Clifford Hotte had a problem. His company had come up short of its earnings target. For the fiscal year ended April 30, 1995, financial analysts had projected that Health Management, Inc. (HMI), a New York–based pharmaceuticals distributor, would post earnings per share of $0.74. Following the close of fiscal 1995, Drew Bergman, HMI’s chief financial officer (CFO) informed Hotte, the company’s founder and chief executive officer (CEO), that the actual earnings figure for fiscal 1995 would be approximately $0.54 per share. According to Bergman, Hotte refused to “take the hit,” that is, the almost certain drop in HMI’s stock price that would follow the announcement of the disappointing earnings. 1 Instead, Hotte wanted HMI to report 1995 earnings in line with analysts’ predictions. 2 Bergman altered HMI’s accounting records to allow the company to reach its 1995 earnings target. To lower cost of sales and increase HMI’s gross profit and net income, Bergman inflated the company’s year-end inventory by approximately $1.8 million. Bergman also posted a few other smaller “adjustments” to HMI’s accounting records. Both Bergman and Hotte realized that the company would have to take elaborate measures to conceal the accounting fraud from its audit firm. Bergman was very familiar with BDO Seidman and its audit procedures since he had been employed by that accounting firm several years earlier. In fact, Bergman had supervised BDO Seidman’s 1989 and 1990 audits of HMI.HMI’s inventory fraud was not particularly innovative. Corporate executives who want to embellish their company’s operating results are aware that among the easiest methods of achieving that goal is overstating year-end inventory. What was unique about HMI’s inventory hoax was that it triggered one of the first major tests of an important and controversial new federal law, the 1995 Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (PSLRA). The PSLRA was the only law passed by Congress during President Clinton’s first administration that overcame a presidential veto. Among the parties most pleased by the passage of the PSLRA were the large, international accounting firms. These firms’ mounting litigation losses in the latter decades of the twentieth century had prompted them to lobby Congress to reform the nation’s civil litigation system. In particular, the firms argued that they were being unfairly victimized by the growing number of class-action lawsuits. The bulk of these lawsuits were being filed under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, one of the federal statutes that created the regulatory infrastructure for the nation’s securities markets in the early 1930s. Top officials of the major accounting firms believed that the PSLRA, which amended key provisions of the 1934 Act, would make it more difficult for plaintiff attorneys to extract large legal judgments or settlements from their firms. The jury’s verdict in favor of BDO Seidman in the HMI lawsuit seemed to support that conclusion. HMI’s stockholders filed suit against BDO Seidman for failing to detect the inventory fraud masterminded by Drew Bergman and Clifford Hotte. Michael Young, a prominent New York…………………….. 1. BDO Seidman’s attorneys pointed out correctly that professional standards do not prohibit auditors and client personnel from being “friends.” At what point do such relationships result in violations of the auditor independence rules and guidelines? Provide hypothetical examples to strengthen your answer. 2. According to court testimony, on July 20, 1995, Drew Bergman recommended to HMI’s board of directors that Mei-ya Tsai be hired as the company’s chief accounting officer (CAO). One week later, BDO Seidman issued its audit report on HMI’s 1995 financial statements. Under presently existing professional standards would this situation have presented an independence “problem” for BDO Seidman? Defend your answer. 3. Under what circumstances is an inventory rollback or rollforward typically performed? How valid is the evidence yielded by this audit procedure? Explain. 4. Jill Karnick abandoned her attempt to complete an inventory roll forward because of the considerable amount of work the procedure involved. Do you believe she made an appropriate decision given the circumstances she faced? How should auditors weigh the cost of an audit procedure, in terms of time and other resources, against the quantity and quality of evidence that it yields? 5. Should the results of inconclusive audit tests be included in audit work papers? Defend your answer. 6. A major focus of the trial in this case was BDO Seidman’s consideration of, and response to, the “red flags” apparent during the 1995 HMI audit. Define or describe the phrase “red flags.” Explain the impact of red flags identified by auditors on each major phase of an audit. 7. The PSLRA requires auditors to report to the SEC illegal acts “that would have a material effect” on a client’s financial statements, assuming client management refuses to do so. Briefly describe three hypothetical situations involving potential illegal acts discovered by auditors. Indicate whether the auditors involved in these situations should insist that client management report the given item to the SEC. Defend your decision for each item.
