Does Auditor Explanatory Language in Unqualified Audit Reports Indicate Increased Financial Misstatement Risk? “Emphasis of matter” language predicts restatements + China Environment’s Auditor Emphasis of Matter

Related posts: (1) China Environment: Auditor Emphasis of Matter raises more questions on potential accounting tunneling risk; (2) Open Letter to SGX/MAS: Reply to CFO of SGX-Listed China Environment (CENV SP) on report “Potential Accounting Tunneling Fraud at China Environment?” – Address the accounting and governance concerns in an SGX/MAS announcement

http://eds.a.ebscohost.com.libproxy.smu.edu.sg/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?sid=6a62a86d-f3c9-4fac-96bc-04ffe9ad6590%40sessionmgr4004&vid=0&hid=4113

Does Auditor Explanatory Language in Unqualified Audit Reports Indicate Increased Financial Misstatement Risk?

Czerney, Keith1 Schmidt, Jaime J.2 Thompson, Anne M.1

Accounting Review. Nov2014, Vol. 89 Issue 6, p2115-2149. 35p. 8 Charts.

Abstract:

According to auditing standards, explanatory language added at the auditor’s discretion to unqualified audit reports should not indicate increased financial misstatement risk. However, an auditor is unlikely to add language that would strain the auditor-client relationship absent concerns about the client’s financial statements. Using a sample of 30,825 financial statements issued with unqualified audit opinions during 2000-2009, we find that financial statements with audit reports containing explanatory language are significantly more likely to be subsequently restated than financial statements without such language. We find that this positive association is driven by language that references the division of responsibility for performance of the audit, adoption of new accounting principles, and previous restatements. In addition, we find that (1) ”emphasis of matter” language that discusses mergers, related-party transactions, and management’s use of estimates predicts restatements related to these matters, and that (2) the financial statement accounts noted in the explanatory language typically correspond to the accounts subsequently restated. In sum, our results suggest that present-day audit reports communicate some information about financial reporting quality.

Cloud Live Spooks Chinese Junk Bonds Amid Second Onshore Default

http://www.wsj.com/articles/chinese-defaults-head-into-the-cloud-heard-on-the-street-1428409016

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-07/cloud-live-spooks-chinese-junk-bonds-amid-second-onshore-default

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-06/china-gets-2nd-onshore-default-as-cloud-live-date-missed

Cloud Live Spooks Chinese Junk Bonds Amid Second Onshore Default

April 7, 2015

Chinese junk bonds fell after Cloud Live Technology Group Co. said it will miss payments due today as the nation braces for its second onshore corporate default. The yield on solar-cell maker Baoding Tianwei Baobian Electric Co.’s notes due 2018 climbed seven basis points to 7.49 percent after Cloud Live’s statement late Monday, according to exchange data. Fertilizer company Inner Mongolia Nailun Group Inc.’s 2018 bonds surged 50 basis points to 21.06 percent. Higher-graded securities showed little reaction. Continue reading

A Muddy Waters-Carson Block short has been frozen by the Chinese government, and the stock hasn’t traded at all today

http://www.businessinsider.sg/500com-halted-after-agreement-2015-4/#.VSOO3PmUeCk

A Carson Block short has been frozen by the Chinese government, and the stock hasn’t traded at all today

JULIA LA ROCHE FINANCE  APR. 7, 2015, 3:41 AM

Carson Block mentioned 500.com as a short back in September.

Shares of Chinese sports lottery site 500.com (WBAI) have been halted since Monday morning with news pending.

On Friday, 500.com said it reached an agreement with the Chinese government that essentially suspended the company’s business. “The Company plans to voluntarily and temporarily suspend all of its online lottery sales services starting from April 4, 2015. During this temporary suspension period the Company expects that it will not generate any revenue,” the statement said (See full statement below). 500.com is also a target of influential short-seller Carson Block. Shares have fallen 64% since he publicly mentioned the stock at a private conference in New York City back in September. Continue reading

China Environment: Auditor Emphasis of Matter raises more questions on potential accounting tunneling risk

China Environment: Auditor Emphasis of Matter in RMB127m unsecured and interest-free advances to sub-contractor raises more questions on potential accounting tunneling risk

