
next year's budget cut—or tax hike. This year $5.5 billion was diverted from
other programs such as higher education and parks to cover the shortfall in
California's retiree pension and health-care benefits. The Governor's office
projects that, absent reform, this figure will balloon to over $15 billion
in the next 10 years.
What to do? The Stanford study suggests that at the
least the state needs to contribute to pensions at a steadier rate and not
shortchange the funds when markets are booming. It also recommends shifting
investments to more fixed-income assets to reduce risks.
But what the public-pension giants find "political"
and "controversial" is the study's recommendation to move away from a
defined benefits system to a 401(k)-style system for new hires. Public
employee unions oppose this because defined benefits plans are usually more
lavish, and someone else is on the hook to make up shortfalls. Calpers and
Calstrs are decrying the Stanford study because it has revealed exactly who
is on the hook for all of this unfunded obligation—California's taxpayers.
April 28, 2010 reply from Mark Eckman, Rockwell Collins
[mseckman@ROCKWELLCOLLINS.COM]
Every time one of these articles appears some
reporter is shocked, and they focus on pointing a finger at the accounting,
the actuarial science or the politics of pensions. But the story dies
because the issues are too complicated to present in a newspaper or
newscast. I'm not necessarily talking about corporate pensions. Yes, there
have probably been more than a couple of companies that have nudged the
expected rate of return to raise EPS and in turn the value of the executive
stock options, but public pensions are much more direct in how they are
abused.
Consider the three groups and their goals and you
begin to get the idea. The accountant wants all the number to flow together
in a neat package that can be explained in terms of cash flow, assets and
liabilities. The actuary wants a theoretical value based on assumptions, and
current investment conditions. But the politician wants only the power all
this money provides. Mention discount rates, duration of liabilities and
actuarial losses to confuse the real issue and focus on what is the defined
benefit from either plan and politically created public confusion takes over
any desire to understand in the masses. Add to that the localized nature of
the report, (Does anyone in Mississippi really care about paying for
California municipal pensions?) and that lack of desire becomes apathy.
Similar to the auto industry in the US, many public
pension plans have offered and provided more than the public ever
envisioned. In the public arena, pensions provide a license to steal on many
levels. The examples of these articles typically tell of a one term mayor
that receives a pension of 100% of salary as a pension, or the 20 year
municipal employee with a pension equal to 200% of their wages when they
retire at age 45. Need to settle a union dispute, bargain for more pension
benefits. Got a budget crunch - defer payment to the pension system. All of
the fuss about defined contributions comes from those that already have a
vested stake in the defined contribution system. Those are gross abuses of
the design to serve a political purpose rather than outright theft. But,
theft also does occur. My personal favorite is how the State of New Jersey
issued bonds to fund the pension, only to have the money stolen by the state
legislature. When problems becomes visible in the public pension arena,
those responsible have finished gorging at the trough, are not accountable,
and look back thanking the accounting rules, the actuarial standards and the
political control that made the theft legitimate.
Gee, sounds a lot like yesterday's Goldman Sachs
hearings...
Mark S. Eckman
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting for pensions are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#Pensions
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on July 10, 2009
Public Pensions Cook the Books
by Andrew G.
Biggs
The Wall Street Journal
Jul 06, 2009
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Advanced
Financial Accounting, Financial Accounting Standards Board, Governmental
Accounting, Market-Value Approach, Pension Accounting
SUMMARY: As
Mr. Biggs, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, puts it,
"public employee pension plans are plagued by overgenerous benefits, chronic
underfunding, and now trillion dollar stock-market losses. Based on their
preferred accounting methods...these plans are underfunded nationally by
around $310 billion. [But] the numbers are worse using market valuation
methods...which discount benefit liabilities at lower interest rates...."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: Introducing
the importance of interest rate assumptions, and the accounting itself, for
pension plans can be accomplished with this article.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
Summarize the accounting for pension plans, including the process for
determining pension liabilities, the funded status of a pension plan,
pension expense, the use of a discount rate, the use of an expected rate of
return. You may base your answer on the process used by corporations rather
than governmental entities.
2. (Advanced)
Based on the discussion in the article, what is the difference between
accounting for pension plans by U.S. corporations following FASB
requirements and governmental entities following GASB guidance?
3. (Introductory)
What did the administrators of the Montana Public Employees' Retirement
Board and the Montana Teachers' Retirement System include in their
advertisements to hire new actuaries?
4. (Advanced)
What is the concern with using the "expected return" on plan assets as the
rate to discount future benefits rather than using a low, risk free rate of
return for this calculation? In your answer, comment on the author's
statement that "future benefits are considered to be riskless" and the
impact that assessment should have on the choice of a discount rate.
5. (Advanced)
What is the response by public pension officers regarding differences
between their plans and those of corporate entities? How do they argue this
leads to differences in required accounting? Do you agree or disagree with
this position? Support your assessment.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"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.
Bob Jensen's threads about fraud in government are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#Lawmakers
Société Générale Tradung Fraud in France
Jérôme Kerviel's duties included arbitraging equity derivatives and equity
cash prices and commenced a crescendo of fake trades. This is an interesting
fraud case to study, but I doubt whether auditors themselves can be credited
with discovery of the fraud. It is a case of poor internal controls, but there
are all sorts of suggestions that the bank was actually using Kerviel to cover
its own massive losses. Kerviel did not personally profit from his fraud,
although he may have been anticipating a bonus due to his "profitable"
fake-trade arbitraging.
Société Générale ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soci%C3%A9t%C3%A9_G%C3%A9n%C3%A9rale
On January 24, 2008, the bank announced that a
single futures trader at the bank had fraudulently lost the bank €4.9billion
(an equivalent of $7.2billionUS), the largest such loss in history.
The company did not name the trader,
but other sources identified him as
Jérôme Kerviel, a
relatively junior
futures
trader who allegedly
orchestrated a series of bogus transactions that spiraled out of control
amid turbulent markets in 2007 and early 2008.
Partly due to the loss, that same day two
credit rating agencies reduced the bank's long
term debt ratings: from AA to AA- by Fitch; and from Aa1/B
to Aa2/B- by Moody's (B and B- indicate the bank's
financial strength ratings).
Executives said the trader acted alone and that he
may not have benefited directly from the fraudulent deals. The bank
announced it will be immediately seeking 5.5 billion euros in financing. On
the eve and afternoon of January 25, 2008, Police raided the Paris
headquarters of Société Générale and Kerviel's apartment in the western
suburb of
Neuilly, to seize his computer files. French
presidential aide Raymond Soubie stated that Kerviel dealt with $73.3
billion (more than the bank's
market capitalization of $52.6 billion). Three
union officials of Société Générale employees said Kerviel had family
problems.
On January 26, 2008, the Paris prosecutors'
office stated that Jerome Kerviel, 31, in Paris, "is not on the run. He will
be questioned at the appropriate time, as soon as the police have analysed
documents provided by Société Générale." Kerviel was placed under custody
but he can be detained for 24 hours (under French law, with 24 hour
extension upon prosecutors' request). Spiegel-Online stated that he may have
lost 2.8 billion dollars on 140,000 contracts earlier negotiated due to DAX
falling 600 points.
The alleged fraud was much larger than the
transactions by Nick Leeson that brought down
Barings Bank
Main article:
January 2008 Société Générale trading loss incident
Other notable trading losses
April 10 message from Jagdish Gangolly
[gangolly@GMAIL.COM]
Francine,
1. In France, accountants and
auditors are regulated by different ministries; accountants by Ministry of
Finance, and auditors by the Ministry of Justice. Only auditors can perform
statutory audits. All auditors are accountants, but not necessarily the
other way round.
I am not sure there is a
fundamental difference when it comes to apportionment of blame and so on,
except that the ominous and heavy hand of the state pervades in France; even
the codes assigned to the items in the national chart of accounts is
specified in French law (in the so called Accounting Plan).
2. I do not think the
accountants/auditors were involved in the Societe Generale case. The
unauthorised trades were detected and the positions closed all within two
days or so. Unfortunately us US taxpayers were left holding the bag in the
long run; we paid $11 billion for the credit default swaps to SG.
Jagdish
--
Jagdish S. Gangolly
Department of Informatics
College of Computing & Information
State University of New York at Albany
Harriman Campus, Building 7A, Suite 220
Albany, NY 12222
Phone: 518-956-8251, Fax: 518-956-8247
April 11, 2010 reply from Francine McKenna
[retheauditors@GMAIL.COM]
Societe Generale was not
resolved that quickly. In the MF Global "rogue trading scandal" the
positions were closed overnights because the trades were in wheat which is
exchange traded and cleared by the CME. Societe General trader was working
with primarily non-exchange traded derivatives. They did not see it right
away and counterparties who could complain about margin calls did not exist.
The banks internal audit group
was ignored (like AIG) and the auditors gave a bank that had poor internal
controls and the ability for any controls to be overridden easily, a clean
bill of health.
Thanks for further
clarification of the French approach. I did not know they had accountants
and auditors but that makes it seem even more like the barristers and
solicitors division...
http://retheauditors.com/2008/10/14/what-the-auditors-saw-an-update-on-societe-generale/
http://retheauditors.com/2008/03/03/mf-global-socgen-and-rogue-traders-dont-fall-for-the-simple-answers/
April 11, 2010 reply from Tom Selling
[tom.selling@GROVESITE.COM]
To refresh memories, the auditors (two Big Four
firms) of Société Générale were involved in the aftermath, by exploiting a
questionable loophole in IFRS. Société Générale chose to lump Kerviel's 2008
trading losses in 2007's income statement, thus netting the losses of the
later year with his gains of the previous year. There is no disputing that
the losses occurred in 2008, yet the company's position is that application
of specific IFRS rules (very simply, marking derivatives to market) would,
for reasons unstated, result in a failure of the financial statements to
present a "true and fair view."
See Floyd Norris’s column in NYT:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/07/business/07norris.html?ref=business
Best,
Tom
Bob Jensen's threads on brokerage trading frauds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Bob Jensen's threads on the history of derivatives financial instruments,
hedging, frauds, and related accounting standards ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds
Derivatives Financial Instruments History Paper
"Leveraging the British Railway Mania: Derivatives for the Individual Investor"
Campbell, Gareth (2010):
Leveraging the British Railway Mania: Derivatives for the Individual Investor.
Unpublished.
http://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/21822/
Abstract
During the British Railway Mania of the 1840s the promotion and
construction of new railways increased dramatically. These new projects
were generally financed by shares with uncalled capital, which allowed
investors to make payments on an installment basis over a period of
several years. There is evidence that these assets can be regarded as
futures or options, implying that investors were purchasing highly
leveraged derivatives. The leverage embedded in these assets multiplied
both the positive returns during the boom, and the negative returns
during the downturn. It also affected the payment schedule for investors
as little capital was required initially, but the subsequent ‘calls for
capital’ resulted in deleveraging.
Item
Type: |
MPRA
Paper |
Language: |
English |
Keywords: |
bubbles, financial crises, Railway Mania |
Subjects: |
G -
Financial Economics > G1 - General Financial Markets > G12 - Asset
Pricing; Trading volume; Bond Interest Rates
N -
Economic History > N2 - Financial Markets and Institutions > N23 -
Europe: Pre-1913
G -
Financial Economics > G1 - General Financial Markets > G13 -
Contingent Pricing; Futures Pricing
G -
Financial Economics > G0 - General > G01 - Financial Crises |
ID
Code: |
21822 |
Deposited By: |
Gareth
Campbell |
Deposited On: |
07. Apr
2010 03:49 |
Last
Modified: |
07. Apr
2010 09:28 |
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World, Sixth Edition, Effingham Wilson.
Tuck, H. (1848), The Railway
Shareholder's Manual; Or Practical Guide to All the Railways in the
World, Eighth Edition, Effingham Wilson. |
Bob Jensen's free tutorials and videos on accounting for derivative
financial instruments and hedging activities ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
"Top
stories (on CPA Trendlines) for accountants, CPAs, tax practitioners and finance
managers this week from
---
Click Here for the Week Ended April 10
http://cpatrendlines.com/2010/04/10/top-10-clicks-what-accountants-are-reading-this-week/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed:+cpatrendlines/tPxN+(CPA+Trendlines)
-
Twitter for Business: 149 Smart and Interesting People to Follow Today
http://ow.ly/1sj5q
-
Top Five Secrets of a CPA Start-Up http://ow.ly/1o6Qh
-
How do accountants define “success?” http://ow.ly/1eZUh
-
Wharton on Lehman’s Demise and Repo 105: No Accounting for Deception –
Knowledge@Wharton http://ow.ly/16X3ks
-
Lehman chicanery is tip of the iceberg | Prem Sikka http://ow.ly/16OFEO
-
It’s a Great Time to Be a Tax Man (or Woman) http://ow.ly/16XEpe
-
Ernst & Young Said to Face Inquiry Into Lehman Role – New York Times (blog) http://ow.ly/16ZQTo
-
‘Big four audit firms bending laws in India’ – India Business – Biz – The
Times of India http://ow.ly/16Zmps
-
Accounting Firms Help Overworked Employees Blow Off Steam in Tax Season http://ow.ly/16ZbIx
-
Ernst Confirms Client Letter to Address Lehman Accounting
http://ow.ly/16YMrl
Posted at April 10, 2010
Jerry Trites called my attention to the new "Babbage" blog from my
favorite magazine The Economist (I read it cover-to-cover every
week.) ---
http://www.economist.com/blogs/babbage?fsrc=nlw|pub|03_30_2010|publishers_newsletter
From Trites E-Business Blog on April 1, 2010 (no fooling) ---
http://www.zorba.ca/blog.html
Babbage - A New Blog
The Economist Magazine has launched a new blog
called Babbage.
Named after Charles Babbage, the father of the
computer, our new blog aims to understand the world through the technology
that now impacts our lives and reveals so much about us. Recent posts
investigate the role of geeks (they are now officially cool, running
companies and making millions), mourn the demise of the analog car, and ask
just who Apple's iPad is for. Answer: no one knows, not even Apple.
The blog is at this URL. It's worth bookmarking, as
the Economist is always on point.
Bob Jensen's threads on listservs, blogs, and social networks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/listservRoles.htm
Accountancy News Sites ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/accountingnews.htm
Risk-Based versus Detail-Testing Audits
Somebody asked me to comment on risk-based auditing. I dug up some old tidbits
that might be of interest on this listserv.
Bob Jensen's threads on risk-based auditing ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#RiskBasedAuditing
My favorite illustration comes
from the world’s worst audit in the history of the world --- Worldcom, As an
auditor, you know one of the most important departments for detailed testing is
the Purchasing Department. I was once told by an insider that for several years
running, Worldcom’s Purchasing Department never had contact with any Andersen
auditors. They were all doing analytical reviews of purchasing.
**********************
Note the 1995 Year Below ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm
The accountants at Arthur Andersen knew Enron was
a high-risk client who pushed them to do things they weren’t comfortable doing.
Testifying in court in May, partner James Hecker said he wrote a parody to that
effect in 1995.
The Financial Times of London reported: "To the tune of the Eagles hit song
‘Hotel California,’ Mr. Hecker wrote lines such as: ‘They livin’ it up at the
Hotel Cram-It-Down-Ya, When the [law]suits arrive, Bring your alibis.’"
Business Ethics
[BizEthics@lb.bcentral.com] on May 15, 2002
I don't know who wrote the following, but it was forwarded
by a former student who is at the local office of Arthur Andersen.
A take-off from the movies
"A Few Good Men" (Some phrases are in the original script and some are
altered.)
Tom Cruise: "Did you order
the shredding?"
Jack Nicholson: "You want
answers?"
Tom Cruise: "I think I'm
entitled."
Jack Nicholson: "You want
answers!!"
Tom Cruise: "I want the
truth!"
Jack Nicholson: "You can't
handle the truth!"
Jack Nicholson: "Son, we
live in a world that has financial statements. And those financial
statements have to be audited by men with calculators. Who's gonna do it?
You? You, Dept. of Justice? I have a greater responsibility than you can
possibly fathom. You weep for Enron and you curse Andersen. You have that
luxury. You have the luxury of not knowing what I know: that Enron's death,
while tragic, probably saved investors. And my existence, while grotesque
and incomprehensible to you, saves investors. You don't want the truth.
Because deep down, in places you don't talk about at parties, you want me on
that audit. You need me on that audit! We use words like materiality,
risk-based,
special purpose entity...we use these words as the backbone to a life spent
auditing something. You use 'em as a punchline. I have neither the time nor
the inclination to explain myself to a man who rises and sleeps under the
blanket of the very assurance I provide, then questions the manner in which
I provide it. I'd prefer you just said thank you and went on your way.
Otherwise, I suggest you pick up a pencil and start ticking. Either way, I
don't give a damn what you think you're entitled to!!"
Tom Cruise: "Did you order
the shredding???"
Jack Nicholson: "You're damn
right I did!"
**********************
"Behind Wave of Corporate Fraud: A Change in How Auditors Work: 'Risk Based'
Model Narrowed Focus of Their Procedures, Leaving Room for Trouble,' " by
Jonathan Weil, The Wall Street Journal, March 25, 2004, Page A1
The recent wave of corporate fraud is raising a harsh question about the
auditors who review and bless companies' financial results: How could they
have missed all the wrongdoing? One little-discussed answer: a big change in
the way audits are performed.
Consider what happened when James Lamphron and his team of Ernst & Young LLP
accountants sat down early last year to plan their audit of HealthSouth
Corp.'s 2002 financial statements. When they asked executives of the
Birmingham, Ala., hospital chain if they were aware of any significant
instances of fraud, the executives replied no. In their planning papers, the
auditors wrote that HealthSouth's system for generating financial data was
reliable, the company's executives were ethical, and that HealthSouth's
management had "designed an environment for success."
As a result, the auditors performed far fewer tests of the numbers on the
company's books than they would have at an audit client where they perceived
the risk of accounting fraud to be higher. That's standard practice under
the "risk-based audit" approach now used widely throughout the accounting
profession. Among the items the Ernst & Young auditors didn't examine at
all: additions of less than $5,000 to individual assets on the company's
ledger.
Those numbers are where HealthSouth executives hid a big part of a giant
fraud. This blind spot in the firm's auditing procedures is a key reason why
former HealthSouth executives, 15 of whom have pleaded guilty to fraud
charges, were able to overstate profits by $3 billion without anyone from
Ernst & Young noticing until March 2003, when federal agents began making
arrests.
A look at the risk-based approach also helps explain why investors continue
to be socked by accounting scandals, from WorldCom Inc. and Tyco
International Ltd. to Parmalat SpA, the Italian dairy company that admitted
faking $4.8 billion in cash. Just because an accounting firm says it has
audited a company's numbers doesn't mean it actually has checked them.
In a September 2003 speech, Daniel Goelzer, a member of the auditing
profession's new regulator, the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board,
called the risk-based approach one of the key factors "that seem to have
contributed to the erosion of trust in auditing." Faced with difficulty in
raising audit fees, Mr. Goelzer said, the major accounting firms during the
1990s began to stress cost controls. And they began to place greater
emphasis on planning the scope of their work based on auditors' judgments
about which clients are risky and which areas of a company's financial
reports are most prone to error or fraud.
Auditors still plow through "high risk" items, such as derivative financial
instruments or "related party" business dealings between a company and its
executives. But ostensibly "low risk" items -- such as cash on the balance
sheet or accounts that fluctuate little from year to year -- often get no
more than a cursory review, for years at a stretch. Instead, auditors rely
more heavily on what management tells them and the auditors' assessments of
a company's "internal controls."
Old and New
A 2001 brochure by KPMG LLP, which claims to have pioneered the risk-based
audit during the early 1990s, explained the difference between the old and
new ways. Under a traditional "bottom up" audit, "the auditor gains
assurance by examining all of the component parts of the financial
statements, ensuring that the transactions recorded are complete and
accurate." By comparison, under the "top down" risk-based audit methodology,
auditors focus "less on the details of individual transactions" and use
their knowledge of a company's business and organization "to identify risks
that could affect the financial statements and to target audit effort in
those areas."
So, for instance, if controls over a company's sales and customer IOUs are
perceived to be strong, the auditor might mail out only a limited number of
confirmation requests to companies that do business with the audit client at
the end of the year. Instead, the auditor would rely more on the numbers
spit out by the company's computers.
For inventory, the lower the perceived risk of errors or fraud, the less
frequently junior-level accountants might be dispatched on surprise visits
to a client's warehouses to oversee the company's procedures for counting
unsold goods. If cash and securities on the balance sheet are deemed low
risk, the auditor might mail out only a relative handful of confirmation
requests to a company's banks or brokerage firms.
In theory, the risk-based approach should work fine, if an auditor is good
at identifying the areas where misstatements are most likely to occur.
Proponents advocate the shift as a cost-efficient improvement. They also say
it forces auditors to pay needed attention to areas that are more subjective
or complex.
"The problem is that there's not a lot of evidence that auditors are very
good at assessing risk," says Charles Cullinan, an accounting professor at
Bryant College in Smithfield, R.I., and co-author of a 2002 study that
criticized the re-engineered audit process as ineffective at detecting
fraud. "If you assess risk as low, and it really isn't low, you really could
be missing the critical issues in the audit."
Auditors can't check all of a company's numbers, since that would make
audits too expensive, particularly in an age of sprawling multinationals.
The tools at auditors' disposal can't ensure the reliability of a company's
numbers with absolute certainty. And in many ways, they haven't changed much
over the modern industry's 160-year history.
Auditors scan the accounting records for inconsistencies. They ask people
questions. That can mean independently contacting a client's customers to
make sure they haven't struck undocumented side deals -- such as agreeing to
buy more products today in exchange for a salesperson's oral promises of
future discounts. They search for unrecorded liabilities by tracing cash
disbursements to make sure the obligations are recorded properly. They
examine invoices and the terms of sales contracts to check if a company is
recording revenue prematurely.
Auditors are supposed to avoid becoming predictable. Otherwise, a client's
management might figure out how to sneak things by them. It's also important
to sample-test tiny accounting entries, even as low as a couple of hundred
dollars. An old accounting trick is to fudge lots of tiny entries that
appear insignificant individually but materially distort a company's
financial statements when taken together.
Facing a crush of shareholder lawsuits over the accounting scandals of the
past four years, the Big Four accounting firms say they are pouring tens of
millions of dollars into improving their auditing techniques. KPMG's
investigative division has doubled to 280 its force of forensic specialists,
some hailing from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP auditors attend seminars run by former Central
Intelligence Agency operatives on how to spot deceitful managers by
scrutinizing body language and verbal cues. Role-playing exercises teach how
to stand up to a company's management.
But the firms aren't backing away from the concept of the risk-based audit
itself. "It would really be negligent" not to take a risk-based approach,
says Greg Weaver, head of Deloitte & Touche LLP's U.S. audit practice.
Auditors need to "understand the areas that are likely to be more subject to
error," he says. "Some might believe that if you cover those high-risk
areas, you could do less work in other areas." But, he adds, "I don't think
that's been a problem at Deloitte."
Mr. Lamphron, the Ernst & Young partner, and his firm blame HealthSouth's
former executives for deceiving them. Mr. Lamphron declined to comment for
this article. Testifying before a congressional subcommittee in November, he
said he had looked through his audit papers and "tried to find that one
string that, had we yanked it, would have unraveled this fraud. I know we
planned and conducted a solid audit. We asked the right questions. We sought
out the right documentation. Had we asked for additional documentation here
or asked another question there, I think that it would have generated
another false document and another lie."
The pioneers of the auditing industry had a more can-do spirit. In Britain
during the 1840s, William Deloitte, whose firm continues today as Deloitte &
Touche, made a name for himself by helping to unravel frauds at the Great
Eastern Steamship Co. and Great Northern Railway. A growing breed of
professionals such as William Cooper, whose name lives on in
PricewaterhouseCoopers, began advertising their services as an essential
means for rooting out fraud.
"The auditor who is able to detect fraud is -- other things being equal -- a
better man than the auditor who cannot," wrote influential British
accountant Lawrence Dicksee in his 1892 book, "Auditing," one of the
earliest on the subject.
But in the U.S., the notion of the auditor as detective never quite took
off. The Securities and Exchange Commission in the 1930s made audits
mandatory for public companies. The auditing profession faced its first real
public test in 1937, when an accounting scandal broke open at McKesson &
Robbins: More than 20% of the assets reported by the drug company were
fictitious inventory and customer IOUs. The auditors had been fooled by
forged documents.
The case triggered some reforms. Auditing standards began requiring that
auditors perform more substantive tests, such as contacting third parties to
confirm customer IOUs and physically inspecting clients' warehouses to check
inventories. However, the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants, the group that set auditing standards, repeatedly emphasized
the limitations on auditors' ability to detect fraud, fearing liability
exposure for its members.
By the 1970s, a new force emerged to erode audit quality: price competition.
For decades, the AICPA had barred auditors from publicly advertising their
services, making uninvited solicitations to rival firms' clients or
participating in competitive-bidding contests. The institute was forced to
lift those bans, however, when the federal government deemed them
anticompetitive and threatened to bring antitrust lawsuits.
Bidding wars ensued. The pressures to hold down hours on a job
"inadvertently discouraged auditors to look for" fraud, says Toby Bishop,
president of the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners, a professional
association.
Increasingly, audits became a commodity product. Flat-fee pricing became
common. The big accounting firms spent much of the 1980s and 1990s building
more-lucrative consulting operations. Many audit clients soon were paying
their independent accounting firms far more money for consulting than
auditing. The audit had become a mere foot in the door for the consultants.
Economic pressures also brought a wave of mergers, winnowing down the number
of accounting firms just as the number of publicly traded companies was
exploding and corporate financial statements were becoming more complex.
Even before the recent rash of accounting scandals, the shift away from
extensive line-by-line number crunching was drawing criticism. In an October
1999 speech, Lynn Turner, then the SEC's chief accountant, noted that more
than 80% of the agency's accounting-fraud cases from 1987 to 1997 involved
top executives. While the risk-based approach was focusing on information
systems and the employees who fed them, auditors really needed to expand
their scrutiny to include top executives, who with a few keystrokes could
override their companies' systems.
Looking back, the risk-based approach's flaws are on display at a variety of
accounting scandals, from WorldCom to Tyco to HealthSouth.
When WorldCom was a small, start-up telecommunications company, its outside
auditor, Arthur Andersen LLP, did things the old-fashioned way. It tested
the thousands of details of individual transactions, and it reviewed and
confirmed the items in WorldCom's general ledger, where the company's
accounting entries were first logged.
But as WorldCom grew, Andersen shifted toward what it called a risk-based
"business audit process." By 1998, it was incurring more costs to audit
WorldCom than it was billing, making up the difference with fees for
consulting and other work, according to an investigative report last year by
WorldCom's audit committee. In its 2000 audit proposal to WorldCom, Andersen
said it considered itself "a committed member of [WorldCom's] team" and saw
the company as a "flagship client and a crown jewel" of the firm.
Under the revised audit approach, Andersen used sophisticated software to
analyze WorldCom's financial statements. The auditors gathered for
brainstorming sessions, imagining ways WorldCom might cook its books. After
identifying areas of high risk, the auditors checked the adequacy of
internal controls in those areas by reviewing the company's procedures,
discussing them with some employees and performing sample tests to see if
the procedures were followed.
'Maximum Risk'
When questions arose, the auditors relied on the answers supplied by
management, even though their software had rated WorldCom a "maximum risk"
client, according to a January report by WorldCom's bankruptcy examiner,
former U.S. Attorney General Richard Thornburgh.
One question that Andersen auditors routinely asked WorldCom management was
whether they had made any "top side" adjustments -- meaning unusual
accounting entries in a company's general ledger that are recorded after the
books for a given quarter had closed. Each year, from 1999 through 2002,
WorldCom management told the auditors they hadn't. According to Mr.
Thornburgh's report, the auditors conducted no testing to corroborate if
that was true.
They did check to see if there were any major swings in the items on the
company's consolidated balance sheet. There weren't any, and from this, the
auditors concluded that follow-up procedures weren't necessary. Indeed,
WorldCom executives had manipulated its numbers so there wouldn't be any
unusual variances.
Had the auditors dug into specific journal entries -- the debits and credits
that are the initial entries of transactions or events into a company's
accounting systems -- they would have seen hundreds of huge entries of
suspiciously round numbers that had no supporting documentation.
The sole documentation for one $239 million journal entry, recorded after
the close of the 1999 fourth quarter, was a sticky note bearing the number
"$239,000,000," according to the WorldCom audit committee's report.
Sometimes the "top side" adjustments boosted earnings by reversing
liabilities. Other times they reclassified ordinary expenses as assets,
which delayed recognition of costs. Other unsupported journal entries
included one for precisely $334 million in July 2000, three weeks after the
second quarter's books were closed. Another was for exactly $560 million in
July 2001.
Andersen signed its last audit report for WorldCom in March 2002, saying the
numbers were clean. Three months later, WorldCom announced that top
executives, including its former chief financial officer, had improperly
classified billions of dollars of ordinary expenses as assets. The final
tally of fraudulent profits hit $10.6 billion. WorldCom filed for Chapter 11
reorganization in June 2002, marking the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history.
Now out of business, Andersen is appealing its June 2002 felony conviction
for obstruction of justice in connection with its botched audits of Enron
Corp.
"No matter what kind of audit you do, it is virtually impossible for an
auditor to detect purposeful fraud by management," says Patrick Dorton, an
Andersen spokesman. "And that's exactly what happened at WorldCom."
PricewaterhouseCoopers also fell prone to faulty risk assessments. In July,
the SEC forced Tyco, the industrial conglomerate, to restate its profits,
which it inflated by $1.15 billion, pretax, from 1998 to 2001. The next
month, the SEC barred the lead partner on the firm's Tyco audits from
auditing publicly registered companies. His alleged offense: fraudulently
representing to investors that his firm had conducted a proper audit. The
SEC in its complaint said that the auditor, Richard Scalzo, who settled
without admitting or denying the allegations, saw warning signs about top
Tyco executives' integrity but never expanded his team's audit procedures.
Mr. Scalzo declined to comment. A PricewaterhouseCoopers spokesman declined
to comment on the SEC's findings in the Tyco matter.
Like Tyco and WorldCom, HealthSouth grew mainly by buying other companies,
using its own shares as currency. So it needed to keep its stock price up.
To do that, the company admitted last year, it faked its profits.
In their audit-planning papers, Ernst & Young auditors noted HealthSouth
executives' "excessive interest" in maintaining or increasing its stock
price and earnings. Twice since the 1990s, the Justice Department had filed
Medicare-fraud suits against HealthSouth.
But none of that shook the Ernst & Young audit team's confidence in
management's integrity, members of the team later testified. And at little
more than $1 million annually, Ernst & Young's audits were fairly low cost.
The firm charged slightly less to audit HealthSouth's financial statements
than it did for one of its other services for HealthSouth: performing
janitorial inspections of the company's 1,800 health-care facilities. The
inspections, performed by junior-level accountants armed with 50-point
checklists, included checking to see that the toilets and ceilings were free
of stains, the magazine racks were neat and orderly, and the trash
receptacles all had liners.
Most of HealthSouth's fraud occurred in an account called "contractual
adjustments." This is an allowance on the income statement that estimates
the difference between the gross amount charged to a patient and the amount
that various insurers, including Medicare, will pay for a specific
treatment. The company manipulated the account to make net revenue and
bottom-line earnings look higher. But for every dollar of illicit revenue,
HealthSouth executives had to make a corresponding entry on the balance
sheet, where the company listed its assets and liabilities.
An Ernst & Young spokesman, Charlie Perkins, says the firm "performed
appropriate procedures" on the contractual-adjustment account.
At an April 2003 court hearing, Ernst & Young auditor William Curtis Miller
testified that his team mainly had performed "analytical type procedures" on
the contractual adjustments. These consisted of mathematical calculations to
see if the account had fluctuated sharply overall, which it hadn't. As for
the balance-sheet entries, prosecutors say HealthSouth executives knew the
auditors didn't look at increases of less than $5,000, a point Ernst & Young
acknowledges. So the executives broke up the entries into tiny pieces,
sprinkling them across lots of assets.
The company's ledger showed thousands of unusual journal entries that
reclassified everyday expenses -- such as gasoline and auto-service bills --
as assets. Had the auditors seen those items, one congresswoman noted at a
November hearing, they would have spotted that something was wrong. Mr.
Lamphron conceded her point.
March 27, 2004 reply from MacEwan Wright, Victoria University
[Mac.Wright@VU.EDU.AU]
-----Original Message-----
From:
Sent: Saturday, March 27, 2004 10:29 PM
Subject: Re: Attacks on Risk-Based Auditing
Dear Bob,
I wonder if this is not a case of throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
I mean the idea of risk based auditing is not in itself a bad idea, The
problem is that the idea of what constitutes risk is not properly
understood. As I interpret it - risk means probability of event multiplied
by cost of event. Risk as used in audit planning means probability of event.
It is obvious that the team did not do enough to properly evaluate the
inherent risk or more properly stated - the probability that management
wouold lie and cheat for profit.
It is am American attitude problem. An American executive posted to an
Australian company found the amount of work put into finding out how honest
potential employees were a waste of time - "just bond them and sack them and
claim the bond insurance if they cheat". Bonding is virtually unheard of in
Australia.
I feel that attitude may encourage fraud - the game is what can each party
get away with!
Sorry about the social implications.
Kind regards,
Mac Wright
March 27, 2004
reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Mac,
You are correct about the fact that risk-based auditing has led to game
playing. Somehow the HealthSouth executives figured out that the risk of
getting caught with fraudulent transactions under $6,000 each was nearly
zero under their auditor's (E&Y) risk-based model, so they looted the
company with transactions under $6,000 each.
I agree with you that some form of risk-based auditing should be utilized.
I think this was the case long before
KPMG formalized the concept. However, in addition
the fear of detailed
testing of small transactions must still remain high among client employees.
Auditors must invest more in unpredictable detailed testing up to a point
where the probability of being audited for even small transactions is
significant.
Probably the worst-case scenario that virtually eliminated fear of getting
caught was Andersen's notoriously defective audits of Worldcom. I'm told
(rumor mill) that an Andersen auditor had not even been seen in Worldcom's
purchasing department for a number of years. What is the first department an
auditor should investigate for fraud?
Bob Jensen
March 28, 2004 reply from Glen L Gray
[vcact00f@CSUN.EDU]
I know a treasurer of a major company. It used to bug him that the auditors
came by every year and take up her staff's time collecting & reconciling
bank and investment information. Then a few years ago, they just stopped
showing up in the treasury dept. I've always wondered what the auditor's
risk model was if suddenly cash and investments were no longer important.
Jensen Comment
My favorite illustration comes
from the world’s worst audit in the history of the world --- Worldcom, As an
auditor, you know one of the most important departments for detailed testing is
the Purchasing Department. I was once told by an insider that for several years
running, Worldcom’s Purchasing Department never had contact with any Andersen
auditors. They were all doing analytical reviews of purchasing.
April 9, 2010 reply from Robert Bruce Walker
[walkerrb@ACTRIX.CO.NZ]
Surely not the worst in history. The Equity Funding
scandal from the 1960s must still take pride of place. As I recall the
insurance company had, according to its records, insured all of the
population of the USA, or something like that. A problem caused by a lack of
analytical review. HIH was up there too. What was happening in that case is
so egregious, it is humourous (presumably unintentionally so). To make a
film of it Steve Martin would be cast in the role of the CEO, Bill Murray
the CFO and John Cleese the auditor.
April 9, 2010 reply from John Anderson
[jcanderson27@COMCAST.NET]
“Billion Dollar Bubble” is the movie about Equity
Funding.
After begin told a few years ago that the position
of the PCAOB was that the General Computer Controls could never lead to a
Material Weakness, I brought up Equity Funding!
I was told that incident occurred too long ago!
If I knew where the guy was today, I’d ask him if
Madoff is recent enough!
Best Regards!
John
John Anderson, CPA, CISA, CISM, CGEIT, CITP
Financial & IT Business Consultant 14 Tanglewood Road Boxford, MA 01921
jcanderson27@comcast.ne t
978-887-0623 Office 978-837-0092 Cell 978-887-3679 Fax
Jensen Comment
In recent years the PCAOB has had a tremendous impact on the writing of auditing
controls and in conducting inspections of actual audits and audit firms.
For example, the
PCAOB imposed a record fine of $1 million on Deloitte.
Here’s an
example of an inspection (in this case KPMG’s lack of detailed testing of
poisoned mortgages):
KPMG Should Be Tougher on Testing, PCAOB
Finds The Big Four audit firm was cited for not ramping up its tests of some
clients' assumptions and internal controls.
KPMG did not show enough
skepticism toward clients last year, according to the Public Company Accounting
Oversight Board, which cited the Big Four accounting firm for deficiencies
related to audits it performed on nine companies. The deficiencies were detailed
in an inspection report released this week by the PCAOB that covered KPMG's 2008
audit season. The shortcomings focused mostly on a lack of proper evidence
provided by KPMG to support its audit opinions on pension plans and
securities valuations.
But in some instances, the firm was cited for
weak testing of internal controls
over financial reporting and the application of generally accepted accounting
principles.
Marie Leone, CFO.com, June 19, 2009 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/13888653/c_2984368/?f=archives
In one instance, the audit lacked evidence
about whether the pension plans contained subprime assets. In another case, the
PCAOB noted, the audit firm didn't collect enough supporting material to gain an
understanding of how the trustee gauged the fair values of the assets when no
quoted market prices were available.
The PCAOB, which inspects the largest
public accounting firms on an annual basis, also found that three other KPMG
audits were shy an appropriate amount of internal controls testing related to
loan-loss allowances, securities valuations, and financing receivables.
In one audit, KPMG accepted its client's
data on non-performing loans without determining whether the information was
"supportable and appropriate." In another case, KPMG "failed to perform
sufficient audit procedures" with regard to the valuation of hard-to-price
financial instruments.
In still another case, the PCAOB found
that KPMG "failed to identify" that a client's revised accounting of an
outsourcing deal was not in compliance with GAAP because some of the deferred
costs failed to meet the definition of an asset - and the costs did not
represent a probably future economic benefit for the client.
Bob Jensen's threads on risk-based auditing ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#RiskBasedAuditing
"What Is the Auditor's Role in Finding Fraud? The PCAOB is trying to
figure out how to explain the answer to the public," by Sarah Johnson,
CFO.com, April 13, 2010 ---
In the standard audit reports that accompany
corporate financial statements, the auditor's responsibility for detecting
fraud is not discussed. Indeed, the word fraud isn't mentioned at all. Yet
whenever an accounting deception is uncovered, one of the first questions
investors ask is, "Where were the auditors?"
The auditing profession calls the discrepancy
between what investors expect and what auditors do an "expectations gap." In
recent years, audit firms have attempted to close the gap by educating the
public on their role. Last May, for instance, the Center for Audit Quality,
the trade group for audit firms, issued a brochure on public-company
accounting that said auditors consider potential areas of misconduct for a
particular company when deciding what areas of a business to review.
However, the CAQ cautioned, "because auditors do not examine every
transaction and event, there is no guarantee that all material
misstatements, whether caused by error or fraud, will be detected."
Now, the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board
(PCAOB) is also trying to close the expectations gap, based on a
recommendation made more than a year ago by a Treasury Department–appointed
advisory group that studied the auditing industry. The advisory group
suggested that the audit report — which is the sole communication between
auditors and investors on a particular company — explain the auditors' role
and their limitations in finding fraud.
Such a clarification had been demanded by observers
of the advisory group. "If the discovery of material errors and fraud is not
a major part of what the audit is about, it is not clear what value-added
service the auditor offers the investor and capital markets," wrote Andrew
Bailey, University of Illinois accountancy professor emeritus.
Officially, the PCAOB's rules require auditors to
provide "reasonable assurance" that the financial statements they've
reviewed "are free of material misstatement whether caused by error or
fraud." However, the language auditors use in their reports doesn't match
the text of the rules. In a meeting last week, the PCAOB's own advisory
group suggested that auditor reports be revised to add the phrase "whether
caused by error or fraud" to indicate that auditors do have some
responsibility for noticing fraud.
On their own, audit reports don't tell investors
how auditors reached their conclusions beyond stating the general scope they
worked under and that they followed generally accepted auditing standards.
Written in boilerplate language, the reports are instead short summaries
expressing that the financial statements under review fairly present the
company's operations and cash flows.
Many years ago, auditor reports included the term
certify as if to guarantee the reviewed financial statements with an
external stamp of approval. But that wording stopped being used in the
1930s, according to the PCAOB. Since then, the reports have been considered
to be opinions. However, the reports do "not adequately reflect the amount
of audit work and judgment" that go into drawing those opinions, the
Treasury advisory group concluded.
Some investors, such as those who responded to a
2008 CFA Institute survey, would like auditors to identify their clients'
key risks as well as highlight areas that could possibly have questionable
estimates made by management. "Investors want to know where the high risks
are," said Mary Hartman Morris, a California Public Employees' Retirement
System investment officer, at the PCAOB meeting.
However, except for its investor members, the
PCAOB's advisory group — which also includes finance executives,
accounting-firm representatives, and accounting professors — generally
refrained from recommending that audit reports move in a more detailed
direction. The group cited the complexity of amending existing auditing
standards, the possibility of increased liability, and the uncertainty over
whether doing so would provide true value to investors. The group also
largely passed over the idea of going beyond the current "pass/fail" model
for the audit report, such as by instituting a grading system.
For the most part, the advisory group discouraged
the regulator from changing auditors' responsibilities or adding new
procedures to their workloads. However, they seemed to agree that the public
needs a more realistic view of an auditor's job. For example, "some people
seem to confuse falsified documents, which the auditor can't authenticate,
and falsified accounting records, which auditors should authenticate," said
Douglas Carmichael, an accountancy professor at Ziklin School of Business at
Baruch College.
As the PCAOB contemplates a solution, the board may
need to think more about investors' wants rather than their expectations,
suggested PCAOB board member Charles Niemeier. "Investors are not satisfied
with the status quo," he said, "and I think that is justified, considering
the disclosure of financial problems tends to come after the fact."
In the meantime, the PCAOB is working on
establishing a financial-reporting fraud center for collecting information
on preventing and detecting fraud. The regulator published a job posting for
a director last month.
Bob Jensen's threads on auditing professionalism ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Professionalism
Are Auditing Firms Getting the Professionalism Message?
April 12, 2010 message from David Albrecht
[albrecht@PROFALBRECHT.COM]
Bob, in the same way that not all auditors always
act properly, it is just as fair to say that not all auditors always act
improperly. I think that almost all act improperly at some time, and almost
all act properly sometime. To say otherwise is to deny human nature.
As a critic of the current system, my position is
that (1) it doesn't take too many improper acting auditors crossing the line
for the system to be broken, and (2) if the line hasn't been crossed, it is
being tap danced on. Supporting my position is the recognition that
significant economic incentives exist for auditors to act improperly in
certain circumstances.
I recall reading Arthur Young's speech, "They still
don't get it." After the dot-com crash and AA's flameout, I was of a mindset
that indeed the line had been crossed by all of the Big 5, and probably GT.
Many were getting to that mind-set. I've even heard you say that SOX saved
the audit industry. If that's the case, then it must have been in danger.
I have written a couple of posts which you have
forwarded here, posts that say "they" really still don't get it. Coupled
with the reasonable question, "Where were the auditors?" during the past
crisis, and I'm ready to start looking for alternatives. Yes, a majority of
auditors do the right thing, more likely than not. However, the
business/auditor mindset is such that improper audit actions are
rationalized away. Although this rationalization doesn't occur to every
auditor every day, it does occur to a majority of auditors at least once in
a blue moon.
When you combine the risk-averse nature of
investors with their realization that the audit game is rigged, I think it a
loser's game to play.
Let me use an analogy. There's a husband and wife.
Both are at party, clothed, and in close proximity. A temptress appears and
suggests that the husband accompany her to a bedroom for some mind-boggling
(and illicit) sex. Does the wife fear that the husband will do the wrong
thing? Probably not. Even if the husband wants to he isn't going to leave in
full sight of his wife. The husband will probably do the right thing and
refuse the temptress, thereby acting in the best interest of the wife. Now,
shift some circumstances. The husband got tired, went up to bed, removed all
clothing and tries going to sleep. The temptress sneaks up to the bedroom,
removes her clothing, slides under the covers and placing a hand on the
husband's genitals, asks, "can we do it now?" In this case (with the wife
being somewhere else), will the wife fear that her husband will do the wrong
thing? Yeah! Husbands have the capacity to let their wives down at just the
wrong time.
It's the same way with auditors. Most of the time
investors don't fear that auditors will let them down. It's just that the
auditors tend to let the investors down at just the wrong time. The wrong
times destroy trust and break the system.
I think that major structural changes need to be
made. That the SEC has decided to change the game by destroying GAAP through
the convergence process to me means that the traditional auditor model is no
longer relevant. The traditional audit model might very well be salvageable
if only bright lines hadn't been replaced in so many instances by "company
judgment". As Tom Selling has written, who can audit that and produce
results that could be achieved with bright-line rules and auditors willing
to identify and speak up about non-compliance? If auditors are not willing
to speak up against non-compliance when there are bright lines,then what
value will auditors supply when there are no bright lines and little to
speak up about?
