Weavering Hedge Fund Founder Magnus Peterson Found Guilty of Fraud, Forgery, False Accounting and Fradulent Trading; The fund’s entire net worth was found to consist of interest-rate swaps where the counterparty was a company based in the British Virgin Islands controlled by Peterson himself

http://www.wsj.com/articles/weavering-hedge-fund-founder-found-guilty-of-fraud-1421697445

Weavering Hedge Fund Founder Found Guilty of Fraud: Jury Finds Swedish Financier Guilty on 8 Counts

LAURENCE FLETCHER

Jan. 19, 2015 2:57 p.m. ET

The conviction of hedge fund manager Magnus Peterson on Monday marks a winning end to a long-running probe by the U.K.’s Serious Fraud Office. In the U.K.’s first prominent hedge fund manager conviction since the credit crisis, a jury found the Swedish financier who ran Weavering Macro Fund guilty on eight counts of fraud, forgery, false accounting and fraudulent trading. Continue reading

Does Religion Mitigate Accounting Tunneling of Corporate Wealth? Evidence from Chinese Buddhism

http://eds.a.ebscohost.com.libproxy.smu.edu.sg/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?sid=1b6f6267-58d0-4f12-869e-add96ec6cd0f%40sessionmgr4005&vid=0&hid=4210

Does Religion Mitigate Tunneling? Evidence from Chinese Buddhism

Du, Xingqiang1 xqdu@xmu.edu.cn

Journal of Business Ethics. Dec2014, Vol. 125 Issue 2, p299-327. 29p. 14 Charts, 1 Map.

Abstract:

In the Chinese stock market, controlling shareholders often use inter-corporate loans to expropriate a great amount of cash from listed firms, through a process called ‘tunneling.’ Using a sample of 10,170 firm-year observations from the Chinese stock market for the period of 2001-2010, I examine whether and how Buddhism, China’s most influential religion, can mitigate tunneling. In particular, using firm-level Buddhism data, measured as the number of Buddhist monasteries within a certain radius around Chinese listed firms’ registered addresses, this study provides strong evidence that Buddhism intensity is significantly negatively associated with tunneling. This finding is consistent with the view that Buddhism has important influence on corporate behavior and can serve as a set of social norms and/or an alternative mechanism to mitigate controlling shareholders’ unethical tunneling behavior. In addition, my findings also reveal that the negative association between Buddhism intensity and tunneling is attenuated for firms that have high analyst coverage. The results are robust to various measures of Buddhism intensity and a variety of sensitivity tests.

Ownership structure in the local Asian companies needs to be balanced for limiting the domination of family stakes in order to help check the alleged practices of manipulating their operational and financial activities through Real Earnings Management (REM)

http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/2015/01/19/76604

Ownership structure in local cos needs to be balanced

FE Report

19 January 2015

The Financial Express (Bangladesh)

Bangladesh, Jan. 19 — Ownership structure in the local companies needs to be balanced for limiting the domination of family stakes in order to help check the alleged practices of manipulating their operational and financial activities through Real Earnings Management (REM), a researcher said.

Referring findings of a study report on such an issue in Japan, an expert came up with the observation at an international conference on “Accounting for Capital Governance” Sunday. Dr Mohammed Mehadi Masud Mazumder, assistant professor of the Department of Accounting and Information Systems (AIS), Dhaka University, presented the study on “Real Activity-based Earnings Management in Japan: Examining the Roles of Sophisticated Investors” at a session of the conference. Continue reading

Britain’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) has closed its investigation into the ill-fated sale of Autonomy to Hewlett-Packard in 2011, saying there was not enough evidence to secure a conviction of the software firm’s former executives

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/01/19/hp-autonomy-sfo-idUSL6N0UY26N20150119

UK’s Serious Fraud Office ends investigation into HP-Autonomy deal

10:03am EST

* UK’s SFO ends its investigation into deal to buy Autonomy

* SFO cedes jurisdiction of parts of case to U.S. authorities (Adds HP, former Autonomy CEO Lynch reaction)

By Paul Sandle

LONDON, Jan 19 (Reuters) – Britain’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) has closed its investigation into the ill-fated sale of Autonomy to Hewlett-Packard Co in 2011, saying there was not enough evidence to secure a conviction of the software firm’s former executives. Autonomy was supposed to be the $11.1 billion centrepiece of a shift into software for HP, but the deal turned sour a year later when it wrote off three quarters of the company’s value.

HP alleged “some former members of Autonomy’s management team used accounting improprieties, misrepresentations and disclosure failures” to inflate the company’s apparent worth by more than $5 billion. Autonomy’s former management, including company founder Mike Lynch, has denied the allegations. Continue reading

[Flashback] Jim Cramer reveals dirty tricks short sellers use to manipulate stock prices down

Posted by CHEN TianCheng, Year 4 undergrad at the School of Accountancy, Singapore Management University

What I found relevant were the ways that short-sellers could manipulate the market and make quick money out of it (in many cases, this would be the minority investors). My purpose for sharing this is to bring up the point that unlike us thinking that the perpetrators of frauds are the only bad guys, short-sellers can also do ethically questionable actions given the amount of funds they have on hand.