Related post: (1) Open Letter to SGX/MAS: Reply to CFO of SGX-Listed China Environment (CENV SP) on report “Potential Accounting Tunneling Fraud at China Environment?” – Address the accounting and governance concerns in an SGX/MAS announcement, (2) Does Auditor Explanatory Language in Unqualified Audit Reports Indicate Increased Financial Misstatement Risk? “Emphasis of matter” language predicts restatements

We note the SGX announcement made by China Environment  (SES: 50U, Bloomberg: CENV SP) on 2 April 2015 with the auditor Baker Tilly making an “Emphasis of Matter” with regards to Footnote 18 in the RMB127m in unsecured and interest-free “Advances/Loan to a sub-contractor”. This is essentially short-term money that can be shifted around and “repaid” by the close of financial period and “taken” again without the guarantee of repayment or recoverability and there is no collateral at all to offset this non-repayment risk imposed on the minority shareholders. Importantly, this emphasis of matter begs several important additional questions that requires proper disclosure for accountability to the minority shareholders given the significance of the sum:

(1) Who is this sub-contractor? Is this a related-party? If this is an “independent” party, it will be necessary for the auditor to ascertain and verify this material information, including the financial track record of this sub-contractor in the event of default. There should be – must be – proper bad debt provisions if these information are not disclosed and ascertained. Also, if the sub-contractor is incorporated in the offshore haven centers, it will be hard to recover back the amount and the ultimate identity can be easily hidden to escape any asset tracing in the event of non-repayment. What is to stop the non-repayment?? This is an obvious red flag in accounting fraud.

(2) Why is this huge amount “lent out” in the first place? And interest-free and unsecured! What is the nature of the relationship to warrant such terms? Without this loans amount, will “revenue” wax and wane with such short-term financing schemes? So with the partial repayment of RMB82.2m after the 27 Feb 2015 announcement, investors and minority shareholders must be even more watchful and suspicious should 1Q 2015 revenue show a corresponding increase in revenue by around RMB82m.

(3) Why does the 4Q14 revenue plunge by RMB122.5m correspond to this “advances to sub-contractor” amount of RMB127m? This is particularly worrying and a cause for accounting tunneling risk with these short-term financing routed to related party vehicles posing as fictitious customers to engage in artificial sales in prior periods – and the abrupt decline in the revenue that correspond to the non-repayment risk of this short-term loan highlights that this scheme may be unwound easily, leading to the missing cash and cash equivalents. This casts huge doubt on the revenue recognition policy and revenue reliability of the listco. Like most capital equipment companies, this should be treated as debt on the liability side since it is the same as the machinery companies incurring a debt and then selling the machines to customers on credit. The cashflow from operations that come from this purported vendor financing activity should be re-categorised as cashflow from financing, which would turn most of these companies to be running negative operating cashflow positions. In other words, if the RMB660m in trade and bill receivables is funded by this “vendor financing”, there should be a corresponding RMB127m in debt liabilities recorded in the balance sheet, or the NET trade and bill receivables to decreased by RMB127m.

In addition, we think that the statement “In our opinion, the accounting and other records required by the Act to be kept by the Company and by those subsidiaries incorporated in Singapore of which we are the auditors, have been properly kept in accordance with the provisions of the Act” is misleading, given that this evades the non-Singapore-incorporated and PRC-incorporated key subsidiaries Fujian Duoyuan and Anhui Dongyuan which formed the substantial bulk of the audit risk.

We urge the independent auditor Baker Tilly to assist the minority shareholders and the investing public with more transparent and clear disclosures. We note that Baker Tilly’s Hong Kong practice has been banned by the US Securities and Exchange Commission from taking on any new US-listed clients until its audit policies and procedures have been reviewed by an independent consultant – due to its audit failure for failure in disclosing the magnitude and impact of the related-party transactions in another Chinese company (China North East Petroleum Holdings) which was charged in accounting fraud. We urge the independent auditor Baker Tilly’s Singapore practice to uphold its critical gatekeeper role and help restore trust in the capital markets in Singapore.

Thank you.