Besides, you have the comparison group wrong. If
you are comparing auditors acting in the public interest, then you need to
compare their performance to some other group acting in the public interest.
Pick your group. The SEC? broken or perilously close to it. Although
legislatively charged with establishing accounting standards, it views this
charge with such disdain that it is farming it out to a foreign group over
which it has no control and probably little influence over the long-run. Law
enforcement groups such as police? Oh my is there lots of corruption here.
DA's? There are lots of stories of innocents being sacrificed in order to
keep conviction rates up. Congress? The presidency? Give me a break.
If we remove auditable accounting standards, then I
say that the system is broken and we need to put the auditors out of our
misery.
David Albrecht
April 13, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi David,
One minor correction. It was Art Wyatt who
gave the “They Just Don’t Get it Speech” at an AAA Annual Meeting plenary
session ---
Art Wyatt admitted:
"ACCOUNTING PROFESSIONALISM: THEY JUST DON'T GET IT" ---
http://aaahq.org/AM2003/WyattSpeech.pdf
Art Ramer Wyatt has an
interesting and remarkable history as a University of Illinois Professor who
became the lead research partner for Andersen and, after Andersen imploded,
returned to the University of Illinois. Along the way he became a member of
the FASB, President of the AAA, and has many other honors bestowed upon him
as reported by the Accounting Hall of Fame ---
http://fisher.osu.edu/departments/accounting-and-mis/the-accounting-hall-of-fame/membership-in-hall/arthur-ramer-wyatt/
Art’s been one of the most
active and long-time volunteers on the auditing standards executive
committee of the AICPA.
I’ve shared a number of
speaking platforms with Art over the years. One thing I greatly admire about
Art over his entire professional career is the war he’s conducted on
off-balance-sheet financing. I’m certain in my own mind that Art was not
aware of the bad stuff taking place at Enron and Worldcom. He might’ve
worked more proactively to centralize some Andersen’s Executive Office
powers after the Waste Management scandal early on where Andersen got one of
its first real warning signals that the Chicago Executive Office should’ve
been more involved in Andersen’s largest audits. Auditing quality control at
Andersen was not the number one Executive Office priority. Apparently Art,
like Art’s Executive Office colleagues, did not “get it” at Andersen.
After Enron, when he
returned to teaching, Art “got it” whereas the practicing profession, in his
viewpoint, did not get it as well as it should be getting it.
I put Art on the same
pedestal as Denny Beresford in my personal accountancy heroes platform.
I agree with you, David,
about the many unpublicized competent and professional audits that take
place. And you can tell that I admire Francine’s informative blogs about the
audits that failed. I tracked the failures in my own archives for an even
longer period of time at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm
And I agree with Francine
that the PCAOB has been doing its job. But I do not agree with her
that “nobody is paying attention to the PCAOB.” This is easy to refute just
by talking with Deloitte’s former quality control partner Jim Fuehrmeyer
(now at Notre Dame) and another one of my heroes Paul Pacter with Deloitte
and the IASB. I think the insiders will tell you that they are paying
attention to the PCAOB.
From: Jim Fuehrmeyer [mailto:jfuehrme@nd.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, March 23, 2010 9:21 AM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: FW: Deloitte
Bob
I was the “Professional Practice Director”, that’s the audit quality control
guy, for Deloitte’s Chicago office for the six years prior to my retirement
in May 2007. I got to experience first-hand everything from the absorption
of AA’s people in Chicago to the advent of the PCAOB and its annual
inspection process the first few years. I don’t think most folks have any
appreciation for the very real impact the PCAOB has had on the profession.
The quality of documentation, the increased amount of partner involvement,
the added quality control processes, the expansion of detail testing – the
PCAOB has had a huge impact. Most folks also don’t have an appreciation for
the impact of 404 not only on the audit process but on corporate cultures as
well. As you pointed out a few messages ago, we do see all the failings in
the press, but what we don’t see is all the positives and all the
improvements.
Jim
Jensen Comment
As an auditor it would be reckless to ignore the PCAOB, especially in the
United States where the plaintiff’s tort lawyers are pouncing on every
weakness in an audit firm’s defense. Unlike Francine, I think that the PCAOB
has been doing its job and that the people that count have been
listening. That does not mean that the auditing firms have been pointing to
each others’ PCAOB audit deficiencies when recruiting our new graduates. But
I would not expect them to do this since the deficiencies arose on
particular audits relative many other audits that were not deficient or
caught being deficient.
In retrospect I think the
auditing firms are “getting it” just like I think worker/product safety is
truly a priority in the majority of our mining and manufacturing operations
in America. But there are failures, some of them criminal, that simply
reinforce the adage that no person and no organization is perfect all of the
time. Some are just worse than others at times, and we must strive to
minimize the imperfections.
Auditing is essential for
detection and prevention of many bad things in any economic system ranging
from communism to capitalism. Until people are perfect, we will need
auditors.
But like Art Wyatt and the
rest of the Executive Office folks at Andersen, perhaps the executive
offices of the surviving large international accounting firms are "not
getting it" as well as they should be "getting it." This may be what
Francine has in mind, although I think she's not been giving sufficient
credit where credit is due on the great audits taking place and the bad
stuff the mere act of auditing is preventing.
But like Art Wyatt and the
rest of the Executive Office folks at Enron, perhaps the executive offices
of the surviving large international accounting firms are "not getting it"
as well as they should be "getting it." This may be what Francine has in
mind, although I think she's not been giving sufficient credit where credit
is due on the great audits taking place and the bad stuff the mere act of
auditing is preventing.
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on auditing professionalism and
independence are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Professionalism
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on April 9, 2010
AT&T Fights Pension Suit
by: Ellen
E. Schultz
Apr 07, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Contingent
Liabilities, Legal Liability, Pension Accounting
SUMMARY: AT&T
changed its defined benefit pension plan to a cash balance plan in 1998. A
long-running case by 24,000 current and former employees seeks one of the
largest potential claims in pension litigation based on these plaintiffs'
argument that AT&T discriminated against older workers upon implementing
this change. The focus of the accounting question at hand now is not pension
accounting but disclosure of the contingent liability, or lack thereof, by
AT&T. "Last May, the Securities and Exchange Commission asked AT&T why it
hadn't disclosed its potential exposure in the pension case." Legal papers
filed Monday in federal court in Newark, N.J., include the first publicly
disclosed estimate for potential damages.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: Accounting
and disclosure requirements for contingent liabilities, in this case a
lawsuit related to pension plan benefits, can be covered with this article.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
What is a defined benefit pension plan? What is a cash balance plan?
2. (Introductory)
According to the article, what improper action does the lawsuit claim that
AT&T committed against current and former employees when it changed to a
cash balance pension plan?
3. (Advanced)
Even if AT&T loses this case, the company "...would face no cash impact for
the $2.3 billion pension portion of the claim" according to the article.
Does this mean that there would be no financial statement impact from this
lawsuit? Explain.
4. (Introductory)
How did AT&T respond when the SEC "...asked why it hadn't disclosed its
potential exposure in the pension case"?
5. (Advanced)
What are the requirements in accounting for and disclosure of contingent
liabilities from lawsuits? What do you think must be the basis for AT&T's
response to the SEC? In your answer, comment on the fact that Monday's legal
filing included "the first publicly disclosed estimate for potential
damages."
6. (Advanced)
Access AT&T's annual report for 2009 filed with the SEC on 2/25/2010. The
interactive form of the filing is available at
http://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/viewer?action=view&cik=732717&accession_number=0000732717-10-000013
Alternatively, click on the live link to AT&T in the online article, click
on SEC Filings on the left hand side of the page, scroll to the filing on
2/25/2010 (at least one page back) and click on the interactive data link.
Review the disclosures under Note 11 and Note 15. Does your review confirm
your answer to the question above? Explain.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"AT&T Fights Pension Suit," by: Ellen E. Schultz, The Wall Street Journal,
April 6, 2010 ---
http://www.wsjsmartkit.com/wsj_redirect.asp?key=AC20100408-01&mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
AT&T Inc. is seeking to dismiss a long-running
pension case alleging age discrimination that seeks $2.3 billion in damages,
according to documents filed this week in a federal court.
The suit alleges a 1998 pension change effectively
froze the pensions of 40,000 older management employees at AT&T, in some
cases for years, but not those of younger employees. AT&T said the pension
didn't discriminate against older workers.
"We believe the conversion to our cash balance plan
was appropriate and in accordance with all legal obligations," said AT&T
spokesman Mark Siegel. "We believe our filing speaks for itself in
explaining why we have no additional liabilities to these retirees."
The suit, filed in 1998, has received little
attention despite the number of plaintiffs—24,000 current and former
employees—and the size of the potential damages, one of the largest ever in
pension litigation. Legal papers filed Monday in federal court in Newark,
N.J., include the first publicly disclosed estimate for potential damages.
The $2.3 billion potential claim dwarfs the
well-publicized $1 billion noncash charge the company will take to reflect
the recent loss of its deductions for health-care subsidies it receives from
the government.
Last May, the Securities and Exchange Commission
asked AT&T why it hadn't disclosed its potential exposure in the pension
case. AT&T responded that it didn't think the case met the reporting
threshold for disclosure, SEC filings show.
Pension cases typically are decided by judges, and
there are no punitive damages. But because this case includes an
age-discrimination claim, under federal law the judge could send it to a
jury trial. If a jury found that the company willfully discriminated against
older workers, it could award punitive damages that would double the size of
the claim to $4.6 billion.
However, if the case went to trial and the company
lost, it would face no cash impact for the $2.3 billion pension portion of
the claim. That is because the additional benefits to current and former
management employees would be paid from the pension plan, which remains
well-funded. In its motion for dismissal, AT&T is asking the judge to throw
out the case without a jury trial.
AT&T was one of dozens of big companies including
International Business Machines Corp. and Xerox Corp. that changed their
traditional pensions to "cash-balance" plans in the 1990s. The change saved
companies money because instead of calculating benefits by multiplying years
of service and salary—which produces rapid pension growth in later years—the
companies converted the pension to a cash-out value. This "balance" would
then grow at a flat annual rate, say 4% of pay.
Among the plaintiffs in the case is Gerald Smit. In
1997, Mr. Smit was 47 and his pension was valued at $1,985 a month when he
reached age 55, according to papers filed in the case. He continued to work
at AT&T for eight more years, and when he retired in 2004, his pension was
still worth $1,985 a month, according to court documents.
Minutes of a 1997 meeting of AT&T's pension
consultants, included in court documents, noted that "employees in 40s could
lose, [and] have to wait 10 years for benefits." Company spreadsheets, which
were among the exhibits submitted by plaintiffs, found that many would wait
three to eight years to begin building a benefit. By contrast, the benefit
would build "immediately for younger employees," according to the meeting
minutes.
AT&T doesn't dispute there were long waiting
periods for benefits to build. But it said in court filings that the older
workers' pensions were affected because the former pension plan included a
formula that boosted benefit growth as employees approached age 55. AT&T
calls this subsidy a "disparity," according to papers filed in the case,
which "benefits older workers."
Many companies established opening "account
balances" for older employees that were lower than the cash-out amounts they
had earned. For example, a worker might have earned a pension that, if
converted to a lump sum, would be worth $150,000. But its opening account
balance would be set at $100,000. The balance would be effectively frozen
until the worker received enough annual credits over the years to restore it
to $150,000. Only then would the pension begin to increase again
The 2006 Pension Protection Act banned companies
from freezing the benefits of older employees when it changes the formula, a
practice called "wearaway." Not all cash-balance plans have wearaway; the
plan covering AT&T union workers is among those that do not.
Documents filed by the plaintiffs' experts estimate
that the average loss to people over age 45 was $65,000. SEC filings show
that under the 2004 severance plan for senior officers, the officers
retained the right to "participate and recover damages or other relief in
the case." The company spokesman declined to comment.
"Pension Funding Is Up, but Shortfalls Remain Companies upped their
pension contributions in 2009, but many plans face trouble ahead," by Alix
Stuart - CFO.com, April 8, 2010 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14489734/c_14490044?f=home_todayinfinance
Most of the nation's largest pension plans kept
themselves out of trouble last year, according to a recent analysis of 10-K
filings by Towers Watson, but many still face substantial underfunding after
the 2008 market meltdown.
According to the analysis, aggregate pension
contributions for the 100 largest plans nearly doubled last year, from $15.6
billion in 2008 to $30.8 billion in 2009. Those contributions, combined with
an average 18% return on plan investments, helped push those plans to an
average funding ratio of 81% at the end of last year, compared with 75% at
year-end 2008. Only 17% of plan sponsors had funding ratios below 70%,
compared with 41% the year earlier.
"It looks like plan sponsors put in more than the
minimum contributions, probably enough to avoid the benefit restriction
provisions in the Pension Protection Act of 2006," notes Mark Ruloff,
director of asset allocation for Towers Watson. Under the PPA, companies
start to face restrictions on their funds, such as constraints on the
ability to offer retirees lump-sum payouts, if their funding level dips
below 80%. If their funding level falls below 60%, companies must stop
accruing new benefits for the participants until the level improves.
Liabilities also increased in 2009, due to lower
discount rates used to calculate them. (The average discount rate last year
was 5.92%, compared with 6.38% in 2008.) At year-end the largest plans had
an aggregate deficit of $183.5 billion, compared with a deficit of $209.6
billion in 2008.
Companies report that they expect to reduce their
pension contributions by about one-third in 2010, according to the Towers
Watson research, with a projected $19.6 billion earmarked for the plans.
However, PPA requirements that plans be 100% funded will likely mean much
higher cash outlays in 2011 and 2012.
"We're looking at a doubling, tripling, or even
quadrupling of contributions from already-high levels going into 2011 and
2012, absent something miraculous happening in the market," says Alan
Glickstein, senior consultant at Towers Watson.
Regulatory relief in the form of an extension to
the seven years that companies currently have to make up funding shortfalls
would also be a potential help. The Senate passed a bill earlier this month
that would allow employers two options along those lines, but the House of
Representatives has yet to act on it. Extending the time frame "would
probably still result in higher contributions than in the past, but they
would not rise as dramatically as they would otherwise," says Glickstein.
An analysis of the asset mix of the largest pension
sponsors showed only a slight shift away from equities, with the average
target equity allocation at 52.8% for 2010, down from 55.1% in 2009. That's
reflective of many large sponsors having already moved to a liability-driven
strategy, in which assets are more heavily focused on fixed-income vehicles.
Ruloff says he expects the trend away from equities
toward fixed income to continue, as more companies freeze or close their
plans and have less of a need for "excess returns to cover growing
accruals." He is also urging companies to take a proactive approach to
likely changes in pension-accounting rules that would increase the level of
equity-related volatility that needs to be reflected in plan valuations.
"The pace of change may be slower than what we've
seen in recent years," he says, "but the shift away from equities could move
at 5% a year for many years in the future."
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting for pensions and post-retirement
beneftits ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#Pensions
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting for intangibles and contingencies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#TheoryDisputes
A Teaching Case from the Commerce Secretary of the United States
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on April 9, 2010
Don't Believe the Writedown
Hype
by: Gary
Locke
Apr 01, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Advanced
Financial Accounting, Income Tax, Medicare, Tax Deferrals
SUMMARY: Mr.
Locke is the commerce secretary of the United States. In this opinion page
piece, he expresses support for the recently-passed health care reform act
as being "focused on three goals: protecting Americans' choice of doctors
and health plans, assuring quality and affordable health care for all
Americans, and reducing costs for families and businesses...[Mr. Locke notes
that], in recent days, critics have seized on a minor provision in the law
to suggest it's already increasing health-care costs for businesses. [He
argues that] a fair reading of this provision suggests that its actual
impact is quite modest, and far outweighed by the benefits for large
businesses..." stemming from the three benefits described above. Mr. Locke
focuses on large businesses because those are the firms reporting charges to
write off deferred tax assets in the first quarter of 2010 stemming from a
change instituted in the new law. The change eliminates deductibility of
prescription drug benefits provided to retirees if those benefits have been
subsidized by the federal government. "When the Medicare Part D prescription
drug bill passed in 2003, businesses were given a double subsidy to help
cover the cost of providing prescription drug coverage to their retirees.
The government picked up 28% of the cost of their retiree prescription drug
plans, and businesses were allowed to both exclude that 28% subsidy from
their income and at the same time deduct that subsidy from their income for
tax purposes... [The WSJ] reported...that while one company calculated a
$100 million hit to its first-quarter earnings, its actual cost after taxes
and subsidies, beginning in 2013, was closer to $7 million a year, or less
than 1% of its profits last year." That final reference is to AT&T's
write-off of deferred tax assets as described in the related article.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article is useful to discuss accounting for income taxes, deferred tax
assets, the lack of time value of money consideration in accounting for
income taxes, and the impact of a change in estimate, particularly on
quarterly reporting.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
What is a deferred tax asset? When is such an asset recorded? When is its
value reduced by an allowance?
2. (Introductory)
What health care cost deduction resulted in companies such as AT&T,
Caterpillar, Inc., 3M Co. and others recording deferred tax assets? Explain
your understanding of this particular example of a deferred tax asset.
3. (Introductory)
What change in law was enacted with the health care reform, which required
the companies to write off these deferred tax assets?
4. (Advanced)
Why must companies record the entire amount of the write-off of deferred tax
assets in one quarter? In your answer, cite authoritative accounting
literature contained in the FASB codification which establishes these
requirements.
5. (Advanced)
Do you think that the amount of the Q1 2010 write-offs accurately measures
potential cost increases to U.S. businesses stemming from the health care
reform legislation? Support your answer.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
AT&T Joins in Health Charges
by David Reilly, Ellen E. Schultz and Ron Winslow
Mar 27, 2010
Page: A1
"Don't Believe the Writedown Hype," by Gary Locke, The Wall Street Journal,
April 1, 2010 ---
http://www.wsjsmartkit.com/wsj_redirect.asp?key=AC20100408-00&mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
President Obama began his campaign to reform the
American health-care system focused on three goals: protecting Americans'
choice of doctors and health plans, assuring quality and affordable health
care for all Americans, and reducing costs for families and businesses.
The new comprehensive health-care legislation meets
these goals, and will significantly benefit American businesses by slowing
and eventually reversing the tide of crippling premium increases washing
over our nation's employers.
These cost savings are real. They will grow over
time. And they will make U.S. businesses more competitive.
First, by drastically cutting the number of
uninsured, this law reduces the hidden tax of about $1,000 for family
coverage that those with insurance pay to cover the cost of the uninsured
who rely on emergency rooms for care.
Second, the law invests $5 billion in a new
reinsurance program for early retirees starting this year. For employers
paying for their retirees between ages 55-64, this provision will directly
reduce family premiums by as much as $1,200.
Third, the new law contains numerous reforms that a
2009 study by the Business Roundtable—an association of CEOs of leading U.S.
companies—says will help slow the growth rate of health costs over time.
It places a fee on insurance companies' most
expensive plans that independent experts agree will put downward pressure on
the long-term growth of health costs.
It empowers an Independent Payment Advisory Board
to keep Medicare cost growth in check and promote payment and health
delivery system reforms. And it realigns incentives to reward medical
providers for the value, not the volume, of their care.
Based on the midrange estimates of the nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office (CBO), the present value benefit of the premium
reductions from these reforms over the next three decades is in excess of
$200 billion.
Add these system-wide reforms with measures like
the $40 billion in tax credits that will be available to about four million
small businesses over the next decade to help cover the cost of employee
health coverage, and what you have is a law that is unquestionably
pro-business and pro-jobs.
However, in recent days, critics have seized on a
minor provision in the law to suggest it's already increasing health-care
costs for businesses. A fair reading of this provision suggests that its
actual impact is quite modest, and far outweighed by the benefits for large
businesses outlined above.
Let's explain how this started. When the Medicare
Part D prescription drug bill passed in 2003, businesses were given a double
subsidy to help cover the cost of providing prescription drug coverage to
their retirees. The government picked up 28% of the cost of their retiree
prescription drug plans, and businesses were allowed to both exclude that
28% subsidy from their income and at the same time deduct that subsidy from
their income for tax purposes.
In 2013, that changes. Under the new law,
businesses will still get the same 28% subsidy, and it will still be tax
free. They just don't get to deduct the subsidy.
Seems reasonable, right? This is how virtually
every other federal subsidy for businesses and individuals is treated by the
IRS. Indeed, Donald Marron, acting CBO director for President George W.
Bush, put it this way: "[A]s the Joint Committee on Taxation recently noted,
that treatment is highly unusual. In my view, it's right that the recent
health legislation closed that loophole."
This change has garnered recent headlines because,
to comply with accounting laws, companies affected by the provision have
taken a one-time charge reflecting the loss of future tax deductions over
the decades-long duration of their retiree health-care plans. Critics have
seized on this accounting adjustment to suggest these costs—as much as $1
billion in one company's case—are going to place immediate and substantial
cost burdens on America's businesses.
This is disingenuous.
The actual cash flow impact of these provisions
begins in 2013, and is only a tiny fraction of the accounting charge-offs.
This newspaper reported last Friday that while one
company calculated a $100 million hit to its first-quarter earnings, its
actual cost after taxes and subsidies, beginning in 2013, was closer to $7
million a year, or less than 1% of its profits last year.
Credit Suisse's response to the tax controversy
was: "don't overreact to the hit on earnings." Morgan Stanley referred to it
as "noise" that would have "no impact whatsoever" on their view of this
earnings cycle. And UBS projected that the impact in virtually all cases
represented less than 1% of market capitalization for affected companies.
When you look past the hype and the overheated
rhetoric, the benefits of the health reforms for America's businesses large
and small far outweigh the impact of this small tax provision.
And while critics have rushed to highlight this
small accounting measure, they conveniently leave out the one fact on which
every serious health-care analyst agrees: The status quo was completely
unsustainable for American businesses.
The Business Roundtable study said that if current
cost trends continued through 2019, the total cost of employer and employee
premiums and out-of-pocket expenses would be 166% higher than it is today.
That would either force companies to decrease or
eliminate employee health-insurance benefits or subject them to
back-breaking costs that would make them less competitive in the global
marketplace.
The bill President Obama signed into law last week
helps avoid each of these equally unappealing options.
I understand that in these difficult economic
times, the potential for any additional expense is not welcomed by American
businesses. But in the long run, the health insurance reform law promises to
cut health-care costs for U.S. businesses, not expand them.
That's good for them. That's good for their
employees. That's good for America.
Mr. Locke is the commerce secretary of the United States.
Bob Jensen's threads on health care are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/health.htm
The Writedowns Revisited:
Commerce Secretary Gary Locke owes CEOs an apology
Rep. Waxman has
since canceled those hearings with much less dudgeon or media fanfare, and the
report from his own staffers explains his retreat. "The companies acted properly
and in accordance with accounting standards in submitting filings to the SEC in
March and April," they write. "These one-time charges were required by
applicable accounting rules." This may stand as the first time in history that
Mr. Waxman has admitted a mistake.
Scroll Down for Update on April 29
Ketz Me If You Can
Another One from That Ketz Guy (this time questioning the reasoning of our
Secretary of Commerce)
"Does Gary Locke Support Accounting Lies?" by: J. Edward Ketz,
SmartPros,
April 2010 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x69221.xml
I just don't understand the
current administration. You would think that after the last decade of
financial thievery and accounting mischief, the Obama administration would
not tolerate a return to such prevarications. But if one listens to his
Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke, that might not be the case.
Mr. Locke wrote an
op-ed (“Don’t
Believe the Writedown Hype”) that appeared in the
Wall Street Journal April 1, 2010. At least the date of publication was
appropriate.
He repeats the political
dogma that the recently passed healthcare act will reduce the number of
uninsured, it will invest $5 billion in a reinsurance program, it contains a
number of reforms that will slow the rate of increase in health care costs,
and it creates a board that will restrain Medicare costs. Locke then
asserts that these changes will benefit corporations as well as individuals.
While I believe these
assertions exaggerate the benefits of the bill and ignore its dysfunctional
components, for the sake of argument, let’s assume that Gary Locke is
correct. So what? Any cost reductions will be accounted for in the future
when the business enterprise actually enjoys cost reductions. Accountants
don’t dream of fewer expenses and then book them. We wait for history to
prove their validity and to correct any errors.
Locke then criticizes
commentators for focusing on a “minor” provision in the legislation that
increases health-care costs. He then asserts without proof that the actual
impact will be “quite modest.” What puffery!
What motivated this
discussion was various 8-Ks issued by corporate America. On March 24, AT&T
informed investors that it would take a charge of about $1 billion.
Specifically, it stated:
Included among the major
provisions of the law is a change in the tax treatment of the Medicare Part
D subsidy. AT&T… intends to take a non-cash charge of approximately $1
billion in the first quarter of 2010 to reflect the impact of this change.
As a result of this legislation, including the additional tax burden, AT&T
will be evaluating prospective changes to the active and retiree health care
benefits offered by the company.
I find it interesting that
Locke calls this a “minor” provision but AT&T calls it “major” because it
involves an expense of $1 billion. I guess it depends on one’s
perspective. To AT&T’s investors, $1 billion is probably significant as it
reduces quarterly earnings by one-third. But to the government which
creates budget deficits of trillions of dollars per year, maybe $1 billion
is immaterial.
I would think that the
administration would applaud the honesty by AT&T’s managers. FAS 106
specifies the accounting for other postemployment benefits (OPEBs),
including their tax effects. As this legislation removes a tax subsidy from
corporations (I’ll leave it to others to debate the merits of this part of
the bill), the firms do indeed incur higher healthcare costs. And these
costs are immediate and persistent. (There also is interaction with FAS
109, accounting for deferred taxes, but that need not concern us.)
The investment community
needs honesty and I hope the administration does too. Accordingly, Mr.
Locke should not be so critical of the immediate recognition of additional
costs by corporations which are real and immediate and should be recognized
in income statements. And he should not be pushy for the recognition of
cost reductions until they materialize—if they in fact materialize.
Other companies are also
issuing 8-Ks and announcing similar writedowns: Caterpillar, $100 million;
Deere, $150 million; and Boeing, $150 million. Some estimate that when all
is said and done, such writedowns will amount to $15 billion or so.
Additionally, some corporations are doubtless considering whether to reduce
the OPEBs they offer employees. I would not characterize these effects as
“quite modest.”
On March 26, Henry Waxman
announced that he would require corporate executives to appear before his
committee on April 21 to determine whether they are playing politics through
these 8-Ks. Unless Mr. Locke supports accounting lies, he too should make
an appearance and explain to Mr. Waxman how investors and creditors
appreciate more honesty and transparency in the accounting reports. Of
course, it is possible that some members of Congress would prefer accounting
shenanigans if they don’t reveal some of the costs of the recently passed
legislation.
Gary Locke admonishes
readers to “look past the hype and the overheated rhetoric.” I suggest he
read his own sentence. I also suggest he include investors and creditors in
the business community, for without their capital, the business of America
ceases to operate. As Commerce Secretary, he should applaud the recent 8-Ks
that managers are releasing. The information is invaluable to investors and
creditors.
Rep. Waxman has
since canceled those hearings with much less dudgeon or media fanfare, and the
report from his own staffers explains his retreat. "The companies acted properly
and in accordance with accounting standards in submitting filings to the SEC in
March and April," they write. "These one-time charges were required by
applicable accounting rules." This may stand as the first time in history that
Mr. Waxman has admitted a mistake.
"The Writedowns Revisited: Gary Locke owes CEOs an apology," The Wall Street
Journal, April 29, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704423504575212422971814134.html#mod=djemEditorialPage_t
Another day, another never-mind ObamaCare moment.
Earlier this week, House Democrats concluded that the deluge of corporate
writedowns—amounting to about $3.4 billion so far—were in fact the result of
ObamaCare, not the nefarious CEO conspiracy that the White House repeatedly
cited when it was embarrassed soon after the bill's passage.
Commerce Secretary Gary Locke rushed to attack
AT&T, Verizon, Caterpillar and many others reporting losses from a tax
increase on retiree drug benefits as "premature and irresponsible." He later
took to these pages to denounce those who noticed these writedowns as
"disingenuous" and peddling "overheated rhetoric."
Meanwhile, House baron Henry Waxman vowed to summon
the offending executives to his committee because their actions "appear to
conflict with independent analyses, which show the new law will expand
coverage and bring down costs."
Mr. Waxman has since canceled those hearings with
much less dudgeon or media fanfare, and the report from his own staffers
explains his retreat. "The companies acted properly and in accordance with
accounting standards in submitting filings to the SEC in March and April,"
they write. "These one-time charges were required by applicable accounting
rules." This may stand as the first time in history that Mr. Waxman has
admitted a mistake.
The larger question is what motivated the White
House to unleash this assault. Democrats were amply warned about the
destructive consequences of these tax changes, and if they really thought
these companies were acting out of political motives, then they didn't
understand what was in their own bill. Or at least that's one possibility.
More likely is that they did know and were simply
trying to intimidate business and mislead the public in the early days of
what was supposed to be the rapturous response to ObamaCare's passage.
Instead, the public has turned even more negative on the bill as Americans
discover that it won't control costs but will raise insurance premiums and
taxes. No wonder Democrats want to change the subject to immigration and
Goldman Sachs.
Bob Jensen's threads on health care are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/health.htm
It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to
entertain a thought without accepting it.
Aristotle
"Science Warriors' Ego Trips," by Carlin Romano, Chronicle of Higher
Education's The Chronicle Review, April 25, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/article/Science-Warriors-Ego-Trips/65186/
Standing up for science excites some intellectuals
the way beautiful actresses arouse Warren Beatty, or career liberals boil
the blood of Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh. It's visceral. The thinker of
this ilk looks in the mirror and sees Galileo bravely muttering "Eppure si
muove!" ("And yet, it moves!") while Vatican guards drag him away. Sometimes
the hero in the reflection is Voltaire sticking it to the clerics, or Darwin
triumphing against both Church and Church-going wife. A brave champion of
beleaguered science in the modern age of pseudoscience, this Ayn Rand
protagonist sarcastically derides the benighted irrationalists and glows
with a self-anointed superiority. Who wouldn't want to feel that sense of
power and rightness?
You hear the voice regularly—along with far more
sensible stuff—in the latest of a now common genre of science patriotism,
Nonsense on Stilts: How to Tell Science From Bunk (University of Chicago
Press), by Massimo Pigliucci, a philosophy professor at the City University
of New York. Like such not-so-distant books as Idiot America, by Charles P.
Pierce (Doubleday, 2009), The Age of American Unreason, by Susan Jacoby
(Pantheon, 2008), and Denialism, by Michael Specter (Penguin Press, 2009),
it mixes eminent common sense and frequent good reporting with a cocksure
hubris utterly inappropriate to the practice it apotheosizes.
According to Pigliucci, both Freudian
psychoanalysis and Marxist theory of history "are too broad, too flexible
with regard to observations, to actually tell us anything interesting."
(That's right—not one "interesting" thing.) The idea of intelligent design
in biology "has made no progress since its last serious articulation by
natural theologian William Paley in 1802," and the empirical evidence for
evolution is like that for "an open-and-shut murder case."
Pigliucci offers more hero sandwiches spiced with
derision and certainty. Media coverage of science is "characterized by
allegedly serious journalists who behave like comedians." Commenting on the
highly publicized Dover, Pa., court case in which U.S. District Judge John
E. Jones III ruled that intelligent-design theory is not science, Pigliucci
labels the need for that judgment a "bizarre" consequence of the local
school board's "inane" resolution. Noting the complaint of
intelligent-design advocate William Buckingham that an approved science
textbook didn't give creationism a fair shake, Pigliucci writes, "This is
like complaining that a textbook in astronomy is too focused on the
Copernican theory of the structure of the solar system and unfairly neglects
the possibility that the Flying Spaghetti Monster is really pulling each
planet's strings, unseen by the deluded scientists."
Is it really? Or is it possible that the alternate
view unfairly neglected could be more like that of Harvard scientist Owen
Gingerich, who contends in God's Universe (Harvard University Press, 2006)
that it is partly statistical arguments—the extraordinary unlikelihood eons
ago of the physical conditions necessary for self-conscious life—that
support his belief in a universe "congenially designed for the existence of
intelligent, self-reflective life"? Even if we agree that capital "I" and
"D" intelligent-design of the scriptural sort—what Gingerich himself calls
"primitive scriptural literalism"—is not scientifically credible, does that
make Gingerich's assertion, "I believe in intelligent design, lowercase i
and lowercase d," equivalent to Flying-Spaghetti-Monsterism?
Tone matters. And sarcasm is not science.
The problem with polemicists like Pigliucci is that
a chasm has opened up between two groups that might loosely be distinguished
as "philosophers of science" and "science warriors." Philosophers of
science, often operating under the aegis of Thomas Kuhn, recognize that
science is a diverse, social enterprise that has changed over time,
developed different methodologies in different subsciences, and often
advanced by taking putative pseudoscience seriously, as in debunking cold
fusion. The science warriors, by contrast, often write as if our science of
the moment is isomorphic with knowledge of an objective world-in-itself—Kant
be damned!—and any form of inquiry that doesn't fit the writer's criteria of
proper science must be banished as "bunk." Pigliucci, typically, hasn't much
sympathy for radical philosophies of science. He calls the work of Paul
Feyerabend "lunacy," deems Bruno Latour "a fool," and observes that "the
great pronouncements of feminist science have fallen as flat as the
similarly empty utterances of supporters of intelligent design."
It doesn't have to be this way. The noble
enterprise of submitting nonscientific knowledge claims to critical
scrutiny—an activity continuous with both philosophy and science—took off in
an admirable way in the late 20th century when Paul Kurtz, of the University
at Buffalo, established the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of
Claims of the Paranormal (Csicop) in May 1976. Csicop soon after launched
the marvelous journal Skeptical Inquirer, edited for more than 30 years by
Kendrick Frazier.
Although Pigliucci himself publishes in Skeptical
Inquirer, his contributions there exhibit his signature smugness. For an
antidote to Pigliucci's overweening scientism 'tude, it's refreshing to
consult Kurtz's curtain-raising essay, "Science and the Public," in Science
Under Siege (Prometheus Books, 2009, edited by Frazier), which gathers 30
years of the best of Skeptical Inquirer.
Kurtz's commandment might be stated, "Don't mock or
ridicule—investigate and explain." He writes: "We attempted to make it clear
that we were interested in fair and impartial inquiry, that we were not
dogmatic or closed-minded, and that skepticism did not imply a priori
rejection of any reasonable claim. Indeed, I insisted that our skepticism
was not totalistic or nihilistic about paranormal claims."
Kurtz combines the ethos of both critical
investigator and philosopher of science. Describing modern science as a
practice in which "hypotheses and theories are based upon rigorous methods
of empirical investigation, experimental confirmation, and replication," he
notes: "One must be prepared to overthrow an entire theoretical
framework—and this has happened often in the history of science ...
skeptical doubt is an integral part of the method of science, and scientists
should be prepared to question received scientific doctrines and reject them
in the light of new evidence."
Considering the dodgy matters Skeptical Inquirer
specializes in, Kurtz's methodological fairness looks even more impressive.
Here's part of his own wonderful, detailed list: "Psychic claims and
predictions; parapsychology (psi, ESP, clairvoyance, telepathy,
precognition, psychokinesis); UFO visitations and abductions by
extraterrestrials (Roswell, cattle mutilations, crop circles); monsters of
the deep (the Loch Ness monster) and of the forests and mountains
(Sasquatch, or Bigfoot); mysteries of the oceans (the Bermuda Triangle,
Atlantis); cryptozoology (the search for unknown species); ghosts,
apparitions, and haunted houses (the Amityville horror); astrology and
horoscopes (Jeanne Dixon, the "Mars effect," the "Jupiter effect"); spoon
bending (Uri Geller). ... "
Even when investigating miracles, Kurtz explains,
Csicop's intrepid senior researcher Joe Nickell "refuses to declare a priori
that any miracle claim is false." Instead, he conducts "an on-site inquest
into the facts surrounding the case." That is, instead of declaring,
"Nonsense on stilts!" he gets cracking.
Pigliucci, alas, allows his animus against the
nonscientific to pull him away from sensitive distinctions among various
sciences to sloppy arguments one didn't see in such earlier works of science
patriotism as Carl Sagan's The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in
the Dark (Random House, 1995). Indeed, he probably sets a world record for
misuse of the word "fallacy."
To his credit, Pigliucci at times acknowledges the
nondogmatic spine of science. He concedes that "science is characterized by
a fuzzy borderline with other types of inquiry that may or may not one day
become sciences." Science, he admits, "actually refers to a rather
heterogeneous family of activities, not to a single and universal method."
He rightly warns that some pseudoscience—for example, denial of HIV-AIDS
causation—is dangerous and terrible.
But at other points, Pigliucci ferociously attacks
opponents like the most unreflective science fanatic, as if he belongs to
some Tea Party offshoot of the Royal Society. He dismisses Feyerabend's view
that "science is a religion" as simply "preposterous," even though he
elsewhere admits that "methodological naturalism"—the commitment of all
scientists to reject "supernatural" explanations—is itself not an
empirically verifiable principle or fact, but rather an almost Kantian
precondition of scientific knowledge. An article of faith, some cold-eyed
Feyerabend fans might say.
In an even greater disservice, Pigliucci repeatedly
suggests that intelligent-design thinkers must want "supernatural
explanations reintroduced into science," when that's not logically required.
He writes, "ID is not a scientific theory at all because there is no
empirical observation that can possibly contradict it. Anything we observe
in nature could, in principle, be attributed to an unspecified intelligent
designer who works in mysterious ways." But earlier in the book, he
correctly argues against Karl Popper that susceptibility to falsification
cannot be the sole criterion of science, because science also confirms. It
is, in principle, possible that an empirical observation could confirm
intelligent design—i.e., that magic moment when the ultimate UFO lands with
representatives of the intergalactic society that planted early life here,
and we accept their evidence that they did it. The point is not that this is
remotely likely. It's that the possibility is not irrational, just as
provocative science fiction is not irrational.
Pigliucci similarly derides religious explanations
on logical grounds when he should be content with rejecting such
explanations as unproven. "As long as we do not venture to make hypotheses
about who the designer is and why and how she operates," he writes, "there
are no empirical constraints on the 'theory' at all. Anything goes, and
therefore nothing holds, because a theory that 'explains' everything really
explains nothing."
Here, Pigliucci again mixes up what's likely or
provable with what's logically possible or rational. The creation stories of
traditional religions and scriptures do, in effect, offer hypotheses, or
claims, about who the designer is—e.g., see the Bible. And believers
sometimes put forth the existence of scriptures (think of them as "reports")
and a centuries-long chain of believers in them as a form of empirical
evidence. Far from explaining nothing because it explains everything, such
an explanation explains a lot by explaining everything. It just doesn't
explain it convincingly to a scientist with other evidentiary standards.
A sensible person can side with scientists on
what's true, but not with Pigliucci on what's rational and possible.
Pigliucci occasionally recognizes that. Late in his book, he concedes that
"nonscientific claims may be true and still not qualify as science." But if
that's so, and we care about truth, why exalt science to the degree he does?
If there's really a heaven, and science can't (yet?) detect it, so much the
worse for science.
As an epigram to his chapter titled "From
Superstition to Natural Philosophy," Pigliucci quotes a line from Aristotle:
"It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought
without accepting it." Science warriors such as Pigliucci, or Michael Ruse
in his recent clash with other philosophers in these pages, should reflect
on a related modern sense of "entertain." One does not entertain a guest by
mocking, deriding, and abusing the guest. Similarly, one does not entertain
a thought or approach to knowledge by ridiculing it.
Long live Skeptical Inquirer! But can we deep-six
the egomania and unearned arrogance of the science patriots? As Descartes,
that immortal hero of scientists and skeptics everywhere, pointed out, true
skepticism, like true charity, begins at home.
Carlin Romano, critic at large for The Chronicle Review, teaches
philosophy and media theory at the University of Pennsylvania.
Jensen Comment
One way to distinguish my conceptualization of science from pseudo science is
that science relentlessly seeks to replicate and validate purported discoveries,
especially after the discoveries have been made public in scientific journals
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTar.htm
Science encourages conjecture but doggedly seeks truth about that conjecture.
Pseudo science is less concerned about validating purported discoveries than it
is about publishing new conjectures that are largely ignored by other pseudo
scientists.
"Modern Science and Ancient Wisdom," Simoleon Sense,
February 15, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/modern-science-and-ancient-wisdom/
Pure Munger……must read!!!!!!
This is by Mortimier Adler the author of How to read abook, which as profiled in
Robert Hagstrom’s Investing The Last Liberal Art and Latticework of Mental
Models.
Full Excerpt (Via Mortimier Adler)
The outstanding achievement and
intellectual glory of modern times has been empirical science and the
mathematics that it has put to such good use. The progress is has made in
the last three centuries, together with the technological advances that have
resulted therefrom, are breathtaking.
The equally great achievement and
intellectual glory of Greek antiquity and of the Middle Ages was philosophy.
We have inherited from those epochs a fund of accumulated wisdom. That, too,
is breathtaking, especially when one considers how little philosophical
progress has been made in modern times.
This is not say that no advances in
philosophical thought have occurred in the last three hundred years. They
are mainly in logic, in the philosophy of science, and in political theory,
not in metaphysics, in the philosophy of nature, or in the philosophy of
mind, and least of all in moral philosophy. Nor is it true to say that, in
Greek antiquity and in the later Middle Ages, from the fourteenth century
on, science did not prosper at all. On the contrary, the foundations were
laid in mathematics, in mathematical physics, in biology, and in medicine.
It is in metaphysics, the philosophy of
nature, the philosophy of mind, and moral philosophy that the ancients and
their mediaeval successors did more than lay the foundations for the sound
understanding and the modicum of wisdom we possess. They did not make the
philosophical mistakes that have been the ruination of modern thought. On
the contrary, they had the insights and made the indispensable distinctions
that provide us with the means for correcting these mistakes.
At its best, investigative science gives
us knowledge of reality. As I have argued elsewhere, philosophy is, at the
very least, also knowledge of reality, not mere opinion. Much better than
that, it is knowledge illuminated by understanding. At its best, it
approaches wisdom, both speculative and practical.
Precisely because science is investigative
and philosophy is not, one should not be surprised by the remarkable
progress in science and by the equally remarkable lack of it in philosophy.
Precisely because philosophy is based upon the common experience of mankind
and is a refinement and elaboration of the common-sense knowledge and
understanding that derives from reflection on that common experience,
philosophy came to maturity early and developed beyond that point only
slightly and slowly.
Science knowledge changes, grows,
improves, expands, as a result of refinements in and accretions to the
special experience — the observational data — on which science as an
investigative mode of inquiry must rely. Philosophical knowledge is not
subject to the same conditions of change or growth. Common experience, or
more precisely, the general lineaments or common core of that experience,
which suffices for the philosopher, remains relatively constant over the
ages.
Descartes and Hobbes in the seventeenth
century, Locke, Hume, and Kant in the eighteenth century, and Alfred North
Whitehead and Bertrand Russell in the twentieth century enjoy no greater
advantages in this respect than Plato and Aristotle in antiquity or than
Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus, and Roger Bacon in the Middle Ages.
How might modern thinkers have avoided the
philosophical mistakes that have been so disastrous in their consequences?
In earlier works I have suggested the answer. Finding a prior philosopher’s
conclusions untenable, the thing to do is to go back to his starting point
and see if he has made a little error in the beginning.
A striking example of the failure to
follow this rule is to be found in Kant’s response to Hume. Hume’s skeptical
conclusions and his phenomenalism were unacceptable to Kant, even though
they awoke him from his own dogmatic slumbers. But instead of looking for
little errors in the beginning that were made by Hume and then dismissing
them as the cause of Humean conclusions that he found unacceptable, Kant
thought it necessary to construct a vast piece of philosophical machinery
designed to produce conclusions of an opposite tenor.
The intricacy of the apparatus and the
ingenuity of the design cannot help but evoke admiration, even from those
who are suspicious of the sanity of the whole enterprise and who find it
necessary to reject Kant’s conclusions as well as Hume’s. Though they are
opposite in tenor, they do not help us to get at the truth, which can only
be found by correcting Hume’s little errors in the beginning, and the little
errors made by Locke and Descartes before that. To do that one must be in
the possession of insights and distinctions with which these modern thinkers
were unacquainted. Why they were, I will try to explain presently.
What I have just said about Kant in
relation to Hume applies also to the whole tradition of British empirical
philosophy from Hobbes, Locke, and Hume on. All of the philosophical
puzzlements, paradoxes, and pseudo-problems that linguistic and analytical
philosophy and therapeutic positivism in our own century have tried to
eliminate would never have arisen in the first place if the little errors in
the beginning made by Locke and Hume had been explicitly rejected instead of
going unnoticed.
How did those little errors in the
beginning arise in the first place? One answer is that something which
needed to be known or understood had not yet been discovered or learned.
Such mistakes are excusable, however regrettable they may be.
The second answer is that the errors are
made as a result of culpable ignorance — ignorance of an essential point, an
indispensable insight or distinction, that has already been discovered and
expounded.