External auditors in India

Posted by CHEN TianCheng, Year 4 undergrad at the School of Accountancy, Singapore Management University

Prior to reading this, I was not aware that in India, there was a different expectation towards external auditors compared to in Singapore, that the external auditors have the onus to detect fraud in their performance of the statutory audit. This is significantly different in Singapore, where our purpose is not to uncover fraud, but to ensure no material misstatements are uncorrected, that can change an intended user’s decision.

This difference is illustrated here in the amendments to the India Company’s Act in 2013.

http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/industry-and-economy/fraud-detection-is-now-responsibility-of-cas/article5455700.ece

I also found a PwC’s special report on MCX in India which unveiled 676 related parties other than the 235 that were already disclosed. This discrepancy was unveiled only after decades.

http://businesstoday.intoday.in/story/pwc-report-mcx-raises-questions-on-role-of-statutory-auditors/1/206318.html

Experts are still questioning the role of auditors in India, whether it is their responsibility to detect fraud, and they bring up valid problems that external auditors face in the performance of audit procedures. If they are required to uncover fraud, it would probably mean that they need to check every transaction and not do the usual sampling processes that is usually performed to ensure no material misstatements.

Indonesia’s Indofood to cut stake in China Minzhong and need not consolidate Minzhong’s accounts; Glaucus had questioned China Minzhong Food’s accounting practices, including an alleged fabrication of sales figures to the company’s top two customers

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/01/16/indofood-sukses-minzhong-idUSL3N0UV3F420150116

Indonesia’s Indofood to cut stake in China Minzhong

Fri, Jan 16 2015

* Indofood to sell 347 mln China Minzhong shares at S$1.20 each

* Sale to investment vehicle controlled by company executives

* Sale will cut Indofood’s stake in China Minzhong to 29.94 pct

* Indofood says China Minzhong needed longer time to reach targets (Adds analyst comment, background)

By Eveline Danubrata

JAKARTA, Jan 16 (Reuters) – Indonesian instant noodle maker PT Indofood Sukses Makmur Tbk will cut its stake in China Minzhong Food Corp Ltd more than a year after it became the controlling shareholder of the Singapore-listed vegetable processing firm. Continue reading

Hong Kong Regulator Alleges Misleading Research on Accounting Fraud of HK-Listed Chinese Companies; SFC Pursues Actions Against Moody’s, Citron

http://www.wsj.com/articles/hong-kong-regulator-alleges-misleading-research-1421616733

Hong Kong Regulator Alleges Misleading Research

SFC Pursues Actions Against Moody’s, Citron

ENDA CURRAN And RICK CAREW

Updated Jan. 18, 2015 4:34 p.m. ET

Hong Kong’s securities regulator is turning up the heat on what it considers to be misleading stock research. In recent months, the Securities and Futures Commission has pursued separate actions against U.S. ratings firm Moody’s Investors Service Inc. and a California-based short seller for releasing what it claims were misleading reports on Hong Kong-listed companies that sent their stock and bond prices tumbling.

The regulator’s actions against Moody’s and the head of Citron Research are rare instances of a developed-market regulator taking on a ratings firm or a research analyst for the content of their reports. In short selling, which is legal in Hong Kong and some other countries such as the U.S., an investor sells borrowed shares in hopes of buying them back later at a lower price, pocketing the difference. Continue reading

Woof-woof: Auditing companies to get an international watchdog – by 2017

http://asia.nikkei.com/Politics-Economy/Economy/Auditing-companies-to-get-an-international-watchdog

Woof-woof: Auditing companies to get an international watchdog

16 January 2015

Nikkei Report

TOKYO — Financial authorities of 51 nations and regions in the West, Asia and Middle East are planning to set up an organization to supervise auditing corporations by 2017. The authorities hope that reinforced supervision will ensure confidence in auditors. Distrust in auditing firms has been mounting since 2001, when U.S. energy giant Enron suddenly went belly up. A series of accounting fraud scandals has followed. Continue reading

[Flashback] Hong Kong banks caught up in ‘boiler room’ money laundering schemes

http://www.scmp.com/business/money/article/1681719/hong-kong-banks-caught-boiler-room-money-laundering-schemes

Posted by Sean CHUA Kian Shun, Year 4 undergrad at the School of Information Systems, Singapore Management University

Thailand and Philippines based “boiler rooms” laundered cash worth hundreds of millions of US dollars through Hong Kong’s banking system over the past decade, according to incriminating documents released online by aggrieved investors now angling for financial settlements with boiler room kingpins – and the banks that helped them. Continue reading