[Flashback] Chinese Rogue Executives Dodge Singapore Law by Staying Home

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2011-07-07/-rogue-executives-from-chinese-firms-dodge-singapore-laws-by-staying-home

Posted by Amy CHAN Wen Yi, Year 4 undergrad at the School of Accountancy, Singapore Management University

Singapore investors are demanding tougher rules to prosecute executives of China-based companies traded in the city-state after scandals from New York to Hong Kong have wiped out the market value of such firms.

U.S. and Hong Kong regulators have been ramping up Chinese company probes as Muddy Waters LLC said last month that Sino-Forest Corp. overstated its timber holdings, erasing as much as 82 percent of the China-based tree plantation owner’s market capitalization in Toronto. Continue reading

[Flashback] How they fell: The collapse of Chinese cross-border listings

http://www.mckinsey.com/insights/corporate_finance/how_they_fell_the_collapse_of_chinese_cross-border_listings

Posted by Daniel KHOO Guan Lin , Year 4 undergrad at the School of Accountancy, Singapore Management University

Amid the frenzy around Twitter’s $1.8 billion IPO on November 7, it would have been easy to miss a pair of small Chinese IPOs in New York a week earlier. Qunar, the Chinese travel-booking service, raised $167 million on November 1, with share prices rising 89 percent above the initial offering. The day before, 58.com—a Chinese version of Craigslist—raised $187 million, exceeding the initial offering by 47 percent.

Do these IPOs—and three others this year—mark a broader return of Chinese cross-border listings in the United States? It’s too early to tell; after all, Qunar’s listing was the second from a reputable company in a well-understood industry. Continue reading

[Flashback] Alibaba stock stumbles over lower-than-expected earnings and illegal-goods row

http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/jan/29/alibaba-stock-price-drops-lower-earnings-accusations-illegal-goods

Posted by Katharine TAN Pei Shi, Year 4 undergrad at the School of Accountancy, Singapore Management University

Shares in Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba crashed on Thursday as the company reported a slide in revenue growth and fended off accusations of trading in fake goods.

Alibaba suffered a 10% drop in its share price in early trading after announcing a 40% increase in revenues in the final quarter of 2014. The total, $4.22bn, missed analysts’ forecasts of $4.45bn. Continue reading

The Price of Oil Is About to Blow a Hole in Corporate Accounting

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-03-04/oil-at-95-a-barrel-discovered-in-sec-rules-on-reserves

The Price of Oil Is About to Blow a Hole in Corporate Accounting

byAsjylyn Loder

8:00 AM AWST
March 4, 2015

(Bloomberg) — There’s one place in the world where oil is still $95 a barrel.

On paper.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission requires drillers to calculate the value of their oil reserves every year using average prices from the first trading days in each of the previous 12 months. Because oil didn’t start its freefall to about $45 till after the OPEC meeting in late November, companies in their latest regulatory filings used $95 a barrel to figure out how much oil they could profitably produce and what it’s worth. Of the 12 days that went into the fourth-quarter average, crude was above $90 a barrel on 10 of them. Continue reading

Almost Half of Global Audits Have Problems

http://blogs.wsj.com/cfo/2015/03/03/almost-half-of-global-audits-have-problems/

https://www.frc.org.uk/News-and-Events/FRC-Press/Press/2015/March/International-audit-regulators-express-concern-ove.aspx

March 3, 2015, 5:08 PM ET

Almost Half of Global Audits Have Problems

MAXWELL MURPHY

Senior Editor

Nearly half of global audits inspected last year were deficient in some way, an international accounting consortium said Tuesday. Top concerns included internal controls testing, measuring fair value of assets, and revenue recognition, according to the International Forum of Independent Audit Regulators. The organization examined almost 950 reports from 29 countries. Internal controls and revenue recognition are two issues getting a closer eye from companies and their auditors, as well as accounting and securities regulators these days. Continue reading

Germany’s Siemens said it was investigating a media report that it boosted sales figures of its healthcare equipment in China by creating fake contracts

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/03/02/siemens-china-healthcare-idUSL5N0W42IN20150302

Siemens investigates report of fictitious Chinese contracts

Mon, Mar 2 2015

FRANKFURT/SHANGHAI, March 2 (Reuters) – Germany’s Siemens said it was investigating a media report that it boosted sales figures of its healthcare equipment in China by creating fake contracts. Chinese business daily Yicai cited Chinese distributors as saying that Siemens’ healthcare division had been creating contracts with them that were not backed up by real sales. The distributors would pay a 10 percent down payment, allowing Siemens to book the contracts. Siemens would then return the payments to them by other means, Yicai said. Continue reading

Hedge Funds Cry Foul Over Indonesian Debt Workout of PT Bakrie Telecom; they can’t vote on the workout arrangements because their defaulted notes were issued by an offshore special-purpose vehicle

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-03-02/hedge-funds-cry-foul-over-indonesian-debt-workout-asean-credit

Hedge Funds Cry Foul Over Indonesian Debt Workout

byChristopher Langner

March 3, 2015

(Bloomberg) — Five hedge funds are testing Indonesia’s legal protections for foreign investors after a local court barred them from PT Bakrie Telecom’s debt restructuring talks.

The funds and one other bondholder are asking a New York court to quash a ruling by a Jakarta district judge that they can’t vote on the workout arrangements because their defaulted notes were issued by an offshore special-purpose vehicle. The investors, who own 28 percent of the $380 million May 2015 dollar-denominated securities, said in the suit they will recover less than 20 cents on the dollar under the plan. Continue reading

China state-owned firms’ overseas assets are not audited

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/03/03/us-china-audit-idUSKBN0LZ09N20150303

Posted by Joel CHUA Yong Sheng, Year 3 undergrad at the School of Business, Singapore Management University

China state-owned firms’ overseas assets are not audited: Xinhua

Mon, Mar 2 2015

SHANGHAI, Mar 3 (Reuters) – China does not audit the 4 trillion yuan ($637.42 billion) of assets its state-owned enterprises (SOE) hold overseas, Xinhua news agency reported, highlighting difficulties the government faces when expanding its anti-corruption drive to SOEs. Continue reading

Building trust as a tool to create an anti-fraud environment?

Building trust as a tool to create an anti-fraud environment?

Posted by PHOON Pei Jing, Year 3 undergrad at the School of Economics, Singapore Management University

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/cynthia-hanson/how-can-businesses-build-_b_6537670.html

http://www.businessinsider.in/Corporate-Frauds-In-India-On-The-Rise/articleshow/45899708.cms

http://www.forbes.com/2010/06/10/corporate-fraud-executive-compensation-personal-finance-risk-list-2-10-kaplan.html

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/07/30/us-financial-sarbox-idUSBRE86Q1BY20120730

Given the rising number of fraud cases around Asia, with India seeing a rise of over 45% in corporate frauds in the last 2 years, one of the more important questions today in the business world has been about how businesses can build trust. After all, trust is key to any businesses’ performance as well as competitiveness, and building trust may even help lay the foundation to a successful anti-fraud business relationship. Continue reading

Detecting the rapidly rising number of small scale fraud cases

Detecting the rapidly rising number of small scale fraud cases

Posted by PHOON Pei Jing, Year 3 undergrad at the School of Economics, Singapore Management University

With the enforcement of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, standards at big companies have generally improved over the past decade or so, with more effective internal controls over their financial reporting. In addition, “Accounting Quality Model”, a computer program that number-crunches reams of companies’ financial statements looking for outliers and other red flags to facilitate fraud detection have also been extensively revised. Stringent enforcement, together with streamlined process of fraud detection has helped to create an anti-fraud environment. Continue reading