It is mainly in the second way that modern
philosophers have made their little errors in the beginning. They are ugly
monuments to the failures of education — failures due, on the one hand, to
corruptions in the tradition of learning and, on the other hand, to an
antagonistic attitude toward or even contempt for the past, for the
achievements of those who have come before.
Ten years ago, in 1974-1975, I wrote my
autobiography, and intellectual biography entitled Philosopher at Large. As
I now reread its concluding chapter, I can see the substance of this work
emerging from what I wrote there.
I frankly confessed my commitment to
Aristotle’s philosophical wisdom, both speculative and practical, and to
that of his great disciple Thomas Aquinas. The essential insights and the
indispensable distinctions needed to correct the philosophical mistakes made
in modern times are to be found in their thought.
Some things said in the concluding chapter
of that book bear repetition here in this work. Since I cannot improve upon
what I wrote ten years ago, I shall excerpt and paraphrase what I said then.
In the eyes of my contemporaries the label
“Aristotelian” has dyslogistic connotations. It has had such connotations
since the beginning of modern times. To call a man an Aristotelian carries
with it highly derogatory implications. It suggests that his is a closed
mind, in such slavish subjection to the thought of one philosopher as to be
impervious to the insights or arguments of others.
However, it is certainly possible to be an
Aristotelian — or the devoted disciple of some other philosopher — without
also being a blind and slavish adherent of his views, declaring with
misplaced piety that he is right in everything he says, never in error, or
that he has cornered the market on truth and is in no respect deficient or
defective. Such a declaration would be so preposterous that only a fool
would affirm it. Foolish Aristotelians there must have been among the
decadent scholastics who taught philosophy in the universities of the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. They probably account for the vehemence
of the reaction against Aristotle, as well as the flagrant misapprehension
or ignorance of his thought, that is to be found in Thomas Hobbes and
Francis Bacon, in Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz.
The folly is not the peculiar affliction
of Aristotelians. Cases of it can certainly be found, in the last century,
among those who gladly called themselves Kantians or Hegelians; and in our
own day, among those who take pride in being disciples of John Dewey or
Ludwig Wittgenstein. But if it is possible to be a follower of one of the
modern thinkers without going to an extreme that is foolish, it is no less
possible to be an Aristotelian who rejects Aristotle’s error and
deficiencies while embracing the truths he is able to teach.
Even granting that it is possible to be an
Aristotelian without being doctrinaire about it, it remains the case that
being an Aristotelian is somehow less respectable in recent centuries and in
our time than being a Kantian or a Hegelian, an existentialist, a
utilitarian, a pragmatist, or some other “ist” or “ian.” I know, for
example, that many of my contemporaries were outraged by my statement that
Aristotle’s Ethics is a unique book in the Western tradition of moral
philosophy, the only ethics that is sound, practical, and undogmatic.
If a similar statement were made by a
disciple of Kant or John Stuart Mill in a book that expounded and defended
the Kantian or utilitarian position in moral philosophy, it would be
received without raised eyebrows or shaking heads. For example, in this
century it has been said again and again, and gone unchallenged, that
Bertrand Russell’s theory of descriptions has been crucially pivotal in the
philosophy of language; but it simply will not do for me to make exactly the
same statement about the Aristotelian and Thomistic theory of signs (adding
that it puts Russell’s theory of descriptions into better perspective than
the current view of it does).
Why is this so? My only answer is that it
must be believed that, because Aristotle and Aquinas did their thinking so
long ago, they cannot reasonable be supposed to have been right in matters
about which those who came later were wrong. Much must have happened in the
realm of philosophical thought during the last three or four hundred years
that requires an open-minded person to abandon their teachings for something
more recent and, therefore, supposedly better.
My response to that view is negative. I
have found faults in the writings of Aristotle and Aquinas, but it has not
been my reading of modern philosophical works that has called my attention
to these faults, nor helped me to correct them. On the contrary, it has been
my understanding of the underlying principles and the formative insights
that govern the thought of Aristotle and Aquinas that has provided the basis
for amending or amplifying their views where they are fallacious or
defective.
I must say one more that in philosophy,
both speculative and practical, few if any advances have been made in modern
times. On the contrary, must has been lost as the result of errors that
might have been avoided if ancient truths had been preserved in the modern
period instead of being ignored.
Modern philosophy, as I see it, got off to
a very bad start — with Hobbes and Locke in England, and with Descartes,
Spinoza, and Leibniz on the Continent. Each of these thinkers acted as if he
had no predecessors worth consulting, as if he were starting with a clean
slate to construct for the first time the whole of philosophical knowledge.
We cannot find in their writings the
slightest evidence of their sharing Aristotle’s insight that no man by
himself is able to attain the truth adequately, although collectively men do
not fail to amass a considerable amount; nor do they ever manifest the
slightest trace of a willingness to call into council the views of their
predecessors in order to profit from whatever is sound in their thought and
to avoid their errors. On the contrary, without anything like a careful,
critical examination of the views of their predecessors, these modern
thinkers issue blanket repudiations of the past as a repository of errors.
The discovery of philosophical truth begins with themselves.
Proceeding, therefore, in ignorance or
misunderstanding of truths that could have been found in the funded
tradition of almost two thousand years of Western though, these modern
philosophers made crucial mistakes in their points of departure and in their
initial postulates. The commission of these errors can be explained in part
by antagonism toward the past, and even contempt for it.
The explanation of the antagonism lies in
the character of the teachers under whom these modern philosophers studied
in their youth. These teachers did not pass on the philosophical tradition
as a living thing by recourse to the writings of the great philosophers of
the past. They did not read and comment on the works of Aristotle, for
example, as the great teachers of the thirteenth century did.
Instead, the decadent scholastics who
occupied teaching posts in the universities of the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries fossilized the tradition by presenting it in a deadly, dogmatic
fashion, using a jargon that concealed, rather than conveyed, the insights
it contained. Their lectures must have been as wooden and uninspiring as
most textbooks or manuals are; their examinations must have called for a
verbal parroting of the letter of ancient doctrines rather than for an
understanding of their spirit.
It is no wonder that early modern
thinkers, thus mistaught, recoiled. Their repugnance, though certainly
explicable, may not be wholly pardonable, for they could have repaired the
damage by turning to the texts or Aristotle or Aquinas in their mature years
and by reading them perceptively and critically.
That they did not do this can be
ascertained from an examination of their major works and from their
intellectual biographies. When they reject certain points of doctrine
inherited from the past, it is perfectly clear that they do not properly
understand them; in addition, they make mistakes that arise from ignorance
of distinctions and insights highly relevant to problems they attempt to
solve.
With very few exceptions, such
misunderstanding and ignorance of philosophical achievements made prior to
the sixteenth century have been the besetting sin of modern thought. Its
effects are not confined to philosophers of the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries. They are evident in the work of nineteenth-century philosophers
and in the writings of our day. We can find them, for example, in the works
of Ludwig Wittgenstein, who, for all his native brilliance and philosophical
fervor, stumbles in the dark in dealing with problems on which premodern
predecessors, unknown to him, have thrown great light.
Modern philosophy has never recovered from
its false starts. Like men floundering in quicksand who compound their
difficulties by struggling to extricate themselves, Kant and his successors
have multiplied the difficulties and perplexities of modern philosophy by
the very strenuousness — and even ingenuity — of their efforts to extricate
themselves from the muddle left in their path by Descartes, Locke, and Hume.
To make a fresh start, it is only
necessary to open the great philosophical books of the past (especially
those written by Aristotle and in his tradition) and to read them with the
effort of understanding that they deserve. The recovery of basic truths,
long hidden from view, would eradicate errors that have had such disastrous
consequences in modern times.
"A Wisdom 101 Course!" February 15, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/a-wisdom-101-course/
"Overview of Prior Research on Wisdom," Simoleon Sense,
February 15, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/overview-of-prior-research-on-wisdom/
"An Overview Of The Psychology Of Wisdom," Simoleon Sense,
February 15, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/an-overview-of-the-psychology-of-wisdom/
"Why Bayesian Rationality Is Empty, Perfect Rationality Doesn’t Exist,
Ecological Rationality Is Too Simple, and Critical Rationality Does the Job,"
Simoleon Sense, February 15, 2010 ---
Click Here
http://www.simoleonsense.com/why-bayesian-rationality-is-empty-perfect-rationality-doesn%e2%80%99t-exist-ecological-rationality-is-too-simple-and-critical-rationality-does-the-job/
Great Minds in Management: The Process of Theory Development ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/GreatMinds.htm
"Top-Down Versus Bottom-Up: A Flawed Approach To Audit Risk Assessment,"
by Francine McKenna, re: The Auditors, April 10, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/04/10/top-down-versus-bottom-up-a-flawed-approach-to-audit-risk-assessment/
Here's the Weil quotation that I provided to Francine from my archives:
From
Jonathan Weil’s 2004 article (courtesy of the vast
resources curated by
Professor Bob Jensen):
“The problem is that
there’s not a lot of evidence that auditors are very
good at assessing risk,” says Charles Cullinan, an
accounting professor at Bryant College in
Smithfield, R.I., and co-author of a 2002 study that
criticized the re-engineered audit process as
ineffective at detecting fraud. “If you assess risk
as low, and it really isn’t low, you really could be
missing the critical issues in the audit.”
Even before the recent
rash of accounting scandals, the shift away from
extensive line-by-line number crunching was drawing
criticism. In an October 1999 speech, Lynn Turner,
then the SEC’s chief accountant, noted that more
than 80% of the agency’s accounting-fraud cases from
1987 to 1997 involved top executives. While the
risk-based approach was focusing on information
systems and the employees who fed them, auditors
really needed to expand their scrutiny to include
top executives, who with a few keystrokes could
override their companies’ systems.
An Ernst & Young
spokesman,
Charlie Perkins, says the
firm “performed appropriate procedures” on the
contractual-adjustment account.
At an April 2003 court
hearing, Ernst & Young auditor William Curtis Miller
testified that his team mainly had performed
“analytical type procedures” on the contractual
adjustments. These consisted of mathematical
calculations to see if the account had fluctuated
sharply overall, which it hadn’t. As for the
balance-sheet entries, prosecutors say HealthSouth
executives knew the auditors didn’t look at
increases of less than $5,000, a point Ernst & Young
acknowledges.
Jensen Comments
We see a lot of ranting about Sarbox and the supposedly-toothless PCAOB ---
Click Here
But here's what I see in the hundreds upon hundreds of PCAOB negative
inspection reports of CPA firm audits
What I see is repeated stress on negligent or otherwise sloppy detailed testing
that, in addition to uncovering client mistakes, serves in large measure to
prevent audit mistakes (like the fear that the cops will show up) ---
http://pcaobus.org/Inspections/Reports/Pages/default.aspx
Here's my favorite and oft-repeated example:
KPMG Should Be Tougher on Testing, PCAOB
Finds The Big Four audit firm was cited for not ramping up its tests of some
clients' assumptions and internal controls.
KPMG did not show enough
skepticism toward clients last year, according to the Public Company Accounting
Oversight Board, which cited the Big Four accounting firm for deficiencies
related to audits it performed on nine companies. The deficiencies were detailed
in an inspection report released this week by the PCAOB that covered KPMG's 2008
audit season. The shortcomings focused mostly on a lack of proper evidence
provided by KPMG to support its audit opinions on pension plans and
securities valuations.
But in some instances, the firm was cited for
weak testing of internal controls
over financial reporting and the application of generally accepted accounting
principles.
Marie Leone, CFO.com, June 19, 2009 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/13888653/c_2984368/?f=archives
In one instance, the audit lacked evidence
about whether the pension plans contained subprime assets. In another case, the
PCAOB noted, the audit firm didn't collect enough supporting material to gain an
understanding of how the trustee gauged the fair values of the assets when no
quoted market prices were available.
The PCAOB, which inspects the largest
public accounting firms on an annual basis, also found that three other KPMG
audits were shy an appropriate amount of internal controls testing related to
loan-loss allowances, securities valuations, and financing receivables.
In one audit, KPMG accepted its client's
data on non-performing loans without determining whether the information was
"supportable and appropriate." In another case, KPMG "failed to perform
sufficient audit procedures" with regard to the valuation of hard-to-price
financial instruments.
In still another case, the PCAOB found
that KPMG "failed to identify" that a client's revised accounting of an
outsourcing deal was not in compliance with GAAP because some of the deferred
costs failed to meet the definition of an asset - and the costs did not
represent a probably future economic benefit for the client.
April 12, 2012 reply from Francine McKenna
[retheauditors@GMAIL.COM]
"repeated stress on negligent or otherwise sloppy
detailed testing that, in addition to uncovering client mistakes, serves in
large measure to prevent audit mistakes..."
Bob Jensen
I agree, Bob.
The PCAOB is doing the work and the firms and
everyone else is ignoring it. I'd bet if you could put an issuer name on
their inspection results that are published, you would find lots of fingers
pointed at future failures, bailouts and problem children. How do we put
more teeth in PCAOB? I used to think they had been "regulatory captured."
Maybe that's the problem at the top in the past. But the work is being done.
Right now we are still waiting for the inspection
report from March 2008 Pre-Satyam, when the PCAOB went to India. We do have
two low level Indian professionals just recently sanctioned by the PCAOB for
not cooperating in their investigation of Satyam. How can we have a report
that is still not issued, two years later? Pushback in India? Pushback by
PwC due to litigation? Pushback within the SCE and PCAOB because the report
cites issues with the Satyam audit and auditors? Or pushback because it
doesn't?
http://retheauditors.com/2009/01/12/satyam-what-we-know-what-i-think-my-predictions/
fm
Bob Jensen's threads on risk-based auditing ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#RiskBasedAuditing
Watch the MSNBC Video Featuring This Harvard Senior Who is Also a Very
Talented Violinist
"Harvard senior thesis on CDOs," by Stephen Hsu, MIT's Technology
Review, April 27, 2010 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/post.aspx?bid=354&bpid=25107&nlid=2934
In the March 30, 2010 edition of Tidbits I posted the following Tidbit ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbits/2010/tidbits033010.htm
Ah, the innocence of youth.
What really happened in the poisonous CDO markets?
I previously mentioned three CBS Sixty Minutes videos that are must-views for
understanding what happened in the CDO scandals. Two of those videos centered on
muckraker Michael Lewis. My friend, the Unknown Professor, who runs the
Financial Rounds Blog, recommended that readers examine the Senior Thesis of a
Harvard student.
"Michael Lewis’s ‘The Big Short’? Read the Harvard Thesis Instead," by Peter
Lattman, The Wall Street Journal, March 20, 2010 ---
http://blogs.wsj.com/deals/2010/03/15/michael-lewiss-the-big-short-read-the-harvard-thesis-instead/tab/article/
Deal Journal has yet
to read “The Big Short,” Michael Lewis’s yarn on the financial crisis that hit
stores today. We did, however, read his acknowledgments, where Lewis praises
“A.K. Barnett-Hart, a Harvard undergraduate who had just written a thesis about
the market for subprime mortgage-backed CDOs that remains more interesting than
any single piece of Wall Street research on the subject.”
While unsure if we can
stomach yet another book on the crisis, a killer thesis on the topic? Now that
piqued our curiosity. We tracked down Barnett-Hart, a 24-year-old financial
analyst at a large New York investment bank. She met us for coffee last week to
discuss her thesis, “The Story of the CDO Market Meltdown: An Empirical
Analysis.” Handed in a year ago this week at the depths of the market collapse,
the paper was awarded summa cum laude and won virtually every thesis honor,
including the Harvard Hoopes Prize for outstanding scholarly work.
Last October,
Barnett-Hart, already pulling all-nighters at the bank (we agreed to not name
her employer), received a call from Lewis, who had heard about her thesis from a
Harvard doctoral student. Lewis was blown away.
“It was a classic
example of the innocent going to Wall Street and asking the right questions,”
said Mr. Lewis, who in his 20s wrote “Liar’s Poker,” considered a defining book
on Wall Street culture. “Her thesis shows there were ways to discover things
that everyone should have wanted to know. That it took a 22-year-old Harvard
student to find them out is just outrageous.”
Barnett-Hart says she
wasn’t the most obvious candidate to produce such scholarship. She grew up in
Boulder, Colo., the daughter of a physics professor and full-time homemaker. A
gifted violinist, Barnett-Hart deferred admission at Harvard to attend
Juilliard, where she was accepted into a program studying the violin under
Itzhak Perlman. After a year, she headed to Cambridge, Mass., for a broader
education. There, with vague designs on being pre-Med, she randomly took “Ec
10,” the legendary introductory economics course taught by Martin Feldstein.
“I thought maybe this
would help me, like, learn to manage my money or something,” said Barnett-Hart,
digging into a granola parfait at Le Pain Quotidien. She enjoyed how the subject
mixed current events with history, got an A (natch) and declared economics her
concentration.
Barnett-Hart’s
interest in CDOs stemmed from a summer job at an investment bank in the summer
of 2008 between junior and senior years. During a rotation on the mortgage
securitization desk, she noticed everyone was in a complete panic. “These CDOs
had contaminated everything,” she said. “The stock market was collapsing and
these securities were affecting the broader economy. At that moment I became
obsessed and decided I wanted to write about the financial crisis.” ,
Back at Harvard,
against the backdrop of the financial system’s near-total collapse, Barnett-Hart
approached professors with an idea of writing a thesis about CDOs and their role
in the crisis. “Everyone discouraged me because they said I’d never be able to
find the data,” she said. “I was urged to do something more narrow, more
focused, more knowable. That made me more determined.”
She emailed scores of
Harvard alumni. One pointed her toward LehmanLive, a comprehensive database on
CDOs. She received scores of other data leads. She began putting together charts
and visuals, holding off on analysis until she began to see patterns–how Merrill
Lynch and Citigroup were the top originators, how collateral became heavily
concentrated in subprime mortgages and other CDOs, how the credit ratings
procedures were flawed, etc.
“If you just randomly
start regressing everything, you can end up doing an unlimited amount of
regressions,” she said, rolling her eyes. She says nearly all the work was in
the research; once completed, she jammed out the paper in a couple of weeks.
“It’s an incredibly
impressive piece of work,” said Jeremy Stein, a Harvard economics professor who
included the thesis on a reading list for a course he’s teaching this semester
on the financial crisis. “She pulled together an enormous amount of information
in a way that’s both intelligent and accessible.”
Barnett-Hart’s thesis
is highly critical of Wall Street and “their irresponsible underwriting
practices.” So how is it that she can work for the very institutions that helped
create the notorious CDOs she wrote about?
“After writing my
thesis, it became clear to me that the culture at these investment banks needed
to change and that incentives needed to be realigned to reward more than just
short-term profit seeking,” she wrote in an email. “And how would Wall Street
ever change, I thought, if the people that work there do not change? What these
banks needed is for outsiders to come in with a fresh perspective, question the
way business was done, and bring a new appreciation for the true purpose of an
investment bank - providing necessary financial services, not creating
unnecessary products to bolster their own profits.”
Ah, the innocence of
youth.
The Senior Thesis
"The Story of the CDO Market Meltdown: An Empirical Analysis," by Anna
Katherine Barnett-Hart, Harvard University, March 19, 2010 ---
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/m-rcbg/students/dunlop/2009-CDOmeltdown.pdf
A former colleague and finance professor at Trinity
University recommends following up this Harvard student’s senior thesis with the
following:
Rene M. Stulz. 2010. Credit default swaps and the credit crisis. J of
Economic Perspectives, 24(1): 73-92 (not free) ---
http://www.aeaweb.org/jep/index.php
Restructuring Audit Services
April 10, 2010 message from Jagdish Gangolly
[gangolly@GMAIL.COM]
It is true that, for example a fortune 100 company
has little choice. That is because of the way audit as a product is
currently packaged.
Years ago, I had suggested that we look at the way
the legal profession was structured in England and learn a few lessons. This
is brought out in the movie "A Fish Called Wanda" starring John Cleese, the
funny guy with a strange sense of humour from Monty Python.
The legal profession there used to be divided
between barristers and solicitors. A very neat division of labour:
barristers could argue cases in the courts but the solicitors could not; the
solicitors could interact with clients and witnesses but barristers could
not. The system enhances integrity because the perception and empathies of
the lawyer who argues in court is not coloured by interactions with
clients/witnesses.
My argument 25 years ago was: why not divide the
audit product into two components: facilitation and execution. The
facilitating firm (accounting equivalent of barristers) could interact with
the client to determine the scope of the audit (but could not peform audits
for any firm), and then put together a team of firms for the audit. This
would have the following advantages:
1. The best talent for various parts of the audit
could be assembled 2. Smaller firms could audit some aspects of large audits
3. The level of sophistication of practice in smaller firms would improve 4.
The larger firms would be rid of practice that can not sustain the firms'
large overheads
Over the years I have had discussions of this with
many senior partners at the Big 4 as well as many academics in accounting.
Most have been intrigued by the idea, but have had little to say by way of
response.
More than two decades ago when I broached the idea,
the information technology had not advanced enough to make this possible.
But with the changes to the securities laws and the accounting profession
makes this very possible today.
Jagdish --
|Jagdish S. Gangolly Department of Informatics College of Computing &
Information State University of New York at Albany Harriman Campus, Building
7A, Suite 220 Albany, NY 12222 Phone: 518-956-8251, Fax: 518-956-8247
April 10, 2010 reply from Tom Selling
[tom.selling@GROVESITE.COM]
Jagdish,
What happens when there is a failed audit? Which audit firm do
the plaintiffs sue? The ’34 Act only exposes auditors to proportionate
liability. How would a jury of non-accountants be able to fairly allocate
proportionate liability among the “facilitator” and the potentially many
firms involved in “execution”? (Even the ’33 Act, which allows for joint
and several liability, requires allocation of responsibility.)
From the firm standpoint, they will all have to trust that they
each did their jobs thoroughly. The legal environment may not be as
sensitive to that issue, for a number of reasons.
Also, you did not list as a potential advantage, that the audit
report will become more reliable, but I suppose that is strongly implied.
Finally, I am curious to know why the barrister/solicitor
division of labor has gone away. Was it cost, theoretical advantages were
not realized in practice, or something else?
Best,
Tom
Before reading below you may want to watch Francine McKenna in a NYT
interview ---
http://www.thedeal.com/video/inside-the-deal/goldman-sec-charges-to-spark-c.php
You might also want to read about swaps since Goldman brokered questionable
(from an ethics standpoint) swaps in this scandal ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swap_(finance)
"Goldman Sachs accused of fraud by US regulator SEC," BBC News,
April 16, 2010 ---
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8625931.stm
Goldman Sachs, the Wall Street powerhouse, has been
accused of defrauding investors by America's financial regulator.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
alleges that Goldman failed to disclose conflicts of interest.
The claims concern Goldman's marketing of sub-prime
mortgage investments just as the US housing market faltered.
Goldman rejected the SEC's allegations, saying that
it would "vigorously" defend its reputation.
News that the SEC was pressing civil fraud charges
against Goldman and one of its London-based vice presidents, Fabrice Tourre,
sent shares in the investment bank tumbling 12%.
The SEC says Goldman failed to disclose "vital
information" that one of its clients, Paulson & Co, helped choose which
securities were packaged into the mortgage portfolio.
These securities were sold to investors in 2007.
But Goldman did not disclose that Paulson, one of
the world's largest hedge funds, had bet that the value of the securities
would fall.
The SEC said: "Unbeknownst to investors, Paulson...
which was posed to benefit if the [securities] defaulted, played a
significant role in selecting which [securities] should make up the
portfolio."
"In sum, Goldman Sachs arranged a transaction at
Paulson's request in which Paulson heavily influenced the selection of the
portfolio to suit its economic interests," said the Commission.
Housing collapse
The whole building is about to collapse anytime
now... Only potential survivor, the fabulous Fabrice...
Email by Fabrice Tourre The SEC alleges that
investors in the mortgage securities, packaged into a vehicle called Abacus,
lost more than $1bn (£650m) in the US housing collapse.
Mr Tourre was principally behind the creation of
Abacus, which agreed its deal with Paulson in April 2007, the SEC said.
The Commission alleges that Mr Tourre knew the
market in mortgage-backed securities was about to be hit well before this
date.
The SEC's court document quotes an email from Mr
Tourre to a friend in January 2007. "More and more leverage in the system.
Only potential survivor, the fabulous Fab[rice Tourre]... standing in the
middle of all these complex, highly leveraged, exotic trades he created
without necessarily understanding all of the implications of those
monstrosities!!!"
Goldman denied any wrongdoing, saying in a brief
statement: "The SEC's charges are completely unfounded in law and fact and
we will vigorously contest them and defend the firm and its reputation."
The firm said that, rather than make money from the
deal, it lost $90m.
The two investors that lost the most money, German
bank IKB and ACA Capital Management, were two "sophisticated mortgage
investors" who knew the risk, Goldman said.
And nor was there any failure of disclosure,
because "market makers do not disclose the identities of a buyer to a seller
and vice versa."
Calls to Mr Tourre's office were referred to the
Goldman press office. Paulson has not been charged.
Asked why the SEC did not also pursue a case
against Paulson, Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami told reporters: "It was
Goldman that made the representations to investors. Paulson did not."
The firm's owner, John Paulson - no relation to
former US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson - made billions of dollars
betting against sub-prime mortgage securities.
In a statement, Paulson & Co. said: "As the SEC
said at its press conference, Paulson is not the subject of this complaint,
made no misrepresentations and is not the subject of any charges."
'Regulation risk'
Goldman, arguably the world's most prestigious
investment bank, had escaped relatively unscathed from the global financial
meltdown.
This is the first time regulators have acted
against a Wall Street deal that allegedly helped investors take advantage of
the US housing market collapse.
The charges come as US lawmakers get tough on Wall
Street practices that helped cause the financial crisis. Among proposals
being considered by Congress is tougher rules for complex investments like
those involved in the alleged Goldman fraud.
Observers said the SEC's move dealt a blow to
Goldman's standing. "It undermines their brand," said Simon Johnson, a
professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Goldman critic.
"It undermines their political clout."
Analyst Matt McCormick of Bahl & Gaynor said that
the allegation could "be a fulcrum to push for even tighter regulation".
"Goldman has a fight in front of it," he said.
"Goldman CDO case could be tip of iceberg,"
by Aaron Pressman and Joseph Giannone, Reuters, April 17, 2010 ---
http://in.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idINIndia-47771020100417
The case against Goldman Sachs Group Inc over a
2007 mortgage derivatives deal it set up for a hedge fund manager could be
just the start of Wall Street's legal troubles stemming from the subprime
meltdown.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charged
Goldman with fraud for failing to disclose to buyers of a collaterlized debt
obligation known as ABACUS that hedge fund manager John Paulson helped
select mortgage derivatives he was betting against for the deal. Goldman
denied any wrongdoing.
The practice of creating synthetic CDOs was not
uncommon in 2006 and 2007. At the tail end of the real estate bubble, some
savvy investors began to look for more ways to profit from the coming
calamity using derivatives.
Goldman shares plunged 13 percent on Friday and
shares of other financial firms that created CDOs also fell. Shares of
Deutsche Bank AG ended down 9 percent, Morgan Stanley 6 percent and Bank of
America, which owns Merrill Lynch, and Citigroup each declined 5 percent.
Merrill, Citigroup and Deutsche Bank were the top
three underwriters of CDO transactions in 2006 and 2007, according to data
from Thomson Reuters. But most of those deals included actual
mortgage-backed securities, not related derivatives like the ABACUS deal.
Hedge fund managers like Paulson typically wanted
to bet against so-called synthetic CDOs that used derivatives contracts in
place of actual securities. Those were less common.
The SEC's charges against Goldman are already
stirring up investors who lost big on the CDOs, according to well-known
plaintiffs lawyer Jake Zamansky.
"I've been contacted by Goldman customers to bring
lawsuits to recover their losses," Zamansky said. "It's going to go way
beyond ABACUS. Regulators and plaintiffs' lawyers are going to be looking at
other deals, to what kind of conflicts Goldman has."
An investigation by the online site ProPublica into
Chicago-based hedge fund Magnetar's 2007 bets against CDO-related debt also
turned up allegations of conflicts of interest against Deutsche Bank,
Merrill and JPMorgan Chase.
Magnetar has denied any wrongdoing. Deutsche Bank
declined to comment. Merrill and JPMorgan had no immediate comment.
The Magnetar deals have spawned at least one
lawsuit. Dutch bank Cooperatieve Centrale Raiffeisen-Boerenleenbank B.A., or
Rabobank for short, filed suit in June against Merrill Lynch over Magnetar's
involvement with a CDO called Norma.
"Merrill Lynch teamed up with one of its most
prized hedge fund clients -- an infamous short seller that had helped
Merrill Lynch create four other CDOs -- to create Norma as a tailor-made way
to bet against the mortgage-backed securities market," Rabobank said in its
complaint filed on June 12 in the Supreme Court of New York.
The two matters are unrelated and the claims today
are not only unfounded but were not included in the Rabobank lawsuit filed
nearly a year ago, said Merrill Lynch spokesman Bill Halldin.
Rabobank was a lender, not an investor, he added.
Regulators at the SEC and around the country said
they would be investigating other deals beyond ABACUS.
We are looking very closely at these products and
transactions," Robert Khuzami, head of the SEC's enforcement division, said.
"We are moving across the entire spectrum in determining whether there was
(fraud)."
Meanwhile, Connecticut Attorney General Richard
Blumenthal said in a statement his office had already begun a preliminary
review of the Goldman case.
"A key question is whether this case was an
isolated incident or part of a pattern of investment banks colluding with
hedge funds to purposely tank securities they created and sold to unwitting
investors," Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal said in a
statement.
"Goldman under investigation for its securities dealings,"
by Greg Gordon, McClatchy Newspapers, January 22, 2010 ---
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/82899.html
WASHINGTON — One of Congress' premier watchdog
panels is investigating Goldman Sachs' role in the subprime mortgage
meltdown, including how the firm sold securities backed by risky home loans
while it simultaneously bet that those bonds would lose value, people
familiar with the inquiry said Friday.
The investigation is part of a broader examination
by the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations into the roots of the
economic crisis and whether financial institutions behaved improperly, said
the individuals, who insisted upon anonymity because the matter is
sensitive.
Disclosure of the investigation comes amid a
darkening mood at the White House, in Congress and among the American public
over the long-term economic impact of the subprime crisis, prompting demands
to hold the culprits accountable.
It marks at least the third federal inquiry
touching on Goldman's dealings related to securities backed by risky home
mortgages.
The separate, congressionally appointed Financial
Crisis Inquiry Commission, which was created to investigate causes of the
crisis, began holding hearings Jan. 13 and took sworn testimony from
Goldman's top officer. In addition, the Securities and Exchange Commission,
which polices Wall Street, is investigating Goldman's exotic bets against
the housing market, using insurance-like contracts known as credit-default
swaps, in offshore deals, knowledgeable people have told McClatchy.
Goldman, the world's most prestigious investment
bank, has denied any improprieties and said that the use of "hedges," or
contrary bets, is a "cornerstone of prudent risk management."
Asked about the Senate inquiry late Friday, Goldman
spokesman Michael DuVally said only: "As a matter of policy, Goldman Sachs
does not comment on legal or regulatory matters."
A spokeswoman for the Senate subcommittee declined
to comment on the investigation, which was spawned by a four-part McClatchy
series published in November that detailed the Wall Street firm's role in
the debacle, which stemmed from subprime loans to millions of marginally
qualified borrowers.
The subcommittee, part of the Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs Committee, is led by veteran Democratic Sen. Carl Levin
of Michigan, who said last year that his panel was "looking into some of the
causes and consequences of the financial crisis."
The panel has a history of conducting formal,
highly secretive investigations in which it typically issues subpoenas for
documents and witnesses, produces extensive reports and sometimes refers
evidence to the Justice Department for possible criminal prosecution.
It couldn't immediately be learned whether the
panel has subpoenaed Goldman executives or company records. However, the
subcommittee has issued at least one major subpoena seeking records related
to Seattle-based Washington Mutual, which collapsed in September 2008 after
being swamped by losses from its subprime lending. J.P. Morgan Chase then
purchased WaMu's banking assets.
Goldman was the only major Wall Street firm to
safely exit the subprime mortgage market. McClatchy reported, however, that
Goldman sold off more than $40 billion in securities backed by over 200,000
risky home loans in 2006 and 2007 without telling investors of its secret
bets on a sharp housing downturn, prompting some experts to question whether
it had crossed legal lines.
McClatchy also has reported that Goldman peddled
unregulated securities to foreign investors through the Cayman Islands, a
Caribbean tax haven, in some cases exaggerating the soundness of the
underlying home mortgages. In numerous deals, records indicate, the company
required investors to pay Goldman massive sums if bundles of risky mortgages
defaulted. Goldman has said its investors were fully informed of the risks.
Federal auditors found that Goldman placed $22
billion of its swap bets against subprime securities, including many it had
issued, with the giant insurer American International Group. In late 2008,
when the government bailed out AIG, Goldman received $13.9 billion.
Goldman's chairman and chief executive, Lloyd
Blankfein, appeared to acknowledge last week that the firm behaved
inappropriately when he was asked about the secret bets in sworn testimony
to the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission.
Blankfein first said that the firm's contrary
trades were "the practice of a market maker," then added: "But the answer is
I do think that the behavior is improper, and we regret the result — the
consequence that people have lost money in it."
A day later, Goldman issued a statement denying
that Blankfein had admitted improper company behavior and said that his
ensuing answer stressed that the firm's conduct was "entirely appropriate."
Senate investigators were described as having pored
over Goldman's SEC filings in recent weeks.
Underscoring the breadth of the Senate
investigation is the disclosure by federal banking regulators in a recent
filing in the WaMu bankruptcy case.
In it, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. revealed
that the Senate subcommittee had served the agency with "a comprehensive
subpoena" for documents relating to WaMu, whose primary regulator was the
Office of Thrift Supervision.
The subcommittee's jurisdiction is "wide-ranging,"
the FDIC's lawyers wrote. "It covers, among other things, the study or
investigation of the compliance or noncompliance of corporations, companies,
or individual or other entities with the rules, regulations and laws
governing the various governmental agencies and their relationships with the
public." The subpoena, they said, "is correspondingly broad."
The Puget Sound Business Journal first reported on
the FDIC's disclosure.
Goldman's former chairman, Henry Paulson, served as
Treasury secretary during the bailouts that benefitted the firm and while
other Wall Street investment banks foundered because of their subprime
market exposure, its profits have soared.
In reporting a $13.4 billion profit for 2009 on
Thursday, the bank sought to quell a furor over its taxpayer-aided success
by scaling back employee bonuses. It also has limited bonuses for its 30
most senior executives to restricted stock that can't be sold for five years.
MORE FROM MCCLATCHY
Goldman Sachs: Low Road to High Finance
Justice Department eyes possible fraud on Wall Street
Goldman admits 'improper' actions in sales of securities
Goldman: Blankfein didn't say firm's practices were 'improper'
Facing frustrated voters, more senators oppose Bernanke
Obama moves to restrict banks, take on Wall Street
Check
out McClatchy's politics blog: Planet Washington
"Your Guide to the Goldman Sachs Lawsuit," Yahoo News, April
20, 2010 ---
http://news.yahoo.com/s/usnews/20100420/ts_usnews/yourguidetothegoldmansachslawsuit
As the Securities and Exchange Commission thrusts
the Goldman Sachs case onto the national stage, Americans are once again
getting acquainted with the most controversial members of the recession-era
cast of characters: the subprime mortgage, the "too big to fail" doctrine,
the Wall Street bailout, and the housing bubble, just to name a few.
But even as those themes hog the limelight, two
other recurring, albeit slightly more obscure, characters--the matchmaker
and the credit default swap--are also starting to peek out from behind the
glamorous SEC indictment. And as they do so, they have the potential to
reshape the contentious debate over Goldman's actions.
Matchmaker, matchmaker. The
Goldman product that the SEC is targeting is quite complex. Known as ABACUS
2007-AC1, it is the result of years of evolution in the synthetic investment
market. But the underlying theory is quite simple.
Gary Kopff, a mortgage expert and the president of
Everest Management, uses the example of wheat. "Two parties get together.
One says, 'I think the price of wheat is going up.' The other says, 'I think
the price of wheat is going down,'" he explains. "Neither party owns any
wheat."
With the Goldman case, of course, the big
difference was that investors were instead betting on mortgages. And since
the investment products were synthetic, investors were able to place bets on
the direction of the housing market without actually owning any physical
mortgage bonds.
[See
How Strategic Defaults are Reshaping the Economy.]
In arranging these deals, one of Goldman's roles
was that of matchmaker. In other words, it was Goldman's job to find some
investors who thought that the housing market would stay healthy and others
who thought it would tank. Goldman would then pair the two sides up in a
transaction.
"Acting as a swaps dealer, Goldman has a commodity.
And in order for it to earn a fee for that commodity going out into the
marketplace, it has to put together the short side and the long side. So it
has to be simultaneously in possession of the names of bona fide longs and
shorts," says Kopff. Using a gambling metaphor, he says, "In that sense,
[Goldman] has a duel incentive. It wants some people to go short and some
people to go long because it's basically like the house. It's making money
as long as it pairs up the longs and shorts."
The question then becomes: When should we blame the
house? The most obvious answer is that the house could be at fault when the
deck is stacked against some of the betters.
In the Goldman case, this issue is particularly
relevant. Notably, the SEC is charging that Goldman let hedge fund manager
John Paulson
essentially hand pick mortgage bonds he thought were doomed to fail. Goldman
then created a vehicle where investors could get synthetic exposure to those
bonds.
Paulson, of course, effectively shorted the housing
market by betting against the bonds, but there were also investors on the
long side of the deal in question. The SEC is alleging that Goldman, in its
role as matchmaker, never told these investors that the bonds they were
getting exposure to were chosen because a prominent manager thought they
were poised to implode.
In fact, they were never even made aware that
Paulson was involved in the deal, according to the lawsuit. Instead,
according to the SEC, they were made to believe that ACA Management, an
independent third party, was behind the bond selection.
Legal issues aside, these charges raise a number of
pressing questions, particularly at a time when Wall Street firms are under
fire for what's perceived as a lack of corporate responsibility.
"I think there is a very large concern among
American taxpayers that not only did
Wall Street cause this problem and not only did the American tax
payers have to bail Wall Street out, but now Wall Street is back and as
profitable as ever--if not more profitable--and is going back to using the
same old practices," says Michael Greenberger, a professor at the University
of Maryland School of Law.
At the moment, one thing is clear: Goldman's own
investors accurately predicted that the housing market would crash, and they
placed their bets accordingly. But what remains to be seen is to what extent
the investment bank encouraged some of its clients to take the opposite
position.
As a result, at least in the court of public
opinion, the Goldman case will be a key test of the matchmaker defense. Put
another way, was Goldman merely allowing clients who had a bullish outlook
toward the housing market to put money on that view? After all, in order for
markets to function, intelligent investors need to disagree from time to
time.
"In some ways, this is Wall Street 101 in that
there needs to be somebody on both sides of every deal. So clearly you have
a world full of smart financial firms, but still with those firms often
taking bets opposite of each other," says Kevin McPartland, a senior analyst
with the TABB Group, a financial-sector research and advisory firm. "There's
always going to be somebody that's looking in the opposite direction."
But another possibility, some say, is that Goldman
was knowingly giving its clients bad advice by actively prodding them into
taking long positions rather than merely presenting them with the option.
"[Goldman is] cynically saying, 'We're not making a recommendation on
whether to buy or sell this.' But clearly they are. They're creating the
instrument and they're sending their salesmen across the world to meet with
institutional players," says Kopff. "To say they're not taking on point of
view on that almost belies reality."
From a legal standpoint, the more pertinent
question is: Did Goldman conceal the role of Paulson? And if so, would the
long investors in the deal in question still have taken the same position
had they known that Paulson picked the bonds with the goal of effectively
shorting them?
In answering the latter question, the SEC points to
the example of the German bank
IKB Deutsche Industriebank, a Goldman client that took a long
position in the Abacus deal that's the subject of the lawsuit. "IKB would
not have invested in the transaction had it known that Paulson played a
significant role in the collateral selection process while intending to take
a short position in ABACUS 2007-AC1," the SEC says in the suit.
The 'naked' truth. Another issue
that could take center stage in the fallout from the Goldman case is the
validity of
credit default swaps, the complex deals that are often likened to
insurance policies.
With most forms of insurance, people take out
policies on items, such as houses and cars, that they own. In some cases,
credit default swaps work the same way. In other words, investors can own
mortgage bonds in the belief that they will appreciate in value, but at the
same time they can hold an insurance policy--through these swaps--that will
pay out in the event that borrowers default. Used that way, these swaps
allow investors to hedge their bets.
But there are also naked swaps, which let people
short investments without ever having to own them directly. Using the
insurance example, it would be the rough equivalent of a person taking out
an insurance policy on his neighbor's house under the belief that the house
would be struck by lightning.
That's what happened in the Goldman deal, which was
created using a package comprised of various credit default swaps. Investors
like Paulson were then able to take the short side of the deal by buying
insurance on the bonds referenced in the deal.
In turn, the long investors were the insurers. They
received regular payments, much in the same way insurance providers do, from
policyholders like Paulson. These payments were much like the interest they
would accumulate had they actually owned the bonds outright. In exchange,
they agreed to make large payouts to the short investors should the bonds
fail, which is exactly what happened.
During the downturn, Goldman was hardly the only
firm that allowed investors to employ these naked credit default swaps. In
fact, naked shorts are viewed by many as one of the prime reasons why the
housing collapse was so painful. "The naked CDS... wreaked havoc on the
market," says Greenberger.
That's because when these shorts are part of
synthetic deals, investors are not constrained by physical supplies. Kopff
uses the example of home insurance. In that industry, people can only buy as
many insurance policies as there are actual houses.
"Once everyone's insured, you've hit the maximum.
There's no more insurance that can be written," he says. "While that number
can be exceedingly high, it is finite. When you allow naked positions, you
allow what doesn't exist in the hazard insurance industry... Now you have
someone saying, 'Listen, you've got a house over there, and I'm going to bet
that lightning hits it.' And then somebody else comes in and says, 'Well,
I'm going to bet that lightning doesn't hit it.' And you can have as many
bets as you want."
This, in turn, compounded the losses that investors
experienced when the housing market went under. "Essentially, [investors]
found people who would give them insurance on the question of whether
subprime mortgages would be paid," says Greenberger. "So every time a
subprime mortgage
collapsed, it wasn't just the real loss of the mortgage, but it was the loss
of all the betting that was done on whether the mortgage would survive or
not survive."
As the Goldman case continues to attract attention,
the debate about swaps is likely to intensify. Importantly, this will happen
right as Congress considers a sweeping financial overhaul package, one which
many would like to see take a harder position on swaps and other similar
deals.
Still, swaps do have ardent defenders who argue
that when used correctly, they can actually reduce the riskiness of
investors' portfolios. But as the Goldman case illustrates, these defenders
are pitted against an American public that is clamoring for tighter
regulations. Says Greenberger, "I think there's been a widespread desire to
see some accountability for this horrific crisis."
Bob Jensen's threads on the 2010 Goldman Sachs SEC lawsuit ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Goldman might get off the hook if it sends enough free porn to the SEC
---
"GOP ramps up attacks on SEC over porn surfing," by Daniel Wagner, Yahoo News,
April 23, 2010 ---
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100423/ap_on_bi_ge/us_sec_porn
Also see
http://www.judicialwatch.org/blog/2010/apr/sec-absorbed-porn-during-economic-crisis
Bob Jensen's threads on subprime sleaze are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#Sleaze
Bob Jensen's threads on banking fraud are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Here's the Morgenson and Story 2009 Article
"Banks Bundled Bad Debt, Bet Against It and
Won," by Gretchen Morgenson and Louise Story, The New York Times,
December 23, 2009 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/24/business/24trading.html?em
My friend Larry clued me in to this link.
In late October 2007, as the
financial markets were starting to come unglued, a Goldman Sachs trader,
Jonathan M. Egol, received very good news. At 37, he was named a managing
director at the firm.
Mr. Egol, a Princeton
graduate, had risen to prominence inside the bank by creating
mortgage-related securities, named Abacus, that were at first intended to
protect Goldman from investment losses if the housing market collapsed. As
the market soured, Goldman created even more of these securities, enabling
it to pocket huge profits.
Goldman’s own clients who
bought them, however, were less fortunate.
Pension funds and insurance
companies lost billions of dollars on securities that they believed were
solid investments, according to former Goldman employees with direct
knowledge of the deals who asked not to be identified because they have
confidentiality agreements with the firm.
Goldman was not the only
firm that peddled these complex securities — known as synthetic
collateralized debt obligations, or C.D.O.’s — and then made financial bets
against them, called selling short in Wall Street parlance. Others that
created similar securities and then bet they would fail, according to Wall
Street traders, include Deutsche Bank and Morgan Stanley, as well as smaller
firms like Tricadia Inc., an investment company whose parent firm was
overseen by Lewis A. Sachs, who this year became a special counselor to
Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner.
How these disastrously
performing securities were devised is now the subject of scrutiny by
investigators in Congress, at the Securities and Exchange Commission and at
the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Wall Street’s self-regulatory
organization, according to people briefed on the investigations. Those
involved with the inquiries declined to comment.