> Executives know success in business depends on identifying and fixing problems before they become crises. It is the most basic rule in management: No matter how smart your strategies seem on paper, if you don't know how they're being executed and whether
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> When Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn said two years ago that he was determined to zoom past Toyota to become the world's biggest automaker, the notion seemed laughable. At the time, the German automaker sold 3 million fewer vehicles than Toyota, was los
> Most small companies seeking to tap overseas markets know they'll have to navigate foreign laws, taxes, and regulations. But they also need to figure out how to avoid cultural blunders. Tom Bonkenburg, director of European operations for St. Onge Company
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> Providence Regional Medical Center Uses a Variety of Management Theories to Profitably Treat Patients Walk into most hospitals, and you'll see patients scattered about the halls on gurneys or wheelchairs. They're waiting to be moved from intensive care
> Is Corporate Monitoring of Employee Behavior Outside of Work Going Too Far? Attempting to cut health care costs and increase productivity, companies are increasingly trying to get employees to lose weight, stop smoking, and exercise. For example, Incent
> You manage a group of software developers for a large organization and several days ago had the difficult task of notifying a friend who works for the company that he is being laid off. Even though he has performed wonderfully in the past and you hate to
> Following are selected financial data for your client for the current year and corresponding data for the client’s industry. Requirement 1. Write a memo to your client comparing his or her business to the industry averages and explain to the client
> You just returned from a meeting with your bank loan officer, and you were a little taken aback by his comments. You’ve been doing business with this bank for a number of years, and the officer always seemed happy with your company’s performance. This is
> Net income was $175,000 in 2014, $190,000 in 2015, and $209,000 in 2016. The change from 2015 to 2016 is an increase of ____ percent. a. 10 b. 9 c. 8 d. 19
> Find the Columbia Sportswear Company Annual Report located in Appendix A and go to the Selected Financial Data starting on page 646. Now access the 2014 Annual Report for Under Armour, Inc. from the Internet. For instructions on how to access the report
> This case focuses on the financial statement analysis of Columbia Sportswear. Recall from this chapter that stakeholders use numerous ways to analyze and so better understand the financial position and results of operations of a company. Tools such as ve
> Robin Peterson, the CEO of Teldar Incorporated, was reviewing the financial statements for the first three months of the year. He saw that sales and net income were lower than expected. Because the reported net income and the related earnings per share w
> According to the Real World Accounting Video, a VC is a __________________. a. veteran communicator b. victorious commercialization c. venture capitalist d. vendor conduit
> According to the Real World Accounting Video, a VC is a __________________. a. veteran communicator b. victorious commercialization c. venture capitalist d. vendor conduit
> How is percentage change in a financial statement line item calculated?
> A company has experienced increases in accounts receivable and inventory turnover ratios and has net cash flow from operations that exceeds net income. All other things constant, what could you conclude about the company’s performance this year relative
> How are financial ratios used in decision making? a. They can be used as a substitute for consulting financial statements. b. They eliminate uncertainty regarding cash flows. c. They are only used in evaluating business liquidity. d. They help to
> What is a “red flag” with respect to financial statement analysis?
> Which statement is most likely to be true? a. An increase in inventory turnover indicates that inventory is not selling as quickly as it was. b. A decrease in inventory turnover indicates that inventory is not selling as quickly as it was. c. A change i
> How would you expect a recession to affect asset management ratios?
> Which of the following statements is true of financial statement analysis? a. Ratio analysis is more important than either horizontal or vertical analysis. b. Vertical analysis involves comparing amounts from one year’s financial statements to another y
> What are the major goals of each of the following types of ratios? a. Liquidity ratios b. Asset management ratios c. Solvency ratios d. Profitability ratios e. Market analysis ratios
> Rockport Company is experiencing a severe cash shortage due to its inability to collect accounts receivable. Which of the following would most likely identify this problem? a. Return on assets b. Current ratio c. Accounts receivable turnover d. Working
> What is benchmarking? What should a company that wishes to use benchmarking look for in establishing benchmarks?
> A business’s economic environment is a. how a business competes for customers, suppliers, and other critical resources. b. how a business is affected by the overall economy. c. how a business uses its business model to create a competitive advantage. d.
> In Chapter 11, we prepared a cash flow statement for Fitness Equipment Doctor, Inc. Now, we will analyze Fitness Equipment Doctor, Inc.’s financial statements using the tools we learned in this chapter. Following are the balance sheets for the months end
> The Financial Accounting Standards Board and the International Accounting Standards Board have identified the goal of comparability of financial statements as one toward which all companies should strive and consistency as the means of achieving that goa
> Cash is $12,000, net accounts receivable amounts to $18,000, inventory is $21,000, prepaid expenses total $3,000, and current liabilities are $37,500. What is the quick ratio? a. 1.44 b. 1.36 c. 0.80 d. 0.88
> What is the purpose of the common-size financial statement?
> Net working capital is a. a measure of the ability to meet short-term obligations with current assets. b. defined as current assets minus current liabilities. c. defined as current assets divided by current liabilities. d. both a and b.
