Danger -- Thin Ice
John Price, Ph.D.
So often with mega disasters such as One-Tel and Enron,
there have been a number of warnings signs. Here I don't
mean abstruse accounting jiggery pokery that only professional
accountants could pick up.
Rather I am talking about little snippets that appear here
and there that make you think that there is something wrong.
Or, at least, indicators of management behaviour showing
that this is not the type of company you want to be associated
with.
It is very easy to criticize the auditing firms for
sliding over rubbery or misleading figures. They did
it for financial
gain for themselves and for their own companies. In
a word, greed. But we have to watch our own motivations.
Do we
find ourselves skating past warning signs onto thin
ice
because
we have become fixated on big profits? I know
that I have.
Some of examples of warning signs are:
- Increasingly large remuneration levels when the
profitability of the company as measured by sales growth, earnings
growth and return on equity is going down.
- Excessive behaviour by the chairman
or CEO.
- Problems with labour relations within
the company.
- Publicity that contains large dollops
of hype.
- Annual reports that attempt to cover
the problems.
And I am sure you can add more of your own.
I am not suggesting that any of the examples of companies
mentioned in this article have committed fraud or are
about to commit fraud. They are warnings signs that may
point
to declining profits, not to illegal practices.
Hide and Seek in the Annual Report
Regarding attempts to downplay declining profits and
profitability, consider Macquarie Bank. In the annual
report for the year
ending 31 March,2002, we read in the Highlights section
that after-tax profits increased by 3.3%. Not great,
but at least it is something.
But it is earnings per share that is important to shareholders,
not total earnings. To find this out,you have to dig
into the body of the report. There you read in the Statements
of Financial Performance that EPS has dropped from $1.40
to $1.32, a drop of 5.6%.Definitely not great.
Let us continue. In the Highlights we read that it has
an excellent return on equity ROE.
But when look at the ROE chart in Conscious Investor
we see that ROE is the lowest it has been for the past
six
years. For example, last year it was 25.7% and the average
for the past five years excluding the current year was
23.1%. Now it is well below 20%.
One more thing. The total remuneration for the top executives
was $A49.9 million in 2002 compared to $A29 million in
2001. (In 2002 there were 13 in this category and 12
in 2001.) This is an increase of 71%. Putting it another
way.
This amount represented 19.9% of total profit in 2002
compared to 12.0% in 2001.
On 25 June, 2002 the Southern Cross Airports Corporation
Consortium purchased the Sydney Airport for $A5.4 billion.
Macquarie Bank-managed funds hold a 53 per cent shareholding
in the asset. Also the bank put together the deal as
a financial advisor and underwriter.
There are many concerns that too much was paid for the
airport. Whether or not this is the case is a very tough
question.
Some idea of just how difficult it is can be gained from
a recent statement by Allen Moss, the managing director
of Macquarie Bank. "In the case of Sydney airport, a huge
amount of work went in over two years with more than 20
people in
Macquarie bank and at the peak up to 40 people and with
an extensive expense in terms of external support."
What I am talking about above is not nearly so complex.
They are very simple warning signals that do not take
any great expertise to uncover. But looking over what
we have
just uncovered, I can't help thinking that if any corporation
was going to pay too much for something, it is very likely
to be Macquarie Bank.
Executives Who Talk Too Much
It is a good exercise to go to the annual meetings of
companies whenever you can. You often pick up things
that you may
not otherwise hear. At the 2000 meeting of AMP, its chairman
Stan Wallis told the audience that its shares were worth
closer to $30 than to $20. Back then they were around
$15 in price, much the same as they are now. If the chairman
is wrong by a factor of two, we can only assume that
he
is trying to bolster the share price.
When the CEO and chairman start to make statements about
how much they think stock in the company is worth I start
to feel uneasy. The business of the executives is to
run the company in the best way that they can, not to
try to
inflate its share price.
As might be expected, Warren Buffet has had a few words
to say on this. In his Letter to Shareholders in the
2000 annual report of Berkshire Hathaway we read:
One further thought while I am on the soapbox: Charlie [Munger]
and I think it is both deceptive and dangerous for CEOs
to predict growth rates for their companies. They are, of course,
frequently egged on to do so by both analysts and their
own investor relations departments. They should resist, however,
because too often these predictions lead to trouble.