While the investigations are
in the early phases, authorities appear to be looking at whether securities
laws or rules of fair dealing were violated by firms that created and sold
these mortgage-linked debt instruments and then bet against the clients who
purchased them, people briefed on the matter say.
One focus of the inquiry is
whether the firms creating the securities purposely helped to select
especially risky mortgage-linked assets that would be most likely to crater,
setting their clients up to lose billions of dollars if the housing market
imploded.
Some securities packaged by
Goldman and Tricadia ended up being so vulnerable that they soured within
months of being created.
Goldman and other Wall
Street firms maintain there is nothing improper about synthetic C.D.O.’s,
saying that they typically employ many trading techniques to hedge
investments and protect against losses. They add that many prudent investors
often do the same. Goldman used these securities initially to offset any
potential losses stemming from its positive bets on mortgage securities.
But Goldman and other firms
eventually used the C.D.O.’s to place unusually large negative bets that
were not mainly for hedging purposes, and investors and industry experts say
that put the firms at odds with their own clients’ interests.
“The simultaneous selling of
securities to customers and shorting them because they believed they were
going to default is the most cynical use of credit information that I have
ever seen,” said Sylvain R. Raynes, an expert in structured finance at R & R
Consulting in New York. “When you buy protection against an event that you
have a hand in causing, you are buying fire insurance on someone else’s
house and then committing arson.”
Investment banks were not
alone in reaping rich rewards by placing trades against synthetic C.D.O.’s.
Some hedge funds also benefited, including Paulson & Company, according to
former Goldman workers and people at other banks familiar with that firm’s
trading.
Michael DuVally, a Goldman
Sachs spokesman, declined to make Mr. Egol available for comment. But Mr.
DuVally said many of the C.D.O.’s created by Wall Street were made to
satisfy client demand for such products, which the clients thought would
produce profits because they had an optimistic view of the housing market.
In addition, he said that clients knew Goldman might be betting against
mortgages linked to the securities, and that the buyers of synthetic
mortgage C.D.O.’s were large, sophisticated investors, he said.
The creation and sale of
synthetic C.D.O.’s helped make the financial crisis worse than it might
otherwise have been, effectively multiplying losses by providing more
securities to bet against. Some $8 billion in these securities remain on the
books at American International Group, the giant insurer rescued by the
government in September 2008.
From 2005 through 2007, at
least $108 billion in these securities was issued, according to Dealogic, a
financial data firm. And the actual volume was much higher because synthetic
C.D.O.’s and other customized trades are unregulated and often not reported
to any financial exchange or market.
Goldman Saw It Coming
Before the financial
crisis, many investors — large American and European banks, pension funds,
insurance companies and even some hedge funds — failed to recognize that
overextended borrowers would default on their mortgages, and they kept
increasing their investments in mortgage-related securities. As the mortgage
market collapsed, they suffered steep losses.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on banking and
investment banking frauds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Accounting for Collateralized Debt
Obligations (CDOs)
As to CDOs in
VIEs, you might take a look at
http://www.mayerbrown.com/public_docs/cdo_heartland2004_FIN46R.pdf
Evergreen
Investment Management case at
http://www.sec.gov/litigation/admin/2009/34-60059.pdf
Bob Jensen's
threads on CDO accounting ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#CDO
Bob Jensen's
threads on SPEs, SPVs, and VIEs ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/speOverview.htm
The Greatest Swindle in the History of the World ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#Bailout
Accountants Claim Immorality is
Acceptable if It Fails to Pass the Materiality Test
Bedtime Lesson 1 for Children: Only Steal a Little Bit at Any One Time and Stay
Below Your Materiality Limit
Bedtime Lesson 2 for Children: The Materiality Limit is Higher for Thieves Who
Are Already Rich
Bedtime Lesson 3 Attributed to Prize Fighter Joe Lewis: Being Rich is Better
Than Being Poor
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on April 23,
2010
Case Hinges on Vital Legal Concept
by: Ashby
Jones, Kara Scannel, and Susanne Craig
Apr 19, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
Click here to view the video on WSJ.com 
TOPICS: Fraud,
Materiality, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission
SUMMARY: The
Securities and Exchange Commission's civil case against Goldman Sachs Group
Inc. hinges in large part on the concept of materiality. The WSJ article
gives a casual definition of this concept. Students are asked to provide the
definition of the accounting concept of materiality and compare its use to
that described in this case. The related article is the main page article
with a clear graphic describing the transaction which led to the SEC case
again Goldman Sachs.
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article is designed to expand students' understanding of the concept of
material beyond a numerical threshold for financial statement adjustments.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
The WSJ article indicates that materiality is central to the case against
Goldman Sachs that was brought this week by the SEC. How is this concept
defined in the WSJ article?
2. (Introductory)
Also refer to the WSJ video of Ashby Jones discussing the legal issues
entitled SEC v. Goldman. How does he define this concept?
3. (Advanced)
Identify the accounting concept of materiality in the conceptual literature
behind U.S. GAAP or IFRS. Does this accounting definition differ from that
provided in the WSJ article? From the WSJ video of Ashby Jones discussing
the legal issues? Explain.
4. (Introductory)
Refer to the related print article and especially the graphic associated
with it, entitled "Middleman: How Goldman Sachs structured the deal under
scrutiny." Describe the transaction that has triggered the SEC's case
against Goldman Sachs.
5. (Introductory)
What was the potentially material fact that was kept from investors who
bought the Abacus CDO designed by ACA Management and sold by Goldman Sachs?
6. (Advanced)
Refer again to the accounting definition of materiality. How does this
example from outside accounting make it clear that the nature of a given
item may create materiality concerns as much as the dollar value of that
item?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
Goldman Sachs Charged with Fraud
by Gregory Zuckerman, Susanne Craig and Serena Ng
Apr 17, 2010
Page: A1
SEC versus Goldman Sachs
"Will Wall Street (or the Rest of Us) Ever Learn?" by Bill Taylor,
Harvard Business Review Blog, April 19, 2010 ---
http://blogs.hbr.org/taylor/2010/04/will_wall_street_or_the_rest_o.html?cm_mmc=npv-_-DAILY_ALERT-_-AWEBER-_-DATE
The SEC's decision to
file civil-fraud charges against Goldman Sachs
over one of the synthetic securities the investment bank issued during the
subprime-mortgage bubble has generated major headlines, roiled the stock
market, and otherwise created a flurry of shock and awe from Wall Street to
Washington, DC. What I find surprising, though, is how surprised people seem
to be by the charges. We still can't seem to come to terms with just how
badly so many "blue-chip" institutions behaved over the last few years, and
how easily so many high-profile executives got caught up in the speculative
frenzy to turn a quick buck (or, in this case, a quick billion).
I might have been surprised, too, had I not just
finished Michael Lewis's remarkable new book, The Big Short. This
account of the subprime-mortgage fiasco, the small band of eccentrics who
made billions betting against it, and the army of highly educated,
well-dressed, overpaid investment bankers who engaged in a march of folly to
the very end, left me angry, shaken, and depressed. It was as if I were
reading a bigger, badder account of all the financial booms and busts that
had come before--from the junk-bond craze to the LBO wave to the Internet
bubble.
As I read the last page and sighed, one question
nagged at me: How is it that so many allegedly brilliant people (just
ask the folks at Goldman, they'll tell you how smart they are)
never seem to learn? Why do the self-satisfied "lords of finance" keep
making the same self-inflicted mistakes, whether they are matters of bad
judgment, fraudulent conduct, or outright criminality?
I woke up the next morning, checked out The New
York Times, and saw a different version of the same story played out
yet again! A
front-page article
explored how the much-celebrated phenomenon of micro-lending, offering small
loans to individuals and entrepreneurs in the poorest countries as a way to
lift them from poverty, is facing a global backlash.
Muhammad Yunus, the Bangladeshi economist who won the Nobel Peace Prize in
2006 for his work in the field, was watching in
horror as powerful, hungry, often-reckless banks were rushing in to generate
big profits from an idea they either didn't understand or didn't care about.
"We created microcredit to fight the loan sharks; we didn't create
microcredit to encourage new loan sharks," Professor Yunus fumed.
"Microcredit should be seen as an opportunity to help people get out of
poverty in a business way, but not as an opportunity to make money out of
people."
I love innovation as much as the next
person--probably more so. But this makes me crazy! The story of finance over
the last 25 years has been the story of innovation run amok--and of our
systematic failure, as a society, as companies, as individual leaders, to
learn from mistakes we seem determined to keep making. It might be condo
loans in Miami, synthetic derivatives in London, or credits to yak herders
in Mongolia, but it's déjà vu all over again: good ideas gone disastrously
wrong, genuine steps forward that ultimately bring markets crashing down.
As I fumed once more, I thought back to some words
of wisdom from Warren Buffet, who continues to amaze with his common-sense
brilliance. Buffet
gave the best explanation of this phenomenon I've ever heard in an interview
with Charlie Rose. The PBS host, talking to the
billionaire about the same disaster Michael Lewis writes about, asked the
obvious question: "Should wise people have known better?" Of course, they
should have, Buffett replied, but there's a "natural progression" to how
good ideas go wrong. He called this progression the "three I's." First come
the innovators, who see opportunities that others don't. Then come the
imitators, who copy what the innovators have done. And then come the idiots,
whose avarice undoes the very innovations they are trying to use to get
rich.
The problem, in other words, isn't with innovation.
It's with the bad behavior that inevitably follows. So how do we as
individuals (not to mention as companies and societies) continue to embrace
the value-creating upside of creativity while guarding against the
value-destroying downsides of imitation and idiocy? It's not easy, which is
why so many of us fall prey to so many bad ideas. "People don't get smarter
about things that get as basic as greed," Warren Buffett told Rose. "You
can't stand to see your neighbor getting rich. You know you're smarter than
he is, but he's doing all these [crazy] things, and he's getting rich...so
pretty soon you start doing it."
That's some pretty straight shooting and a pretty
fair approximation of the delusional, foolish, and downright stupid behavior
that Michael Lewis chronicles in such detail. It's also a central challenge
for innovators everywhere. Sometimes, the most important form of leadership
is resisting an innovation that takes hold in your field when that
innovation, no matter how popular with your rivals, is at odds with your
values and long-term point of view. The most determined innovators are as
conservative as they are disruptive. They make big strategic bets for the
long term and don't hedge their bets when strategic fashions change.
Can you distinguish between genuine creativity and
mindless imitation? Are you prepared to walk away from ideas that promise to
make money, even if they make no sense? Do you have the discipline to keep
your head when so many around you are losing theirs? Those questions are
something to think about. The answers may be the difference between being an
innovator and an idiot.
Bob Jensen's threads on banking and investment banking fraud ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Questions
How is bright-line-rule Repo accounting in 2008 like the bright-line-rule “1%
Solution” of a decade earlier?
Answer is suggested below.
How do we simultaneously award PwC for being the
world’s Number 1 financial management consulting firm and the Number 1 financial
auditing firm?
Question is raised below.
First Let’s Talk About 2010
PwC is the auditor of Goldman Sachs, and we really don't
know if and how long PwC will be off the hook on Goldman’s 2010 lawsuits. The
former Treasury Secretary, Hank Paulson, was previously the CEO of Goldman. He
made it his number one priority to save Goldman in the Bailout, which in turn
made it necessary to bail out AIG since billions in AIG credit derivative
obligations were owed to Goldman. The net effect was to bail out AIG, which of
course is also audited by PwC.
Ernst & Young, the audit firm, had a long and lucrative relationship with Lehman
Brothers. Lehman Brothers has paid EY more than $160 million in audit and other
fees since fiscal year 2001. Although this isn’t nearly as much as
Goldman Sachs and AIG pay PwC – almost $230
million a year combined in 2008 – it was still a huge amount and represented a
significant client relationship for Ernst & Young
Francine McKenna, "Liberté,
Egalité, Fraternité: Big Lehman Brothers Troubles For Ernst & Young," re:
The Auditors, March 15, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/03/15/liberte-egalite-fraternite-lehman-brothers-troubles-for-ernst-young-threaten-the-big-4-fraternity/
Also see
The Continuing Saga of Auditing, Independence, Consulting, and Professionalism
and Fees
"The Great American Financial Sandwich: AIG, PwC, and Goldman Sachs," by
Francine McKenna, re: The Auditors, February 2, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/02/02/4151/
If and when shareholders lose money in 2010 because of
proven Goldman frauds, it’s inevitable that Goldman’s shareholders and creditors
will file lawsuits against the PwC auditors as well as Goldman Sachs itself and
the credit agencies that fraudulently gave Goldman’s toxic CDO bonds AAA ratings
when they should’ve been junk. The credit rating agencies in turn will sue PwC
claiming they were misled by Goldman’s golden financial statement.
The 2010 lawsuit merry-go-round is barely beginning
since the SEC’s lawsuit against Goldman is hot off the presses. Worse, the
Justice Department has yet to decide whether it will pursue criminal prosecution
of Goldman. I doubt that this will happen since hauling Goldman into criminal
court might greatly upset the Administration’s economic recovery plan and create
massive unemployment and economic disruption.
Thus it’s become a waiting game for PwC in 2010.
Meanwhile PwC can bank hundreds of millions in a war chest, much of it earned
from the administration of the Lehman Bankruptcy. It’s also not clear that PwC
is as culpable for any Goldman audit failures as much Ernst & Young is culpable,
in my opinion, for the alleged Lehman audit failures ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
PwC does have other legal battles pending ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#PwC
Goldman and PwC might well survive the 2010 legal battle
like they survived a huge 2000 legal battle:
A History Lesson on Goldman that
Sounds a Bit Like Repo Accounting Issues with the “1%
Solution”
Question
How can you "PUT" away your cares about clear-cut (bright line) rules of
accounting?
Answer
See how AOL did it in conspiracy with Goldman Sachs
With the
AOL-Time Warner deal due to close in just three months, Bertelsmann needed to
reduce its AOL Europe holding -- pronto. But the obvious buyer, AOL, didn't want
to own more than 50% or more of the venture, either. Going above half might
trigger a U.S. accounting rule that would force AOL to consolidate all the
struggling unit's losses on its books when AOL was already grappling with
deteriorating ad revenues and a declining stock price. Enter Goldman Sachs Group
Inc. (GS ) Business Week has learned that the premier Wall Street bank agreed to
buy 1% of AOL Europe -- half a percent from each parent -- for $215 million. AOL
Europe, in return, agreed to a "put" contract promising Goldman that it could
sell back the 1% by a specific date and at a set price. That simple transaction
solved Bertelsmann's EU problem without trapping AOL in an accounting conundrum
-- a perfect solution.
"Goldman's 1% Solution," by Paula
Dwyer, Business Week, June 28, 2004 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/@@ajkOUmUQQWvg7RMA/premium/content/04_26/b3889045_mz011.htm?se=1
Goldman's 1% Solution
In 2000, it cut a questionable deal that smoothed the AOL-Time Warner merger.
Will the SEC take action?
In more ways
than one, the news from the European Union was bad. It was October, 2000, and
the EU's executive arm, the European Commission, had just jolted America Online
Inc. with a ruling that its pending acquisition of Time Warner Inc. (TWX
) could harm competition in Europe's media markets, especially the emerging
online music business. The EC was concerned that AOL was a 50-50 partner with
German media giant Bertelsmann in one of Europe's biggest Internet service
providers, AOL Europe. Now the EC was ordering Bertelsmann to give up control
over AOL Europe.
With the AOL-Time Warner deal due to close in just
three months, Bertelsmann needed to reduce its AOL Europe holding -- pronto. But
the obvious buyer, AOL, didn't want to own more than 50% or more of the venture,
either. Going above half might trigger a U.S. accounting rule that would force
AOL to consolidate all the struggling unit's losses on its books when AOL was
already grappling with deteriorating ad revenues and a declining stock price.
Enter Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS ) Business
Week has learned that the premier Wall Street bank agreed to buy 1% of AOL
Europe -- half a percent from each parent -- for $215 million. AOL Europe, in
return, agreed to a "put" contract promising Goldman that it could sell back the
1% by a specific date and at a set price. That simple transaction solved
Bertelsmann's EU problem without trapping AOL in an accounting conundrum -- a
perfect solution.
LEGAL HEADACHES
Or so it seemed at the time. But the deal also may
have violated U.S. securities laws. The Securities A: Exchange Commission and
the Justice Dept. have construed some deals involving promises to buy back
assets at a specific time and price as share-parking arrangements designed to
mislead investors. The former chief executive of AOL Europe says the Goldman
deal may have kept up to $200 million in 2000 losses off of the combined
AOL-Time Warner financials -- enough, he says, that Time Warner might have tried
to change the terms of the $120 billion merger, since AOL wouldn't have looked
as healthy. But as the deal moved toward consummation, the Goldman arrangement
was never disclosed in public documents to AOL or Time Warner shareholders.
The AOL Europe transaction threatens to create
problems for Goldman Sachs. But it could also prolong the legal headaches of
Time Warner Inc., as the AOL-Time Warner combine is now called. For the past two
years, Time Warner has been in heated negotiations with the SEC over AOL's
accounting for advertising revenues (BW -- June 7). Just as the SEC is wrapping
up that case -- it could warn Time Warner as early as this summer that it
intends to bring civil fraud charges -- the Goldman transaction raises troubling
new questions about AOL's financial dealings prior to the merger.
The SEC has not brought charges over the 1%
solution, and an SEC spokesman would not comment on whether the agency is
probing the deal. Time Warner spokeswoman Tricia Primrose Wallace says the
company will not comment on any part of the Goldman arrangement. A lawyer for
Stephen M. Case, AOL's chairman and CEO at the time of the deal, referred
questions to Time Warner. Thomas Middelhoff, who was Bertelsmann's chairman at
the time of the deal and negotiated the AOL Europe joint venture with Case in
1995, says through a spokesman that the sale of a 0.5% stake was "purely a
financial technique" handled by others. And Lucas van Praag, a Goldman Sachs
spokesman, says: "We handled this entirely appropriately. We don't believe there
is anything untoward here."
Continued
in the article
"University of California, Bank Sue AOL:
Lawsuit claims firm lied about finances, cost them," by Pamela Tate, The Wall
Street Journal, April 15, 2003 ---
http://www.yourlawyer.com/practice/printnews.htm?story_id=5448
The University of
California has joined with Amalgamated Bank to file a lawsuit against AOL Time
Warner Inc., claiming their stakes have lost more than $500 million in value
because the media company allegedly lied about its financial condition.
The University of California, which dropped out of a federal class-action suit
against AOL earlier this month, filed the complaint Monday in the Superior Court
of California in Los Angeles. The university and co-plaintiff Amalgamated Bank,
a New York institution that manages funds for several dozen union pension funds,
are being represented by Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes & Lerach.
The plaintiffs allege that AOL Time Warner materially misrepresented its revenue
and subscriber growth after the merger of AOL and Time Warner in January 2001.
In two separate restatements in October and March, AOL slashed nearly $600
million from previously reported revenue over the past two years.
The University of California and Amalgamated allege that AOL's admissions so far
have been "too conservative," and that the company may have overstated results
by almost $1 billion.
In a March 28 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, AOL Time
Warner said it faces 30 shareholder lawsuits that have been centralized in the
U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. The company said in
the filing it intends to defend itself "vigorously." The lawsuit filed by the
University of California and Amalgamated names several current and former AOL
Time Warner executives, as well as financial-services giants Citigroup and
Morgan Stanley.
Citigroup is the parent of Salomon Smith Barney, now called Smith Barney, which
with Morgan Stanley allegedly reaped $135 million in advisory fees from the AOL
and Time Warner merger.
Defendants include Stephen Case, who resigned as chairman in January; former
Chief Executive Gerald Levin, who left the company in May; current Chairman and
Chief Executive Richard Parsons; and Ted Turner, who recently stepped down as
vice chairman.
The lawsuit claims they and more than two dozen other insiders sold off $779
million in stock just after the merger closed but before the accounting
revelations that would cause the stock price to plummet.
The suit also names AOL's
auditor, Ernst & Young.
The University of California claims it lost $450 million in the value of its AOL
Time Warner shares, which were converted from more than 11.3 million Time Warner
shares in the merger. At the end of 2002, the value of the university's
portfolio was at $49.9 billion.
Continued
in the article
And so the beat goes on a decade later with Goldman
raking in billions in profits and PwC thriving like never before in assurance
services and consulting.
"PricewaterhouseCooopers Gains Top Rating From Gartner," Big Four Blog,
January 20, 2010 ---
http://www.bigfouralumni.blogspot.com/
We see from a recent
press release that PricewaterhouseCoopers has received a “Strong Positive”
rating in Gartner’s Global Finance Management Consulting Services MarketScope
Report, which was published recently on December 21, 2009.
This is the highest
possible rating in the Marketscope, a "Strong Positive" shows a provider who can
be considered "a strong choice for strategic investments" where customers can
continue with planned investments and potential customers can consider this
vendor a strong choice for strategic investments.. The research assesses the
global capabilities of nine leading finance management consulting service
providers on customer experience, market understanding, market responsiveness,
product/service, offering strategy, geographical capabilities and
vertical-industry strategy.
Congratulations to PwC
for this select honor.
Jensen Comment
Unfortunately, there is a stiff price to see the contents of this report
(US$1,995), so we can’t say who the other 8 providers are, but very likely some
of the Big Four firms would be on that list, and somewhat curious why PwC should
feature this as a big release on their global website, but other firms are quite
silent on this point.
At times it may be difficult for the world's largest auditing firm to also be
rated as the top firm for "Global Finance Management Consulting Services."
Nobody seems to question financial consulting since the Andersen destruction
gave rise to new independence rules, notably Sarbanes-Oxley. In the past decade
the Big Four auditing firms, except for Deloitte, shed themselves of their
consulting divisions and then commenced to selectively build them back up once
again. However, more care is being devoted to the independence bounds of
computer systems and tax consulting.
From:
THE Internet Accounting List/Forum for CPAs [mailto:CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Jim Fuehrmeyer
Sent: Friday, January 22, 2010 10:07 AM
To: CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: PricewaterhouseCooopers Gains Top Rating From Gartner
Despite the SEC/Sarbanes-Oxley rules that severely limit the non-audit services
that auditors can provide to their audit clients, the re-growth of consulting
should still be a concern.
I
think Art Wyatt’s article on the cultural impact of consulting at Arthur
Andersen that appears in the March 2004 Issue of Accounting Horizons sums
it up best.
It’s
required reading for all my undergraduate CPAs to be.
Jim
Fuehrmeyer
JAMES
L. FUEHRMEYER, JR.
Associate Professional Specialist
Department of Accountancy |
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. |
MENDOZA COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME
384 Mendoza College of
Business
Notre Dame, IN 46556
office: (574) 631-1752 | fax: (574) 631-5255
e:
jfuehrme@nd.edu | w:
http://business.nd.edu |
Art Wyatt asserted:
"ACCOUNTING PROFESSIONALISM: THEY JUST DON'T GET IT" ---
http://aaahq.org/AM2003/WyattSpeech.pdf
Bob Jensen's threads on auditing professionalism and
independence are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Professionalism
Accounting Professionalism in the Good Old Days
April 21, 2010 message from David Albrecht
[albrecht@PROFALBRECHT.COM]
In a recent e-mail, I
pointed out the questionable timing of corporate announcements about
Obamacare corporate charges against earnings (e.g., ATT's 1 billion dollar
charge). I think it possible that corporate disclosures could be above
board, but then I think it possible that they are below board.
I think government actions
can always be questioned. Presidents, senators, congressmen and their
appointees consider honesty to be a random walk variable.
It is no secret that the
Obama administration has seriously leaned on the SEC since Schapiro was
named chair a long year ago. For her part, Schapiro seems quite willing to
do whatever to keep her job. Reportedly, the pressure on her to adopt the
party line with respect to IFRS was immense.
The Christian Science
Monitor has a new piece out ( http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Politics/2010/0420/Goldman-Sachs-SEC-case-Is-it-all-about-politics
) questioning whether the SEC fraud charge against Goldman Sachs has been
timed to coincide with crunch time for the Dodd financial reform bill.
Although I think it possible that GS could be guilty as charged, I also
think it possible that Obama has forced the SEC to lob a grenade at GS and
will (in a couple weeks) call it all off ("just kidding, GS) or be willing
to settle for a very very very small amount with the words "fraud" removed.
I wish we could go back to
the good old days when Denny ran a good FASB, and before that when auditors
sought to serve the public interest.
David Albrecht
April 21, 2010 reply
form Bob Jensen
Hi David,
I grabbed a
few quotations both in support and in opposition to your comments about the
good old days. You might especially want to scroll down to accounting
historian Steve Zeff’s remarks about a CPA Certificate being a union card
versus a license to be a member of a profession.
It’s always
easy to block out the bad stuff when remembering the good old days. It’s
like when I remember warmth of three teams of draft horses, gentle giants,
inside the barn when I was a little kid pushing down hay from the hay loft.
I block out how freezing cold it was before daybreak in the smelly privy.
There’s a song I hear on Pandora Internet Radio that says “the privy was a
hundred feet too far away in the winter and a hundred feet too close in the
heat of summer.”
The quotations
below are taken from “The Saga of Auditing Professionalism and Independence”
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Professionalism
Bob Jensen
Message from Steven Bachrach (Department of
Chemistry at Trinity University)
The
Sunday New York Times this past weekend (1/13/02) has a very interesting
article on the "integrity" of sports records that clearly indicates that the
Favre-Strahan controversy is not unprecedented.
A few
examples:
Nykesha Sales, opened up the last game of her college career hobbling onto the
floor due to a ruptured Achilles tendon and was allowed to unopposedly sink a
basket to set a career scoring mark.
Gordie Howe skates for 47 seconds in a minor league hockey game to set the
"record" for being the first athlete to compete in 6 decades.
Denny
McLain grooves 3 pitches to Mickey Mantle so that Mantle can hit a home run,
passing Jimmie Foxx into 3rd place all time.
Our
own David Robinson scores 71 points (thanks to exclusive feeding of the ball) in
the last game of the 1993-1994 season to pass Shaq as the scoring leader. A
similar situation lead to Wilt Chamberlin's famous 100 point game.
One
begins to wonder whether there is any point to a discussion of ethics when it
comes to sports records, especially those involved in team sports.
Steve
Hi Bill,
Andersen and
the other firms "shifted their focus from prestige to profits --- and thereby
transformed the firm. "
The same thing
happened in Morgan Stanley and other investment banking firms. Like it or not,
the quote below from Frank Partnoy (a Wall Street insider) seems to fit
accounting, banking, and other firms near the close of the 20th Century.
From Page 15 of
the most depressing book that I have ever read about the new wave of rogue
professionals. Frank Partnoy in FIASCO: The Inside Story of a Wall Street Trader
(New York: Penguin Putnam, 1997, ISBN 0 14 02 7879 6)
************************************************
This was not the Morgan Stanley of yore. In the 1920s, the white-shoe (in
auditing that would be black-shoe) investment bank developed a reputation for
gentility and was renowned for fresh flowers and fine furniture (recall that
Arthur Andersen offices featured those magnificent wooden doors), an elegant
partners' dining room, and conservative business practices. The firm's credo was
"First class business in a first class way."
However, during the banking heyday of the 1980s, the firm faced intense
competition from other banks and slipped from its number one spot. In response,
Morgan Stanley's partners shifted their focus from prestige to profits --- and
thereby transformed the firm. (Emphasis added) Morgan Stanley had swapped its
fine heritage for slick sales-and-trading operation --- and made a lot more
money.
************************************************
Bob Jensen
-----Original
Message-----
From: William Mister
[mailto:bmister@LAMAR.COLOSTATE.EDU]
Sent: Tuesday, February 19, 2002 11:05 PM
To:
AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: Andersen again
I
refer you back to the Fortune article some years ago (old timers may remember
it) that referred to then AA&Co as the "Marine Corp of the accounting
Profession." In those days there were no "rogue partners." I wonder what
changed?
William G. (Bill) Mister
William.Mister@colostate.edu
Here is some of the good we remember about the good old days
The Accounting Hall of Fame Citation for Leonard Spacek ---
http://fisher.osu.edu/acctmis/hof/spacek.html
It must be kept in mind that the statements
certified are not ours but are our clients--and our clients do not care to mix
explanations of accounting theory with explanations of their business nor can we
pass onto our readers the responsibility for appraisal of differences in
accounting theory. Those fields are for you and me to grapple with, not the
public. In general, clients are not primarily interested in arguments of
accounting theory at the time of preparing their reports. The companies whose
accounts are certified are chiefly interested in what is said to their
shareholders, and in the hard practical facts of how accounting rules affect
them, their competitors and other companies. Usually they are very critical of
what we call accounting principles when these called principles are unrealistic,
inconsistent, or do not protect or distinguish scrupulous management from the
scrupulous.
"The Need for An Accounting Court," by Leonard Spacek, The Accounting
Review, 1958, Pages 368-379 ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudSpacek01.htm
Jensen Comment
Fifty years later I'm a strong advocate of an accounting court, but I envision a
somewhat different court than envisioned by the great Leonard Spacek in 1958.
Since 1958, the failure of anti-trust enforcement has allowed business firms to
merge into enormous multi-billion or even trillion dollar clients who've become
powerful bullies that put extreme pressures on auditors to bend accounting and
auditing principles. For example see the way executives of Fannie Mae pressured
KPMG to bend the rules (an act that eventually got KPMG fired from the audit).
In my opinion the time has come where auditors and clients can take their
major disputes to an Accounting Court that will use expert independent judges to
resolve these disputes much like the Derivatives Implementation Group (DIG)
resolved technical issues for the implementation of FAS 133. The main
difference, however, is that an Accounting Court should hear and resolve
disputes in private confidence that allows auditors and clients to keep these
disputes away from the media. The main advantage of such an Accounting Court is
that it might restrain clients from bullying auditors such as became the case
when Fannie Mae bullied KPMG.
Here is some of the bad we forget about the good old days.
External Auditing Combined With Consulting and Other Assurance
Services: Audit Independence?
TITLE:
"Auditor Independence and Earnings Quality"
AUTHORS:
Richard M. Frankel MIT Sloan School of Business 50 Memorial Drive,
E52.325g Cambridge, MA 02459-1261 (617) 253-7084
frankel@mit.edu
Marilyn F. Johnson Michigan State University Eli Broad Graduate School
of Management N270 Business College Complex East Lansing, MI 48824-1122
(517) 432-0152
john1614@msu.edu
Karen K. Nelson Stanford University Graduate School of Business
Stanford, CA 94305-5015 (650) 723-0106
knelson@gsb.stanford.edu
DATE: August 2001
LINK:
http://gobi.stanford.edu/ResearchPapers/Library/RP1696.pdf
Stanford University
Study Shows Consulting Does Affect Auditor Independence ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=54733
Academics have found that the provision of consulting services to audit
clients can have a serious effect on a firm's perceived independence.
And
the new SEC rules designed to counter audit independence violations
could increase the pressure to provide non-audit services to clients to
an increasingly competitive market.
The
study (pdf format), by the Stanford Graduate School of Business,
showed that forecast earnings were more likely to be exceeded when the
auditor was paid more for its consultancy services.
This
suggests that earnings management was an important factor for audit
firms that earn large consulting fees. And such firms worked at
companies that would offer little surprise to the market, given that
investors react negatively when the auditor also generates a high
non-audit fee from its client.
The
study used data collected from over 4,000 proxies filed between February
5, 2001 and June 15, 2001.
It
concluded: "We find a significant negative market reaction to proxy
statements filed by firms with the least independent auditors. Our
evidence also indicates an inverse relation between auditor independence
and earnings management.
"Firms with the least independent auditors are more likely to just meet
or beat three earnings benchmarks – analysts' expectations, prior year
earnings, and zero earnings – and to report large discretionary
accruals. Taken together, our results suggest that the provision of
non-audit services impairs independence and reduces the quality of
earnings."
New
SEC rules mean that auditors have to disclose their non-audit fees in
reports. This could have an interesting effect, the study warned: "The
disclosure of fee data could increase the competitiveness of the audit
market by reducing the cost to firms of making price comparisons and
negotiating fees.
"In
addition, firms may reduce the purchase of non-audit services from their
auditor to avoid the appearance of independence problems."
A
Lancaster University study in February this year found that larger
auditors are less likely to compromise their independence than smaller
ones when providing non-audit services to their clients.
And
our sister site, AccountingWEB-UK, reports that
research by the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England &
Wales (ICAEW) showed that, despite the prevalence of traditional
standards of audit independence, the principal fear for an audit partner
was the loss of the client. |
-----Original Message-----
From: Jensen, Robert
Sent: Sunday, December 30, 2001 2:13 PM
To: 'Stephen A. Zeff'
Subject: RE: threads on accounting fraud
Hi
Steve,
What
a nice message to encounter in my message box. Thank you for the kind words.
I
think your remarks should be shared with accounting educators. Would you mind if
I place your remarks in my next (probably January 5) edition of New Bookmarks?
The archives are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
I
hear from you so rarely that it is really a pleasure when I get a message from
you. I have more respect for your dedication to our craft than you can ever
imagine. I wish that you, like Denny Beresford, would share your vast storehouse
of accounting knowledge and history with accounting educators on the AECM ---
http://pacioli.loyola.edu/aecm/
Our
younger accounting educators communicating on the AECM are very bright and
skilled in technology, but they are usually a mile wide and an inch deep when it
comes to accounting history.
I
don't recall if I ever told you this, but your efforts to find Marie in the Rice
alumni database led to the subsequent marriage between her and my friend Billy
Bender. Both were well into their eighties on the wedding day. They were engaged
while both attended Rice University in the 1940s, but the war called Billy away
to be a Navy pilot. They had no subsequent contact for over 50 years until you
helped Billy find Marie.
Thanks,
Bob
Jensen
-----Original Message-----
From: Stephen A. Zeff
[mailto:sazeff@rice.edu]
Sent: Sunday, December 30, 2001 1:36 PM
To:
rjensen@trinity.edu
Subject: threads on accounting fraud
Dear
Bob:
Yesterday I happened across your Threads on Accounting Fraud, etc. (the Enron
case) at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm , and I found it to be fascinating
reading. I had already seen quite a few of the items, but I knew I could count
on you to pull everything--and I mean everything--together. You do wonders on
the Internet.
I
don't know if you recall seeing my short article, "Does the CPA Belong to a
Profession?" (Accounting Horizons, June 1987). The previous year, I was invited
by the chairman of the Texas State Board of Public Accountancy to give a
15-minute address to newly admitted CPAs at the Erwin Center in Austin in
November. Even though I am not a CPA, I accepted. I asked if they would mind if
I were to say something controversial. They said no. Some 2,500 candidates,
relatives and friends, and elders of the profession were in attendance, the
largest audience to which I have ever spoken. Typically at such gatherings, the
speaker enthuses about the greatness of the profession the candidates are about
to enter. Instead, I opted to discuss whether the CPA actually belongs to a
profession, and my view came down heavily on the skeptical side. Some of the
questions I raised are being raised today about the supposedly independent
posture of auditors and about the teaching of accounting. Fifteen years have
passed, and things don't seem to have changed.
My
address raised the question of whether the CPA certification constitutes a union
card, a license to practice a trade, or admission to a profession. I reviewed a
number of recent trends, including the growing commercialization of the practice
of accounting, the increasing number of points of possible conflict between the
widening scope of services and the attest function, the decline in the vitality
of the professional literature, and the even greater emphasis on the rule-bound
approach to teaching accounting in the universities. My conclusion was that
accounting was in a state of professional decline that should concern all of its
leaders.
Following the address, I expected to be taken to task for using such a solemn
occasion, at which speakers are normally heard to celebrate the profession, to
deliver a pessimistic message. I was, however, astonished that not one of the
professional leaders in attendance uttered a word of criticism. When I pointedly
asked several of the senior practitioners for their reaction to my remarks, the
general response was a shrug of their shoulders. Yes, professionalism is not
what it once was, but there seemed to be little that one could, or should, do to
attempt to reverse the trend. This wholly unexpected reaction led me to conclude
that I had underestimated the depth and pervasiveness of the malaise in the
profession.
I
wish you and Erika a Happy New Year.
Steve. --
***************************************************************
Subsequent Message received from Steve Zeff
Bob:
It's
always a delight to hear from you. Yes, of course you have my permission to
place my remarks in your Bookmarks.
In
fact, a lot of what I know about accounting history was packed into my recent
book, Henry Rand Hatfield: Humanist, Scholar, and Accounting Educator (JAI
Press/Elsevier, 2000).
For
some years in the early 1990s, I wrote to successive directors of the AAA's
doctoral consortium to persuade them that a session should be provided on the
history of accounting thought. When the directors replied (which was less than
half the time), they said that their planned programs were already full with the
standard people and the standard subjects. They typically do bring a standard
setter in (usually Jim Leisenring), but the last time someone held a session on
accounting history at the consortium was in 1987 (I was the presenter, and the
students told me that the subject I treated was entirely new to them.).Virtually
no top doctoral programs in the country treat accounting history or even
accounting theory. They deal only with how to conduct analytical or empirical
research, and the references given to the students are, with a few exceptions
(Ball and Brown, and Watts and Zimmerman), from the last six or eight years.
Small wonder that tyro assistant professors struggle to learn what accounting is
all about once they start teaching the subject. Our emerging doctoral students,
for years, have had no knowledge of the evolution of the accounting literature,
even the theory that is now finding its way in the work of Stephen Penman and
Jim Ohlson.
I
think that one of the aims of the consortium should be to "round out" the
intellectual preparation of the doctoral students. Instead, the consortium goes
deeper in the areas already studied.
Keep
up the good work. You are one of the very few people in our field who really
cares. And you have done a great deal--more than anyone else I know--to broaden
the vision and knowledge base of our colleagues.
Steve. --
Stephen A. Zeff
Herbert S. Autrey Professor of Accounting
Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Management
Rice University 6100 Main Street Houston, TX 77005
One
of the most prominent CPAs in the world sent me the following message and
sent the WSJ link:
Bob,
More on Enron.
It's interesting that this matter of performing internal audits didn't come up
in the testimony Joe Beradino of Andersen presented to the House Committee a
couple of days ago
"Arthur Andersen's 'Double Duty' Work Raises Questions
About Its Independence," by Jonathan Weil, The Wall Street Journal, December 14,
2001 ---
http://interactive.wsj.com/fr/emailthis/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1008289729306300000.djm
In
addition to acting as
Enron Corp.'s outside auditor, Arthur Andersen LLP also performed
internal-auditing services for Enron, raising further questions about the Big
Five accounting firm's independence and the degree to which it may have been
auditing its own work.
That
Andersen performed "double duty" work for the Houston-based energy concern
likely will trigger greater regulatory scrutiny of Andersen's role as Enron's
independent auditor than would ordinarily be the case after an audit failure,
accounting and securities-law specialists say.
It
also potentially could expose Andersen to greater liability for damages in
shareholder lawsuits, depending on whether the internal auditors employed by
Andersen missed key warning signs that they should have caught. Once valued at
more than $77 billion, Enron is now in proceedings under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code.
Internal-audit departments, among other things, are used to ensure that a
company's control systems are adequate and working, while outside independent
auditors are hired to opine on the accuracy of a company's financial statements.
Every sizable company relies on outside auditors to check whether its internal
auditors are working effectively to prevent fraud, accounting irregularities and
waste. But when a company hires its outside auditor to monitor internal auditors
working for the same firm, critics say it creates an unavoidable conflict of
interest for the firm.
Still, such arrangements have become more common over the past decade. In
response, the Securities and Exchange Commission last year passed new rules,
which take effect in August 2002, restricting the amount of internal-audit work
that outside auditors can perform for their clients, though not banning it
outright.
"It
certainly runs totally contrary to my concept of independence," says Alan
Bromberg, a securities-law professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas.
"I see it as a double duty, double responsibility and, therefore, double
potential liability."
Andersen officials say their firm's independence wasn't impaired by the size or
nature of the fees paid by Enron -- $52 million last year. An Enron spokesman
said, "The company believed and continues to believe that Arthur Andersen's role
as Enron's internal auditor would not compromise Andersen's role as independent
auditor for Enron."
Andersen spokesman David Tabolt said Enron outsourced its internal-audit
department to Andersen around 1994 or 1995. He said Enron began conducting some
of its own internal-audit functions in recent years. Enron, Andersen's
second-largest U.S. client, paid $25 million for audit fees in 2000, according
to Enron's proxy last year. Mr. Tabolt said that figure includes both internal
and external audit fees, a point not explained in the proxy, though he declined
to specify how much Andersen was paid for each. Additionally, Enron paid
Andersen a further $27 million for other services, including tax and consulting
work.
Following audit failures, outside auditors frequently claim that their clients
withheld crucial information from them. In testimony Wednesday before a joint
hearing of two House Financial Services subcommittees, which are investigating
Enron's collapse, Andersen's chief executive, Joseph Berardino, made the same
claim about Enron. However, given that Andersen also was Enron's internal
auditor, "it's going to be tough for Andersen to take that traditional tack that
'management pulled the wool over our eyes,' " says Douglas Carmichael, an
accounting professor at Baruch College in New York.
Mr.
Tabolt, the Andersen spokesman, said it is too early to make judgments about
Andersen's work. "None of us knows yet exactly what happened here," he said.
"When we know the facts we'll all be able to make informed judgments. But until
then, much of this is speculation."
Though it hasn't received public attention recently, Andersen's double-duty work
for Enron wasn't a secret. A March 1996 Wall Street Journal article, for
instance, noted that a growing number of companies, including Enron, had
outsourced their internal-audit departments to their outside auditors, a
development that had prompted criticism from regulators and others. At other
times, Mr. Tabolt said, Andersen and Enron officials had discussed their
arrangement publicly.
Accounting firms say the double-duty arrangements let them become more familiar
with clients' control procedures and that such arrangements are ethically
permissible, as long as outside auditors don't make management decisions in
handling the internal audits. Under the new SEC rules taking effect next year,
an outside auditor impairs its independence if it performs more than 40% of a
client's internal-audit work. The SEC said the restriction won't apply to
clients with assets of $200 million or less. Previously, the SEC had imposed no
such percentage limitation.
-----Original Message-----
From: Roselyn Morris
[mailto:rm13@BUSINESS.SWT.EDU]
Sent: Friday, January 11, 2002 1:45 PM
To:
AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: Oh No!
I am president of the
Board of Directors of a higher education authority, which provides secondary
financing for student loans. By nature of that position, I am chairman of the
audit committee. From that experience, I know that I do battle with the auditors
annually. The auditors did not see any reason to meet with the audit committee
until they were threatened with dismissal. I know that I have asked hard
questions and do not allow the auditors to take the easy way out. I am
continuing being told by the auditors that I am the only one asking these
questions and that I am wasting valuable time, especially for a small client.
The quality of the audit from the Big Five firm is of questionable quality. I
continually find mistakes, and for the last two of three years the audit report
draft was completely wrong. As I press hard, the auditors annually let me know
that the audit is a small audit ($100,000 annually for the authority, and
$35,000 for a subsidiary) and that there are more valuable and worthwhile jobs
to be done. Why is the authority using Big Five auditors then? Because is
required by the bond covenants. The Big Five have worked hard to get all the
publicly traded and SEC audit work, but want to make more money through the big
audits or consulting only.
In working with the
audit committee, I have found that real-world auditors don't know what the
standards or the profession require, only what that particular Big Five firm
requires. The real-world auditors do not want to know those things because most
of those auditors are putting in their time at the Big Five in order to get a
bigger paying job.
As an academic, what
can we do?
Roselyn E. Morris, PhD,
CPA
Associate Dean College of Business Administration
Southwest Texas State University San Marcos, Texas 78666-4616 Phone
(512)245.2311 Fax (512)245.8375 e-mail:
rm13@business.swt.edu
Worldcom Inc.'s restated financial reports aren't even at the printer yet, and
already new questions are surfacing about whether investors can trust the
independence of the company's latest auditor, KPMG LLP -- and, thus, the numbers
themselves.
I suspect by now, most of you are aware that after the world's largest
accounting scandal ever, our
Denny Beresford
accepted an invitation to join the Board of Directors at Worldcom. This has
been an intense addition to his day job of being on the accounting faculty
at the University of Georgia. Denny has one of the best, if not the best,
reputations for technical skills and integrity in the profession of
accountancy. In the article below, he is quoted extensively while coming to
the defense of the KPMG audit of the restated financial statements at
Worldcom. I might add that Worldcom's accounting records were a complete
mess following Worldcom's deliberate efforts to deceive the world and
Andersen's suspected complicity in the crime. If Andersen was not in on the
conspiracy, then Andersen's Worldcom audit goes on record as the worst audit
in the history of the world. For more on the Worldcom scandal, go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm#WorldcomFraud
"New Issues Are
Raised Over Independence of Auditor for MCI," by Jonathan Weil, The Wall
Street Journal, January 28, 2004 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107524105381313221,00.html?mod=home_whats_news_us
Worldcom Inc.'s restated financial reports aren't even at the printer yet,
and already new questions are surfacing about whether investors can trust
the independence of the company's latest auditor, KPMG LLP -- and, thus, the
numbers themselves.
