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OldSchoolValue (< 20)

DMND accounting fraud

Recs

14

January 30, 2012 – Comments (5) | RELATED TICKERS: DMND

You can see the original post with images and formatting here.

http://bit.ly/xgUbVX

 

Here is a good case study to go through.

Diamond Foods (DMND) is being investigated by the SEC and DoJ for potential accounting fraud.

I will go through a few methods to detect earnings quality, manipulation and aggressive accounting to see how well it comes up against DMND.

So as we go through this, the question is, could you have identified DMND’s accounting shenanigans in advance by using such methods?

Accounting Fraud Accusation against DMND

From the Forbes article,

“Allegedly, the company delivered so-called “momentum payments” to walnut farmers in order cook their earnings filings.”

Momentum payments mean that DMND paid their suppliers in advance. Future expenses is shifted to an earlier period which will inflate earnings.

If the audit proves to be true, then based on a Bloomberg magazine article (no link sorry), DMND’s 2011 earnings will be reinstated from $2.22 to $1.14. That’s close to 50%. Ouch!

Earnings Shenanigans

In Financial Shenanigans, shifting expenses to another period is clearly defined as one of the shenanigans used to manipulate earnings. Now in the Bloomberg article, Mendes, the CEO, is portrayed as a very ambitious and business aggressive man. If the article is true, that “could” explain the aggressiveness in the accounting.

If you have read The Art of Short Selling, you will know that there have been many companies throughout history where such CEO characteristics have led to accounting frauds.

Balance Sheet Check

Let’s get down to the numbers.

Take a quick glance at the balance sheet. Even though a company like Diamond Foods is all about the brand of its products, the balance sheet is very unattractive. Just looking at the total intangibles should immediately raise red flags.

66% of total assets is made up of intangibles.

 

Accrual Ratios

Previously I went through examples of how to analyze accruals. One of the examples featured Dolby (DLB) where accruals were consistently above 25% for 4 years, yet DLB increased cash and reduced debt. DLB’s Sloan ratio was higher than the recommended 8%, but nothing jumped out and the result was inconclusive.

However, take a look at DMND below. (These numbers are from my stock analyzer and the model will be included in the next update.)

 

Cash balance is close to zero, debt has sky rocketed with all the acquisitions, net income is increasing but cash flow from operations is erratic. Dangerous signs already.

The accruals for 2009 and 2010 is shocking. In 2010 and 2011, there is a very good chance that DMND’s growth in EPS came from accruals. In other words, low quality and cookie jar type earnings.

Beneish M (Manipulation) Score

The third method you can use is the Beneish M score to detect earnings manipulation. Full details of how this model works is in the Beneish M Score article.

A score greater than -2.22 indicates a strong likelihood of a firm being a manipulator.

 

Coincidentally, the 2009 and 2010 numbers are red flagged.

Conclusion?

By checking the balance sheet, accruals and M score, warnings are flashing everywhere. DMND is innocent until proven guilty, but by my definition, shifting expenses to inflate earnings is fraud.

Summing up, do you:

check the financial shenanigans checklist?look at the construction of the balance sheet ?analyze the accruals?calculate the Beneish M score?

5 Comments – Post Your Own

#1) On January 31, 2012 at 11:58 AM, MegaShort (99.96) wrote:

Hello Jae - I tried to post a comment on OSV the other day, but the spam filter wouldn't let me.  It didn't accept the answer that 1 + 7 = 8.  Check it out and see if it's working correctly.

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#2) On January 31, 2012 at 12:41 PM, OldSchoolValue (< 20) wrote:

Hi,

It does seem to be working. Or just write the comment here and I can copy and paste it over.

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#3) On January 31, 2012 at 1:03 PM, MegaShort (99.96) wrote:

OK I'll try again later.

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#4) On January 31, 2012 at 4:10 PM, Momentum21 (92.11) wrote:

great work on this post...interesting...

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#5) On January 31, 2012 at 4:12 PM, truthisntstupid (85.46) wrote:

Financial Shenanigans

That is one great book. It's taking me forever to read it, and even when I'm done, I'll have a retention problem and have to go back through it taking notes and actually studying it.

It's hard to have the patience to keep fighting my way through it, and sometimes I put it down for a month before I dive back in. 

Love the case histories. How many people know the crap Netflix pulled not that long ago, shifting expenses from the income statement to the capex portion of the cash flow statement to inflate their net income and operating cash flow?

Blockbuster may have done itself in, but its competitor was cooking the books. Not exactly fair.

Got this page bookmarked so I can also click on all your links and read more about financial shenanigans. Maybe you have some new examples that will help some of the info stick.

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