The problem arising from lofty predictions is not just the spread of unwarranted
optimism. Even more troublesome is that they corrode CEO behavior. Over the years,
Charlie and I have observed many instances in which CEOs engaged in uneconomic
operating maneuvers so that they could meet earnings targets they had announced.
Worse still, after exhausting all that operating acrobatics would do, they sometimes
played a wide variety of accounting games to "make the numbers." These accounting shenanigans have a way of snowballing: Once a company moves earnings from one period to another, operating shortfalls that occur thereafter require it to engage in further accounting maneuvers that must be even more "heroic." These
can turn fudging into fraud.
Charlie and I tend to be leery of companies run by CEOs who
woo investors with fancy predictions. A few of these
managers will prove prophetic--but others will turn out to be congenital
optimists, or even charlatans.
Buffett ends by saying that it is not easy to know in
advance which species we are dealing with. So, along
with Buffett,
I think that it is much better to stay away from companies
with such CEOs to begin with.
Accounting Shenanigans
What are the shenanigans that Buffett is referring to?
In many cases you don't have to be a $300 per hour accountant
to find out about them. Often reading the newspapers
or attending annual meetings is enough. The main thing
is
to be willing to see what is in front of you or willing
to listen to what is being said.
Long before One-Tel crashed, many newspapers articles
described its accounting shenanigans. I recall one article
describing
how One-Tel changed their accounting methods twice in
one six-month period, each time capitalizing various
expenses
so that their losses were reduced. In other words, reducing
their current losses by pushing them into the future.
Executive Hubris
Sure, it takes a certain self-confidence to get to the
level of the being the CEO or chairman of a major company.
The danger comes when this self-confidence slips over
to arrogance and hubris.
I remember reading an interview with Rodney Adler when
he said that he didn't worry about the financials of
an investment. He went with his instinct about the management.
He used Jodie Rich, the co-founder of One-Tel, as an
example. This was just before the collapse of One-Tel
and its investigation
by the ASIC.
Next in line was Mr. Adler himself. Just last month the
Supreme Court of New South Wales handed down penalties
for Rodney Adler, Mr Ray Williams and Mr Dominic Fodera
all former executives of the insurance company HIH. They
related to charges that these three had breeched their
duties under the Corporations Act.
Have a look at the statements made by the senior executives
of a company. You will often see signs that that are
pushing things just a bit too far. I don't mean anything
illegal.
Just signs that maybe their eye is not on the ball as
much as it should be. Or that they are making statements
more
for their own bottom line, rather than that of the companies
they are responsible for.
For example, Dick Warburton is chairman of three large
companies-David Jones, Caltex and AurionGold-in very
different areas. He is also a member of the boards of
the Reserve
Bank and several other companies as well as chairman
of the Government's board of taxation. Too much? He doesn't
think so, recently asserting that most board decisions
are generic in nature so that the boards he is on, the
more efficient and experienced he becomes.
The Australian Shareholders Association is one of those
who disagree. "There's got to be an upper limit to that argument and he's well and truly passed it," explains its executive officer Stuart Wilson. "Director's
shouldn't overload themselves, particularly in this environment,
when they need to be critically examining the accounts
and management's explanations. The more overloaded they
are,
the greater chance you have of missing something.
The moral is if you feel uncomfortable about something
that a company is doing, don't push it aside or dismiss
it. It is quite likely that there is thin ice ahead.
Even if there is not, it is not much fun having investments
that make you toss and turn at night.
Disclaimer: Conscious
Investing provides general advice and information, not individually
targeted personalised advice. Advice from Conscious Investing
does not take into account any investor¹s particular
investment objectives, financial situation and personal needs.
Investors should assess for themselves whether the advice
is appropriate to their individual investment objectives,
financial situation and particular needs before making any
investment decision on the basis of such general advice.
Investors can make their own assessment of the advice or
seek the assistance of a professional adviser.
Investing
entails some degree of risk. Investors should inform themselves
of the risks involved before engaging in any investment.
Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. Information
and advice provided here is not an offer to buy or sell securities. View the
full Disclaimer.
Just
phone 1800 689 962 for
a complimentary consultation or contact us by email at admin@accountants.com.au
This list has a privacy
policy.
|