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An International Problem
Fraud is an international phenomenon touching all countries. Transparency International (TI) is a global network including more than 90 locally established national chapters and chapters-in-formation, whose goal is to fight corruption in the national arena. TI produces a Transparency International Corruption Perception Index (CPI), which ranks more than 150 countries by their perceived levels of corruption, as determined by expert assessments and opinion surveys.
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Organizations lose 5 percent of annual revenue to fraud and abuse. Fraud and abuse costs organizations more than $2.9* trillion annually.
* $994 billion in 2008 in U.S. $652 billion in 2006. $660
billion in 2004.
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Asset misappropriation accounted for more than four out of five offenses or 90% in 2010 (88.7% in 2008) (91.5% in 2006) (92.7% in 2004). $135,000 Bribery and corruption constituted about 30% (27.4% in 2008) (30.8% in 2006) (30.1% in 2004) of offenses. $250,000 ($375,000) ($538,000) Fraudulent statements were the smallest category of offense 5% (10.3% in 2008) (10.6% in 2006) (7.9% in 2004) (most costly). $4 million per scheme.
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Manipulation, falsification, or alteration of accounting records or supporting documents from which financial statements are prepared. Misrepresentation in or intentional omission from the financial statements of events, transactions, or other significant information. Intentional misapplication of accounting principles relating to amounts, classification, manner of presentation, or disclosure.
Source: D.S. Hilzenrath, Forensic Auditors Find What Some Companies Try to Hide, The Washington Post, November 23, 2002, p.19.
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2. 3. 4.
5.
Fictitious and/or overstated revenues and assets. Fictitious reductions of expenses and liabilities. Premature revenue recognition. Misclassified revenues and assets. Overvalued assets or undervalued expenses and liabilities.
(continued on next slide)
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Recording revenue before it is earned. Creating fictitious revenue. Boosting profits with nonrecurring transactions. Shifting current expenses to a later period. Failing to record or disclose liabilities. Shifting current income to a later period. Shifting future expenses to an earlier period.
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Rationalization Sherron Watkins provides an excellent comment about rationalization with respect to Enrons Jeff Skilling and Andy Fastow. At what point did they turn crooked? But there is not a defining point where they became corrupt. It was one small step after another, with more and more rationalizations. There was a slow erosion of values over time.
Source: Pamela Colloff, The Whistle-Blower, Texas Monthly, April 2003, p. 141.
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Reframing
Behavioral psychologists call this rationalization reframing, where someone who is about to cheat will adjust the definition of cheating to exclude his or her actions. Dan Ariely says people who would never take $5 from petty cash have no problem paying for a drink for a stranger and putting it on a company tab.
Source: S.L. Mintz, The Gauge of Innocence, CFO, April 2009, p. 56.
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External
External
Diversion of sales
Source: KPMG, Fraud Awareness Survey, Dublin: KPMG, 1995, pp. 10-12.
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Motive Opportunity Lack of integrity (or rationalization) Capacitythe person must have the necessary traits, abilities, or positional authority to commit the crime
Source: Wolfe and Hermanson, The Fraud Diamond, The CPA J., December 2004, pp. 38-42.
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Source: SAS No. 94, The Effect of Information Technology on the Auditors Consideration of Internal Control in a Financial Statement Audit, New York: AICPA.
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Types of Controls
Preventive Controls
Segregation of duties Required approvals Securing assets Passwords Using document control numbers Drug testing Job rotation Computer backup
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Types of Controls
Detective Controls Reconciliations Reviews Event notifications Surprise cash count Counting inventory
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Types of Controls
Corrective Controls Training Process redesign Additional technology Quality circle teams Budget variance reports
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Earnings Management
Earnings management may be defined as the purposeful intervention in the external financial reporting process, with the intent of obtaining some private gain.
Katherine Schipper, Commentary on Earnings Management, Accounting Horizon, December 1989, p. 92.
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He is more hopeful about new methods involving microexpressions, or those brief facial expressions that may reveal a persons predisposition to fraud.
Source: S.L. Mintz, The Gauge of Innocence, CFO, April 2009, p. 57.
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Psychology of Fraud
Some fraudsters wish to make fools of their victims. They take delight in the act itself.
Risk of fraud is a product of both personality and environmental (or situational) variables.
Grace Duffield and Peter Grabosky, The Psychology of Fraud, Australian Institute of Criminology, No. 19.
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Anti-Fraud Program
An auditor must perform company-wide anti-fraud programs and controls and work related to other controls that have a pervasive effect on the company, such as general controls over the companys electronic data processing.
Further, the auditor must obtain directly the principal evidence about the effectiveness of internal controls.
PCAOB endorses the COSO Cube.
Source: PCAOB Release 2004-001.
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85% of fraud victims never get their money or property back. Most investigations flounder, leaving the victims to defend for themselves against counter-attacks by hostile parties. 30% of companies that fail do so because of fraud.
Source: Michael J. Comer, Investigating Corporate Fraud, Burlington, VT: Gower Publishing, 2003, p. 9.
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Financial fraud affects companies of all sizes, with the median company having assets and revenues just under $100 million. The median fraud was $12.1 million. More than 30 of the fraud cases each involved misstatements/misappropriations of $500 million or more. The SEC names the CEO and/or CFO for involvement in 89 percent of the fraud cases. Within two years of the completion of the SEC investigation, about 20 percent of the CEOs/CFOs had been indicted. Over 60 percent of those indicted were convicted. Motivations include meeting expectations, concealing deteriorating financial conditions, and preparing for debt/equity offerings.
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Revenue frauds accounted for over 60 percent of the cases. Overstated assets, 51%. Understatement of expenses/ liabilities (31%). Misappropriation of assets, 14%. Many of the commonly observed board of director and audit committee characteristics such as size, meeting frequency, composition, and experience do not differ meaningfully between fraud and no-fraud companies. Recent corporate governance regulatory efforts appear to have reduced variation in observable board-related governance characteristics. Twenty-six percent of the firms engaged in fraud changed auditors during the period examined compared to a 12 percent rate for no-fraud firms.
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Initial news in the press of an alleged fraud resulted in an average 16.7 percent abnormal stock price decline for the fraud company in the two days surrounding the announcement. News of an SEC or Department of Justice investigation resulted in an average 7.3 percent abnormal stock price decline. Companies engaged in fraud often experienced bankruptcy, delisting from a stock exchange, or material asset sales at rates much higher than those experienced by no-fraud firms. 50% of the stock traded on NASDAQ over a variety of industries.
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20% of the fraud companies were in the computer hardware/software industry and 20% were in financial service providers. 11% were in health care and health products. 45% of the Section 404 opinions indicated effective controls and 45% indicated ineffective controls.
Source: COSO News Release, Alamonte Springs, May 20, 2010, www.coso.org/documents.
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Fraud Pentagon
Source: P.D. Goldman, Fraud in the Markets (John Wiley & Sons: 2010), pp. 24-25.
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A Thin Line
There certainly is a thin line between legal earnings management and abusive earnings management. Where does a company cross the line between criminal behavior and merely conduct that is beneficial to the organization?
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