> Which amount is the base amount for vertical analysis on the balance sheet?
> A statement that reports only percentages is called a ____ statement. a. comparative b. cumulative c. condensed d. common-size
> Which amount is the base amount for vertical analysis on the income statement?
> Horizontal analysis of a financial statement shows a. the relationship of each statement item to a specified base. b. percentage changes in comparative balance sheets. c. percentage changes in comparative income statements. d. both b and c.
> This concludes the accounting for Sensations Salon, Inc., that we began in Chapter 1. For this exercise, refer to the comparative balance sheet presented in the Continuing Exercise in Chapter 11. Requirements 1. Prepare a horizontal analysis of the
> Let’s look at Dick’s Sporting Goods (Dick’s) one last time. Think about Dick’s and how everything you’ve learned comes together. Think about accountants reporting what Dick’s has, where it got its money, and what it has been doing to create value. Is Dic
> On May 19, 1987, a short article in the Wall Street Journal reported that ZZZZ Best Company, Inc., of Reseda, California, had signed a contract for a $13.8 million insurance restoration project. This project was just the most recent of a series of large
> In 1995, Canadian native Maria Messina achieved one of the most sought-after career goals in the public accounting profession when she was promoted to partner with Deloitte & Touche, Chartered Accountants, the Canadian affiliate of the U.S.-based Deloitt
> Cyrus McCormick revolutionized American agriculture in the mid-nineteenth century when he invented a mechanical reaper. His horse-drawn harvester would become the primary product marketed by McCormick Harvesting Machine Company. Decades later, Cyrus McCo
> After graduating from West Virginia University in 1984 with a degree in accounting and finance, Gregory Podlucky decided to work with his father Gabriel, who had a small business empire in western Pennsylvania. 1 The senior Podlucky’s business interests
> Paul Polishan graduated with an accounting degree in 1969 and immediately accepted an entry-level position in the accounting department of The Leslie Fay Companies, a women’s apparel manufacturer based in New York City. Fred Pomerantz, Leslie Fay’s found
> In 1971, 25-year-old Thomas Shine founded a small sporting goods company, Logo 7, that would eventually become known as Logo Athletic. Shine’s company manufactured and marketed a wide range of shirts, hats, jackets, and other apparel items that boldly di
> 8:15 a.m., Saturday, October 31 “So, Dani, seriously, what exactly am I going to be doing today?” 1 “I am serious, Tyler. I’m not sure what I’m supposed to be doing much less what I’m supposed to have you do. Like I said … Katelyn hasn’t told me anything
> In March 2000, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) began requiring public companies to have their quarterly financial statements “reviewed” by their independent auditors. The broad purpose of this new requirement was to improve the quality and c
> In August 2004, an Internet-based investment advisory service included the common stock of LocatePlus Holdings Corporation in its “Stocks to Watch” 1 alert. The advisory service touted the New Age business model of LocatePlus, a company whose headquarte
> In 1999, a group of private investors founded Celebrity Sports Network, Inc., a company that retained professional athletes and former professional athletes to sponsor “fringe” sporting events such as professional wrestling, competitive dancing, and roll
> As David Robinson works his way through the large, festive crowd, he keeps bumping into people he knows. All the while, Robinson is hoping that he will avoid the one person he doesn’t want to meet face to face. 1 Belot Enterprises’ several hundred employ
> Prior to the Internet, the Bank Rate Monitor served as the primary source of information for U.S. consumers searching for the best available mortgage interest rates and interest rates on certificates of deposit. Over time, Bankrate, Inc., the company tha
> Thursday, October 24, 1929, easily ranks as the most dramatic day that Wall Street has ever seen. 1 That day witnessed the beginning of the Great Stock Market Crash that over the following few years would result in an almost 90 percent decline in the Dow
> During the 1980s, CBI Holding Company, Inc., a New York-based firm, served as the parent company for several wholly owned subsidiaries, principal among them Common Brothers, Inc. CBI’s subsidiaries marketed an extensive line of pharmaceutical products. T
> Over the past few decades, hedge funds have become among the most controversial and largest investment vehicles on Wall Street. Critics of hedge funds argue that their high-risk investment strategies contributed significantly to the economic crisis that
> The Great Depression dealt a devastating blow to Billy Durant. During the depths of the Depression in 1936, Durant, a high school dropout who was born a few months after the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, was forced to declare bankruptcy. Like mil-li
> Grand Theft Auto ranks among the best-selling video games of all time as well as one of the most controversial. 1 By the time Grand Theft Auto V was released in 2013, over 125 million copies of the video game had been sold worldwide since the original v
> Jack Nicklaus electrified sports fans worldwide in 1986 when he won the prestigious Masters golf tournament at the ripe old age of 46. Over the previous several years, the “Golden Bear” had been struggling to remain competitive with the scores of talente