The doubts stem from a brewing series of disputes between state taxing
authorities and WorldCom, now doing business under the name MCI, over an
aggressive KPMG tax-avoidance strategy that the long-distance company used
to reduce its state-tax bills by hundreds of millions of dollars from 1998
until 2001. MCI, which hopes to exit bankruptcy-court protection in late
February, says it continues to use the strategy. Under it, MCI treated the
"foresight of top management" as an asset valued at billions of dollars. It
licensed this foresight to its subsidiaries in exchange for royalties that
the units deducted as business expenses on state tax forms.
It turns out, of course, that WorldCom management's foresight wasn't all
that good. Bernie Ebbers, the telecommunications company's former chief
executive, didn't foresee WorldCom morphing into the largest bankruptcy
filing in U.S. history or getting caught overstating profits by $11 billion.
At least 14 states have made known their intention to sue the company if
they can't reach tax settlements, on the grounds that the asset was bogus
and the royalty payments lacked economic substance. Unlike with federal
income taxes, state taxes won't necessarily get wiped out along with MCI's
restatement of companywide profits.
MCI says its board has decided not to sue KPMG -- and that the decision
eliminates any concerns about independence, even if the company winds up
paying back taxes, penalties and interest to the states. MCI officials say a
settlement with state authorities is likely, but that they don't expect the
amount involved to be material. KPMG, which succeeded the now-defunct Arthur
Andersen LLP as MCI's auditor in 2002, says it stands by its tax advice and
remains independent. "We're fully familiar with the facts and circumstances
here, and we believe no question can be raised about our independence," the
firm said in a one-sentence statement.
Auditing standards and federal securities rules long have held that an
auditor "should not only be independent in fact; they should also avoid
situations that may lead outsiders to doubt their independence." Far from
resolving the matter, MCI's decision not to sue has made the controversy
messier.
In a report released Monday, MCI's Chapter 11 bankruptcy-court examiner,
former U.S. Attorney General Richard Thornburgh, concluded that KPMG likely
rendered negligent and incorrect tax advice to MCI and that MCI likely would
prevail were it to sue to recover past fees and damages for negligence.
KPMG's fees for the tax strategy in question totaled at least $9.2 million
for 1998 and 1999, the examiner's report said. The report didn't attempt to
estimate potential damages.
Actual or threatened litigation against KPMG would disqualify the accounting
firm from acting as MCI's independent auditor under the federal rules.
Deciding not to sue could be equally troubling, some auditing specialists
say, because it creates the appearance that the board may be placing MCI
stakeholders' financial interests below KPMG's. It also could lead outsiders
to wonder whether MCI is cutting KPMG a break to avoid delaying its
emergence from bankruptcy court, and whether that might subtly encourage
KPMG to go easy on the company's books in future years.
"If in fact there were problems with prior-year tax returns, you have a
responsibility to creditors and shareholders to go after that money," says
Charles Mulford, an accounting professor at Georgia Institute of Technology
in Atlanta. "You don't decide not to sue just to be nice, if you have a
legitimate claim, or just to maintain the independence of your auditors."
In conducting its audits of MCI, KPMG also would be required to review a
variety of tax-related accounts, including any contingent state-tax
liabilities. "How is an auditor, who has told you how to avoid state taxes
and get to a tax number, still independent when it comes to saying whether
the number is right or not?" says Lynn Turner, former chief accountant at
the Securities and Exchange Commission. "I see little leeway for a
conclusion other than the auditors are not independent."
Dennis Beresford, the chairman of MCI's audit committee and a former
chairman of the Financial Accounting Standards Board, says MCI's board
concluded, based on advice from outside attorneys, that the company doesn't
have any claims against KPMG. Therefore, he says, KPMG shouldn't be
disqualified as MCI's auditor. He calls the tax-avoidance strategy
"aggressive." But "like a lot of other tax-planning type issues, it's not an
absolutely black-and-white matter," he says, explaining that "it was
considered to be reasonable and similar to what a lot of other people were
doing to reduce their taxes in legal ways."
Mr. Beresford says he had anticipated that the decision to keep KPMG as the
company's auditor would be controversial. "We recognized that we're going to
be in the spotlight on issues like this," he says. Ultimately, he says, MCI
takes responsibility for whatever tax filings it made with state authorities
over the years and doesn't hold KPMG responsible.
He also rejected concerns over whether KPMG would wind up auditing its own
work. "Our financial statements will include appropriate accounting," he
says. He adds that MCI officials have been in discussions with SEC staff
members about KPMG's independence status, but declines to characterize the
SEC's views. According to people familiar with the talks, SEC staff members
have raised concerns about KPMG's independence but haven't taken a position
on the matter.
Mr. Thornburgh's report didn't express a position on whether KPMG should
remain MCI's auditor. Michael Missal, an attorney who worked on the report
at Mr. Thornburgh's law firm, Kirkpatrick & Lockhart LLP, says: "While we
certainly considered the auditor-independence issue, we did not believe it
was part of our mandate to draw any conclusions on it. That is an issue left
for others."
Among the people who could have a say in the matter is Richard Breeden, the
former SEC chairman who is overseeing MCI's affairs. Mr. Breeden, who was
appointed by a federal district judge in 2002 to serve as MCI's corporate
monitor, couldn't be reached for comment Tuesday.
KPMG’s “Unusual Twist”
While KPMG's strategy isn't uncommon among corporations with lots of units
in different states, the accounting firm offered an unusual twist: Under
KPMG's direction, WorldCom treated "foresight of top management" as an
intangible asset akin to patents or trademarks.
Worldcom Inc.'s restated financial reports aren't even at the printer yet,
and already new questions are surfacing about whether investors can trust
the independence of the company's latest auditor, KPMG LLP -- and, thus, the
numbers themselves.
I suspect by now, most of you are aware that after the world's largest
accounting scandal ever, our
Denny Beresford
accepted an invitation to join the Board of Directors at Worldcom. This has
been an intense addition to his day job of being on the accounting faculty
at the University of Georgia. Denny has one of the best, if not the best,
reputations for technical skills and integrity in the profession of
accountancy. In the article below, he is quoted extensively while coming to
the defense of the KPMG audit of the restated financial statements at
Worldcom. I might add that Worldcom's accounting records were a complete
mess following Worldcom's deliberate efforts to deceive the world and
Andersen's suspected complicity in the crime. If Andersen was not in on the
conspiracy, then Andersen's Worldcom audit goes on record as the worst audit
in the history of the world. For more on the Worldcom scandal, go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm#WorldcomFraud
And the saga goes on and on and on.
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.
"PwC's Administration of Lehman Translates to $24,000 Per Hour!" Big
Four Blog, April 16, 2010 ---
http://www.bigfouralumni.blogspot.com/
April 19, 2010 message from Francine McKenna
[retheauditors@GMAIL.COM]
This is a great article by
Jennifer hughes in FT, from early in the process that describes PwC's
approach to the engagement.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/e4223c20-aad1-11dd-897c-000077b07658.html
Francine
Bob Jensen's threads on the Lehman-Ernst Controversies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
Where Were the Auditors? ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm#AuditFirms
Bob Jensen's threads on off-balance-sheet financing (OBSF) ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#OBSF2
Best Explanation to Date:
"Lehman's Demise and Repo 105: No Accounting for Deception,"
Knowledge@Wharton, March 31, 2010 ---
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=2464
The collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008
is widely seen as the trigger for the financial crisis, spreading panic that
brought lending to a halt. Now a 2,200-page report says that prior to the
collapse -- the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history -- the investment bank's
executives went to extraordinary lengths to conceal the risks they had
taken. A new term describing how Lehman converted securities and other
assets into cash has entered the financial vocabulary: "Repo 105."
While Lehman's huge indebtedness and other mistakes
have been well documented, the $30 million study by Anton Valukas, assigned
by the bankruptcy court, contains a number of surprises and new insights,
several Wharton faculty members say.
Among the report's most disturbing revelations,
according to Wharton finance professor
Richard J. Herring, is the picture of Lehman's
accountants at Ernst & Young. "Their main role was to help the firm
misrepresent its actual position to the public," Herring says, noting that
reforms after the Enron collapse of 2001 have apparently failed to make
accountants the watchdogs they should be.
"It was clearly a dodge.... to circumvent the
rules, to try to move things off the balance sheet," says Wharton accounting
professor professor
Brian J. Bushee,
referring to Lehman's Repo 105 transactions. "Usually, in these kinds of
situations I try to find some silver lining for the company, to say that
there are some legitimate reasons to do this.... But it clearly was to get
assets off the balance sheet."
The use of outside entities to remove risks from a
company's books is common and can be perfectly legal. And, as Wharton
finance professor
Jeremy J. Siegel points out, "window dressing" to
make the books look better for a quarterly or annual report is a widespread
practice that also can be perfectly legal. Companies, for example, often
rush to lay off workers or get rid of poor-performing units or investments,
so they won't mar the next financial report. "That's been going on for 50
years," Siegel says. Bushee notes, however, that Lehman's maneuvers were
more extreme than any he has seen since the Enron collapse.
Wharton finance professor professor
Franklin Allen suggests that the other firms
participating in Lehman's Repo 105 transactions must have known the whole
purpose was to deceive. "I thought Repo 105 was absolutely remarkable – that
Ernst & Young signed off on that. All of this was simply an artifice, to
deceive people." According to Siegel, the report confirms earlier evidence
that Lehman's chief problem was excessive borrowing, or over-leverage. He
argues that it strengthens the case for tougher restrictions on borrowing.
A Twist on a Standard Financing Method
In his report, Valukas, chairman of the law firm
Jenner & Block, says that Lehman disregarded its own risk controls "on a
regular basis," even as troubles in the real estate and credit markets put
the firm in an increasingly perilous situation. The report slams Ernst &
Young for failing to alert the board of directors, despite a warning of
accounting irregularities from a Lehman vice president. The auditing firm
has denied doing anything wrong, blaming Lehman's problems on market
conditions.
Much of Lehman's problem involved huge holdings of
securities based on subprime mortgages and other risky debt. As the market
for these securities deteriorated in 2008, Lehman began to suffer huge
losses and a plunging stock price. Ratings firms downgraded many of its
holdings, and other firms like JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup demanded more
collateral on loans, making it harder for Lehman to borrow. The firm filed
for bankruptcy on September 15, 2008.
Prior to the bankruptcy, Lehman worked hard to make
its financial condition look better than it was, the Valukas report says. A
key step was to move $50 billion of assets off its books to conceal its
heavy borrowing, or leverage. The Repo 105 maneuver used to accomplish that
was a twist on a standard financing method known as a repurchase agreement.
Lehman first used Repo 105 in 2001 and became dependent on it in the months
before the bankruptcy.
Repos, as they are called, are used to convert
securities and other assets into cash needed for a firm's various
activities, such as trading. "There are a number of different kinds, but the
basic idea is you sell the security to somebody and they give you cash, and
then you agree to repurchase it the next day at a fixed price," Allen says.
In a standard repo transaction, a firm like Lehman
sells assets to another firm, agreeing to buy them back at a slightly higher
price after a short period, sometimes just overnight. Essentially, this is a
short-term loan using the assets as collateral. Because the term is so
brief, there is little risk the collateral will lose value. The lender – the
firm purchasing the assets – therefore demands a very low interest rate.
With a sequence of repo transactions, a firm can borrow more cheaply than it
could with one long-term agreement that would put the lender at greater
risk.
Under standard accounting rules, ordinary repo
transactions are considered loans, and the assets remain on the firm's
books, Bushee says. But Lehman found a way around the negotiations so it
could count the transaction as a sale that removed the assets from its
books, often just before the end of the quarterly financial reporting
period, according to the Valukas report. The move temporarily made the
firm's debt levels appear lower than they really were. About $39 billion was
removed from the balance sheet at the end of the fourth quarter of 2007, $49
billion at the end of the first quarter of 2008 and $50 billion at the end
of the next quarter, according to the report.
Bushee says Repo 105 has its roots in a rule called
FAS 140, approved by the Financial Accounting Standards Board in 2000. It
modified earlier rules that allow companies to "securitize" debts such as
mortgages, bundling them into packages and selling bond-like shares to
investors. "This is the rule that basically created the securitization
industry," he notes.
FAS 140 allowed the pooled securities to be moved
off the issuing firm's balance sheet, protecting investors who bought the
securities in case the issuer ran into trouble later. The issuer's
creditors, for example, cannot go after these securities if the issuer goes
bankrupt, he says.
Because repurchase agreements were really loans,
not sales, they did not fit the rule's intent, Bushee states. So the rule
contained a provision saying the assets involved would remain on the firm's
books so long as the firm agreed to buy them back for a price between 98%
and 102% of what it had received for them. If the repurchase price fell
outside that narrow band, the transaction would be counted as a sale, not a
loan, and the securities would not be reported on the firm's balance sheet
until they were bought back.
This provided the opening for Lehman. By agreeing
to buy the assets back for 105% of their sales price, the firm could book
them as a sale and remove them from the books. But the move was misleading,
as Lehman also entered into a forward contract giving it the right to buy
the assets back, Bushee says. The forward contract would be on Lehman's
books, but at a value near zero. "It's very similar to what Enron did with
their transactions. It's called 'round-tripping.'" Enron, the huge Houston
energy company, went bankrupt in 2001 in one of the best-known examples of
accounting deception.
Lehman's use of Repo 105 was clearly intended to
deceive, the Vakulas report concludes. One executive email cited in the
report described the program as just "window dressing." But the company,
which had international operations, managed to get a legal opinion from a
British law firm saying the technique was legal.
Bamboozled
The Financial Accounting Standards Board moved last
year to close the loophole that Lehman is accused of using, Bushee says. A
new rule, FAS 166, replaces the 98%-102% test with one designed to get at
the intent behind a repurchase agreement. The new rule, just taking effect
now, looks at whether a transaction truly involves a transfer of risk and
reward. If it does not, the agreement is deemed a loan and the assets stay
on the borrower's balance sheet.
The Vakulas report has led some experts to renew
calls for reforms in accounting firms, a topic that has not been
front-and-center in recent debates over financial regulation. Herring argues
that as long as accounting firms are paid by the companies they audit, there
will be an incentive to dress up the client's appearance. "There is really a
structural problem in the attitude of accountants." He says it may be
worthwhile to consider a solution, proposed by some of the industry's
critics, to tax firms to pay for auditing and have the Securities and
Exchange Commission assign the work and pay for it.
The Valukas report also shows the need for better
risk-management assessments by firm's boards of directors, Herring says.
"Every time they reached a line, there should have been a risk-management
committee on the board that at least knew about it." Lehman's ability to get
a favorable legal opinion in England when it could not in the U.S.
underscores the need for a "consistent set" of international accounting
rules, he adds.
Siegel argues that the report also confirms that
credit-rating agencies like Moody's and Standard & Poor's must bear a large
share of the blame for troubles at Lehman and other firms. By granting
triple-A ratings to risky securities backed by mortgages and other assets,
the ratings agencies made it easy for the firms to satisfy government
capital requirements, he says. In effect, the raters enabled the excessive
leverage that proved a disaster when those securities' prices fell to
pennies on the dollar. Regulators "were being bamboozled, counting as safe
capital investments that were nowhere near safe."
Some financial industry critics argue that big
firms like Lehman be broken up to eliminate the problem of companies being
deemed "too big to fail." But Siegel believes stricter capital requirements
are a better solution, because capping the size of U.S. firms would cripple
their ability to compete with mega-firms overseas.
While the report sheds light on Lehman's inner
workings as the crisis brewed, it has not settled the debate over whether
the government was right to let Lehman go under. Many experts believe
bankruptcy is the appropriate outcome for firms that take on too much risk.
But in this case, many feel Lehman was so big that its collapse threw
markets into turmoil, making the crisis worse than it would have been if the
government had propped Lehman up, as it did with a number of other firms.
Allen says regulators made the right call in
letting Lehman fail, given what they knew at the time. But with hindsight
he's not so sure it was the best decision. "I don't think anybody
anticipated that it would cause this tremendous stress in the financial
system, which then caused this tremendous recession in the world economy."
Allen, Siegel and Herring say regulators need a
better system for an orderly dismantling of big financial firms that run
into trouble, much as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. does with ordinary
banks. The financial reform bill introduced in the Senate by Democrat
Christopher J. Dodd provides for that. "I think the Dodd bill has a
resolution mechanism that would allow the firm to go bust without causing
the kind of disruption that we had," Allen says. "So, hopefully, next time
it can be done better. But whether anyone will have the courage to do that,
I'm not sure."
Bob Jensen's threads on the Lehman/Ernst controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
-----Original
Message-----
From: Jensen, Robert [mailto:rjensen@trinity.edu]
Sent: Thursday, April 08, 2010 9:18 AM
To: Jim Fuehrmeyer
Subject: RE: AT&T $1 billion write-down, Repo 105 and other dumb questions
Yes, but can the FAS 140 defense be used in the
British Courts when British investors sue the failed London office of Lehman
and the London office of E&Y?
I assumed that branch investment banks in England
are subject to UK accounting/auditing standards. Or can investment banks
avoid local accounting/auditing standards by having headquarters in other
nations?
Bob Jensen
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Fuehrmeyer [mailto:jfuehrme@nd.edu]
Sent: Thursday, April 08, 2010 11:51 AM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: RE: AT&T $1 billion write-down, Repo 105 and other dumb questions
I guess that depends on what
their basis is for suing. I'm not a lawyer, of course. I expect the local
Lehman office filed statutory reports in the UK, whether they were regulated
or not, and those would have been done using IFRS. The Repo 105 would not
qualify as a sale under IFRS - the fixed price repurchase arrangement would
take care of that (IFRS No. 39R, AG40) - so I expect this would have shown
as a secured borrowing on those financials. I'm quite sure UK companies
file financial statements, even wholly-owned subsidiaries of US companies.
Assuming the Lehman entities did that, the financials may even be available
to the public/press and someone's likely already pouring over them. So it's
not clear to me that a UK plaintiff would be relying on the US GAAP
financials nor is it clear to me what damages there are in the UK related to
the Lehman subsidiaries. The plaintiffs I guess would be creditors, lenders
and so on, and you're correct, they would not have been using the
consolidated Lehman 10K as a basis for their credit decisions if they had
local financials to go on - and I bet that would be the case here.
The requirement to file local
financials is typical all around the world - except in the US of course. A
US subsidiary of a foreign company doesn't have to do separate financials.
And that's among the reasons the big US multinationals want to be on IFRS.
Their subsidiaries all around the world already have to prepare local,
statutory financials and most places are now using IFRS so they have to
convert all those subs to US GAAP for purposes of reporting here. They could
actually save a lot of time and effort if the US piece went to IFRS.
Jim
Demystify the Lehman Shell Game," by Floyd Norris, The New York
Times, April 1, 2010 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/02/business/02norris.html
Making unattractive assets disappear from corporate balance sheets was one
of the great magical tricks performed by accountants over the last few
decades.
Whoosh went assets into off-balance-sheet vehicles that seemed to be owned
by no one. Zip went assets into securitizations that turned mortgage loans
for poor credit risks into complicated pieces of paper that somehow earned
AAA ratings.
As impressive as those accomplishments were, they did not make the assets
vanish altogether. If you dug deep enough, you could find the structured
investment vehicle or the underlying assets of that strange securitization.
Now there is another possibility in the world of accounting magic. Did
accountants find a way to make some assets disappear altogether? Was it
possible for everybody with an interest in them to disclaim ownership?
Until recently, it never would have occurred to me
that companies would want to do that — particularly if the assets in
question were perfectly respectable ones. But now that we have learned Lehman
Brothers did
it, the question arises of how far the practice went.
Lehman’s reasons for doing it were simple: to mislead investors into
thinking the company was not overleveraged. Were other firms doing that? Are
they still? Lehman thought not, but no one really knows.
Now the Securities
and Exchange Commission is
demanding that other firms disclose whether they did the same. If it finds
they did, the commission ought to go further and examine whether there were
conspiracies to make the assets vanish, thus making Wall Street appear to be
less leveraged than it was.
Lehman’s practices, outlined in a bankruptcy
examiner’s report released
last month, showed the creative use of accounting for repos.
Don’t let your eyes glaze over. I’ll try to keep it simple.
A repo is simply a “sale” of a financial asset to
someone else, with an agreement to repurchase it at a fixed price and date.
That amounts to borrowing secured by the asset, often a Treasury bond,
with the added security that the lender has the bond, and so can sell it
quickly if need be.
Normally, such transactions are accounted for as loans, as they should be.
They are often the cheapest way for a brokerage firm to borrow money.
I had taken for granted that repos were always
accounted for as loans, but it turns out there was a loophole. The Financial
Accounting Standards Board had
accepted that under some conditions a repo could be treated as a sale. One
condition: if the securities securing the transaction were worth
significantly more than the loan, that could be a sale.
In the examples the board provided, it concluded that securing the loan with
assets worth 102 percent of the amount borrowed did not produce a sale, but
that 110 percent would push the deal over the line. In between was a gray
area.
Lehman appears to have concluded that 105 percent was enough if the assets
being borrowed against were bonds. If they were equities, it set the bar at
108 percent.
By doing such sales repos at the end of each quarter, and reversing them a
few days later, the firm could seem to have less debt than it really did.
It started the practice in 2001 but really accelerated it in 2007 and early
2008, when investors belatedly discovered there were risks to high leverage
ratios. At the end of 2007, the bankruptcy examiner concluded, Lehman’s real
leverage ratio was 17.8 — meaning it had $17.80 in assets for every dollar
of equity. It reported a ratio of 16.1.
By the end of June 2008 — Lehman’s last public balance sheet — it was hiding
$50 billion of debt that way, enabling it to appear to be reducing its
leverage far more than it was. When investors asked how it was doing that,
Lehman officials chose not to explain what was actually happening.
Lehman’s collapse is history, but after it was allowed to collapse other
firms were rescued. We don’t know whether those firms used the same tricks,
although we do know that Lehman thought they were not doing so.
The questions sent
to financial companies by the S.E.C. this week should provide answers to
that question. Companies that classified repos as sales are going to have to
provide specifics and explain exactly why the accounting was justified. The
reports will go back three years, so we can see history as well as current
practices.
It would be nice if the commission found that other firms did not choose to
hide borrowing this way.
But if that is not what is found, then the commission should dig deeper into
actual transactions. It should find out how the firm on the other side of
each repo accounted for it.
There are at least two abuses that might have happened.
The first would stem from differing reporting periods. One firm could hide
debt with another when its quarter ended. Then, when the other firm’s
quarter ended, that firm could hide debt with the first firm.
The second method would reflect the fact that two companies involved in a
transaction do not have to use the same accounting. Lehman could treat the
repo as a sale, but the other firm could call it a financing. Presto: Nobody
reports owning the assets in question.
That could even be legal. The second firm could conclude that an
asset-to-loan ratio of 105 percent was not high enough to qualify for sales
treatment, while the first firm thought 105 percent was high enough.
But legal or not, it would be misleading.
Wall Street leverage remains an important issue. The S.E.C. should discover
if it was, or is, being concealed, and then get to the bottom of how that
was done.
Floyd Norris comments on finance and economics in his blog at
nytimes.com/norris.
The Financial Accounting Standards Board moved last
year to close the loophole that Lehman is accused of using, Bushee says. A new
rule, FAS 166, replaces the 98%-102% test with one designed to get at the intent
behind a repurchase agreement. The new rule, just taking effect now, looks at
whether a transaction truly involves a transfer of risk and reward. If it does
not, the agreement is deemed a loan and the assets stay on the borrower's
balance sheet.
"Lehman's Demise and Repo 105: No Accounting for Deception,"
Knowledge@Wharton, March 31, 2010 ---
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=2464
Bob Jensen's threads on the Lehman-Ernst controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
"My Commentary Part 2: Ernst & Young’s Letter To Audit Committee Members,"
by Francine McKenna, re: The Auditors, April 4, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/04/04/my-commentary-part-2-ernst-young%e2%80%99s-letter-to-audit-committee-members/
Jensen Comment
Francine is not so impressed with the E&Y defense to date.
Bob Jensen's threads on the Lehman/Ernst Controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
The messages below are in reverse
order as to the time received on April 7m 2010
From:
THE Internet Accounting List/Forum for CPAs [mailto:CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Jensen, Robert
Sent: Wednesday, April 07, 2010 10:43 AM
To: CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: AT&T $1 billion write-down, Repo 105 and other dumb
questions
Hi Jim,
I agree. But then why does
do auditors contend that financial statements have greater transparency
because of the many additions to standards and interpretations.
The Repo 105 deception
seems like one of the simpler cosmetic that could’ve been made more
transparent with a rather simple footnote indicating the sales amount, the
repurchase amount, and the probability of repurchase under the buy-back
contracts. That was probably more transparency than Lehman wanted at the
time.
Bob Jensen
From:
THE Internet Accounting List/Forum for CPAs [mailto:CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Jim Fuehrmeyer
Sent: Wednesday, April 07, 2010 10:21 AM
To: CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: FW: AT&T $1 billion write-down, Repo 105 and other dumb
questions
Bob,
I agree completely. This
was strictly for financial statement cosmetics around a particular ratio –
otherwise why convert high quality liquid securities into cash? But as I
said once before, we’re focusing on these particular cosmetics and in the US
business world there are a lot of things that are done purely for
cosmetics. Structuring a lease to get operating treatment is cosmetic.
Doing year-end clearance sales is cosmetic. Securitizations themselves are
cosmetic – who would want to show all those subprime loans as assets? And by
the way, in my humble opinion, those are among the biggest of the “poisons”
behind our financial crisis – and I’ve been hearing the ads for loans with
no down-payment and no credit checks on the radio so it’s going to
continue. So long as we have an economy that is dependent on us going into
debt to buy things we don’t need or can’t afford, it won’t get better.
As an aside, I suspect
some of the things that we in Academia do at the
department/college/university level for the purpose of improving the ratings
are also cosmetic.
J
Jim
From:
THE Internet Accounting List/Forum for CPAs [mailto:CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Jensen, Robert
Sent: Wednesday, April 07, 2010 10:43 AM
To: CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: AT&T $1 billion write-down, Repo 105 and other dumb
questions
That is very helpful Jim.
But I still don’t understand how the Lehman Repo 105 contracts had any
economic purpose other than to deceive. The probability of not having the
poison returned seems asymptotically close to zero.
Bob Jensen
From:
AECM, Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia [mailto:AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Jagdish Gangolly
Sent: Wednesday, April 07, 2010 11:03 AM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: AT&T $1 billion write-down, Repo 105 and other dumb
questions
Bob and Jim,
The last
sentence in Rule 203 states:
_______________________________________
If,
however, the statements or data contain such a
departure
and the member can demonstrate that
due to
unusual circumstances the financial
statements
or data would otherwise have been
misleading,
the member can comply with the rule
by
describing the departure, its approximate effects,
if
practicable, and the reasons why compliance with
the
principle would result in a misleading statement.
_____________________________________
From:
THE Internet Accounting List/Forum for CPAs [mailto:CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Jim Fuehrmeyer
Sent: Wednesday, April 07, 2010 10:21 AM
To: CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: FW: AT&T $1 billion write-down, Repo 105 and other dumb
questions
Bob,
I’ve just started working
through Lehman’s last 10Q and you certainly can’t see any specific evidence
of the Repo 105/108 arrangements in there. I suspect they’re included in the
derivative note and in MD&A in the liquidity section. I’m guessing the Repo
105/8 arrangement is in the “Other Commitments and Guarantees” table in the
first number – the $114 billion of derivatives’ notional value maturing in
2008. But again, the $50 billion isn’t even 10% of Lehman’s
off-balance-sheet derivative activity. I’m not aware of requirements to
disclose in detail the make-up of one’s derivatives by contracts or
counterparties so if that’s in fact where it is, they’ll argue that the
disclosure “is there”.
I’ve been struggling for a couple
of days trying to understand how they did qualify for sale treatment given
the fixed price repurchase provision. I’ve always understood fixed price
repurchase options to be terms that “constrain the transferee and provide
more than a trivial benefit to the transferor” thus resulting in no sale
treatment. Lehman had to use a fixed price arrangement because an agreement
to repurchase at market would have resulted in the “05” being a loss on sale
rather than a “derivative asset”. I think this is one of those times where
the effort to structure transactions to meet the rules really shows up. In
FAS 140, paragraphs 47 to 49 discuss the issues one has to look at for
repurchase agreements to meet the “sale” test. There are four key points
that if present cause the repo to be treated as a borrowing. One of those
points is having a fixed repurchase price (47c). It appears to me that the
way Lehman was able to comply with the rule relates to 47b – which says that
if Lehman had the means to repurchase even on default by the transferee they
could not get sale treatment. This is explained in paragraph 49 as meaning
Lehman would have to obtain cash or other collateral sufficient to fund the
repurchase throughout the term of the agreement. They got the cash but
likely determined that if they paid down debt and thus didn’t “fund” the
repurchase, they’d meet this one requirement of the four and thus not have
to account for the repos as borrowings. I’m not an expert on financial
instruments, but so far, this is all I can see. The FASB did deal with
repos, though. Back in the discussion about their deliberations on FAS 125
(in paragraph 210 et seq. of FAS 140) they mention that at one point they
had considered requiring a 90-day period between “sale” and repurchase for
these things to qualify. They opted not to go that route after pressure
from respondents who argued this was an arbitrary rule. That
might have dampened this a little had that requirement been in place.
Jim
"Repo 105 Explained With Barbie Dolls," by David Albrecht,
The Summa,
April 23, 2010 ---
http://profalbrecht.wordpress.com/2010/04/23/repo-105-explained-with-barbie-dolls/
Jensen Comment
It took Mattel's Mary Doll to fully explain the SEC's potential role in
resolving n this controversy.
April 24, 2010 Message from
dberesfo@TERRY.UGA.EDU
Dave's pictorial is very cute. But a better example would be to show
Barbie reducing her weight from 32 to 1 leverage to about 30.5 to 1
leverage. Of course, that wouldn't have looked very dramatic just like the
Repo 105 transaction had hardly any impact on Lehman's leverage.
Denny Beresford
April 24, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
That’s a very good point Denny! I do appreciate the
details on how little Lehman got prettier at closing time from “32 to 1
leverage to about 30.5 to 1.”
But your message begs the question: If diet pills
(Repos 105 transactions) were virtually worthless for losing weight
(improving leverage attractiveness at closing time), why take these
potentially dangerous pills in the first place?
And why do so only at quarterly “closing times”?
Of course we might recall the Mickey Gilley’s song
lyrics
"Don't the Girls All Get Prettier at
Closing Time?"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j6ltTzLMgJQ
But that might be extending the concept of bookkeeping’s “closing time”
diet pills a bit too far.
And now would probably not be a good time to also recall that “it’s never
over ‘til the fat lady sings.”
Perhaps you can give us more perspective on why
Lehman's CFO purportedly invented Repo 105 contracts if he knew in advance
that the benefits to leverage attractiveness were not significant at closing
times. Seems like a whole lot trouble and risk in accounting if nobody will
ever notice the weight loss at closing time.
I repeat my argument criticizing the FASB’s “control
reasoning” in the FAS 140 standards. The major justification for allowing a
repo contract to be booked as a sale seems to be that the buyer rather than
the seller "controls" when and if the purchased items are returned to
the seller (which was a virtual certainty in Lehman’s case since the rate of
return as very high to the temporary owner of the securities for a matter of
days.)
The FASB reasons inconsistently with respect to "control."
FAS 133 requires booking and maintaining written options at fair value even
though the seller of the option loses control. It’s the buyer of the option,
especially an American option, who determines if and when the option is
exercised. The buyer has less control in a European option contract, but
American options are vastly more popular in the United States.
When Chrysler sells a SUV’s power train, the
buyer over his/her entire lifetime has control over if and when the
power train is returned. Of course in this case, tradition in accounting
allows the initial sale to be booked as a sale. But accounting rules also
require that warranty reserves be booked with realistic estimates as to the
cost a percentage of the power train parts that will have to be replaced
over the expected lifetimes of all buyers. Of course in the case of
Chrysler, the government has set up a multi-billion warranty fund for
replacing Chrysler power trains or entire cars if Chrysler should eventually
tank. Taxpayers should be grateful that Hank Paulson did not set up a
similar government warranty fund for Lehman’s Repo 105 returns.
It would seem that in FAS 140 the FASB should’ve
required some type of accounting for the financial risk of a seller having
to repossess the contracted item. In the case of Lehman’s Repo 105 contracts
it was 99.99999% certain the “sold” securities would be returned in a matter
of days.
The FASB apparently did not anticipate that FAS 140
would be used to “mask debt” at closing times, and it would seem that the
FASB should now act quickly in the interest of investors to devise some rule
for greater transparency of repo contract sales. Perhaps something like
warranty reserves will suffice. Or perhaps, merely FASB-mandated repo sales
disclosures will suffice where the company must disclose the contracted
return price, the contracted return period, and the estimated amounts that
will be paid out for the repossessions.
I realize that the matching concept reasoning is no
longer politically acceptable. However, AC Littleton would’ve argued that
the $5 cost in the $105 might be better matched to the sales revenues if the
cost is to be incurred a few days after the sale. Keep in mind that if
Lehman called the $5 an interest expense, the Repo 105 contracts would
violate usury laws in most of our 50 states (South Dakota being an
exception).
Once again Denny, I do appreciate the details on how
little Lehman got prettier at closing time from “32 to 1 leverage to about
30.5 to 1.” And the resolution of issues raised in the Lehman Bankruptcy
Examiner’s Report won’t end until “the fat lady sings.”
Thank you
for the value added.Bob Jensen
April 25, 2010 reply from Tom Selling
[tom.selling@GROVESITE.COM]
Hi folks,
I agree with Bob’s
assessment of the lack of effectiveness of the control criteria as being the
appropriate criteria for recognition or derecognition of assets. As Walter
Schuetze once remarked to me, “legal form is economic substance.” In this
context, changes in legal ownership of the securities should determine how a
repo is accounted for—“effective control” is an even more dubious concept
than “control.”
However, I disagree with
Bob on two other points.
First, in accounting for
the $5 in the Lehman repo 105, you need to consider it together with the
initial fair value of the forward contract to repurchase the transferred
securities. I would imagine that if you fair valued the asset component
separately from the liability component of the forward contract, they would
not be equal.
Second, as Shayam Sunder
wrote, “unlike a uniform system of weights and measures, the conduct of
business changes in response to the accounting rules applied.” The FASB has
a responsibility to anticipate abuses, and Congress should ask whether the
FASB can do a better job in anticipating abuses of complex, rules-based
standards with highly subjective criteria. I am not ready to conclude that
the FASB should be resolved of responsibility for these abuses without
looking at their due diligence records.
I have more to say on this
in my latest blog post, which I just published 15 minutes ago:
http://accountingonion.typepad.com/theaccountingonion/2010/04/fasb-could-easily-stop-repo-accounting-games-assuming-it-wants-to.html
Best,
Tom
April 25, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Tom,
I think you misinterpreted my point. My point is that
the term “forward contract” implies that the contract is a derivative. Since
Lehman’s Repo 105 contract is not a derivative, it must be called something
else. That’s all I meant.
With respect to your proposed solution, I would have to
study more on the issue of repo contracts in practice. In particular, how
frequently are these contracts used in situations where repossession is only
a very remote possibility? It would be great if somebody who mines big
databases could provide more information upon how other companies use repo
contracts, what accounting disclosures are provided about such contracts,
etc. It would be helpful to know more about why the FASB embedded repo sales
in FAS 140. Surely some industry groups were lobbying the FASB and making
arguments for allowing repo contracts to be accounted for as sales.
I think Lehman’s purported “debt masking” using the
Lehman Repo 105 invention is an outlier among possible repo contracts and
may not even be a good example of the more common types of repo
contracts. Lehman’s Repo 105 contracts have a fixed return price and a very
short (maybe two weeks?) return horizon. What about repo contracts with
longer time horizons such as five or ten years? What about repo contracts
where the returns vary under some type of time amortization? What about repo
contracts that depend upon some contingency event with regard to the return
and/or the price paid for the repossession?
It may very well be that some repo contracts can be
structured as derivative financial instruments scoped into FAS 133. For
example, repossession could possibly be contracted as a written option based
upon some underlying.
If I were to approach rewriting a standard for repo
contracts I would first of all state that whenever the contracts fall under
some other standard such as FAS 133, that those other standards dictate the
accounting treatment. For repo contracts not covered by other standards,
then I would break them down into those with a fixed return price, those
with a fixed amortized price, and those with variable and uncertain return
prices. Then I would have to give more thought on how investors might best
be served under the various types of repossession contract alternatives. It
may well be that when repossession has a low probability (similar to the
case for bad debts and warranties), then perhaps what should be done is to
currently expense the present value of expected future losses much like is
done with warranty reserve accounting.
I don’t think Lehman’s Repo 105 contracts should even
be called sales if and when the FASB revises FAS 140. It is inconsistent
with the entire history of accounting to book the “sale” of an item as a
sale if it’s certain to be returned in a matter of days. When Sears sells a
dress that’s returned in two days, the original sale was booked as a sale,
but the probability of the dress being returned is relatively low. This is
not the same as if all dresses sold are certain to be returned.
Perhaps a fixed or amortized price repo contract in
many instances contract is better accounted for as a lease. However, I
hesitate to call Lehman’s Repo 105 contracts leases since the “lessee”
really is not getting an item with any utility other than the anticipated
return price. The item itself need not even be moved from storage between
when the lease period begins and ends. That begins to look more like a “bill
and hold” transaction. Perhaps Lehman’s Repo 105 contracts should be
accounted for as “bill and holds” ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm#BillAndHold
In any case, I hope the FASB is re-studying the entire
realm of repo contracts found in practice. Then I hope that repo contracts
that are tantamount to debt masking are no longer accounted for under
present FAS 140 rules.
One person wrote that the Lehman Repo 105 is nothing
other than channel stuffing. I might be inclined to agree if what Lehman
really intended was to push up sales ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm#ChannelStuffing
However, I don’t think the motive in Lehman’s case was to inflate sales.
Rather the purpose seems to be more balance sheet related in an effort to
mask debt.
Perhaps the best alternative standard in this
particular case really is a principles-based standard rather than a bright
line standard. The principle would be for the accounting to be fully
transparent with respect to the intent of the “seller” of the item and on
the other side of the coin the “buyer” of the item. Perhaps repo contracts
are just too varied in practice to embrace in a single standard other than
maybe a principles-based standard. There should be a proviso, however, that
if the contract really is a derivative or a lease or insurance or whatever,
the accounting should conform to the standard that is written for that
particular type of contract.
Bob Jensen
April 25, 2010 reply from Francine McKenna
[retheauditors@GMAIL.COM]
Tom/Bob,
I think any reasonable criteria for ownership and
control was not met in the Lehman Repo 105 situation. Why? Lehman continued
to collect the coupon on the underlying securities per the bankruptcy
examiner's report. There were major machinations required on both the Lehman
side and the counterparty's side to present one thing for financial
reporting purposes and to ignore the reality that the securities were most
likely still recorded on the Lehman subsidiary investment accounting
systems. Otherwise, how to match up the coupon with a CUSIP? It's enough to
make me dizzy. Any objective regulator or watchdog/gatekeeper as the
auditors should be should have cringed and called a fake on the sale
treatment.
http://goingconcern.com/2010/03/let-me-tell-you-a-funny-story-lehman’s-repo-105-accounting/
Francine
One Auditing Firm Has Become Better Known for Its Auditing Specialty Than
Other Firms that are only pretenders
"The Leading Indicator of Repurchase Risk Losses? Audited By KPMG," by
Francine McKenna, re: The Auditors, April 25, 2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/04/25/the-leading-indicator-of-repurchase-risk-losses-audited-by-kpmg/
If you are a regular
reader of this site, you may remember the first time I warned you about the poor
disclosure practices surrounding repurchase risk. It was all the way back in
March of 2007 and I was referring to the lack of disclosures surrounding New
Century Financial. I warned you again seven months ago that another KPMG client,
Wachovia/Wells Fargo, has the same disclosure issues with regard to repurchase
risk. The latest announcements of potentially material losses due to forced
repurchases of mortgages from Fannie Mae (Deloitte) and Freddie Mac (PwC) were
made by JP Morgan and Bank of America – both audited by PwC. Maybe ya’ll should
kick the tires a little more on Citibank’s big comeback
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
Francine also added a video entitled “It’s Like Déjà Vu All Over Again!”
Bob Jensen's threads on the largest auditing firms are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on Lehman's Repo 105 contracts ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
Ketz Me If You Can
Here's Professor Ketz's Bombshell We've All Been Waiting For: And to Think
I Was Shocked by Repo 105s Until Ed Wrote This
"Shock over Repo 105," by J. Edward Ketz, SmartPros, April 2010
---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x69280.xml
The bankruptcy report by Anton Valukas has created
quite a stir. Given that we all knew about the demise of Lehman Brothers,
what was the surprise? Ok, he wrote about some fast and loose accounting
tricks, which are dubbed Repo 105 transactions. So what?
What I find fascinating about managers at Lehman’s
is not so much what they did, but that the public is shocked—shocked!—at
another accounting game. As if these behaviors were going to stop!
On what basis would the public believe that
corporate accounting had become the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but
the truth? Maybe they thought that Sarbanes-Oxley was the golden legislation
that solved all our problems. But, as most of the act was incremental
changes over previous dictates, that conclusion has exaggerated and
continues to exaggerate the reality.
Besides, legislation today will never focus on the
real issues of creating incentives for managers to walk the straight and
narrow, generating disincentives for those who walk astray, and making sure
these things are enforced. In today’s partisanship, what happens depends on
who is in office. If it is the Republicans, they’ll talk about ethics and
close their eyes. If it is the Democrats, they will ignore current
violations and pass new legislation as they continue to build the Great
Socialistic Society. And neither party enforces the law, unless you count
the SEC’s fining of shareholders as enforcement.
With fewer accounting tricks, as documented by USA
Today, maybe the public felt that the tide had turned. Maybe it had, but the
cycle continues. Managers find accounting chicanery easier to carry out at
some times than others. Never mistake a lull in accounting tricks as their
cessation. It is merely a rest before a return to lies, damned lies, and
accounting.
Perhaps people felt that the auditors were
ferreting out fraud. While the auditors at least have to worry about
potential lawsuits, that apparently does not mean that they are always
skeptical of management’s actions, even with a credible whistleblower.
Audits in the U.S. are better than audits in other countries, but there is
still room for improvement. Let’s not think that the auditors are always
vigilant.
Maybe with stock market prices going up after an
extended downturn, folks started believing that the economy was resurging. I
cannot share that optimism for we have so many asset bubbles yet to burst.
Even if it were true, increasing stock market prices just accent the
perverse incentives in our economy, as corporate managers and directors
attempt to maximize their own wealth through share-based compensation, and
accounting is merely a tool to accomplish their goals.
No, I don’t see much reason for accounting frauds
to cease. I laugh when I watch television programs, listen to radio
broadcasts, and read news accounts and op-ed pieces that lash out at the
rascals that dominated Lehman Brothers. What are these people thinking? Why
is anybody shocked?
The heart is deceitful above all things and
desperately wicked—who can understand it? Clearly, not those who are shocked
at the revelations by Valukas.
Bob Jensen's threads on the Lehman-Ernst scandals are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
Repo 105:
FASB published on its Web site
a letter from FASB Chairman Herz to the House Financial Services Committee
April 21, 2010 message from Paul
Polinski [paulp_is@YAHOO.COM]
The FASB has published on its web
site a letter from Chairman Herz to the House Financial Services Committee
regarding Lehman's accounting for repurchase agreements. I've attached the
pdf file here, or you can go to the FASB web site and follow the news link.
Paul
The letter is shown below.
April 19, 2010
The Honorable Barney Frank, Chairman
The Honorable Spencer T. Bachus III, Ranking Minority Member
House Financial Services Committee
2129 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
Re: Discussion of Selected Accounting Guidance Relevant to Lehman Accounting
Practices
Dear Chairman Frank and Ranking Minority Member Bachus:
Thank you for the opportunity to submit an explanation of the accounting
standards and relevant guidance relating to repurchase agreements for your April
20, 2010 hearing "Public Policy Issues Raised by the Report of the Lehman
Bankruptcy Examiner." In order to focus my response on the most relevant
financial accounting guidance, I have referred to certain matters discussed in
the report of the Lehman Bankruptcy Examiner.
1
Additionally, I have also provided a brief discussion of the
relevant accounting guidance relating to consolidation of special-purpose
entities, which I believe may be helpful to the Members of the Committee as they
deliberate the public policy issues relating to Lehman’s bankruptcy.
1
Report of Anton R. Valukas, Examiner, United States
Bankruptcy Court Southern District of New York, In re Lehman Brothers Holdings
Inc., et al., Debtors, March 11, 2010.
The FASB does not have regulatory or enforcement powers. However, whenever
there are reports of significant accounting or financial reporting issues, we
monitor developments closely to assess whether standard-setting actions by us
may be needed. In some cases, a misreporting is due to outright fraud and/or
violation of our standards, in which case accounting standard-setting action is
not necessarily the remedy. Other cases reveal weaknesses in current standards
or inappropriate structuring to circumvent the standards, in which case revision
of the standards may be appropriate. In some cases, there are elements of both.
