Forensics Journal - Stevenson University 2015 | Page 9
FORENSICS JOURNAL
sale securities is the method by which each investment is recorded.
Trading securities are recorded at fair value on the balance sheet,
and the changes in fair value are recognized as gains and losses on
the income statement. Available-for-sale securities are recorded at
fair value on the balance sheet; however, gains and losses are only
recorded once these securities are sold. Therefore, a corporation
practicing earnings management may prefer to record its equity
securities as available-for-sale and benefit from recording the sale
of these securities at a later time (Ketz, 2003, p. 56). For instance,
a corporation may decide to sell its available-for-sale securities to
meet consensus earnings, which will reflect an increase on its income
statement. However, earnings of this nature can be classified as a
nonrecurring item, which financial statement readers may remove
from net income to obtain a better measure of periodic financial
performance (Mulford & Comiskey, 2002, p. 75). Nonrecurring
items are not representative of normal business activities;
consequently, they do not aid in providing creditors or
investors with the corporation’s true financial position.
lower debt-to-equity ratio because the corporation’s ratio portrays
a promising investment/return option with minimal risk. Although
a corporation may have less than 50% ownership in a company, it
can still have total control over the company’s operations; and
therefore, it must consolidate both operations in its financial
statements (Ketz, 2003, p. 70).
An effective auditor must evaluate the corporation’s procedures for
identifying and properly accounting for investment transactions.
It may be necessary to request the names of all joint ventures from
appropriate management personnel, and determine if the corporation
controls the operating, investing, and financing decisions of the
company by examining executed copies of agreements, contracts,
invoices, cash receipts, and bank statements. The auditor should
obtain independent third party confirmations with banks, guarantors,
agents, and attorneys, to discuss and verify the accuracy of significant
information for a better understanding of each transaction. If the
corporation has employed the equity method when accounting for
any joint ventures, which it clearly controls, then the auditor must
determine if the corporation was hiding the subsidiary’s debt in order
to keep it off the balance sheet instead of consolidating the operations.
To determine the impact of utilizing each accounting method, the
auditor will need to obtain financial statements for each company
to consolidate the financial results of the operations. To determine
whether there are any financial risks for the given period, the auditor
can calculate the debt-to-equity ratio using the corporation’s financial
results under the equity and consolidation methods. The auditor may
also perform a horizontal analysis of operating revenues, cost of goods
sold, gross profit, and operating expenses to determine whether the
implications of the differences suggest that the parent company is
hiding debt with the equity method.
A corporation may own less than 20% of a company, yet exercise
significant influence over the company. If so, the equity method
must be applied. The equity method requires a corporation to
record its investment income (or loss), which is its proportional
share in the company’s earnings, and deduct compensated dividends
in its investment account on the balance sheet (Ketz, 2003, pp.
56-57). To avoid recording losses on its investment, a corporation
may argue the equity method is not applicable because it does not
own between 20 to 50%. Therefore, a corporation may prefer to
manage earnings by recording its equity investments as availablefor-sale securities to control the environment in which the gains and
losses are recorded for these investments. As a result, the corporation
does not report its investment losses on the balance sheet, and
effectively hides its financial risk from creditors and investors.
In, “How Leases Play a Shadowy Role in Accounting” a Wall Street
Journal review of annual reports for companies in the Standard &
Poor’s 500-stock index reveal a total of $482 billion in off-balancesheet operating-lease commitments out of $6.25 trillion reported as
debt (Weil, 2004). Accounting for leases represents an opportunity
for corporations to mislead creditors and investors. The two types of
leases are operating and capital. An operating lease represents a rental
for a short period. In contrast, a capital lease ultimately represents a
purchase through the method of financing over the life of the lease
(Ketz, 2003, p. 73). Corporations may seek to structure their leases
to appear as operating leases for the purpose of hiding debt; however,
certain aspects of leases clearly distinguish the two types.
Conversely, a corporation may prefer to apply the equity method
instead of consolidating the subsidiary’s financial results with its
financial statements.1 To avoid consolidation a corporation will
deliberately develop an affiliate with ownership slightly below 50%
to avoid consolidation (Ketz, 2003, p. 64). Under the equity method,
the investment account reflects a net amount consisting of the
company’s assets and liabilities. If the company’s assets are greater
than their liabilities, then essentially the company’s liabilities will be
hidden (Ketz, 2003, p. 70). Therefore, the corporation will not report
the liabilities of the company on its balance sheet, and essentially
lower its debt-to-equity ratio. Creditors and investors favor a
The investee is classified as a subsidiary under the consolidation method.
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