> Auditors commonly find themselves facing situations in which they must persuade client executives to do something they absolutely and resolutely do not want to do. When all else fails, auditors may be forced to use a tactic that clinical psychologists, m
> A desire to be their “own bosses” and a burning entrepreneurial spirit compelled John Orecchio and Paul Oliver to leave the ranks of well-paid, white-collar employees and strike out on their own. In February 2002, the two friends established a new invest
> Bernard Lawrence Madoff was born on April 29, 1938, in New York City. Madoff spent his childhood in a lower middle-class neighborhood in the borough of Queens. After graduating from high school, Madoff enrolled in the University of Alabama but transferre
> From 1962 to 1992, Ed McMahon served as the quintessential sidekick and straight man to Johnny Carson on the long-running and popular television program The Tonight Show. After leaving that program, McMahon stayed in the television spot-light for 12 year
> As a small child, Brooklyn native David Brooks loved horses. 1 In 1969, when he was 14 years old, Brooks went to work at a local racetrack as a groom to help support his family. Brooks loved the tough job that involved arriving at the racetrack in the w
> John and Mary Andersen immigrated to the United States from their native Norway in 1881. The young couple made their way to the small farming community of Plano,Illinois, some 40 miles southwest of downtown Chicago. Over the previous few decades, hundred
> Andrea Kimball has recently acquired a franchise of a well-known fast-food restaurant chain. She is considering a special promotion for a week during which hamburger prices would be reduced $0.40 from the regular price of $1.09 to $0.69. Local advertisin
> Dr. Barbara Benson is the head of the pathology laboratory at Barrington Medical Center in Mobile, Alabama. Dr. Benson estimates the amount of work for her laboratory staff by classifying the pathology tests into three categories: simple routine, simple
> A Votre Santé (AVS) is a small, independent winery owned by Kay Aproveche. Kay has a relationship with a grower who grows two types of wine grapes, a Chardonnay and a generic white grape. AVS buys the grapes at the point at which they have r
> Aramis Aromatics Company produces and sells its product AA100 to well-known cosmetics companies for $940 per ton. The marketing manager is considering the possibility of refining AA100 further into finer perfumes before selling them to the cosmetics comp
> Nordstrom, Inc. (http://www.nordstrom.com) and Saks Fifth Avenue (http://www.saksfifthavenue.com) are upscale retailers. Using the following sources, answer the questions below. • Each company’s history reported on its web page (from “About Us” at the c
> Describe the low-total-cost value proposition and provide your own example of a company that has successfully implemented this value proposition.
> Why does attempting to improve customer measures such as customer satisfaction, customer retention, customer profitability, and market share not necessarily constitute a strategy?
> Define and explain the role of measures, objectives, and targets, in the Balanced Scorecard strategy map.
> Why is a clear strategy vital for an organization?
> What is return on investment?
> Explain why the growing importance of intangible assets complements growing interest in the Balanced Scorecard.
> Why are both financial and nonfinancial measures necessary to manage a company’s strategy?
> What are four common pitfalls in developing a Balanced Scorecard?
> What is the nature of the objective(s) that nonprofit and government organizations are likely to put at the top of their Balanced Scorecard and strategy maps?
> What are several desirable characteristics for a Balanced Scorecard measure?
> What are the three components of the learning and growth perspective in the Balanced Scorecard?
> How do the time frames for financial benefits for improvements in the different categories of processes typically vary?
> How might a company link its strategy or customer value proposition to a focus on particular categories of processes in the Balanced Scorecard?
> What are some critical dimensions along which to measure regulatory and social processes in the operating processes part of the Balanced Scorecard’s process perspective?
> What are the four bases for setting a transfer price?
> What are operations management processes within the Balanced Scorecard’s process perspective, and what are some typical objectives for operations management processes?
> All of a Balanced Scorecard’s measures for processes should be fully controllable by people who perform the work in the processes. Do you agree with this statement? Explain.
> Explain how a Balanced Scorecard approach is helpful in identifying critical processes and evaluating the processes.
> Describe the customer solutions value proposition and provide your own example of a company that has successfully implemented this value proposition.
> Describe the product leadership value proposition and provide your own example of a company that has successfully implemented this value proposition.
> Describe two broad approaches that companies can use to generate additional revenues.
> What are the two basic approaches to improving a company’s financial performance?
> What are the four measurement perspectives in the Balanced Scorecard?
> What is a Balanced Scorecard?
> What two important sub processes does managing innovation include?
> What is a soft number in accounting?
> How are innovation processes in the process perspective linked to the Balanced Scorecard’s customer and financial perspectives?