Twitter, RSS and Facebook logos

  Connect with Security Magazine!
     Follow us on Twitter and Facebook or subscribe to our newsletters or RSS feeds.

Security Newswire

CEOs, CFOs Implicated Most in Accounting Fraud

Accounting fraud usually starts at the top of the corporate ladder, but its effects filter all the way back down, says a study by the Treadway Commission.
 
The report, issued by Dana Hermanson, Dinos Eminent Scholar of Private Enterprise and accounting professor at Kennesaw State University's Coles College of Business, said that in 90 percent of the 347 cases of alleged fraudulent reporting it identified in public companies from 1998-2007, CEOs and CFOs were implicated in the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission investigations.
 
"But that's only the beginning of the consequences," said Hermanson, co-author of the study. "The repercussions go on to affect employees, stockholders and board members." Hermanson compared companies investigated for fraud with those that were not. "We found that the companies under investigation for accounting fraud had abnormal stock declines (an average of 17 percent) within two days of the fraud announcement," he said. "Twenty-eight percent of the alleged fraud companies went bankrupt and 62 percent had to liquidate assets within two years, and 47 percent of these companies were delisted from a stock exchange, which impacted both the company's reputation and access to capital."
 
"There were 347 cases in 1998-2007 versus 294 cases in 1987-1997, but the dollar amount soared to nearly $400 million per case. By comparison, the mean was $25 million per case in the decade before," Hermanson said. The latest decade included the dot.com bust of 2001, and the high-profile fraud cases of Enron, Tyco International and WorldCom.
You must register or login in order to post comments.

Multimedia

Videos

Image Galleries

Stanley Customer Appreciation Event at ASIS 2011

Customers enjoyed the annual Stanley customer appreciation event during ASIS 2011 in Orlando.

Podcasts

The New Age of Video Surveillance
In this podcast, Bill Lawrence, director of Service Solutions and Platforms for ADT Security Services, explains the growing interest in video surveillance by both government agencies as well as businesses of every stripe. He discusses what any organization should consider before investing heavily in the technology. Lawrence is a 25-year veteran of both the information technology and physical security industries, with extensive experience in network video surveillance and physical security convergence.
More Podcasts

Your Time

On a daily basis, how much work time do you estimate that you spend addressing an emergency or crisis within your organization?
See Poll Results Poll Archive

THE SECURITY STORE

comptiahighriseproductphoto
CompTIA Security+ Certification Study Guide
CompTIA's Security+ certification is a globally-recognized, vendor neutral exam that has helped over 60,000 IT professionals reach further and higher in their careers. The current Security+ exam (SY0-201) focuses more on being able to deal with security issues rather than just identifying them.
More Products

Clear Seas Research

Clear Seas ResearchWith access to over one million professionals and more than 60 industry-specific publications,Clear Seas Research offers relevant insights from those who know your industry best. Let us customize a market research solution that exceeds your marketing goals.

Vertical Sector Focus: Critical Infrastructures

criticalhomepagethumbFrom terrorism to vandalism, it’s preparedness, response, training and partnerships. Learn about some of the critical security issues facing this sector.

Visit the Critical Infrastructure page to read more.  

STAY CONNECTED

facebooklogo twitterlogo  linkedinlogo  YouTube icon