At this point in time, while we have read the report of the Lehman Bankruptcy
Examiner, press accounts, and other reports, we do not have sufficient
information to assess whether Lehman complied with or violated particular
standards relating to accounting for repurchase agreements or consolidation of
special-purpose entities. Furthermore, we do not know whether other major
financial institutions may have engaged in accounting and reporting practices
similar to those apparently employed by Lehman.
2
In that regard, we work closely with the SEC. We understand that the SEC
staff is in the process of obtaining information directly from a number of
financial institutions relating to their practices in these areas. As they
obtain and evaluate that information, we will continue to work closely with them
to discuss and consider whether any standard-setting actions by us may be
warranted.
However, in the meantime, this letter and its attachments summarize the
current accounting and reporting standards relating to repurchase agreements and
consolidation of special-purpose entities, including some of the recent changes
the FASB has put in place.
Accounting and Reporting Standards for Repurchase Agreements
In a typical repurchase (repo) transaction, a bank transfers securities to a
counterparty in exchange for cash with a simultaneous agreement for the
counterparty to return the same or equivalent securities for a fixed price at a
later date, usually a few days or weeks.
Accounting standards prescribe when a company can and cannot recognize a sale
of a financial asset based on whether it has surrendered control over the asset.
In this context, two of the criteria key in determining whether a sale has
occurred are:
(a) The transferred financial assets must be
legally isolated
from the company that transferred the assets. In other
words, Lehman or its creditors would not be able to reclaim the transferred
securities during the term of the repo, even in the event of Lehman’s
bankruptcy.2
(b) The company that transferred the assets does not maintain
effective control
over those assets. Specific tests relate to whether the
company has maintained effective control, which are described below.
2
The Audit Issues Task Force Working Group of the
AICPA issued an Auditing Interpretation, "The Use of Legal Interpretations As
Evidential Matter to Support Management’s Assertion That a Transfer of Financial
Assets Has Met the Isolation Criterion in Paragraph 9(a) of Statement of
Financial Accounting Standards No. 140," to assist auditors in their analysis. I
have separately provided a copy to the Committee staff.
If both of these criteria are met (among other criteria), the repo would be
accounted for as a sale. If either of these criteria is not met, the repo would
be accounted for as a secured borrowing. As a general matter, most standard repo
transactions fail one or both of these criteria and, therefore, are accounted
for as financings.
In the case of repos, one of the relevant tests for assessing effective
control relates to the amount of cash collateral that has been provided,
relative to the value of the securities transferred. The rationale behind this
condition is that the counterparty has promised to return the securities, but
even if it defaults, the arrangement provides for sufficient cash collateral at
all times, so that the company could buy replacement securities in the market.
My understanding of Lehman’s Repo 105 and 108 transactions is based on what I
have read in the Examiner’s report, press accounts, and other reports. Lehman
apparently engaged in structured transactions, known within Lehman as "Repo 105"
and "Repo 108" transactions,
3
to temporarily remove securities inventory from its balance sheet, usually
for a period of seven to ten days. Lehman reported its Repo 105 and Repo 108
transfers as sales rather than secured borrowings. The cash received in the
transfers was used to pay down liabilities.
Lehman reported its Repo 105 and Repo 108 transactions as sales rather than
secured borrowings, apparently by attempting to structure the transactions so as
to try to support the following conclusions:
(a) That the transferred securities had been legally isolated from Lehman
(based on a true sale opinion from a U.K. law firm), and
(b) That the collateralization in the transactions did not provide Lehman
with effective control over the transferred securities.
Based on the Examiner’s report, Lehman’s Repo 105 and Repo 108 transactions
were structurally similar to ordinary repo transactions. The transactions were
conducted with the same collateral and with substantially the same
counterparties.
3
3
Report of Anton R. Valukas, Examiner, United States
Bankruptcy Court Southern District of New York, In re Lehman Brothers Holdings
Inc., et al., Debtors, March 11, 2010, v3, pg. 746.
Additionally, the following two points may be relevant to the analysis of
Lehman’s accounting for Repo 105 and Repo 108 transactions.
First, the assessment of legal isolation may have only considered whether the
securities were isolated from a U.K. subsidiary, as opposed to the consolidated
U.S. entity. We understand that, at least in some cases, the securities were
first transferred from a U.S.-based entity to a U.K. subsidiary, and were then
repoed with a counterparty in the U.K. Attorneys have told us that there are
significant legal differences in how repo transactions are viewed in the event
of the insolvency of a repo seller under U.S. and English laws. In the United
States, case law related to repurchase transactions has been varied enough that
most attorneys generally would not provide a true sale opinion. In England,
there is apparently significantly less uncertainty about how a transfer related
to a repo would be viewed by a court of law in the event of the insolvency of
the repo seller (transferor). Under English law, a transfer in which the
documents clearly demonstrate a seller intends to transfer outright to the buyer
his entire proprietary interest in an asset apparently would be considered a
true sale.
We understand that the opinion prepared by the English law firm may have
limited applicability and pertains only to the portion of the transaction
executed by the U.K. subsidiary with the repo counterparty. It is not clear that
claims could not be pressed in another jurisdiction such as the U.S., since the
securities were registered in the U.S. and it is not clear whether the transfer
from Lehman to its U.K. subsidiary would be deemed to be a true sale under U.S.
law. It is also not clear that the transfers would have resulted in isolation
(including in bankruptcy) of the transferred assets from the consolidated Lehman
entity, not just the U.K. subsidiary, and thus any legal analysis would likely
need to address all relevant jurisdictions including U.K. and U.S. law.
4
Second, with respect to the level of collateralization in the arrangement,
Lehman apparently took a discount on the face value of the transferred assets
(known as a "haircut") offered to the counterparty. Instead of transferring
approximately $100 worth of securities for every $100 of cash received, Lehman
transferred $105 worth of debt securities or $108 of equity securities for every
$100 in cash received (hence, the names Repo 105 and Repo 108). It appears that
Lehman structured the transactions in an attempt to support a conclusion that
there was inadequate cash collateral to ensure the repurchase of the securities
in the event of a default by the counterparty, and, on that basis, Lehman
determined that sale accounting was appropriate. Under sale accounting, Lehman
(a) Removed the transferred securities from its balance sheet,
(b) Recognized the cash received, and
(c) Recognized the difference ($105 or $108 securities derecognized less $100
cash received) as a forward purchase commitment.
When developing the guidance for determining whether a company maintains
effective control over transferred assets, the FASB noted that repo transactions
have attributes of both sales and secured borrowings. On one hand, having a
forward purchase contract—a right and obligation to buy an asset—is not the same
as owning the asset. On the other hand, the contemporaneous transfer and
repurchase commitment entered into in a repo transaction raises questions about
whether control actually has been relinquished. To differentiate between the
two, the FASB developed criteria for determining whether a company maintains
effective control over securities transferred in a repo transaction.
As noted above, one of those criteria requires a company to obtain adequate
cash or collateral during the contract term to be able to purchase replacement
securities from others if the counterparty defaults on its obligation to return
the transferred securities ("collateral maintenance requirement"). The
accounting guidance provides the following example of a collateral maintenance
requirement that does maintain effective control:
Arrangements to repurchase securities typically with as much as 98–102%
collateralization, valued daily and adjusted up or down frequently for changes
in market prices, and with clear powers to use that collateral quickly in the
event of the counterparty’s default, typically fall clearly within that
guideline.
The accounting guidance emphasizes the need for understanding the terms of a
repo agreement and applying judgment in other situations to determine whether a
company maintains effective control over the transferred securities. That
example was not intended to, nor does it, create a "bright-line" for making that
determination. Rather, the example describes typical collateral arrangements in
repurchase agreements involving marketable securities indicating that these
typical arrangements clearly result in the transferor maintaining effective
control over the transferred securities.
The accounting guidance for repos has been in place since 1997 and has not
been changed significantly over the years.
5
When there are material structured or unusual transactions, disclosure is
also very important. The Examiner’s report indicates that Lehman’s disclosure
was incorrect and misleading. According to the Examiner’s report, Lehman
disclosed that it accounted for all repos as secured borrowings.
Accounting and Reporting Standards for Consolidation of Special-Purpose
Entities
A recent press account indicates that Lehman used a small company run by
former Lehman employees apparently to shift investments off its books.
4
Based on that press account, it is not possible to
determine whether that company was an operating business or a special-purpose
entity (SPE). Although the press account does not describe whether and how the
presence of related parties may have affected Lehman’s consolidation analysis,
consolidation accounting standards require consideration of related parties and
de-facto agents in the consolidation analysis. In addition, accounting standards
require companies to disclose significant related party transactions and
de-facto agent arrangements.
4
Article in New York Times on April 13, 2010, titled
Lehman Channeled
Risks Through "Alter Ego" Firm.
The financial crisis revealed that accounting standards governing which
entity must recognize and report interests in SPEs were inadequate to protect
against "surprise" risks to institutions that had treated these entities as "off
balance sheet." Before the recent changes to the accounting standards on
consolidation described below, certain entities were exempt from consolidation
requirements. Those exemptions assumed that some SPEs (including mortgage
trusts) could function on "autopilot," in which no entity was deemed to be in
control of such SPEs. This assumption has not been borne out in the recent
period of severe stress in the mortgage market. Consolidation requirements
before the recent changes had a simple concept that a company should consolidate
an SPE if it has the majority of risks and/or rewards of that entity. However,
the implementation of this concept was effected through complex mathematical
calculations that often excluded the effect of key risks such as liquidity risk.
With the benefit of hindsight, it seems that judgments were made based on overly
optimistic forecasts of returns and risk, enabling companies to avoid
consolidating entities in which they retained significant continuing risks and
obligations. While there were numerous required disclosures under generally
accepted accounting principles and SEC rules, many financial companies failed to
clearly disclose retained risks, obligations, and involvements with SPEs.
Also, with the benefit of hindsight, it appears that arrangements were
structured to achieve the desired outcomes of removing financial assets and
obligations from balance sheets and reporting lower ongoing risk and leverage.
From an investor’s viewpoint, this obfuscated important risks and obligations.
To address this, the FASB, at the request of the SEC, completed targeted
projects that resulted in removing the exemption for certain entities from
consolidation requirements (FAS 166 on transfer of financial assets) and in
tightening the requirements governing when such entities should be consolidated
(FAS 167 on consolidation of variable interest entities). In addition, the FASB
enhanced disclosure requirements to improve disclosure of a company’s
6 The enhanced disclosure requirements
became effective in December 2008.
April 21, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Paul,
One thing the FASB letter fails to demonstrate is
how Lehman’s Repo sales could possibly serve any economic purpose other than
to deceive, especially sales that only took place just prior to balance
sheet reporting dates.
The letter reads like an attempt to get E&Y off the
hook, although one paragraph of the FASB’s letter must be disturbing to the
auditors about failures to disclose:
“When there are material structured or unusual
transactions, disclosure is also very important. The Examiner’s report
indicates that Lehman’s disclosure was incorrect and misleading.
According to the Examiner’s report, Lehman disclosed that it accounted
for all repos as secured borrowings.”
Page 5 of the FASB letter
Another disturbing paragraph of the FASB letter
reads as follows:
“A recent press account indicates that Lehman
used a small company run by former Lehman employees apparently to shift
investments off its books. Based on that press account, it is not
possible to determine whether that company was an operating business or
a special-purpose entity (SPE). Although the press account does not
describe whether and how the presence of related parties may have
affected Lehman’s consolidation analysis, consolidation accounting
standards require consideration of related parties and de-facto agents
in the consolidation analysis. In addition, accounting standards require
companies to disclose significant related party transactions and
de-facto agent arrangements.”
Page 5 of the FASB letter.
It seems to me there is also something that the
standard setters have to change. If it is virtually certain that nearly all
of the Repo sales are coming back (e.g., because terms of the sales returns
are exceedingly attractive), then it should be explicit that either the
sales are not to be reported as sales or if they were reported as sales then
full disclosure is required as to the price, timing, and likelihood of the
repossessions.
There is such a thing as the letter of the law and
the spirit of the law. In my viewpoint, the Lehman Repos were only intended
to deceive investors and regulators. The smoking gun here is the timing of
the repo sales around the balance sheet dates. It would be far less
suspicious if most of the Repos sales took place after the balance sheet
dates.
If the FASB does not add more explicit disclosure
requirements to Repo sales transactions then we’ve got a sorry FASB that
needs to be replaced by the IASB. Also the FASB's accounting requirements
for SPEs, SPVs, VIEs, or whatever you want to call them are still convoluted
and explosive ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/speOverview.htm
Bob Jensen
April 21, 2010 reply from
AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Hi Bob. I agree with your analysis of the letter. I
was not surprised that the FASB's letter did not address the managerial
intent issue. Even the most recently proposed standards (including the
coming financial statement presentation proposal) provide managements
latitude to classify, measure, and disclose important information based on
their own view or intent. I don't think the FASB would call into question
its own reasoning in this respect.
I spent several months while working for Grant
Thornton doing work for their public policy group (much of which related to
the Treasury committee on the auditing profession and the CIFIR committee).
I marveled at how every word of every communication from professional bodies
and the major firms was thoroughly vetted to target a certain image and
outcome from the communication.
Paul
Bob Jensen's threads on the Lehman-Ernst controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
April 21, 2010 message from David Albrecht
[albrecht@PROFALBRECHT.COM]
I think it is great that the FASB is involved
early, this time. But now, post Codification, how will it not always be the
case that the FASB will be the one source to haul into Congress and ask,
"How could this have happened?"
How will the FASB not be in perpetual "damage
control" mode?
After IFRS is adopted, who will be Congress's
whipping boy? With the SEC increasingly echoing presidential policies,
hearings on accounting issues will lack any pizzazz.
David Albrecht
April 22, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi David,
Does anything prevent governments from debating anything they choose,
especially when doing post-mortems on scandals?
The adoption of IFRS certainly does not prevent IFRS from being a
political football in the EU. If anything the EU is making matters worse for
the IASB. Most certainly the IASB has to be concerned with the EU’s decision
to allow some cherry picking of IFRS rulings.
I think it’s significant that the SEC is considering taking its own
standard setting moves on “Debt Masking” because of the failure of the FASB
to move quickly enough on this deceptive practice. Of course the FASB can
only set accounting standards. The SEC has greater power over setting
regulations on the underlying transactions.
However, time and time again the FASB that I admire has taken moves on
accounting standards that virtually end the transactional abuses themselves
--- such as changing FAS 123 to FAS 123R. The FASB also went part of the way
in changing FIN 141 to FIN 141R. But the FASB has long put off doing what it
needs to be done on accounting for SPEs and what needs to be done on “Debt
Masking” accounting.
The Lehman Bankruptcy Examiner’s Report should lead to some significant
new rulings of the FASB if this a FASB that I still greatly admire. The
recent letter from Bob Herz on Repo 105 accounting worries me greatly. Herz
sounds more like a defense lawyer for E&Y and the FASB than an advocate of
more transparent accounting for investors ---
Click Here
http://www.fasb.org/cs/ContentServer?c=Document_C&pagename=FASB%2FDocument_C%2FDocumentPage&cid=1176156813156
And I don’t agree with you that in banning “Debt Masking” that Mary
Shapiro would be simply bowing on her hands and knees at President Obama’s
feet. I’m more inclined to believe that Lehman’s Repo 105 deceptive
accounting really was a failure of the FASB and SEC to anticipate how
deceptive Lehman’s creative accounting could be by unscrupulous Wall Street
opportunists. The SEC is trying to make amends for an FASB failure here. My
hope is that the FASB is willing to make amends for a bad mistake in FAS
140.
Bob Jensen
Lehman's Ghost Has Been Named "Debt Masking"
The initials DM, however, stand for "Deception Manipulation"
Debt Masking Teaching Case from The Wall Street Journal
Accounting Weekly Review on April 23, 2010
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on April 23,
2010
Debt 'Masking' Under Fire
by: Tom
McGinty, Kate Kelly and Kara Scannell
Apr 20, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Banking,
Debt, Degree of Operating Leverage, Disclosure, Disclosure Requirements,
SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission
SUMMARY: The
SEC is now considering changing financial firms', and perhaps others' as
well, required disclosures to ensure that their debt levels, and associated
risk, are adequately evident to investors and other financial statement
users. Currently, banks are required to disclose average debt balances in
their annual reports. However, quarterly reports require only discussion of
significant changes in liquidity or any efforts that impact this issue. The
SEC maintains that these requirements should already trigger disclosure if a
financial institution significantly reduces debt at the end of a reporting
quarter. Questions about these policies stem from a WSJ analysis of data on
all bank's weekly activities reported by the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York." Excessive borrowing by banks is widely considered to be one of the
causes of the financial crisis, leading to bank runs in 2008 on firms
including Bear Stearns Cos. and Lehman Brothers. Since then, banks have
grown more sensitive about showing high levels of debt and risk, worried
that their stocks and credit ratings could be punished."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article is useful for making clear the benefit of disclosures in addition to
the amounts shown on primary financial statements.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
Refer to the chart presented with this article. Describe what the chart
implies and where the WSJ obtained the information on which it is based
(hint: the data are not taken from these banks' financial statements).
2. (Advanced)
How does adding disclosure about the average level of debt during a year add
to the information provided in a company's balance sheet? In your answer, be
sure to describe what is included in any company's balance sheet.
3. (Introductory)
Why are banks particularly motivated at this point in time to reduce the
level of debt shown on their balance sheets?
4. (Advanced)
Refer to the related article. What is the repurchase, or "repo," market
which big banks use for financing? How does the financing help these firms
to glean greater profits from securities trading activities? How does this
activity increase a bank's risk?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
RELATED ARTICLES:
Big Banks Mask Risk Levels
by Kate Kelly, Tom McGinty and Dan Fitzpatrick
Apr 09, 2010
Page: C1
"Debt 'Masking' Under Fire: SEC Considers New Rules to Deter Banks From
Dressing Up Books; Ghost of Lehman, by Tom McGinty, Kate Kelly, and Kara
Scannell, " The Wall Street Journal, April 21, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB20001424052748703763904575196334069503298.html#mod=todays_us_page_one
The Securities and Exchange Commission is
considering new rules that would prevent financial firms from masking the
risks they take by temporarily lowering their debt levels before quarterly
reports to the public are due.
SEC Chairwoman Mary Schapiro's disclosure, at a
hearing of the House Committee on Financial Services, came two weeks after
The Wall Street Journal reported that 18 large banks had consistently
lowered one type of debt at the end of each of the past five quarters,
reducing it on average by 42% from quarterly peaks.
That practice, if done intentionally to deceive,
already violates SEC guidelines, an official said. But now, the SEC is
weighing requiring stricter disclosure and a clearer rationale from firms
about their quarter-end borrowing activities. The agency may also extend
these rules to all companies, not just banks.
Excessive borrowing by banks is widely considered
to be one of the causes of the financial crisis, leading to bank runs in
2008 on firms including Bear Stearns Cos. and Lehman Brothers. Since then,
banks have grown more sensitive about showing high levels of debt and risk,
worried that their stocks and credit ratings could be punished.
Tuesday's hearing focused on a recent report by a
bankruptcy examiner that found that Lehman Brothers, through transactions
the firm dubbed "Repo 105s," had hidden its true debt levels before its
collapse by treating certain loans as sales, thus reducing its
end-of-quarter debt levels.
Rep. Gregory W. Meeks (D., N.Y.) 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."
She added: "We are considering whether...we need
new rules to prevent sort of the masking of debt or liquidity at quarter
end, as we saw Lehman do with the Repo 105 transaction."
Under current rules, bank holding companies are
required to disclose their average debt balances in their annual reports.
The SEC is considering extending this disclosure requirement to all
companies, an SEC official said. The SEC is also mulling whether those
figures should be made public to shareholders every quarter rather than just
once a year, the official said.
Currently, companies are required every quarter to
discuss their readily available cash, or liquidity, as well as any important
changes to it and any efforts they're undertaking to address liquidity
problems. If a company used a transaction at the end of the quarter to
temporarily reduce debt or increase liquidity in a significant way, the SEC
official said, the company would be required under current rules to disclose
that.
The SEC official said the goal of any new rules
would be to give shareholders a better sense of financial institutions'
actual debt levels. The official said the agency is concerned companies are
misleading investors if what they are disclosing at the period end doesn't
reflect what the true activity was during the period. The official said they
are considering whether to shed more light on the intra-period levels, for
example, by requiring companies to disclose what the high debt level was
during the period. The SEC is analyzing responses to the letters before
formally proposing new rules.
The Journal story focused on weekly disclosures
filed with the New York Federal Reserve Bank by 18 major banks that are
known as "primary dealers" because they trade directly with the central
bank. The reports detail money the banks have lent and borrowed on the
repurchase, or "repo," market, where short-term loans are made in exchange
for collateral such as treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities. The
list of primary dealers includes the U.S. brokerage units of J.P. Morgan
Chase & Co., Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley and
Bank of America Corp. Because the weekly figures released by the Fed reflect
aggregate repo borrowing by all the banks, it is impossible to determine the
behavior of any one bank.
Some banks privately confirm that they lower their
borrowing activities at quarter end, but others deny doing so. Several
pointed to their SEC filings, which disclose average asset levels and
end-of-period asset levels during the course of a year. Those figures, the
firms say, tell investors that risk and indebtedness vary during a given
quarter.
The latest New York Fed data show that in the first
week of this year's second quarter, the 18 banks had together raised their
net borrowings on the repo market by 8% from the total that was reported on
March 31.
In a statement, a Goldman representative denied
that the firm's risk-taking in the repo market was masked, adding that
"normal fluctuations in the size of our balance sheet...are fully disclosed
in our quarterly and annual SEC filings."
J.P. Morgan said that in five out of the past six
quarters, repo financing levels at its U.S. brokerage firm—which accounts
for about 15% of its total assets—either rose or stayed flat at the end of
the quarter.
A Morgan Stanley spokeswoman said: "Over the past
five quarters, our quarter-end repo balances are virtually identical to our
average quarterly balances."
Citigroup and Bank of America declined to comment.
A spokeswoman for the New York Fed cautioned that
the repo data "reflects only a portion of a firm's total assets and
liabilities" and noted that the Fed requires additional reporting of
firm-wide figures.
Some on Wall Street reacted strongly to the
end-of-quarter declines in repo financing revealed by the Fed data. "The
fact that window-dressing produces distorted financial data (both for
individual firms and for the system as a whole) is unhealthy," wrote Lou
Crandall, chief economist at research firm Wrightson ICAP LLC, in a note
reviewing the Fed data last week.
Bob Jensen's threads on the Lehman-Ernst controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
Bob Jensen's threads on off-balance-sheet financing, OBSF, are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#OBSF2
April 22, 2010 message from
Paul Polinski
Bob: The FASB seems to be making much more of an
effort recently to emphasize and practice 'neutrality' in standard setting.
The proposed new conceptual framework features the neutrality principle more
centrally, and does not feature traditional sources of bias (such as
conservatism and matching). I think that the letter is consistent with this
philosophy.
At a recent speaking engagement, Bob Herz
underscored more than once your point about the respective roles of the SEC
vs. the FASB. Bob stated that the SEC is the regulator, their role being to
oversee and control certain business practices and reporting. The FASB is
not a regulator - it is the accounting standard-setter - and its role is
not, under law and the neutrality principle, to oversee and control business
practices; its role is limited to setting standards for reporting. As a
result, they discuss standard setting in terms of achieving transparency and
disclosure for investors, and not to achieve business practice-related ends
per se.
Paul
April 22, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Paul,
FAS 133, for
example, was neither a neutral nor an unbiased standard. It greatly impacted
the use of derivative financial instruments for both financial speculation
as well as hedging purposes.
Perhaps the
neutrality goal is to have zero consequences, but it’s literally impossible
in many instances to require better disclosures, changed principles for
principles-based standards, and even bright lines for booking without having
economic consequences and impacts on behavior.
If you
change the basis of keeping score or of calling fouls, it’s inevitable that
the way the game is played will change. Think of what changing long shots
from two to three points per basket did for basketball. Think of what
penalties, sometimes very severe penalties, for driving helmet shots did for
tackling and blocking behavior in football.
Denny
Beresford noted that economic consequences are often inevitable in a great
article years ago about neutrality (that relates neutrality more to bias
than to consequences). I might contend that even bias is permitted when it
is in favor of the users of financial statements. I think this is what Denny
contends as well.
"How well does the FASB consider the consequences of
its work?" by Dennis Beresford, All Business, March 1, 1989 ---
http://www.allbusiness.com/accounting/methods-standards/105127-1.html
Neutrality is the quality that distinguishes technical decision-making from
political decision-making. Neutrality is defined in FASB Concepts Statement
2 as the absence of bias that is intended to attain a predetermined result.
Professor Paul B. W. Miller, who has held fellowships at both the FASB and
the SEC, has written a paper titled: "Neutrality--The Forgotten Concept in
Accounting Standards Setting." It is an excellent paper, but I take
exception to his title. The FASB has not forgotten neutrality, even though
some of its constituents may appear to have. Neutrality is written into our
mission statement as a primary consideration. And the neutrality concept
dominates every Board meeting discussion, every informal conversation, and
every memorandum that is written at the FASB. As I have indicated, not even
those who have a mandate to consider public policy matters have a firm grasp
on the macroeconomic or the social consequences of their actions. The FASB
has no mandate to consider public policy matters. It has said repeatedly
that it is not qualified to adjudicate such matters and therefore does not
seek such a mandate. Decisions on such matters properly reside in the United
States Congress and with public agencies.
The only mandate the FASB has, or wants, is to formulate unbiased standards
that advance the art of financial reporting for the benefit of investors,
creditors, and all other users of financial information. This means
standards that result in information on which economic decisions can be
based with a reasonable degree of confidence.
A
fear of information
Unfortunately, there is sometimes a fear that reliable, relevant financial
information may bring about damaging consequences.
But damaging to whom? Our democracy is based on free dissemination of
reliable information. Yes, at times that kind of information has had
temporarily damaging consequences for certain parties. But on balance,
considering all interests, and the future as well as the present, society
has concluded in favor of freedom of information. Why should we fear it in
financial reporting?
Continued in article
Fortunately this 1989 link is still active ---
http://www.allbusiness.com/accounting/methods-standards/105127-1.html
Jensen
Comment
In my viewpoint the FASB can change the repo sales rules for more
transparency regarding “debt masking” disclosures by arguing that debt
masking secrecy is unnecessarily deceptive for investors and creditors and
regulators. I can’t imagine that the FASB would justify not changing FAS 140
in grounds of neutrality after having been witness to Lehman’s deceptive use
of FAS 140 (according to the Bank Examiner’s report). FAS 140 could be
changed by simply requiring more disclosures on circumstances surrounding
relatively large repo sales transactions, disclosures that explain the terms
of the buy-back contracts and the likelihood of having to buy them back.
This should be no more complicated than estimating loan losses and bad debt
reserves.
In some ways
a repo sales contract is like a written option where the writer of the
option has no control over when and if the buyer of the option will exercise
the option. However, repo sales contracts do not meet the technical
definition of derivatives, because the notional is entirely at risk whereas
in option contracts the risk is usually only a fraction of the total
notional. But we still require booking of written options and maintaining
them at fair value even though control has been passed to the buyer of the
options and not the seller of the options.
In FAS 140
and in the recent Herz letter on Lehman’s Repo 105 accounting, it seems to
me that the FASB is overplaying a “control” argument that is inconsistent
with FAS 133 treatment of written options not allowed to have hedge
accounting. Control is not the issue in FAS 133. What is the issue of the
booking and disclosure of financial risk of derivative financial
instruments.
Financial
risk disclosures should nearly always dominate FASB reasoning even if
neutrality is at stake. This should apply to repo sales contracts as well as
derivative financial instruments.
FAS 133, for
example, was neither a neutral nor an unbiased standard. It greatly impacted
the use of derivative financial instruments for both financial speculation
as well as hedging purposes.
Bob Jensen
Hi Pat,
Never say never.
Auditors can certainly uncover intent, and often they can do so by asking. If
the client refuses to answer, then that is certainly an incentive to probe
deeper into the audit questions.
Auditors are
responsible to fully understand the transactions and circumstances affecting
those transactions.
In many
instances, the client mentions intent to the auditors hoping that the auditors
can devise a way to meet that intent in the accounting rules. I’ve no idea if
the CFO of Lehman, a former E&Y audit partner, spelled out the leverage problem
faced by Lehman and requested ideas from Lehman’s auditors. But this would not
necessarily be an unusual request.
In any case it
is highly unlikely that E&Y auditors did not fully understand the real reasons
behind the Repo 105 transactions and the timing of those transactions (even if
some of those transactions arose in quarterly review periods rather than full
audit periods).
It’s a huge
stretch to assume that E&Y auditors did not fully understand intent of the Repo
105 transactions.
And ignorance is
generally a poor defense in court no matter what the circumstances, especially
when the defendants are professional experts in such matters.
“Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité: Big Lehman Brothers
Troubles For Ernst & Young,” By Francine McKenna, re; The Auditors, March 15,
2010 ---
http://retheauditors.com/2010/03/15/liberte-egalite-fraternite-lehman-brothers-troubles-for-ernst-young-threaten-the-big-4-fraternity/
Begin Quote (about how top financial executives at
Lehman were former E=&Y auditors of Lehman)
That kind of comfort and confidence in your client
and their technical competence comes from a long, lucrative relationship. But
it must have been more than that. It could not have possibly come from
confidence in the CFO suite, given its revolving door and the lack of accounting
interest and aptitude in later years.
No.
Ernst and Young’s
confidence in Lehman’s CFO leadership was rooted in fraternity.
Both Christopher O’Meara and
David Goldfarb,
his predecessor who was CFO from 2000 to 2004, are Ernst and Young alumni.
Prior to joining Lehman Brothers in 1994, Mr. O’Meara worked as a senior
manager in Ernst & Young’s Financial Services practice. Prior to joining Lehman
Brothers in 1993, Mr. Goldfarb served as the Senior Partner of the Ernst &
Young’s Financial Services practice, where he worked from 1979 to 1993.
Mr. Goldfarb,
the former EY Senior Partner, was the Lehman CFO who created the Repo 105
transactions.
End Quote
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!
"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!
Bob Jensen's threads on SPEs, VIEs, SPVs, and synthetic leasing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/speOverview.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on off-balance-sheet financing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#OBSF2
Federal regulations cost a whopping $1.187 trillion last year in
compliance burdens on Americans. That’s the finding of a new report, Ten
Thousand Commandments: An Annual Snapshot of the Federal Regulatory State,
from the Competitive Enterprise Institute that examines the costs imposed by
federal regulations.
“Trillion-dollar deficits and regulatory costs in the trillions are both
unsettling new developments for America,” said report author, Clyde Wayne
Crews, CEI Vice President for Policy. “It is sobering to note how both dwarf
the initial $150 billion ‘stimulus package’ of early 2008.”
The costs of federal regulations often exceed the benefits, yet receive
little official scrutiny from Congress. The report urges Congress to step up
and take responsibility as lawmakers to review and roll back economically
harmful regulations. “Rolling back regulations would constitute the
deregulatory stimulus that the U.S. economy needs,” said Crews.
Among the report’s findings:
• 3,503 new regulations took effect last year. The burden of government is
heavier than ever.
• How much does government cost? Government is spending $3.518 trillion of
our money and imposing another $1.187 trillion dollars in the form of
regulatory compliance costs.
• How much of our economic output should be eaten by regulatory costs?
Regulatory costs now absorb 8.3 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product.
• What's the federal government's total share of the economy? Regulations +
spending combined puts the federal government's share of the economy at over
30 percent.
• Regulations cost more than the income tax.
• New rules that cost at least $100 million increased by 13 percent between
2007 and 2008.
The report urges reforms to make the regulatory costs more transparent and
accountable to the people, including annual “report cards” on regulatory
costs and benefits, and congressional votes on significant agency rules
before they become binding.
Read the report: Ten Thousand Commandments: An
Annual Snapshot of the Federal Regulatory State
"Could Codification Weaken Internal Controls? Maybe. And here's what you
can do to mitigate the effect on your accounting policies, disclosures, and
error detection," by Bruce Pounder, CFO.com April 16, 2010 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14491629/?f=rsspage
April 17, 2010 reply from Jagdish Gangolly
[gangolly@GMAIL.COM]
Bob,
I read the article carefully.
If the author really means to say that codification
has added to the costs of financial reporting because of the five effects of
codification, I completely agree. However, the author's arguments that
codification weakens internal controls are transparently bogus.
It is true that all references to GAAP requires
revision because of codification, and that it requires additional work and
entails additional cost. But to say that the impact of codification on
internal controls could be to weaken them is like saying that I could make
more mistakes and pay more penalties on this years tax return because the
tax law changed. Of course you will pay penalties if you don't follow the
tax law changes, but you don't have to be careless enough not to know what
the changes are.
Jagdish --
Jagdish S. Gangolly Department of Informatics College of Computing &
Information State University of New York at Albany Harriman Campus, Building
7A, Suite 220 Albany, NY 12222 Phone: 518-956-8251, Fax: 518-956-8247
April 18, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
I agree Jagdish and still think the money and time given FASB
Codification is a waste if the SEC does not shoot IFRS convergence down. And
the chances of the SEC doing this are almost zero in my opinion. Soon the
FASB’s Codification database will be only an expensive accounting history
database ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Codification is a good idea only if we do not abandon FASB standards.
Another more interesting question will be whether the IASB standards and
interpretations can be eliminated as hard copy (and the present electronic
reproductions of hard copy) in the same manner that the FASB eliminated hard
copy/PDF files with the Codification database. In my opinion, it will be
much more difficult to create a codification database for IFRS due to the
language and other barriers, including a much more complicated costing and
billing problem. The FASB worked out a usage and billing scheme for members
of the American Accounting Association. It is much more difficult, however,
to reach IFRS educators in remote parts of the world.
Codification (complete with over a hundred language translations) could
be a wonderful thing for international standards But the cost of complete
codification is truly immense.
It will be many years before the IASB and its many constituencies can
achieve the efficiencies that are envisioned for the FASB Codification
database (that I personally consider a pain in the tail at present). One of
my complaints as an educator is the way the Codification database left out
many wonderful teaching illustrations contained in the hard copy
versions and revisions of standards and interpretations. FAS 133, FAS 138,
and other amendments of FAS 133 contain many examples of wonderful learning
illustration losses in the Codification database.
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on FASB Codification are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
"13 Bankers Versus One Professor: The author of a new book on financial
reform makes a case for breaking up the nation's largest banks," by Scott Leibs,
CFO.com, April 2, 2010 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14488823/c_14489620?f=home_todayinfinance
"This is about power and control and who decides
your future," Simon Johnson warned for at least the second time on Friday.
He had just returned to the campus of MIT's Sloan School of Management in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, having been in New York hours earlier to deliver a
similar message on The Today Show. Both appearances were part of an
intensive launch of his latest book, 13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover
and the Next Financial Meltdown, co-authored with former McKinsey
consultant James Kwak.
The "13 bankers" of the book's title refers to the
financial-industry luminaries who were summoned to the White House on March
27, 2009, in a mostly futile effort to enlist their help in solving the very
economic crisis they had been so instrumental, in Johnson's view, in
creating.
"We're all in this together," President Obama told
the assembled bankers. The statement was more apt than Obama intended,
Johnson contends. Wall Street bankers have become so entrenched in
Washington in the past three decades that the solution proposed by Johnson
and Kwak — break up "too big to fail" banks into smaller entities for which
failure is, in fact, an option — faces a very long uphill climb.
If Johnson's solution isn't adopted, it won't be
for lack of effort on his part. Speaking to an audience of 150 at MIT, where
he is the Ronald A. Kurtz Professor of Entrepreneurship, Johnson argued
forcefully that the astounding rise of the nation's largest banks mandates
immediate corrective action. In 1995, he pointed out, the assets of the six
largest banks equaled 17% of GDP; by last year that figure had risen to more
than 60%. Profits (and compensation) have followed similarly stunning
trajectories, as has the clout wielded by bankers on both sides of the
political aisle.
When bankers came looking for a bailout, Johnson
said, they not only got one, they got it on terms that were "completely at
odds with conventional practices" in similar financial catastrophes. The
result was a rescue operation that amounts to "nontransparent corporate
welfare that must be stopped."
Johnson disagrees with Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner's claim that the Great Recession represents a 30- or 40-year flood
that few people will see again in their working lifetimes. A more apt
comparison, he said, is to weakened levees, and the key question is whether
the structural changes that have taken place in the financial industry will
cause those levees to be breached again in the near future. "Do we want to
experience this crisis again," he asked, "just because six banks can't be
made smaller?"
Johnson has no illusions that enacting stronger
regulations than those currently put forward will be easy. "It will take
time to change people's attitudes," he admitted, but he said there is
historical precedent for picking a fight that few people grasp, let alone
support. "When Teddy Roosevelt took on J.P. Morgan," he said, "no one
understood why, and of those who did, no one thought he would win." Yet
Roosevelt triumphed over not only Morgan but also monopolies such as
Standard Oil, which was broken into almost three dozen smaller companies.
Asked by an audience member whether banks have
learned valuable lessons from the meltdown and thus won't need tighter
regulation, Johnson responded, "The recent executive bonuses handed out
suggest not much has been learned." Indeed, Wells Fargo and several others
have recently announced lavish compensation awards to some of the very
executives Johnson believes should have been ousted as one condition of the
bailouts.
But he remains hopeful, citing several chief
executives who support his argument, sometimes publicly, sometimes
privately. Asked about potential support from CFOs, who rarely, if ever,
champion any form of financial regulation, Johnson quipped, "I don't expect
CFOs to be in the vanguard, but I do believe many will support the concept
of breaking up too-big-to-fail banks once they take a close look at the
issues."
Bob Jensen's threads on the economic crisis are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm
"An Update on the FASB’s and IASB’s Joint Project on Financial Instruments
With Characteristics of Equity," by Magnus Orrell and Ana Zelic,
Deloitte & Touche LLP Heads Up, April 15, 2010 ---
http://www.iasplus.com/usa/headsup/headsup1004liabequity.pdf
Entities have long struggled with the question of
whether instruments they issue to raise capital should be reported as
liabilities or equity when those instruments possess characteristics of both
debt and equity. The demand for a set of accounting principles that clearly
distinguishes between equity and nonequity instruments is greater than ever
in this era of increasing sophistication and rapid change in financial
markets. The current accounting requirements governing the classification of
financial instruments as liabilities or equity under both IFRSs and U.S.
GAAP have been criticized for lacking a clear and consistently applied set
of principles and for not distinguishing between equity and nonequity in a
manner that best reflects the economics of the transactions involving those
instruments.
Responding to these concerns, in February 2006, as
part of their Memorandum of Understanding, the IASB and FASB agreed to
undertake a joint project on financial instruments with characteristics of
equity to improve and simplify the financial reporting for financial
instruments considered to have one or more characteristics of equity.1 In
this project, the two boards have developed a new classification approach
(see the Decisions Reached to Date section below) that we expect will be
exposed for public comment in June 2010. The boards have agreed that the
exposure draft will have a 120-day comment period and hope to publish a
final standard in the first half of 2011; the effective date is yet to be
determined.
The classification approach contemplated by the two
boards would, if finalized, significantly affect the manner in which
entities determine whether to classify many financial instruments as
liabilities or equity and account for exercises of options and conversions
of debt into equity instruments. Entities are well-advised to begin
assessing the implications of, and planning for, these changes and their
effect on debt and equity, interest coverage, and other financial ratios;
earnings; and compliance with debt covenants.
Continued in article
History from two years ago
Debt Versus Equity: Dense Fog on the Mezzanine Level
Deloitte has submitted a
Letter of Comment (PDF 277k) on the IASB's
Discussion Paper: Financial Instruments with Characteristics of Equity. We
strongly support development of a standard addressing how to distinguish
between liabilities and equity. We do not support any of the three
approaches outlined in the
Discussion Paper, but
we believe that the basic ownership approach is a suitable starting point.
Below is an excerpt from our letter. Past comment letters are
Here.
IASPlus, September 5, 2008 ---
http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
July 19, 2009 reply from John Anderson
[jcanderson27@COMCAST.NET]
Professor Jensen,
Thanks for your very interesting post!
This peek into the work of the IASB illustrates much of what is happening
within the IFRS iceberg … where 6/7th's of the activity is under the
surface, or else seemingly ignored in the US press and perhaps intentionally
under-reported by US professional organizations.
I have pulled the following excerpts from the IASB’s linked site in your
post ---
http://www.iasplus.com/dttletr/0809liabequity.pdf
The approach was prepared by staff of the Accounting Standards Committee of
Germany on behalf of the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG)
and the German Accounting Standards Board (GASB) under the Pro-active
Accounting Activities in Europe Initiative (PAAinE) of EFRAG and the
European National Standard Setters.
The staff pointed out that the basic principle for the classification of
equity and liability has been established but that all other components
still represent work-in-progress.
Also:
The staff asked the Board whether there was agreement on acknowledging in
the IASB's forthcoming discussion paper that the European Financial
Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) had also issued a discussion paper on the
distinction between equity and liabilities. Most Board Members disagreed
with the staff's proposed wording and emphasised that the IASB should make
it clear that it had not deliberated the final version of the EFRAG
document, had therefore reached no final position on its merits and that the
acknowledgement of the existence of the EFRAG paper should not be seen as
the IASB endorsing the positions taken therein. It was decided to take the
staff proposals offline to agree a suitable wording.
Also:
The FASB document describes three approaches to distinguish equity
instruments and non-equity instruments:
·
basic ownership,
·
ownership-settlement, and
·
reassessed expected outcomes.
The FASB has reached a preliminary view that the basic ownership approach is
the appropriate approach for determining which instruments should be
classified as equity. The IASB has not deliberated any of the three
approaches, or any other approaches, to distinguishing equity instruments
and non-equity, and does not have any preliminary view.
The IASB's DP describes some implications of the three approaches in the
FASB document for IFRSs. For instance:
·
Significantly fewer instruments would be classified as equity under the
basic ownership approach than under IAS 32.
·
The ownership-settlement approach would be broadly consistent with the
classifications achieved in IAS 32. However, under the ownership-settlement
approach, more instruments would be separated into components and fewer
derivative instruments would be classified as equity.
The goal of
the Discussion Paper is to solicit views on whether FASB's proposals are a
suitable starting point for the IASB's deliberations. If the project is
added to the IASB's active agenda, the IASB intends to undertake it jointly
with the FASB. The IASB requests responses to the DP by 5 September 2008.
Click for
Press Release
PDF 52k).
My concerns are the following:
-
About a year ago I understood that in IFRS most Preferred Stock would be
classified as Debt, not Equity.
-
There was some question about Callable and Convertible Debt.
Today, going through the IASB’ abstract of all of their meetings on this
subject, I cannot determine if the Germans in ERFAG are arguing for
Preferred Stock to be classified as Equity or not. Logically their issue of
the Loss Absorbing nature of the Security should be the determining factor
for classifications and therefore classify Preferred Stock as Equity or not.
This is critical in areas like Boston where many of our VC backed companies
would be transformed into companies having little or no Equity under IFRS.
I have seen IFRS “experts” present on Route 128 in Boston and seemingly
being unaware of this difference between US GAAP and IFRS. Similarly,
Tweedie’s stand-by illustrative company from Scotland that he loves to use
is Johnnie Walker. This would indicate to me that maybe McGreevy should
introduce Tweedie to some of the Microsoft development now performed in
Ireland, unless Johnnie Walker is about to enter the Technology Business.
As has been the theme in some of my prior posts, after correctly bringing
the US position (FASB) into the discussions about a year ago, since then the
IASB seems to have its hands full dealing with the Contingencies from the
EU.
Clearly with 55 conventions in the EU, 2½ for each EU country, a key task
for the IASB is the de-Balkanization of the EU’s Accounting. During this
necessary period of consolidation within the EU, we should not be required
to mark time as the IASB planned during the EU conversion from 2005
throughout 2008. (The Credit Crunch and Financial Meltdown in September
2008 threw a monkey-wrench into these plans!)
As in their December 2008 Revenue Recognition “Discussion Paper” the IASB
seems to have their hands full now introducing these revolutionary new
concepts such as Equity Section Accounting and Revenue Recognition to their
subscribing countries. They are seemingly starting each exercise with a
blank sheet. Unfortunately this is no way conducive to their goal of
converging with us in the US. This methodology also will create excess
fatigue within the EU’s apparently limited and diffused technical resources.
Given that the IASB has been struggling with Equity Accounting since 2005
this also confirms my fear of future lack of responsiveness to newly arising
needs for new accounting regulations. We are now down to only the FASB in
this country. I shudder to consider a world with only the IASB. Could they
handle Cash in 3 months, or would this require further study?
They were quick with Derivatives in 2008 Q4 and in recent threats to us in
the US.
Apparently they can only be decisive in emotional moments of pique or fear!
Best Regards!