Warm regards,
KB Kee Continue reading

Toshiba Drops Most Since 2012 After Accounting Probe; panel formed to examine the “reasonableness of estimates” when using the percentage-of-completion accounting method for some projects

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-06/toshiba-drops-most-since-2012-after-accounting-probe

Toshiba Drops Most Since 2012 After Accounting Probe

byTakashi AmanoPavel Alpeyev

April 6, 2015

Toshiba Corp. fell the most in more than two years after the company said it would appoint a committee to investigate possible problems with its accounting. The maker of nuclear reactors, chips, appliances and electronics dropped as much as 9 percent, the most since July 2012. The shares traded 5.7 percent lower at 483.2 yen as of 10:33 a.m. in Tokyo.

Toshiba said Friday after the market closed that it would form a panel to examine the “reasonableness of estimates” when using the percentage-of-completion accounting method for some projects. The effect on earnings hasn’t been determined, according to the Tokyo-based company’s statement. Continue reading

Victims of Financial Wrongdoing Need a More Muscular S.E.C.; The regulator lacks the power to extract fines equal to the losses of harmed investors, often making class-action suits their best recourse

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/05/business/victims-of-financial-wrongdoing-need-a-more-muscular-sec.html?_r=0

Victims of Financial Wrongdoing Need a More Muscular S.E.C.

APRIL 4, 2015

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

Given the many billions of dollars financial companies have paid in regulatory and legal settlements related to the mortgage crisis, how much money has actually found its way into the pockets of investors harmed by their actions? Continue reading

Black Eats Black: Quah Su-Ling, the chief executive of public-listed Ipco involved in Asiasons-Blumont-LionGold-Ipco penny scam, lost her $50 million law suit against Goldman Sachs in London for alleged breach of contract – and was ordered to pay $15.5 million to the investment bank instead

http://business.asiaone.com/print/news/spore-investor-loses-suit-against-goldman-sachs-must-pay-155m

Related Post: Accounting Fraud and Pump-and-Dump Schemes: Penny Stock Pawnbroker Had a Clever Trick to Get Paid

S’pore investor loses suit against Goldman Sachs, must pay $15.5m

Saturday, Apr 04, 2015

K C Vijayan

The Straits Times

A Singaporean investor lost her $50 million law suit against Goldman Sachs in London for alleged breach of contract – and was ordered to pay $15.5 million to the investment bank instead. Ms Quah Su-Ling, the chief executive of public-listed Ipco International, sued Goldman Sachs International for allegedly having “dumped” 65 million of her shares in the market in October 2013, causing a dramatic price fall. Goldman had held the shares in Asiasons, Blumont and LionGold together with other assets as collateral from Ms Quah for a loan facility from which she had drawn about $56 million. Continue reading

China’s Cloud Live Technology Sparks Corporate Default Worries; A restaurant chain that abruptly shifted into cloud computing and is under regulatory scrutiny could become the first Chinese company to fail to repay principal to local bond investor

http://www.wsj.com/articles/chinas-cloud-live-technology-sparks-corporate-default-worries-1428062690

China’s Cloud Live Technology Sparks Corporate Default Worries

Cloud computing firm says it is unable to repay $38.8 million in debt

Updated April 3, 2015 8:05 a.m. ET

BEIJING—A restaurant chain that abruptly shifted into cloud computing and is under regulatory scrutiny could become the first Chinese company to fail to repay principal to local bond investors.

Cloud Live Technology Group Co. said it is unable to pay back 240.6 million yuan ($38.8 million) in debt due Tuesday. In a Thursday filing with the stock exchange in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen, Cloud Live said it had raised 161.4 million yuan to pay back about 400 million yuan in debt sold three years ago. Continue reading

SEC Warns Fenway Partners of Possible Action; Private-equity firm warned over disclosure of expenses, fees; The notice comes amid widespread examinations of private-equity firms by the SEC

http://www.wsj.com/articles/sec-warns-fenway-partners-of-possible-action-1428073087

SEC Warns Fenway Partners of Possible Action; Private-equity firm warned over disclosure of expenses, fees

RYAN DEZEMBER

Updated April 3, 2015 1:48 p.m. ET

Fenway Partners LLC has been warned that U.S. securities regulators may take action against the New York private-equity firm over its disclosure of expenses, fees and other financial information, according to people familiar with the matter. Continue reading