Earnings Management Notes
Earnings Management Notes
The main internal reason is to meet targets. The targets may be there for a
number of reasons. Some may just be budgeted numbers, which if they are not
met will look unfavorable on the person, department, or company that “blew the
budget.” Others may be “required” numbers, which if not met will mean that a
person doesn’t get his or her bonus.
The external factors are a bit more diverse. The company may have previously
projected numbers that external parties are now expecting the company to
meet or exceed. External analysts may have made their own predictions public,
which the company would now like to achieve.
Investors, and potential investors, like to see continual upward income growth. It
looks really positive and looks as if the company is doing well in the charts found in
annual reports. Hence, income smoothing is the second external factor potentially
contributing to earnings management.
Finally, if a company is looking for new financing, they will have an easier time
obtaining it (or obtain better terms if it is debt financing) if they have good looking
financial statements. Therefore, window dressing is the final factor listed.
The big bath – This form of income manipulation can be thought of as part of
income smoothing. What it usually does is effectively accelerate expenses and
losses into a single year with already poor results so that future income looks
better and smoother. Even though the FASB has issued fairly recent statements
to reduce the magnitude for taking a big bath, companies can, and do, still use
this technique. Examples may include recognizing losses on assets that have a
fair market value below the current book, or carrying, value, cookie jar reserves
(to be discussed in 3. below); and doing a restructuring (taking the expenses
allowed under SFAS No. 146) that a company may not otherwise have done.
Cookie jar reserves – These can go along with the big bath and are a form of
income smoothing. Earnings are managed under this method by selecting the
period in which a revenue or expense item is taken. This is usually done for
expenses that are based on estimates. If a company is having a particularly good
year and next year’s results are uncertain, they can over-accrue some reserves
in the current year and then have the ability to under-accrue them in the next
year if needed. By doing so, they effectively inflate the following year’s income
at the expense of this year’s.
Income, thus, appears smoother, and the company may be able to publicly
forecast higher profits for the following year even if their business isn’t actually
going to do any better in the following year. This may temporarily be good for
the stock price, but it isn’t good for those wanting to know how the company is
actually performing.
Materiality – This topic may not be a big deal to small companies since nearly
everything is material and, hence, should be accounted for. But for large,
publicly traded companies with revenues and assets in the billions of dollars,
they can potentially get away with millions of dollars worth of misstatements and
merely write them off as being “nonmaterial” in nature. Auditors are primarily
concerned with material misstatements. Materiality has the potential to allow
companies to slightly fudge their numbers, just enough to get them to where the
analysts forecasted.
Despite the above arguments, most people would likely regard earnings
management with
suspicion, reinforced by revelation of serious abuses of earnings
management by Enron and
WorldCom and numerous other corporations in the early 2000s.
Consequently, students
should not be left with the impression that it is necessarily good. A useful
place to start is
Hanna’s 1999 article in CA Magazine, which is well worth assigning and
discussing. The
important point to get across from this article is that management is
tempted to provide
excessive unusual, non-recurring and extraordinary charges, to put future
earnings in the
bank. Furthermore, these future earnings are buried in operations. This
makes it difficult for
investors to diagnose the reasons for subsequent earnings increases.
Nortel Networks’
reversals of its excess accruals (see Theory in Practice vignette11.1 in
Section 11.6.1)
provide a vivid example of Hanna’s argument. Also, the effect on future
profits of putting earnings in the bank has been recognized by an article in
The Economist (“A world awash
with profits, Business is booming almost everywhere,” February 18, 2005,
pp. 62-63). This
article states that one reason for the dramatic increase in firm profits
during 2002-2004 is that
they are an “accounting fiction,” which apparently means that they are a
consequence of
earlier writeoffs.
I find that to drive home these various considerations, an example of how
earnings management can go too far is instructive. An excellent case in
point is the downfall of “Chainsaw Al” Dunlap at Sunbeam Corp. Jonathan
Laing’s 1998 article in Forbes is reproduced in Question 10. Laing
demonstrates that Sunbeam’s 1997 reported earnings were almost
completely manufactured by means of discretionary accruals. The
substantial first quarter, 1998, loss reported by Sunbeam supports Laing’s
analysis, and the “iron law” of accrual reversal.
I think that Laing’s analysis of the effects of the $17.2 million drop in
Sunbeam’s prepaid expenses for 1997 is backwards–see part a of
Question 10. If I am not correct in this, presumably other instructors will
let me know. However, even taking this error into account does not
substantially alter Laing’s conclusion that 1997 earnings were
manufactured.
They may feel that the market rewards share prices of firms that report
steadily increasing earnings, consistent with the findings of Barth, Elliott,
and Finn (1999).
They may want to keep earnings for bonus purposes between the bogey
and cap of their bonus plan.