John
John Anderson, CPA, CISA, CISM, CGEIT, CITP
Financial & IT Business
Consultant
14
Tanglewood Road
Boxford,
MA
01921
jcanderson27@comcast.net
978-887-0623 Office
978-837-0092 Cell
978-887-3679
Fax
Bob Jensen's threads on debt versus equity are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#FAS150
A Teaching Case on Joint Ventures
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on April 9, 2010
Verizon CEO Sees No Case for Merger
by: Roger
Cheng
Apr 07, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Mergers
and Acquisitions
SUMMARY: "Verizon
Communications Inc. Chief Executive Ivan Seidenberg said he sees little
compelling reason to merge with Vodafone Group PLC...[though] he would
eventually like to resolve the structure of the companies' Verizon Wireless
U.S. joint venture." The article reports on this question because "recent
reports suggest the two [companies-Verizon Communications Inc. and Vodafone
Group PLC--] were discussing a larger alliance."
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article can be used in a course covering business combinations to introduce
reasons for various corporate structures and ownership interests such as
joint ventures, controlling interests, and minority (noncontrolling)
interests. References to footnote disclosures by Vodafone PLC require
students to identify a description of the equity method of accounting for
its investment in Verizon Wireless.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
What is a joint venture? What is one possible strategic reason for entering
into a joint venture arrangement?
2. (Advanced)
Do you think the description of Verizon Communications' ownership interest
in Verizon Wireless meets the definition of a joint venture? Explain.
3. (Introductory)
What does Ivan Seidenberg, Chief Executive of Verizon Communications Inc.,
see as a compelling reason for expanding their alliance through joint
venture arrangements?
4. (Introductory)
What instead would Mr. Seidenberg like to do about the current structure of
ownership of Verizon Wireless?
5. (Introductory)
Access the Vodaphone Vodafone Group Plc Annual Report 2009. It is available
on the SEC web site at
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/839923/000095012309010070/u06917e20vf.htm#175
Alternatively, click on the live link to Vodafone Group PLC in the online
article, click on SEC Filings on the left hand side of the page, and click
on the "Documents' button for the 20-F filing dated June 1, 2009. Scroll to
the balance sheet on page 40. Review the footnote disclosure for Investments
in associated undertakings. How is Vodafone accounting for its investment in
Verizon Wireless? Explain and support your answer.
6. (Advanced)
Where is Vodafone incorporated? How and why does this company report to the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission? In your answer, define the Form
20-F that you examined to answer question 3 above.
7. (Advanced)
Access the Verizon Communications 10-K filing with the SEC that was made on
2/26/2010, available at
http://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/viewer?action=view&cik=732712&accession_number=0001193125-10-041685
for interactive data. Click on the statement of financial position and
review its contents. Then click on the Noncontrolling Interest link. How is
Verizon Communications accounting for its interest in Verizon Wireless?
Explain your answer.
8. (Advanced)
Why do the amounts recorded by Vodafone and Verizon Communications for this
interest in Verizon Wireless differ?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"Verizon CEO Sees No Case for Merger," by: Roger Cheng, The Wall Street
Journal, April 7, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304172404575167821216754724.html?KEYWORDS=Verizon+CEO+Sees+No+Case+for+Merger
Verizon Communications Inc. Chief Executive Ivan
Seidenberg said he sees little compelling reason to merge with Vodafone
Group PLC.
Mr. Seidenberg, speaking Tuesday at a conference in
New York, said he would eventually like to resolve the structure of the
companies' Verizon Wireless U.S. joint venture. He has often said he would
like to buy out Vodafone's stake in Verizon Wireless, but didn't provide a
timetable. Verizon owns a controlling stake in the carrier.
The direction the two carriers will take has been a
subject of continuing speculation in the telecom industry.
Recent reports suggest the two were discussing a
larger alliance. Mr. Seidenberg, however, dismissed the notion, saying that
absent new information, there wasn't any appeal to a merger.
"There's no compelling reason that this is an
exciting thing to do," Mr. Seidenberg said at the conference, which was
hosted by the Council on Foreign Relations. He added, however, that his
opinion on a merger wasn't a final position, and that things could change.
The model of a global wireless company, which is
what Vodafone is, isn't the preferred one, Mr. Seidenberg said. At some
point, that model would lose economies of scale, he added, noting that a
combined company would have a difficult time finding enough growth to
justify the tie-up.
In comments on the proposed National Broadband
Plan, which aims to make U.S. Internet access faster and more widely
available. Mr. Seidenberg said he is concerned the plan could lead to an
"overreach" of regulation that could cut into private investment.
Still, he added, it's early in the game and Verizon
is working with other players, such as Google Inc., to find a more
reasonable position on hot-button issues such as "net neutrality," which is
intended to create open and equal access to the Internet.
Mr. Seidenberg said it isn't a "slam dunk" that net
neutrality is the right policy, and he doesn't want too many government
rules.
"We have to be careful that well-intentioned
policies don't become burdensome rules and regulations," Mr. Seidenberg
said. "Any time the government decides it knows what the market wants and
makes it a static requirement, you always lose."
Mr. Seidenberg also commented on the potential of
Verizon Wireless getting the Apple Inc. iPhone, saying he has expressed
interest in bringing it to the carrier. But he said he doesn't know when it
would happen, and that it would be Apple's decision.
"We're open to getting the device," he said. "Our
network is capable of handling it."
Mr. Seidenberg declined to comment on whether it
would run on Verizon Wireless's current third-generation, or 3G, network, or
the 4G one, which is scheduled to be rolled out in the second half of this
year. He insisted it was "Apple's call."
AT&T Inc., which exclusively sells the iPhone in
the U.S., has run into trouble over the past year in major cities such as
New York and San Francisco.
One of the reasons AT&T had so much trouble was
because a small percentage of users would clog up the network with excessive
wireless data demands.
Mr. Seidenberg showed support for his wireless
rival by saying that Verizon Wireless would be willing to "throttle," or
slow down the connection speed of excessive users and find a way to make
them pay more for their service.
AT&T has in the past mentioned a willingness to
explore pricing caps on its data plans, but hasn't made any firm
commitments.
On the U.S. health-care overhaul, which prompted
Verizon to plan a $970 million write-down because of an accounting change on
subsidies it receives for providing care, Mr. Seidenberg said the
legislation is light on cutting costs. He noted that while the cost-cutting
part of the bill doesn't kick in for another few years, the additional fees
are going to kick in right away.
He added, however, that he believes the attempt to
broaden access to health care is a positive. Verizon spent about $3.7
billion on health care last year.
"Are Business School Students Under Too Much Pressure?" by Louis
Lavelle, Business Week, March 31, 2010 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/blogs/mba_admissions/archives/2010/03/are_business_sc.html?link_position=link5
Bloomberg is reporting today that the young man who
leaped to his death from the Empire State Building yesterday (May 30)
was a Yale junior, Cameron Dabaghi. His death follows
six suicides at Cornell since September, including three in the last six
weeks.
In the immediate aftermath of the most recent
deaths at Cornell, campus police there have posted officers at the bridges
that span Ithaca’s famous gorges, and several other schools have begun
taking precautions against a “suicide contagion.” The Harvard Crimson is
reporting that University Health Services is educating students on how to
help depressed peers. Boston University has undertaken similar efforts. And
at the University of Pennsylvania, Bill Alexander, interim director of
counseling and psychological services, told the Daily Pennsylvanian: “We are
just checking and rechecking the system to make sure we don’t get rusty or
complacent.”
All the recent deaths involved undergraduates, and
the explanations offered by assorted experts have run the gamut, but one of
the big ones was the high-pressure atmosphere of the Ivy League. True
enough, I suppose, but it occurs to me that if any student group is subject
to serious, debilitating pressure it’s not undergrads…it’s graduate
students, particularly graduate business students.
Think about it. If you’re reading this blog you
probably have shelled out something close to $300,000 for a top-notch
education (including forgone salary) and you’re under intense pressure to
find a job that will make it all worthwhile—a job that right now may be a
figment of your imagination. When you entered your program, you were out of
school for five years or more, and suddenly you’re knee-deep in advanced
math, business jargon, and bad study habits. At some schools all the first
years might stand around singing Kumbaya, but let’s face it, the atmosphere
at many top schools (for jobs, internships, even classes) is one of intense,
even cutthroat competition.
All of which raises the question: how do you deal
with the pressure? Are mental health issues like depression—and yes,
suicide—a big concern at business school? And is enough being done to help
students? The suicides at Cornell are clearly a wake-up call. But what can
be done to help students as they struggle with issues like these?
Jensen Comment
We should of course seek solutions, but I don't believe in watering down
academic standards. Also, many of the pressures come from outside the academy
such as competition for a job opening, employer recruiting focus on grade
averages, and stress upon graduate admission test scores to get into top MBA
programs and doctoral programs.
The U.S. Labor Department's new ruling that bans unpaid internships will only
increase stress. Unpaid internships enabled students with lower grade averages
to both get on-the-job experience and to prove their employment merits beyond
their grade records.
Bob Jensen's threads on higher education controversies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
Tom’s latest blog module points out what David Raggay has told us all along
should never happen with IFRS. David rightly contends that nations should either
be on IFRS or not on IFRS as a package. They should not be able to cherry pick
what IFRS standards and interpretations will be excluded for their
jurisdictions. The EU, however, set a cherry picking precedent.
IFRS convergence won’t mean as much if the U.S. decides to go cherry picking
(like maybe those yummy Lifo Cherries).
EU to IASB: It's Our Way, or the Highway
The Accounting Onion ---
Click Here
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/theaccountingonion/~3/N6VYNPYjwTI/eu-to-iasb-its-our-way-or-the-highway.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email
Posted: 06 Apr 2010 10:41 PM PDT
by Tom Selling
The EU is
simply too committed to pertuating the giddy notion that financial
statements can serve investors -- and be smoothed at the same time. That's
why I
predicted
that they would soon respond negatively and vociferously to the SEC's recent
statement
of support for
a brand of convergence that would end up forcing broader application of fair
value on unwilling European financial institutions.
But, I could
not have predicted that a reaction would come so soon, or so crudely. In an
article entitled
"Accounting
Convergence Threatened by EU Drive,"
the
Financial Times
has reported that, "in a tense meeting on
future funding for the IASB," the EU's internal market commissioner made its
financial support conditional on greater board representation for banks and
their regulators.
Is this a credible threat? I think, yes. The EU has already achieved its
major objective for beating down US GAAP, which was to browbeat the SEC into
accepting financial statements prepared in accordance with IFR S. from
European issuers without reconciliation to US GAAP. Granted, that objective
has only been partially met, because the SEC still insists on the
reconciliation of differences between "IFRS as issued by the IASB" and any
provincial variation.
Nonetheless, the EU's saber rattling may not resonate well with European
companies listed in the US. They could end up facing more onerous
reconciliation requirements over time if the EU takes this issue to the
brink. What's a bank to do if US GAAP requires fair value for its assets and
liabilities, while a future watered-down version of IFRS, permitted in the
EU, does not require reporting those fair values?
The bank would either have to break ranks with its European counterparts and
reconcile to US GAAP, or terminate its US listing (including ADR
sponsorship).* Neither would be an appetizing prospect, but the indications
to this point are that the EU would dislike that scenario less than losing
its leverage over the IASB should convergence continue—and especially if the
US adopts IFRS. It seems that henceforth, the EU will be saying at virtually
every new fair value increment that it really,
really
does not want to see the US adopt IFRS.
For its part, the IASB is boxed in. If it were to make a principled stand
against this blatant threat to its independence, it could he be quite easy
for Europe to abandon the IASB for some alternative standard setting
mechanism. Or, if the IASB caves to the demands of the EU, then it will lose
the US.
So, either way, convergence
and US adoption of the IFRS are lost causes;
obviously, the IASB cannot afford to be abandoned by the EU.
Some at the SEC may continue to disingenuously insist that convergence is
like 'apple pie,' but this recent development should finally make it evident
that convergence has become more like an albatross around the neck of the
FASB. If the EU had their way, convergence would be nothing more than a race
to the bottom, with the interests of investors cast aside in the process.
As one friend who called the FT article to my attention put it, "it appears
the independence of the IASB is more a matter of one's imagination than
reality." It's time for the SEC to get real.
----------------------
If you are
curious to know how a foreign issuer can avoid filing a Form 20-F even
though it has US shareholders, you should take a look at
Exchage Act Rule 12g3-2(b).
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standard setting are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
IFRS-FASB Convergence Will Lead to Worldwide Monopoly
Much of the economic resistance to IFRS in the American Academy stems from fear
of monopoly power as well as cultural politics.
Lest we forget
Professor Sunders stand at Yale University---
SEC's Mandate
Will Lead to a Monopoly
Shyam Sunder
Yale School of Management
Also published in the Financial Times
September 18, 2008
(Even convergence proponent Patricia Walters admitted this was one of her main
fears about convergence.)
If US
companies are required to use international accounting standards, it will
effectively create a single set of standards used around the world by taking
away the one system — US GAAP — with the influence and significance to challenge
the international rules.
According to the Securities and Exchange Commission, which has proposed a
roadmap for companies to transfer to the new international financial reporting
standards, the move would integrate the world's capital markets by providing a
common high-quality accounting language, and increase confidence and
transparency in financial reporting.
These
are lofty and desirable goals. But why mandate a monopoly? The top-down
imposition of a single set of standards will move us away from, not closer to,
the SEC's goals.
First, principles-based standards are less enforceable. By allowing more room
for judgment of managers and auditors, they introduce greater diversity and
result in fewer, not more, comparable reports.
Second, the SEC does not explain what it means by "high quality". Qualities such
as decision usefulness, reliability, timeliness, and verifiability often
conflict: expensing the value of employee stock options is a high-quality
standard for some and low for others.
Third, standard-setters try to devise new rules to account for market
innovations. Identifying which accounting rule is better calls for
experimentation. At the moment, US standard-setters can look overseas; with the
proposed worldwide monopoly of IFRS, comparisons of alternative treatments will
become impossible.
Fourth, the economic substance of business transactions depends on their legal,
commercial, market, governance and managerial environment. Even within the US,
the same set of accounting rules does not yield similar results across
industries. Greater comparability of financial reports of all public firms
across more than 100 countries is a pipedream. Within the European Union,
accountants find little comparability between the financial reports of, say,
Italian and Dutch firms - and both report under IFRS. Many Asian countries
embraced IFRS to attract foreign capital but plan to use their own
interpretations. So much for comparability.
Fifth, unlike a uniform system of weights and measures, the conduct of business
changes in response to the accounting rules applied.
The
metaphor of natural languages is more appropriate, where the meaning of words
arises from their usage, and ambiguity and multiplicity of meanings are norms,
not exceptions. Esperanto is an example of a failed effort to replace the
world's languages with a single language.
The
SEC would better protect investors by allowing two or more standard-setters to
compete for royalty revenues from companies that could choose one brand of
standards to prepare their reports. Standards competition produces efficient
results in fields such as appliances, bond ratings, higher education and stock
exchanges.
Investor or consumer self-interest, combined with some regulatory oversight,
keeps such competition from racing to the bottom. It also keeps the door open
for faster response to financial engineering and limits the complexity of the
standards.
Allowing a worldwide monopoly to a single manufacturer serves neither the public
nor the manufacturer for long. Development of IFRS is good news; a government
mandate to grant it a monopoly is not.
Shyam Sunder is James L. Frank Professor of Accounting, Economics and Finance at
Yale School of Management.
IFRS and the Accounting
Consensus
Shyam Sunder
Yale School of Management
July 28, 2008
A broad consensus in
accounting favors principles over rules to guide creation of a uniform high
quality set of standards for use everywhere, and granting monopoly power to a
single body for this purpose. This consensus has little logical basis, and if
implemented into policy, will discourage discovery of better methods of
financial reporting, make it difficult if not impossible to conduct comparative
studies of the consequences of using alternatives methods of accounting, promote
substitution of analysis and thinking by rote learning in accounting classes,
drive talented youth
away from collegiate programs in accounting, and probably endanger the place of
accounting discipline in university curricula. The paper calls for a
re-examination of the accounting consensus.
Key Words: IFRS,
Accounting standards, uniformity, accounting education
JEL
Codes: M41, M44
Bob Jensen’s threads on IFRS-US GAAP convergence are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
IFRS and Cultural Differences
April 11, 2010 message from
jcanderson27@comcast.net
Anderson Wrote Professor Gangolly,
Thanks for your recent post clarifying a number of
points about the Legal profession in the UK. This was very helpful! For
example I had previously thought a barrister was a criminal attorney and a
solicitor a civil attorney, but now thanks to your post I understand the
bifurcation of the UK Legal System across both of what we in the US know as
civil and criminal law.
Perhaps you could help some of us who are
hopelessly American understand our cousins across the sea and their
professional culture a little better than we currently do.
Frankly I feel that converging professional
cultures may be a bigger challenge than converging IFRS and US GAAP.
Can you expand upon the cultural differences
between the US and the UK on the following areas involving the Accounting
Profession:
Education – I note that in a presentation about a
year ago on Long Island for KPMG, Sir David seemed contemptuous of the need
for accountants to be college educated or waiting for US colleges to begin
teaching IFRS. Therefore, in your estimation: • What Percentage of UK
accountants were trained from the age of 14 on, through an apprenticeship
program versus, having formal college training? Is there ever a combo as in
US co-op programs? • How do these varying backgrounds play out into the ACCA
and other certifying organizations? • How does this play out in UK Public
Accounting?
Social Class – How does class play into this? Are
there still positions in the UK that the most talented cannot attain? Or,
worst case, would we say there are … and they feel this is not true, because
we have fundamental disagreements on what qualifies one for Management?
Country – Why can’t the UK standardize? How do the
Professional Standards and GAAP vary among the following: • England •
Scotland • Wales • Cornwall – Is this always grouped with Wales? • Northern
Ireland – Why are there still Standards in Northern Ireland? Why isn’t it
amalgamated with the Republic of Ireland? • The Republic of Ireland
Can a Welsh CA practice in England or Scotland?
Traditionally, before 2005, who developed UK GAAP? How did this work? My
Pro-IFRS friends tell me this doesn’t matter but these are the sorts of
cultural issues which must be considered in any proposed merger, which is
what I see convergence as. If even with our common language, we and the UK
still have major cultural disconnects, we will have even rougher sledding
with other regions. Not talking about these differences is a non-starter if
we are looking to succeed!
I haven’t forgotten about our disagreement back in
December of Cost Accounting! I will respond sometime very soon!
Best Regards!
John
John Anderson, CPA, CISA, CISM, CGEIT, CITP
Financial & IT Business Consultant
14 Tanglewood Road Boxford, MA 01921
jcanderson27@comcast.net
978-887-0623 Office 978-837-0092 Cell 978-887-3679 Fax
April 12, 2010 reply from Bender, Ruth
[r.bender@CRANFIELD.AC.UK]
John – here’s my answers to your questions, and no doubt someone else will
be able to improve on them. For much better info, go the ICAEW website
www.icaew.com and type ‘Divided by Common Language’ in to the search
engine. This was the title of a paper on UK v US governance and accounting
etc, which is excellent. It turned into a whole ICAEW research programme -
Beyond the myth of Anglo-American corporate
governance.
In the meantime:
- What Percentage of UK
accountants were trained from the age of 14 on, through an
apprenticeship program versus, having formal college training? Is there
ever a combo as in US co-op programs?
- How do these varying
backgrounds play out into the ACCA and other certifying organizations?
- How does this play out in UK
Public Accounting?
As far as I’m aware, the answer is zero from age 14, as our school-leaving
age is 16 and we don’t specialise before then. Chartered accountants
generally have degrees before they go into firms to undertake the ACA
qualification. I don’t have numbers for the other qualifications.
Social Class – How does class
play into this?
Are there still positions in
the UK that the most talented cannot attain? Or, worst case, would we say
there are … and they feel this is not true, because we have fundamental
disagreements on what qualifies one for Management?
The ‘correct’ answer to your class question is that anyone can do anything,
and we can cite a load of examples of people who have made it. A pragmatic
answer is that yes, class is still a barrier, but talent does seem to
outweigh it. A glance at the electioneering that’s going on at the moment
shows that the Labour party is trying to play the class card. There was a
brilliant piece about this on the radio last night. It pointed out that
George Osborne, the Shadow Chancellor (i.e. the guy who will be in charge of
our economy if the Tories win on May 6th) is considered by most
people to be Upper class, as his father is a baronet and he went to Eton and
such. But when he was at Oxford, he was looked down upon by his upper class
peers because his father had made his money in ‘trade’!
Country – Why can’t the UK
standardize? How do the Professional Standards and GAAP vary among the
following:
- England
- Scotland
- Wales
- Cornwall – Is this always
grouped with Wales?
- Northern Ireland – Why are
there still Standards in Northern Ireland? Why isn’t it amalgamated
with the Republic of Ireland?
- The Republic of Ireland
The question ‘why isn’t Northern Ireland amalgamated with the Republic of
Ireland is one that led to a car bomb there in the early hours of this
morning, and there’s probably enough politics in this list without me trying
to address the Irish question here.
We can’t standardise because the UK comprises separate countries, The
Republic of Ireland is a completely different country, and even ignoring
that, within the Profession, everyone is too pig-headed to even think about
merging the 6 different accounting bodies.
England & Wales (and Cornwall, which – although Cornish nationalists will
protest – is still part of England) are together in the ICAEW. ICAS is a
separate Institute, but the standards of all of the Institutes are the same
– certainly as far as accounting goes.
Can a Welsh CA practice in
England or Scotland? Traditionally, before 2005, who developed UK GAAP?
How did this work? My Pro-IFRS friends tell me this doesn’t matter but
these are the sorts of cultural issues which must be considered in any
proposed merger, which is what I see convergence as. If even with our
common language, we and the UK still have major cultural disconnects, we
will have even rougher sledding with other regions. Not talking about these
differences is a non-starter if we are looking to succeed!
Any member of the ICAEW or ICAS can practice anywhere in the UK. Other
than the Institutes themselves, nobody cares. Indeed, I think that any
qualified accountant in the EU can practice anywhere else in the EU.
(Although I’ll take correction on that if anyone knows more.)
Wikipedia is okay on the ICAEW -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ICAEW and on the umbrella group, the CCAB -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consultative_Committee_of_Accountancy_Bodies
Our accounting standards in the UK go back to the ‘60s. (When I started my
degree we just had a handful of them to learn - bliss!) We used to have
Accounting Standards. Then Statements of Standard Accounting Practice.
Then Financial Reporting Standards. Now IFRS for larger companies. They
are all principles-based, which is the fundamental difference between UK and
US. I love the idea of principles-based, and can’t see why you guys like
rules … but I’ve been on this list long enough to know that most of you
think the exact opposite, so let’s not go there!
Our standards have always been ‘voluntary’, i.e. put out by the joint
accounting bodies rather than the government. As we all know, the EU is
trying to change that…
Hope this helps a bit
R
Bob Jensen’s threads on IFRS-US GAAP convergence are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Illustration of a Great Tutorial Site That Relies Heavily on Camtasia videos
---
http://www.bionicturtle.com/
April 26, 2010 message from Richard Campbell
[campbell@RIO.EDU]
David Harper has built an excellent site providing
study materials for finance certification exams. He relies heavily on
Camtasia videos.
http://www.bionicturtle.com/
Richard J. Campbell
mailto:campbell@rio.edu
Here's a free sample (recommended by Amy Dunbar).
"How to use Excel’s LINEST() function to return multivariate regression - 10
min. screencast," by David Harper, Bionic Turtle, April 28, 2010 ---
http://www.bionicturtle.com/learn/article/how_to_use_excels_linest_function_to_return_multivariate_regression_10_min_/
Scroll down to watch the Camtasia video
Bob Jensen's Free Accounting Tutorials Using Camtasia Videos ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5342/
It’s amazingly easy to use Camtasia Studio from TechSmith
---
http://www.techsmith.com/
Images are from Bankruptcy Visuals Produced by Lynn
M LoPucki (for educational purposes only, I recommend ordering the large size
poster for your wall)
"Visualizing The Bankruptcy Process: Chapter 7, Chapter 11, Chapter 13,"
Simoleon Sense, April 15, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/visualizing-the-bankruptcy-process-chapter-7-chapter-11-chapter-13/
Jensen Comment
I think it is ironic that this article is dated on the date taxes are due to the
IRS for individuals.
Bankruptcy seems to be only slightly more complicated than a Raptor's SPE
formed by Andy Fastow for Enron ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/speOverview.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on visualization of multivariate data (including faces)
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/352wpvisual/000datavisualization.htm
Joseph Fuller
The Monitor Company
Michael C. Jensen
Harvard Business School; Social Science Electronic Publishing (SSEP), Inc.
Journal of
Applied Corporate Finance, Vol. 22, No. 1, Winter 2010
Harvard Business School NOM Unit Working Paper No. 10-090
Abstract:
Putting an end to the “earnings game” requires that
CEOs reclaim the initiative by avoiding earnings guidance and managing
expectations in such a way that their stocks trade reasonably close to their
intrinsic value. In place of earnings forecasts, management should provide
information about the company's strategic goals and main value drivers. They
should also discuss the risks associated with the strategies, and
management's plans to deal with them.
Using the experiences of several companies, the authors illustrate the
dangers of conforming to market pressures for unrealistic growth targets.
They argue that an overvalued stock, by encouraging overpriced acquisitions
and other risky, value-destroying bets, can be as damaging to the long-run
health of a company as an undervalued stock.
CEOs and CFOs put themselves in a bind by providing earnings guidance and
then making decisions designed to meet Wall Street's expectations for
quarterly earnings. When earnings appear to be coming in short of
projections, top managers often react by suggesting or demanding that middle
and lower level managers redo their forecasts, plans, and budgets. In some
cases, top executives simply acquiesce to increasingly unrealistic analyst
forecasts and adopt them as the basis for setting organizational goals and
developing internal budgets. But in cases where external expectations are
impossible to meet, either approach sets up the firm and its managers for
failure and in the process value is destroyed.
Keywords:
Value Maximization, Overvaluation, Incentives, Managing Earnings, Analyst
Expectations, Managing Wall Street, Earnings Guidance, Financial Reporting,
Budgeting Process
Great Nova Video: Can a market of irrational people be a "rational
market?"
PBS Nova Videp: "Mind Over Money,"
http://video.pbs.org/video/1479100777
Jensen Question
This seems to beg the question of how accountants can contribute information to
irrational people with an underlying goal of helping their markets themselves be
more rational.
Of course many scholars argue that markets themselves are not " rational" ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Fox
Behavioral Economics ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behavioral_economics
Bounded Rationality ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bounded_rationality
Rationality in Economics
Peter J. Hammond
Department of Economics, Stanford
University, CA 94305-6072, U.S.A.
e-mail:
hammond@leland.stanford.edu
http://www.warwick.ac.uk/~ecsgaj/ratEcon.pdf
1 Introduction and Outline
Rationality is one of the most
over-used words in economics. Behaviour can be rational, or irrational. So
can decisions, preferences, beliefs, expectations, decision procedures, and
knowledge. There may also be bounded rationality. And recent work in game
theory has considered strategies and beliefs or expectations that are “rationalizable”.
Here I propose to assess how
economists use and mis-use the term “rationality.”
Most of the discussion will concern
the normative approach to decision theory. First, I shall consider single
person decision theory. Then I shall move on to interactive or multi-person
decision theory, customarily called game theory. I shall argue that, in
normative decision theory, rationality has become little more than a
structural consistency criterion. At the least, it needs supplementing with
other criteria that reflect reality. Also, though there is no reason to
reject rationality hypotheses as normative criteria just because people do
not behave rationally, even so rationality as consistency seems so demanding
that it may not be very useful for practicable normative models either.
Towards the end, I shall offer a
possible explanation of how the economics profession has arrived where it
is. In particular, I shall offer some possible reasons why the rationality
hypothesis persists even in economic models which purport to be descriptive.
I shall conclude with tentative suggestions for future research —about where
we might do well to go in future.
2 Decision Theory with Measurable Objectives
In a few cases, a decision-making
agent may seem to have clear and measurable objectives. A football team,
regarded as a single agent, wants to score more goals than the opposition,
to win the most matches in the league, etc. A private corporation seeks to
make profits and so increase the value to its owners. A publicly owned
municipal transport company wants to provide citizens with adequate mobility
at reasonable fares while not requiring too heavy a subsidy out of general
tax revenue. A non-profit organization like a university tends to have more
complex objectives, like educating students, doing good research, etc. These
conflicting aims all have to be met within a limited budget.
Measurable objectives can be measured,
of course. This is not always as easily as keeping score in a football match
or even a tennis, basketball or cricket match. After all, accountants often
earn high incomes, ostensibly by measuring corporate profits and/or
earnings. For a firm whose profits are risky, shareholders with well
diversified portfolios will want that firm to maximize the expectation of
its stock market value. If there is uncertainty about states of the world
with unknown probabilities, each diversified shareholder will want the firm
to maximize subjective expected values, using the shareholder’s subjective
probabilities. Of course, it is then hard to satisfy all shareholders
simultaneously. And, as various recent spectacular bank failures show, it is
much harder to measure the extent to which profits are being made when there
is uncertainly.
In biology, modern evolutionary theory
ascribes objectives to genes —so the biologist Richard Dawkins has written
evocatively of the
Selfish Gene.
The measurable objective of a gene is the extent to which the gene survives
because future organisms inherit it. Thus, gene survival is an objective
that biologists can attempt to measure, even if the genes themselves and the
organisms that carry them remain entirely unaware of why they do what they
do in order to promote gene survival.
Early utility theories up to about the
time of Edgeworth also tried to treat utility as objectively measurable. The
Age of the Enlightenment had suggested worthy goals like “life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness,” as mentioned in the constitution of the U.S.A.
Jeremy Bentham wrote of maximizing pleasure minus pain, adding both over all
individuals. In dealing with risk, especially that posed by the St.
Petersburg Paradox, in the early 1700s first Gabriel Cramer (1728) and then
Daniel Bernoulli (1738) suggested maximizing expected utility; most previous
writers had apparently considered only maximizing expected wealth.
3 Ordinal Utility and Revealed Preference
Over time, it became increasingly
clear to economists that any behaviour as interesting and complex as
consumers’ responses to price and wealth changes could not be explained as
the maximization of some objective measure of utility. Instead, it was
postulated that consumers maximize unobservable subjective utility
functions. These utility functions were called “ordinal” because all that
mattered was the ordering between utilities of different consumption
bundles. It would have been mathematically more precise and perhaps less
confusing as well if we had learned to speak of an
ordinal equivalence
class of utility functions.
The idea is to regard two utility functions as equivalent if and only if
they both represent the same
preference ordering
— that is, the same
reflexive, complete, and transitive binary relation. Then, of course, all
that matters is the preference ordering — the choice of utility function
from the ordinal equivalence class that represents the preference ordering
is irrelevant. Indeed, provided that a preference ordering exists, it does
not even matter whether it can be represented by any utility function at
all.
Bob Jensen's threads on theory are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm
The Financial Accounting Standards Board moved last
year to close the loophole that Lehman is accused of using, Bushee says. A new
rule, FAS 166, replaces the 98%-102% test with one designed to get at the intent
behind a repurchase agreement. The new rule, just taking effect now, looks at
whether a transaction truly involves a transfer of risk and reward. If it does
not, the agreement is deemed a loan and the assets stay on the borrower's
balance sheet.
Note that I’m not in favor of repealing the recent
legislation. But I am in favor of adding a public option so long as taxation and
insurance premiums are added to fully cover the annual costs of health
insurance. And let's stop the BS on the left and on the right side of this
debate.
Fuzzy Congressional Budget Office Accounting Tricks
"ObamaCare by the Numbers: Part 2," by John Cassidy, The New Yorker,
March 26, 2010 ---
http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/johncassidy/2010/03/obamacare-by-the-numbers-part-2.html
This is a long and somewhat involved followup to my
previous post on ObamaCare. . For those of you
with O.A.D.D. (online attention-deficit disorder), I’ve provided an express
and local version.
EXPRESS:
The official projections for health-care reform,
which show it greatly reducing the number of uninsured and also reducing the
budget deficit, are simply not credible. There are three basic issues.
The cost and revenue projections rely on
unrealistic assumptions and accounting tricks. If you make some adjustments
for these, the cost of the plan is much higher.
The so-called “individual mandate” isn’t really a
mandate at all. Under the new system, many young and healthy people will
still have a strong incentive to go uninsured.
Once the reforms are up and running, some employers
will have a big incentive to end their group coverage plans and dump their
employees onto the taxpayer-subsidized individual plans, greatly adding to
their cost.
LOCAL:
For future reference (or possibly to roll up and
beat myself over the head with in my dotage) I have filed away a copy the
latest analysis (pdf) of health-care reform from the Congressional Budget
Office. By 2019, it says, the bills passed by the House and Senate will have
cut the number of uninsured Americans by thirty-two million, raised the
percentage of people with some form of health-care coverage from
eighty-three per cent to ninety-four per cent, and reduced the federal
deficit by a cumulative $143 billion. If all of these predictions turn out
to be accurate, ObamaCare will go down as one of the most successful and
least costly government initiatives in history. At no net cost to the
taxpayer, it will have filled a gaping hole in the social safety net and
solved a problem that has frustrated policymakers for decades.
Does Santa Claus live after all? According to the
C.B.O., between now and 2019 the net cost of insuring new enrollees in
Medicaid and private insurance plans will be $788 billion, but other
provisions in the legislation will generate revenues and cost savings of
$933 billion. Subtract the first figure from the second and—voila!—you get
$143 billion in deficit reduction.
The first objection to these figures is that the
great bulk of the cost savings—more than $450 billion—comes from cuts in
Medicare payments to doctors and other health-care providers. If you are
vaguely familiar with Washington politics and the letters A.A.R.P. you might
suspect that at least some of these cuts will fail to materialize. Unlike
some hardened skeptics, I don’t think none of them will happen. One part of
the reform involves reducing excessive payments that the Bush Administration
agreed to when it set up the Medicare Advantage program in 2003. If Congress
remains under Democratic control—a big if, admittedly—it will probably enact
these changes. But that still leaves another $300 billion of Medicare
savings to be found.
The second problem is accounting gimmickry. Acting
in accordance with standard Washington practices, the C.B.O. counts as
revenues more than $50 million in Social Security taxes and $70 billion in
payments towards a new home-care program, which will eventually prove very
costly, and it doesn’t count some $50 billion in discretionary spending.
After excluding these pieces of trickery and the questionable Medicare cuts,
Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former head of the C.B.O., has calculated that the
reform will actually raise the deficit by $562 billion in the first ten
years. “The budget office is required to take written legislation at face
value and not second-guess the plausibility of what it is handed,” he wrote
in the Times. “So fantasy in, fantasy out.”
Holtz-Eakin advised John McCain in 2008, and he has
a reputation as a straight shooter. I think the problems with the C.B.O.’s
projections go even further than he suggests. If Holtz-Eakin’s figures
turned out to be spot on, and over the next ten years health-care reform
reduced the number of uninsured by thirty million at an annual cost of $56
billion, I would still regard it as a great success. In a $15 trillion
economy—and, barring another recession, the U.S. economy should be that
large in 2014—fifty or sixty billion dollars is a relatively small sum—about
four tenths of one per cent of G.D.P., or about eight per cent of the 2011
Pentagon budget.
My two big worries about the reform are that it
won’t capture nearly as many uninsured people as the official projections
suggest, and that many businesses, once they realize the size of the
handouts being offered for individual coverage, will wind down their group
plans, shifting workers (and costs) onto the new government-subsidized
plans. The legislation includes features designed to prevent both these
things from happening, but I don’t think they will be effective.
Consider the so-called “individual mandate.” As a
strict matter of law, all non-elderly Americans who earn more than the
poverty line will be obliged to obtain some form of health coverage. If they
don’t, in 2016 and beyond, they could face a fine of about $700 or 2.5 per
cent of their income—whichever is the most. Two issues immediately arise.
Even if the fines are vigorously enforced, many
people may choose to pay them and stay uninsured. Consider a healthy single
man of thirty-five who earns $35,000 a year. Under the new system, he would
have a choice of enrolling in a subsidized plan at an annual cost of $2,700
or paying a fine of $875. It may well make sense for him to pay the fine,
take his chances, and report to the local emergency room if he gets really
sick. (E.R.s will still be legally obliged to treat all comers.) If this
sort of thing happens often, as well it could, the new insurance exchanges
will be deprived of exactly the sort of healthy young people they need in
order to bring down prices. (Healthy people improve the risk pool.)
If the rules aren’t properly enforced, the problem
will be even worse. And that is precisely what is likely to happen. The
I.R.S. will have the administrative responsibility of imposing penalties on
people who can’t demonstrate that they have coverage, but it won’t have the
legal authority to force people to pay the fines. “What happens if you don’t
buy insurance and you don’t pay the penalty?” Ezra Klein, the Washington
Post’s industrious and well-informed blogger, asks. “Well, not much. The law
specifically says that no criminal action or liens can be imposed on people
who don’t pay the fine.”
So, the individual mandate is a bit of a sham.
Generous subsidies will be available for sick people and families with
children who really need medical care to buy individual coverage, but
healthy single people between the ages of twenty-six and forty, say, will
still have a financial incentive to remain outside the system until they get
ill, at which point they can sign up for coverage. Consequently, the number
of uninsured won’t fall as much as expected, and neither will prices.
Without a proper individual mandate, the idea of universality goes out the
window, and so does much of the economic reasoning behind the bill.
The question of what impact the reforms will have
on existing insurance plans has received even less analysis. According to
President Obama, if you have coverage you like you can keep it, and that’s
that. For the majority of workers, this will undoubtedly be true, at least
in the short term, but in some parts of the economy, particularly industries
that pay low and moderate wages, the presence of such generous subsidies for
individual coverage is bound to affect behavior eventually. To suggest this
won’t happen is to say economic incentives don’t matter.
Take a medium-sized firm that employs a hundred
people earning $40,000 each—a private security firm based in Atlanta,
say—and currently offers them health-care insurance worth $10,000 a year, of
which the employees pay $2,500. This employer’s annual health-care costs are
$750,000 (a hundred times $7,500). In the reformed system, the firm’s
workers, if they didn’t have insurance, would be eligible for generous
subsidies to buy private insurance. For example, a married forty-year-old
security guard whose wife stayed home to raise two kids could enroll in a
non-group plan for less than $1,400 a year, according to the Kaiser Health
Reform Subsidy Calculator. (The subsidy from the government would be
$8,058.)
In a situation like this, the firm has a strong
financial incentive to junk its group coverage and dump its workers onto the
taxpayer-subsidized plan. Under the new law, firms with more than fifty
workers that don’t offer coverage would have to pay an annual fine of $2,000
for every worker they employ, excepting the first thirty. In this case, the
security firm would incur a fine of $140,000 (seventy times two), but it
would save $610,000 a year on health-care costs. If you owned this firm,
what would you do? Unless you are unusually public spirited, you would take
advantage of the free money that the government is giving out. Since your
employees would see their own health-care contributions fall by more than
$1,100 a year, or almost half, they would be unlikely to complain. And even
if they did, you would be saving so much money you afford to buy their
agreement with a pay raise of, say, $2,000 a year, and still come out well
ahead.
Even if the government tried to impose additional
sanctions on such firms, I doubt it would work. The dollar sums involved are
so large that firms would try to game the system, by, for example, shutting
down, reincorporating under a different name, and hiring back their
employees without coverage. They might not even need to go to such lengths.
Firms that pay modest wages have high rates of turnover. By simply refusing
to offer coverage to new employees, they could pretty quickly convert most
of their employees into non-covered workers.
The designers of health-care reform and the C.B.O.
are aware of this problem, but, in my view, they have greatly underestimated
it. According to the C.B.O., somewhere between eight and nine million
workers will lose their group coverage as a result of their employers
refusing to offer it. That isn’t a trifling number. But the C.B.O. says it
will be largely offset by an opposite effect in which employers that don’t
currently provide health insurance begin to offer it in response to higher
demand from their workers as a result of the individual mandate. In this
way, some six to seven million people will obtain new group coverage, the
C.B.O. says, so the overall impact of the changes will be minor.
The C.B.O.’s analysis can’t be dismissed out of
hand, but it is surely a best-case scenario. Again, I come back to where I
started: the scale of the subsidies on offer for low and moderately priced
workers. If economics has anything to say as a subject, it is that you can’t
offer people or firms large financial rewards for doing something—in this
case, dropping their group coverage—and not expect them to do it in large
numbers. On this issue, I find myself in agreement with Tyler Cowen and
other conservative economists. Over time, the “firewall” between the
existing system of employer-provided group insurance and taxpayer-subsidized
individual insurance is likely to break down, with more and more workers
being shunted over to the public teat.
At that point, if it comes, politicians of both
parties will be back close to where they began: searching for health-care
reform that provides adequate coverage for all at a cost the country can
afford. What would such a system look like? That is a topic for another
post, but I don’t think it would look much like Romney-ObamaCare.
Read more:
http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/johncassidy/2010/03/obamacare-by-the-numbers-part-2.html#ixzz0jrFSFK3j
More Headaches for Deloitte After Auditing the Biggest Bank to Ever Fail
"Investigation finds fraud in WaMu lending: Senate report: Failed bank’s
own action couldn’t stop deceptive practices," by Marcy Gordon, MSNBC, April 12,
2010 ---
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36440421/ns/business-mortgage_mess/?ocid=twitter
The mortgage lending operations of Washington
Mutual Inc., the biggest U.S. bank ever to fail, were threaded through with
fraud, Senate investigators have found.
And the bank's own probes failed to stem the
deceptive practices, the investigators said in a report on the 2008 failure
of WaMu.
The panel said the bank's pay system rewarded loan
officers for the volume and speed of the subprime mortgage loans they
closed. Extra bonuses even went to loan officers who overcharged borrowers
on their loans or levied stiff penalties for prepayment, according to the
report being released Tuesday by the investigative panel of the Senate
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.
Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., the chairman, said Monday
the panel won't decide until after hearings this week whether to make a
formal referral to the Justice Department for possible criminal prosecution.
Justice, the FBI and the Securities and Exchange Commission opened
investigations into Washington Mutual soon after its collapse in September
2008.
The report said the top WaMu producers, loan
officers and sales executives who made high-risk loans or packaged them into
securities for sale to Wall Street, were eligible for the bank's President's
Club, with trips to swank resorts, such as to Maui in 2005.
Fueled by the housing boom, Seattle-based
Washington Mutual's sales to investors of packaged subprime mortgage
securities leapt from $2.5 billion in 2000 to $29 billion in 2006. The
119-year-old thrift, with $307 billion in assets, collapsed in September
2008. It was sold for $1.9 billion to JPMorgan Chase & Co. in a deal
brokered by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
Jennifer Zuccarelli, a spokeswoman for JPMorgan
Chase, declined to comment on the subcommittee report.
WaMu was one of the biggest makers of so-called
"option ARM" mortgages. These mortgages allowed borrowers to make payments
so low that loan debt actually increased every month.
The Senate subcommittee investigated the Washington
Mutual failure for a year and a half. It focused on the thrift as a case
study for the financial crisis that brought the recession and the loss of
jobs or homes for millions of Americans.
The panel is holding hearings Tuesday and Friday to
take testimony from former senior executives of Washington Mutual, including
ex-CEO Kerry Killinger, and former and current federal regulators.
Washington Mutual "was one of the worst," Levin
told reporters Monday. "This was a Main Street bank that got taken in by
these Wall Street profits that were offered to it."
The investors who bought the mortgage securities
from Washington Mutual weren't informed of the fraudulent practices, the
Senate investigators found. WaMu "dumped the polluted water" of toxic
mortgage securities into the stream of the U.S. financial system, Levin
said.
In some cases, sales associates in WaMu offices in
California fabricated loan documents, cutting and pasting false names on
borrowers' bank statements. The company's own probe in 2005, three years
before the bank collapsed, found that two top producing offices — in Downey
and Montebello, Calif. — had levels of fraud exceeding 58 percent and 83
percent of the loans. Employees violated the bank's policies on verifying
borrowers' qualifications and reviewing loans.
Washington Mutual was repeatedly criticized over
the years by its internal auditors and federal regulators for sloppy lending
that resulted in high default rates by borrowers, according to the report.
Violations were so serious that in 2007, Washington Mutual closed its big
affiliate Long Beach Mortgage Co. as a separate entity and took over its
subprime lending operations.
Senior executives of the bank were aware of the
prevalence of fraud, the Senate investigators found.
In late 2006, Washington Mutual's primary
regulator, the U.S. Office of Thrift Supervision, allowed the bank an
additional year to comply with new, stricter guidelines for issuing subprime
loans.
According to an internal bank e-mail cited in the
report, Washington Mutual would have lost about a third of the volume of its
subprime loans if it applied the stricter requirements.
Deloitte is Included in the Shareholder
Lawsuit Against Washington Mutual (WaMu)
"Feds Investigating WaMu Collapse," SmartPros,
October 16, 2008 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x63521.xml
Oct. 16, 2008 (The Seattle
Times) — U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Sullivan's office [Wednesday] announced that
it is conducting an investigation of Washington Mutual and the events
leading up to its takeover by the FDIC and sale to JP Morgan Chase.
Said Sullivan in a
statement: "Due to the intense public interest in the failure of Washington
Mutual, I want to assure our community that federal law enforcement is
examining activities at the bank to determine if any federal laws were
violated."
Sullivan's task force
includes investigators from the FBI, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s
Office of Inspector General, Securities and Exchange Commission and the
Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigations division.
Sullivan's office asks that
anyone with information for the task force call 1-866-915-8299; or e-mail
fbise@leo.gov.
"For more than 100 years
Washington Mutual was a highly regarded financial institution headquartered
in Seattle," Sullivan said. "Given the significant losses to investors,
employees, and our community, it is fully appropriate that we scrutinize the
activities of the bank, its leaders, and others to determine if any federal
laws were violated."
WaMu was seized by the FDIC
on Sept. 25, and its banking operations were sold to JPMorgan Chase,
prompting a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing by Washington Mutual Inc., the
bank's holding company. The takeover was preceded by an effort to sell the
entire company, but no firm bids emerged.
The Associated Press
reported Sept. 23 that the FBI is investigating four other major U.S.
financial institutions whose collapse helped trigger the $700 billion
bailout plan by the Bush administration.
The AP report cited two
unnamed law-enforcement officials who said that the FBI is looking at
potential fraud by mortgage-finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and
insurer American International Group (AIG). Additionally, a senior
law-enforcement official said Lehman Brothers Holdings is under
investigation. The inquiries will focus on the financial institutions and
the individuals who ran them, the senior law-enforcement official said.
FBI Director Robert Mueller
said in September that about two dozen large financial firms were under
investigation. He did not name any of the companies but said the FBI also
was looking at whether any of them have misrepresented their assets.
"Federal Official Confirms Probe Into
Washington Mutual's Collapse," by Pierre Thomas and Lauren Pearle, ABC News,
October 15, 2008 ---
http://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/story?id=6043588&page=1
The federal government is
investigating whether the
leadership of shuttered bank
Washington Mutual broke
federal laws in the run-up
to its collapse,
the largest in U.S. history.
. . .
Eighty-nine
former WaMu employees are confidential witnesses in
a
shareholder class action lawsuit against
the bank, and some former insiders
spoke exclusively to ABC News,
describing their claims that
the bank ignored key advice from its own risk
management team so they could maximize profits
during the housing boom.
In
court documents, the insiders said the company's
risk managers, the "gatekeepers" who were supposed
to protect the bank from taking undue risks, were
ignored, marginalized and, in some cases, fired. At
the same time, some of the bank's lenders and
underwriters, who sold mortgages directly to home
owners, said they felt pressure to sell as many
loans as possible and push risky, but lucrative,
loans onto all borrowers, according to insiders who
spoke to ABC News.
Continued in article
Allegedly "Deloitte Failed to Audit WaMu in
Accordance with GAAS" (see Page 351) ---
Click Here
Deloitte issued unqualified opinions and is a defendant in this lawsuit (see
Page 335)
In particular note Paragraphs 893-901 with respect to the alleged negligence of
Deloitte.
Bob Jensen's threads on Deloitte's troubles are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Deloitte
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on April 16,
2010
For Entrepreneurs, Sharing Isn't Always Fun
by: Sarah
E. Needleman
Apr 13, 2010
Click here to view the full article on WSJ.com
TOPICS: Compensation,
Dilution, Equity, Stock Options, Stock Valuation
SUMMARY: The
article discusses small businesses' use of equity "as a substitute for a
portion of salary when trying to attract top talent" either in the form of a
portion of the company's overall financial value or in stock options that
become valuable if the company goes public. In essence, when employees
accept equity in lieu of salary, small business owners are diluting
potential reward, notes Michael Keeling, president of ESOP Association, "a
Washington trade group representing businesses with employee stock ownership
plans." Another issue arising in relation to small businesses in particular
is that "companies sometimes outgrow the competence of the individuals they
hire," in the words of Chris Carey, a small-business adviser in Brooklyn,
NY, and so owners considering using equity-based compensation "
CLASSROOM APPLICATION: The
article can be used to discuss the use of stock option plans by small
businesses in addition to the typical view of larger firms' use of these
plans and the recent focus on the backdating scandal in executive stock
option plans. Though the article doesn't address accounting issues per se,
points about compensation value stemming from equity-based compensation and
the definition of dilutive effects on owners' shares in firm value are
useful for understanding the economic substance behind accounting for
equity-based compensation.
QUESTIONS:
1. (Introductory)
Define the term equity-based compensation.
2. (Introductory)
What two forms of equity-based compensation used by small businesses,
particularly at the start-up phase of business, are described in this
article?
3. (Introductory)
What is dilution? How does offering a share of stockholders' equity or a
stock option plan to an employee dilute an owner's interest in a business
currently? In the future?
4. (Advanced)
Consider the accounting for stock option plans offered by ForceLogix to its
employees in 2008 and 2009 as described in the article. How do you think the
granting of these stock options was accounted for?
5. (Advanced)
Access the ForceLogix (formerly Courtland Capital Corp.) Financial
Statements for the year ended August 31, 2009, available online at
http://www.sedar.com/DisplayCompanyDocuments.do?lang=EN&issuerNo=00026340
or by searching for them through the company's web site link to investor
information. Read Note 2, Summary of Significant Accounting Policies
(particularly the paragraph on stock-based compensation) and Note 6, Share
Capital. Does this description confirm your answer to the question above?
Explain, including a comment on the method used to value the options.
6. (Advanced)
Have the stock options described in the article been exercised? Cite your
source for this information.
7. (Introductory)
Have the stock options described in the article been exercised? Cite your
source for this information.
8. (Advanced)
Refer again to the ForceLogix financial statements Note 2, this time the
paragraph on Loss per share. What can you infer about the current market
value of the company's stock from the fact that no diluted earnings (loss)
per share is shown in these financial statements and the statement in this
note that the impact of potentially dilutive securities would be
anti-dilutive.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
"For Entrepreneurs, Sharing Isn't Always Fun," by: Sarah E. Needleman, The
Wall Street Journal, April 13, 2010 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303828304575180073125261114.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
Business owners with limited payroll budgets may be
tempted to use equity as a substitute for a portion of salary when trying to
attract top talent—but this means possibly parting with a piece of their
business's future success.
Mary and Matt Paul say they're grateful that their
employees turned down an offer of equity in lieu of more pay when they
launched their transportation-services firm, Crown Cars & Limousines Inc.,
more than 15 years ago.
"They didn't trust that the company was going to be
successful," says Ms. Paul of the recruits. "I'm happy it worked out that
way because now I couldn't imagine sharing my profits." She says the company
earned roughly $4 million in 2009.
Businesses have long used part-ownership in place
of—or in addition to—bigger salaries. Some offer a piece of their firm's
overall financial value as equity. Others dispense it in the form of stock
options that only become valuable if their company goes public.
The latter may be a tougher sell these days since
few companies have gone public in recent years: There were just 63 U.S.
initial-public offerings last year and 43 in 2008, compared with 272 in 2007
and 221 in 2006, according to Renaissance Capital LLC, an independent
research firm in Greenwich, Conn.
For a small business, where profits often aren't
too big to begin with, this can mean dividing the pot even further. "In
essence you are diluting your potential reward," says Michael Keeling,
president of ESOP Association, a Washington trade group representing
businesses with employee-stock-ownership plans.
Chris Carey, a small-business adviser in Brooklyn,
N.Y., says owners thinking about offering new recruits equity-based pay
should consider what would happen if they later decide that those workers
aren't worth retaining.
"Companies sometimes outgrow the competence of the
individuals they hire," says Mr. Carey. Other recruiting incentives, such as
performance-based bonuses, may be more palatable for owners fearful of
landing in that kind of situation, he says.
On the flip side, sharing a smaller percentage of
something successful can be "better than 100% of your business closing
down," says ESOP's Mr. Keeling.
View Full Image
Studio West Photography
Employees at ForceLogix Offering equity can be an
especially useful tool in a downturn. Business owners should be able to more
easily offset a below-market salary with equity-based pay when unemployment
is high, theorizes Andrew Zacharakis, professor of entrepreneurship at
Babson College in Wellesley, Mass. "A lot of people are trying to get
something on their résumé, even though it may not pay as much as what they
earn in a good economic climate," he says.
Equity can also sweeten a job offer for candidates
who are always in high demand because they possess unique skills or
knowledge. Bret Farrar proposed giving a financial stake in his small
consulting firm to two prospective recruits last year in lieu of bigger
salaries.
He says both candidates accepted the positions over
other, higher-paying opportunities. "We wanted to attract better people and
keep them for the long haul," says Mr. Farrar, founder of Sendero Business
Services LP in Dallas.
Even in prosperous times, equity can be an
effective recruiting tool for small firms, says David Wise, a senior
consultant for Hay Group Inc., a management-consulting firm based in
Philadelphia.
"There's a limited pool of equity available, and
larger companies with more employees have to be that much more selective in
allocating it," says Mr. Wise. "For a smaller company, providing an equity
stake is one way to compete for talent with the big boys."
When Patrick Stakenas co-founded ForceLogix
Technologies Inc. in Chicago in 2005, he says he and his business partner,
Steve Potts, couldn't afford to pay recruits salaries on par with market
rates. So they offered equity in their sales-technology firm to compensate
for the difference.
"We looked for people who understood they'd have
the opportunity to make a lot of money down the road," says Mr. Stakenas.
Over the next few years, ForceLogix employees also
received pay raises mostly in the form of equity. "A couple of times in 2008
and 2009 cash was very tight, so tight that we weren't going to potentially
make payroll," says Mr. Stakenas. "We promised employees that if they stay,
there will be more equity for them, and all of them stayed."
This past December, ForceLogix went public on the
Toronto stock exchange at 10 cents a share, making its 10 employees' stock
options finally worth something. The price has been fluctuating between
eight and 11 cents ever since.
"They can sit on it or sell it," says Mr. Stakenas,
who declines to offer specifics on how much equity his staff has in his
firm. "All of them are holding onto it because they want to see the company
go further."
Bob Jensen's threads on employee stock options and equity sharing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory/sfas123/jensen01.htm
"SBA Warns Small Businesses of Scams to Help Obtain Government Loans,"
Journal of Accountancy, April 1, 2010 ---
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Web/20102758.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on fraud reporting are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraudReporting.htm
Bob Jensen's small business helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#SmallBusiness
"Auditing
Your Auditor: After nearly a decade of turmoil, companies have gained the
advantage in negotiating with their auditors," by Tim Reason, CFO.com,
April 1, 2010 ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14485723/c_14487989?f=home_todayinfinance
When telecommunications provider IDT decided to switch
auditors from Ernst & Young to Grant Thornton in early 2008, the "driving
force was to save money," says CFO Bill Pereira. It worked. Part of a
companywide effort to reduce corporate overhead, the move cut IDT's $4.3
million audit bill almost in half. Although initially "we were fearful of
leaving the Big Four," says Pereira, "in retrospect, we are really happy
with the decision."
In fact, the switch went so smoothly that IDT declined to announce the
renewal of Grant Thornton's contract in its most recent proxy because IDT
was open to switching again. "We knew there had been changes in the market
and we wanted to evaluate where fees stood," says Pereira. "We didn't just
make the automatic assumption that we'd stick with Grant Thornton. We felt
it was our responsibility to do our homework." (IDT eventually did renew
with Grant Thornton and cut its bill by nearly another million dollars, to
$1.42 million last year.)
Welcome to the new auditor-client relationship. In the wake of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, audit fees soared, auditors dumped risky clients
by the hundreds, and "value-added" services all but vanished under the
weight of new independence rules. Today, the reverse is true. Audit fees
have been dropping across the board since 2007. In 2004, more than a third
of auditor changes were the result of audit firms walking away from clients.
Last year, 82% of auditor changes were because companies fired their
auditors (among the Big Four, the number was 90%). And companies aren't just
negotiating lower fees; they are also demanding more value read "services"
covering everything from corporate-board education to competitive
intelligence.
No More Sticker Shock In 2000, the Securities and Exchange Commission
required that companies begin disclosing all payments made to their
auditors. Prompted by the 1998 merger of Price Waterhouse and Coopers
Lybrand, the rule was intended to shine a light on potential independence
problems created by nonaudit work. But it also seemed likely that, in a
normal market, such transparency would affect the price of audits.
Alas, the ensuing decade proved anything but normal. That Big Six merger was
followed quickly by dramatic audit failures that culminated in the Enron and
WorldCom debacles, the implosion of Arthur Andersen, and the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act and its infamous Section 404, creating the most turbulent era in the
history of auditing. "From 2000 to 2007, there was one shock after another,
so there really wasn't normal pricing during that period," observes
associate professor Scott Whisenant of the University of Houston, who
studies audit fees.
It is still a bitter irony for finance executives that Sarbox much of it
aimed squarely at Arthur Andersen's failings as auditor to Enron and
WorldCom turned into a bonanza for surviving audit firms. Between 2004 and
2006, internal-control audits created intense auditor shortages, which
rippled through the market, affecting companies not even required to comply
with Section 404. The supply-versus-demand dilemma combined with new
auditing requirements and auditor risk aversion drove costs skyward during
those years.
That has now changed markedly. "We have seen price competition return in
2007 and 2008," observes Whisenant. Not only have fees been falling, but
they have fallen for companies of all sizes, including those not directly
affected by 404. Companies with revenues between $100 million and $250
million saw an average 8% drop in fees from 2007 to 2008, while those with
revenues of $250 million to $500 million saw them drop 5%, according to a
CFO analysis of data provided by Audit Analytics (see "Fees Fall
Everywhere," below).
Chalk up much of that change to a long-delayed reaction to the fee
transparency ushered in by the SEC's 2000 decree. When fee disclosure was
first proposed, some experts theorized that it would actually result in
higher fees, in that audit firms would no longer offer a discount in the
early years of an engagement to win new clients. On the contrary, says
Whisenant, "fee disclosure probably gave auditors more information to
underbid existing audits."
But, he adds, it now appears that the larger impact of price transparency is
its potential to help clients control their costs once an engagement is
under way. "After the second or third year, when the fee starts to revert to
a normal level, then the clients have the advantage, because they can start
benchmarking."
In other words, clients are wising up to initial discounting and are
leveraging the new transparency not only to help select a new auditor, but
to rebuff fee increases in subsequent years.
While Sarbox may have been a windfall for auditors in its early days, it is
actually driving fees down now for several reasons. Fee disclosure was
intended to shed light on potential conflicts when auditors acted as
consultants, but Sarbox went further and outlawed many types of auditor
consulting altogether. It also emphasized a relatively straightforward
"check-the-box" review of controls. Both aspects of the law make it harder
for audit firms to differentiate their services.
Continued in article
Jensen
Comment
There are a number of factors that can contribute to better audits. Aggressive
fee negotiation is seldom one of these.
April 1, 2010 reply from David Albrecht
[albrecht@PROFALBRECHT.COM]
Bob, I agree with you that it is at least very
possible that auditor effectiveness will suffer as a result of this price
competition. Here are some of the problems I see. First, auditors will
have less time on-site performing the audit. Although this is cheap grunt
time, there will be less testing and evidence gathering. Second, there will
be renewed pressure to continue the problematic business model of audit
firms relying on new hires. Fewer experienced professionals and partners
will be around to supply judgment (I can't believe I'm attributing
judgmental prowess to audit firms). Third, increased price competition will
only increase pressure on audit firms to go along with management, or else
there will be the loss of precious remaining revenues. Fourth, it will give
more power to corporate management in the company-auditor relationship. If
the U.S. moves to IFRS, audit firms will need to be in a position to
exercise judgment and the power to express its will. Too much price
competition will turn the audit firms into cheap whores.
Sox is frequently a failed experiment. So many of us had high hopes for a
focus on internal controls having some positive impact on reducing financial
statement manipulation. It has, in many cases, turned into a check-the-box
exercise with little meaningful import.
If there is any hope for audit firms to serve the public interest, this
increasing price competition will effectively kill off the hope. Audit
firms will continue to place their own self-interest over those of
investors.
David Albrecht
Bob
Jensen's threads on professionalism in auditing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Professionalism
Question
What's the difference between a John Meriwether hedge fund and a Larry King
marriage?
Answer
Larry King flamed out eight times whereas John's hedge funds have flamed out
only twice --- but far more spectacular than any Larry King divorce..
"Long Term Capital Management Again? Wow John Meriwether Has a Short Memory,"
by Dave Manuel, Simoleon Sense, April 14, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/long-term-capital-management-again-wow-john-meriwether-has-a-short-memory/
In
October of 2009, multiple news organizations
reported that John Meriwether, formerly of Salomon
Brothers/LTCM/JWM Partners, would be forming his
third hedge fund.
Now,
this wouldn’t normally be big news, but it is when
you consider that Meriwether’s two previous hedge
funds both flamed out, one of which was in
spectacular fashion.
John
Meriwether founded LTCM (Long-Term Capital
Management) in 1994. This fund, which included
famous bond traders (John Meriwether), two Nobel
Memorial Prize winners (Robert C. Merton and Myron
Scholes) and a Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve
(David Mullins), was an instant success due to the
incredible collection of talent that comprised the
fund’s team of partner
Bob Jensen's threads on the spectacular Long
Term Capital Management Trillion Dollar Bet that nearly brought down Wall Street
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#LTCM
Question
Will students buy iPads instead of laptops?
Answer
Probably not since the iPad is not really intended to be a production machine.
It's primarily a reader of multimedia (except for the popular Flash videos which
it will not read). The question is more of whether students will leave their
laptops at home while on campus or whether they will have to lug yet another
device on top of their iPhones and laptops.
Egads!
What if an accounting instructor requires that students use Excel workbook?
(There are of course still PC labs on most campuses but what about the distance
education student who buys an iPad instead of a real computer?)
What about the many AIS courses that require that students use MS Access? MS
Access is popular in AIS course in part because the college saves a great deal
of money by not having to by site licenses for more expensive relational
database software.
Jensen Conclusion
Students should be advised to buy computers that will run the most popular
collegiate Microsoft software (including PowerPoint, Excel, Word, and other
Office software commonly used by faculty). Of course this does not always mean
purchasing a Windows computer since MS Office will run on Mac laptops.
MS Office software will not, however, run on an iPad. It is possible to read
Excel spreadsheets and PowerPoint files that are online in the Safari Browser.
However, suppose an instructor assigns an Excel problem that requires that the
student both read an Excel problem and answer in Excel such as using an Excel
function like the Bond Yield function? No can do on an iPad!
Also suppose that a student creates a project file that is too large to send
to the instructor as an email attachment. Currently some students burn the file
to a DVD disk that is submitted to the instructor. But students cannot burn DVD
disks on an iPad. In fact they cannot even read a DVD disk on an iPad.
"iPads Arrive on Campuses, to Mixed Reviews," by Jeff Young, Chronicle of
Higher Education, April 6, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/iPads-Arrive-on-Campus-to/22308/?sid=wc&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
It's not every day that a new category of computer
hits the market, which explains some of the hype over Apple's new iPad. It's
not quite a laptop (because it doesn't have all the features of a standard
personal computer), not exactly a giant smartphone (because it's not a
phone), and not quite an e-reader (because it can play video and do other
things those machines can't). On campuses, the question is: Will this new
type of mobile device help teaching and research?
George Washington University's campus bookstore was
one of many across the country to start selling the devices today, and just
about every student who walked by the iPad display here stopped to give it a
look, and to flip around the device's shiny touch screen.
"I wanted to see if I could actually type on it,"
said Vince Kooper, a freshman who tapped out a sentence or two. Several
students said they would love to have one but could not afford the price,
which ranges from $499 to $829. "It's hard to afford that kind of stuff when
you're in college," said Matt Weitzfeld, an undergraduate who also stopped
to look.
While the iPad is certainly good enough to take
notes on in class, Mr. Weitzfeld said that several professors ban laptops
for fear that students would poke around on Facebook rather than listen to
lectures, and that iPads would most likely face the same restrictions.
The devices were not exactly flying off the
bookstore's shelves. Zach Dunseth, computer and software coordinator, said
15 iPads went to students who had preordered them, but that the store had
more in stock. Nationwide, Apple officials said they sold more than 300,000
iPads on the first day, though stores are not reporting widespread
shortages.
Eric Weil, managing partner at Student Monitor,
which studies student buying habits, said a survey last month found a
growing interest in e-reading devices (which is how the group categorized
them), and a stronger interest in the iPad than in the Kindle or other
e-readers.
"Better than three in 10 students said, 'I'm
somewhat interested in purchasing a wireless reading device,'" he reported.
Several professors spent the past few days sparring
on blogs and Twitter feeds over whether iPads will send big waves over the
academic and media landscape or something closer to a ripple.
"It's actually been a fairly interesting debate
online," said Dan Cohen, director of the Center for History and New Media at
George Mason University. Scholars profess either love or hate for iPads, he
said. "There's no gray area here."
Opponents of the device argue that it is not open
enough and sets a bad precedent for how computers and software are sold,
since Apple, by controlling access to its online store of apps, controls
what iPad software is allowed to be sold. Some fans, though, including some
artists and writers, are excited by what they see as a machine that
simplifies the experience of reading and viewing multimedia.
It will take months before the potential of these
new pad-style computers becomes clear, Mr. Cohen said, because developers
are still working out what a light, nine-inch computer can do that laptops,
netbooks, and smartphones can't.
Bob Jensen's threads on electronic books are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ebooks.htm
Hi Richard,
The problem is that some of the
leading accounting textbooks that have electronic versions that can be purchased
from Amazon do not have the exhibits included in the purchase. Hard copy
exhibits must be purchased separately (at least from Amazon for the Kindle).
For accounting textbooks in
question, Amazon will only sell the exhi8bits in hard copy to Kindle Users.
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/EbooksDeal.htm
I
was wondering if the iPad overcame this problem for these textbooks purchased
from Amazon . Wiley and other publishers will “lease” electronic textbooks that
contain the exhibits. By leasing I mean that the downloaded book expires and
cannot be permanently stored by lessees.
Amazon.com
Kindle Version of
Accounting Principles
Jerry J. Weygandt, Paul D. Kimmel, and Donald E. Kieso
Wiley, 9th Edition, 2010 |
 |
Kindle eBook Price $95.96 ---
Click Here
We'll add in the chapter exhibits for an additional $147.95
Note that the chapter exhibits are only available in hard copy from
Amazon
Amazon doesn't tell you that there are no
chapter exhibits when you order the Kindle version
Order online today
Note that this book may also be leased as eBook --- Click
Here
The one year lease price direct from WileyPlus is $119.50
But it is only available from the Wiley server and may not be
downloaded into a student's computer
The leased online version does have all chapter exhibits
This leasing deal is only available through the publisher directly
and not through Amazon
February 21, 2010 reply from Burnell, Mary
[Mary.Burnell@FAIRMONTSTATE.EDU]
Bob,
I see lots of comments here, but not an exact answer about Wiley
Plus. I've used Wiley Plus since it was new with their introductory
books.
Their books are not downloadable. You must use them on the Wiley
server. That means that the student has a "lease" for a limited time
to all their material. Students can use the book for a set time
period -- usually a year.
I understand that is the same model with other publishers.
I've tried to negotiate a more permanent options for students, but
so far I've not managed it.
Just 2 cents from a lurker.
Dede Burnell
Mary A. Burnell, CPA Coordinator of Accounting and Finance Fairmont
State University 1201 Locust Avenue Fairmont, WV 26554 (304)
367-4189
Mary.Burnell@fairmontstate.edu
Jensen Comment
Back when I was teaching I almost always gave in-class open book
examinations. But I did not let students turn on computers in fear
that a miscreant might contact a buddy via email for help on the
examination or search for unauthorized help on the Internet.
I guess if some students only had leased online eBook versions of a
textbook, I could no longer give open book examinations.
About the only way for students to get permanent eBook ownership of
this Weygandt et al Accounting Principles textbook is to
download the $95.96 Kindle version (or some comparable version on
another reader such as the Sony Reader or Nook). But those
downloadable versions apparently don't have the essential chapter
exhibits. The good news is that if your Amazon Kindle blows, Amazon
will forever let you re-download the purchased edition for free. The
bad news is that it does not have chapter exhibits.
If this is beginning to sound like a Catch 22 here it's because it's
Catch $95.96 for the Kindle Edition 9 version of this particular
textbook?
For students who do not want permanent copies of an eBook version,
it's cheaper to buy the hard copy new from Amazon or some other
retailer for $147.95 (or eventually much less as a used book once
used Edition 9 hard copy versions are available from Amazon and B&N
and campus bookstores) and then sell them back as used books in
Amazon, B&N, or campus bookstores.
If a student has to repeat a basic accounting course a year later, I
wonder if WileyPlus will discount the $119.50 lease price for the
eBook containing all chapter exhibits?
I also found pirated downloads of the solutions manual and test bank
available at a Hong Kong site, but I will not disclose that link.
It is also interesting why publishing companies continue to give
instructors hard copy examination versions before the book is
actually adopted. It would seem that publishers could end the
process where instructors sell their free examination copies to
sleazy book buyers that stop by faculty offices with wads of cash in
their fists. All the publishers would have to do is give free access
to the online eBook versions. But some unscrupulous instructors
might never adopt any textbook where the book rep did not give them
several hard copy versions to sell for extra income. It's a dog eat
dog world out there. |
Bob Jensen's threads
on electronic books are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ebooks.htm
"Distance Education's Rate of Growth Doubles at Community Colleges,"
by Helen Miller, Chronicle of Higher Education, April 13, 2010
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/Distance-Educations-Rate-of/22540/?sid=wc&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
Distance education is growing quickly at community
colleges, according to the results of a study published by the Instructional
Technology Council. For the 2008-9 academic year, enrollment in distance
learning at community colleges grew 22 percent over the 2007-8 academic
year, up from a growth rate of 11 percent in the previous year.
The Instructional Technology Council, which is
affiliated with the American Association of Community Colleges, conducted
its annual survey by e-mail and received responses from 226 community
colleges. The 22 percent growth from 2007-8 to 2008-9 is somewhat higher
than the 17-percent growth that the Sloan Consortium noted for all distance
education from fall 2007 to fall 2008 in a recent report. Overall enrollment
in higher education grew less than 2 percent during that time.
Fred Lokken, associate dean for the Truckee Meadows
Community College WebCollege and author of the technology-council report,
said he thinks that one reason distance education has grown more quickly at
community colleges than it has in general is because community colleges are
more enthusiastic about it than universities are.
Most respondents cited the economic downturn as the
main reason for growth in online enrollment, and other respondents said that
the growth was typical or was a result of new enrollment efforts.
Community-college enrollment has increased in general with the downturn, and
Mr. Lokken said that online courses are particularly appealing to people who
are job hunting.
“They now see the online classes giving them the
greatest flexibility, given the crises they’re facing their lives,” Mr.
Lokken said.
The survey also found that for administrators, the
greatest challenge in distance learning was a lack of support staff needed
for training and technical assistance. In regard to faculty, the
administrators who responded to the survey said, workload issues were the
biggest obstacle. For students, the institutions' greatest challenge was
preparing them to take classes online.
When distance education first became common about
10 years ago, completion rates for online courses were about 50 percent, but
survey findings indicate that they are now up to 72 percent. For
face-to-face learning, completion rates are only a little higher, at 76
percent.
Mr. Lokken will present
the survey findings on April 18 at the American
Association of Community Colleges'
annual convention in
Seattle.
Bob Jensen's threads on distance education and training alternatives ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Crossborder.htm
Humor
Between April 1 and April 30, 2010
April 26, 2010 message from Michael CPA
[taxtalker99@GMAIL.COM]
That was hilarious.
Michael
On Sun, Apr 25, 2010 at 5:44 PM, Accountants CPA
Hartford CT William Brighenti CPA <accountantscpahartford@gmail.com>
wrote:
The examination is available here:
http://www.cpa-connecticut.com/blog/?p=356
Answer
honestly, since non-nerds already know if you are or not.
--
William Brighenti, CPA
Accountants CPA Hartford, LLC
46 Mildrum Rd, Berlin, CT 06037-2423
860-828-3269
accountantscpahartford@gmail.com
http://www.cpa-connecticut.com
Very funny Jewish wedding with English subtitle (la boda)
---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7NF3OWNJgYw
It gets better near the end!
Me and My Shadow ( a very funny video link forwarded by David
Fordham) ---
Click Here
http://www.urlesque.com/2010/04/06/math-teacher-pranks/?icid=main|main|dl6|link5|http://www.urlesque.com/2010/04/06/math-teacher-pranks/
The only thing missing
is the music ---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e5hXtGkzZ9k
1927 Version ---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RrRsNWzfEZA
Dear professor Robert Bob,
Thank for these funny videos.
My reply now:
1
http://vodpod.com/watch/2908094-are-you-smarter-then-a-monkey
2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M5xVPJUdTHk&NR=1
3
http://riddles.yolasite.com/funny-videos.php
All the best,
Dan
(from Rumania)
Voters pick dead man for mayor over the incumbent in Tracy City, Tennessee
---
http://content.usatoday.com/communities/ondeadline/post/2010/04/voters-pick-dead-man-for-mayor-over-the-incumbent/1?csp=34
Jensen County
In some counties in Texas it could've been the graveyard voters that pushed the
dead candidate over the top.
Forwarded by Nancy
A Cowboy from Sweetwater , Texas walked into a bank
in New York City and asked for the loan officer. He told the loan officer
that he was going to Paris for an international rodeo for two weeks and
needed to borrow $5,000 and that he was not a depositor of the bank..
The bank officer told him that the bank would need
some form of security for the loan, so the Cowboy handed over the keys to a
new Ferrari. The car was parked on the street in front of the bank. The
Cowboy produced the title and everything checked out.. The loan officer
agreed to hold the car as collateral for the loan and apologized for having
to charge 12% interest.
Later, the bank's president and its officers all
enjoyed a good laugh at the Cowboy from Texas for using a $250,000 Ferrari
as collateral for a $5,000 loan. An employee of the bank then drove the
Ferrari into the bank's private underground garage and parked it.
Two weeks later, the Cowboy returned, repaid the
$5,000 and the interest of $23.07.
The loan officer said, "Sir, we are very happy to
have had your business, and this transaction has worked out very nicely, but
we are a little puzzled. While you were away, we checked you out on Dunn &
Bradstreet and found that you are a highly sophisticated investor and
multimillionaire with real estate and financial interests all over the
world. Your investments include a large number of wind turbines around
Sweetwater , Texas . What puzzles us is, why would you bother to borrow
$5,000?"
The good 'ole Texas boy replied, "Where else in New
York City can I park my car for two weeks for only $23.07 and expect it to
be there when I return?"
Don't mess with TEXANS....
Forwarded by Nancy
1. She was in the bathroom, putting on her makeup, under the watchful eyes of
her young granddaughter, as she'd done many times before. After she applied her
lipstick and started to leave, the little one said, "But Gramma, you forgot to
kiss the toilet paper good-bye!" I will probably never put lipstick on again
without thinking about kissing the toilet paper good-bye...
2. My young grandson called the other day to wish me Happy Birthday. He asked
me how old I was, and I told him, 62. My grandson was quiet for a moment, and
then he asked, "Did you start at 1?"
3. After putting her grandchildren to bed, a grandmother changed into old
slacks and a droopy blouse and proceeded to wash her hair. As she heard the
children getting more and more rambunctious, her patience grew thin. Finally,
she threw a towel around her head and stormed into their room, putting them back
to bed with stern warnings. As she left the room, she heard the three-year-old
say with a trembling voice, "Who was THAT?"
4. A grandmother was telling her little granddaughter what her own childhood
was like: "We used to skate outside on a pond. I had a swing made from a tire;
it hung from a tree in our front yard. We rode our pony. We picked wild
raspberries in the woods." The little girl was wide-eyed, taking this all in. At
last she said, "I sure wish I'd gotten to know you sooner!"
5. My grandson was visiting one day when he asked, "Grandma, do you know how
you and God are alike?" I mentally polished my halo and I said, "No, how are we
alike?'' "You're both old," he replied.
6. A little girl was diligently pounding away on her grandfather's word
processor. She told him she was writing a story.. "What's it about?" he asked.
"I don't know," she replied. "I can't read.."
7. I didn't know if my granddaughter had learned her colors yet, so I decided
to test her. I would point out something and ask what color it was She would
tell me and was always correct. It was fun for me, so I continued. At last, she
headed for the door, saying, "Grandma, I think you should try to figure out some
of these, yourself!"
8. When my grandson Billy and I entered our vacation cabin, we kept the
lights off until we were inside to keep from attracting pesky insects. Still, a
few fireflies followed us in. Noticing them before I did, Billy whispered, "It's
no use Grandpa. Now the mosquitoes are coming after us with flashlights."
9. When my grandson asked me how old I was, I teasingly replied, "I'm not
sure." "Look in your underwear, Grandpa," he advised, "mine says I'm 4 to 6."
10. A second grader came home from school and said to her grandmother,
"Grandma, guess what? We learned how to make babies today." The grandmother,
more than a little surprised, tried to keep her cool "That's interesting," she
said, "how do you make babies?" "It's simple," replied the girl. "You just
change 'y' to 'i' and add 'es'.."
11 Children's Logic: "Give me a sentence about a public servant," said a
teacher. The small boy wrote: "The fireman came down the ladder pregnant." The
teacher took the lad aside to correct him. "Don't you know what pregnant means?"
she asked. "Sure," said the young boy confidently. 'It means carrying a child."
12. A grandfather was delivering his grandchildren to their home one day when
a fire truck zoomed past. Sitting in the front seat of the fire truck was a
Dalmatian dog. The children started discussing the dog's duties. "They use him
to keep crowds back," said one child. "No," said another. "He's just for good
luck." A third child brought the argument to a close."They use the dogs," she
said firmly, "to find the fire hydrants."
13. A 6-year-old was asked where his grandma lived. "Oh," he said, "she lives
at the airport, and when we want her, we just go get her. Then, when we're done
having her visit, we take her back to the airport."
14. Grandpa is the smartest man on earth! He teaches me good things, but I
don't get to see him enough to get as smart as him!
15. My Grandparents are funny, when they bend over; you hear gas leaks, and
they blame their dog.
Forwarded by Maureen
How to get to Heaven from Ireland
I was testing children in my Dublin Sunday school class to see if they
understood the concept of getting to heaven.
I asked them, 'If I sold my house and my car, had a big garage sale and gave
all my money to the church, would that get me into heaven?'
'NO!' the children answered.
'If I cleaned the church every day, mowed the garden, and kept everything
tidy, would that get me into heaven?'
Again, the answer was 'NO!' By now I was starting to smile.
'Well, then, if I was kind to animals and gave sweets to all the children,
and loved my husband, would that get me into heaven?'
Again, they all answered 'NO!' I was just bursting with pride for them.
I continued, 'Then how can I get into heaven?' A six year-old boy shouted
out:
"YUV GOTTA BE FOOKN' DEAD...."
Forwarded by
Maureen
Getting old in Florida
Two elderly
ladies are sitting on the front porch in Bradenton ,
doing
nothing.
One lady turns and asks, 'Do you
still get horny?'
The other replies, 'Oh sure I
do.'
The first old lady asks, 'What do
you do about it?'
The second old lady replies, 'I
suck a lifesaver.'
After a few moments, the first
old lady asks, 'Who drives you to the beach?'
**********************************************************
Three old
ladies were sitting side by side in their retirement home
in Sarasota reminiscing.
The
first lady recalled shopping at the green grocers and demonstrated with
her hands, the length and thickness of a cucumber she could buy for a
penny.
The second old lady nodded,
adding that onions used to be much bigger and cheaper also, and
demonstrated the size of two big onions she could buy for a penny a
piece..
The third old lady remarked, 'I
can't hear a word you're saying, but I remember the guy you're talking
about.
**********************************************************
A little old
lady was sitting on a park bench in The Villages,
a Florida Adult
community. A
man walked over and sits down on the other end of the bench. After a few
moments, the woman asks, 'Are you a stranger
here?'
He replies, 'I lived here years
ago.'
'So, where were you all these
years?'
'In prison,' he
says.
'Why did they put you in
prison?'
He looked at her, and very
quietly said, 'I killed my wife.'
'Oh!' said the woman. 'So you're
single...?!'
**********************************************************
Two elderly
people living in Tamarac ,
he was a widower
and she a widow, had known each other for a number of years. One evening
there was a community supper in the big arena in the
Clubhouse.
The two were at the same table,
across from one another. As the meal went on, he took a few admiring
glances at her and finally gathered the courage to ask her, 'Will you
marry me?'
After about six seconds of
'careful consideration,' she answered 'Yes. Yes, I
will!'
The meal ended and, with a few
more pleasant exchanges, they went to their respective places. Next
morning, he was troubled. 'Did she say 'yes' or did she say
'no'?'
He couldn't remember. Try as he
might, he just could not recall. Not even a faint memory. With
trepidation, he went to the telephone and called
her.
First, he explained that he
didn't remember as well as he used to. Then he reviewed the lovely
evening past.. As he gained a little more courage, he inquired, 'When I
asked if you would marry me, did you say ' Yes' or did you say
'No'?'
He was delighted to hear her say,
'Why, I said, 'Yes, yes I will' and I meant it with all my heart.' Then
she continued, 'And I am so glad that you called, because I couldn't
remember who had asked me.'
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * *
A man was
telling his neighbor in Naples ,
'I just bought a
new hearing aid. It cost me four thousand dollars, but it's state of the
art. It's perfect.'
'Really,' answered the neighbor.
'What kind is it?'
'Twelve
thirty.'
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * *
A little old
man shuffled slowly into the 'Orange
Dipper', an ice cream
parlor in Ft Myers , and pulled himself slowly, painfully, up
onto a stool.
After catching his breath he
ordered a banana split.
The waitress asked kindly,
'Crushed nuts?'
'No,' he replied,
'hemorrhoids
Forwarded by Hossein Nouri.
Somali Pirates Say They Are Subsidiary of Goldman Sachs. Could Make
Prosecution Difficult, Experts Say
Eleven indicted Somali pirates dropped a bombshell in a U.S. court today,
revealing that their entire piracy operation is a subsidiary of banking giant
Goldman Sachs.
There was an audible gasp in the courtroom when the leader of the pirates
announced, “We are doing God’s work. We work for Lloyd Blankfein.” The pirate,
who said he earned a bonus of $48 million in doubloons last year, elaborated on
the nature of the Somali’s work for Goldman, explaining that the pirates
forcibly attacked ships that Goldman had already shorted.
”We were functioning as investment bankers, only every day was casual
Friday,” the pirate said.
The pirate acknowledged that they merged their operations with Goldman in
late 2008 to take advantage of the more relaxed regulations governing bankers as
opposed to pirates, “plus to get our share of the bailout money.”
In the aftermath of the shocking revelations, government prosecutors were
scrambling to see if they still had a case against the Somali pirates, who would
now be treated as bankers in the eyes of the law.
”There are lots of laws that could bring these guys down if they were, in
fact, pirates,” one government source said. “But if they’re bankers, our hands
are tied.”
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
In Pharmacology, all drugs have two names, a trade name and generic name. For
example, the trade name of Panadol also has a generic name ofParacetamol. Amoxil
is also call Amoxicillin and Nurofen is also called Ibuprofen.
The FDA has been looking for a generic name for Viagra. After careful
consideration by a team of government experts, it recently announced that it has
settled on the generic name of Mycoxafloppin. Also considered were Mycoxafailin,
Mydixarizin, Dixafix, and of course, Ibepokin.
Pfizer Corp. announced today that Viagra will soon be available in liquid
form, and will be marketed by Pepsi Cola as a power beverage suitable for use as
a mixer. It will now be possible for a man to literally pour himself a stiff
one. Obviously we can no longer call this a soft drink, and it gives new meaning
to the names of 'cocktails', 'highballs' and just a good old-fashioned 'stiff
drink'. Pepsi will market the new concoction by the name of: MOUNT & DO.
Thought for the day: There is more money being spent on breast implants and
Viagra today than on Alzheimer's research. This means that by 2040, there should
be a large elderly population with perky Boobs and huge erections and absolutely
no recollection of what to do with them.
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
WHY MEN ARE NEVER DEPRESSED
Men Are Just Happier
People-- What do you expect from such simple creatures? Your last name stays
put. The garage is all yours. Wedding plans take care of themselves. Chocolate
is just another snack. You can be President. You can never be pregnant. You can
wear a white T-shirt to a water park. You can wear NO shirt to a water park. Car
mechanics tell you the truth. The world is your urinal. You never have to drive
to another gas station restroom because this one is just too icky. You don't
have to stop and think of which way to turn a nut on a bolt. Same work, more
pay. Wrinkles add character. Wedding dress $3500 Tux rental-$75.. People never
stare at your chest when you're talking to them. One mood all the time.
Phone conversations are
over in 30 seconds flat.. A five-day vacation requires only one suitcase. You
get extra credit for the slightest act of thoughtfulness. If someone forgets to
invite you, he or she can still be your friend.
Your underwear is $3.99 for a three-pack. You are unable to see wrinkles in
your clothes. Everything on your face stays its original colour. The same
hairstyle lasts for years, maybe decades. You only have to shave your face and
neck.
You
can play with toys all your life. You can wear shorts no matter how your legs
look. You can 'do' your nails with a pocket knife. You have freedom of choice
concerning growing a moustache.
You
can do Christmas shopping for 25 relatives on December 24 in 25 minutes.
No
wonder men are happier.
Humor Between April 1 and April 30, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q2.htm#Humor043010
Humor Between March 1 and March 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q1.htm#Humor033110
Humor Between February 1 and February 28, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book10q1.htm#Humor022810
Humor Between January 1 and January 31, 2010
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book09q1.htm#Humor013110
And that's
the way it was on April 30, 2010 with a little help from my friends.
Bob
Jensen's gateway to millions of other blogs and social/professional networks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Bob
Jensen's Threads ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/threads.htm
Bob
Jensen's Blogs ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JensenBlogs.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
New Bookmarks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Tidbits ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Bob Jensen's past presentations and lectures ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/resume.htm#Presentations
Free
Online Textbooks, Videos, and Tutorials ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
Free Tutorials in Various Disciplines ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob2.htm#Tutorials
Edutainment and Learning Games ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Edutainment
Open Sharing Courses ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#OKI
Bob
Jensen's Resume ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Resume.htm
Bob
Jensen's Homepage ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/
Concerns That Academic Accounting Research is Out of Touch With Realit
I think leading academic researchers avoid applied research for the
profession because making seminal and creative discoveries that
practitioners have not already discovered is enormously difficult.
Accounting academe is threatened by the
twin dangers of fossilization and scholasticism (of three types:
tedium, high tech, and radical chic)
From
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm
“Knowledge and competence increasingly developed out of the internal
dynamics of esoteric disciplines rather than within the context of
shared perceptions of public needs,” writes Bender. “This is not to
say that professionalized disciplines or the modern service
professions that imitated them became socially irresponsible. But
their contributions to society began to flow from their own
self-definitions rather than from a reciprocal engagement with
general public discourse.”
Now, there is a definite note of sadness in Bender’s narrative – as
there always tends to be in accounts
of the
shift from Gemeinschaft to
Gesellschaft. Yet it is also
clear that the transformation from civic to disciplinary
professionalism was necessary.
“The new disciplines offered relatively precise subject matter and
procedures,” Bender concedes, “at a time when both were greatly
confused. The new professionalism also promised guarantees of
competence — certification — in an era when criteria of intellectual
authority were vague and professional performance was unreliable.”
But in the epilogue to Intellect and Public Life,
Bender suggests that the process eventually went too far.
“The risk now is precisely the opposite,” he writes. “Academe is
threatened by the twin dangers of fossilization and scholasticism
(of three types: tedium, high tech, and radical chic).
The agenda for the next decade, at least as I see it, ought to be
the opening up of the disciplines, the ventilating of professional
communities that have come to share too much and that have become
too self-referential.”
What went wrong in accounting/accountics research?
How did academic accounting research become a pseudo science?
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
|
Accountancy, Tax, IFRS, XBRL, and Accounting History News Sites
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Accounting
Professors Who Blog ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Cool
Search Engines That Are Not Google ---
http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/06/coolsearchengines
Free
(updated) Basic Accounting Textbook --- search for Hoyle at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
CPA
Examination ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cpa_examination
Free CPA Examination Review Course Courtesy of Joe Hoyle ---
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Bob
Jensen's Personal History in Pictures ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/PictureHistory/
Bob
Jensen's Homepage ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/

Some
Accounting News Sites and Related Links
Bob Jensen at
Trinity University
Accounting and Taxation News Sites ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Fraud News ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
XBRL News ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Selected Accounting History Sites ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Some of Bob Jensen's Pictures and Stories
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Free Tutorials, Videos, and Other Helpers
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Bob
Jensen's gateway to millions of other blogs and social/professional networks ---
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Bob
Jensen's Threads ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/threads.htm
Bob
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Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Bob Jensen's past presentations and lectures ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/resume.htm#Presentations
Free
Online Textbooks, Videos, and Tutorials ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
Free Tutorials in Various Disciplines ---
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Edutainment and Learning Games ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Edutainment
Open Sharing Courses ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#OKI
Peter, Paul, and Barney: An Essay on 2008 U.S. Government Bailouts of Private
Companies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm
Health
Care News ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Health.htm
Bob
Jensen's Resume ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Resume.htm

Bob
Jensen's Homepage ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/
