Corporate Fraud

Illegal, deceptive actions committed either by a company or an employee of the company

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What is Corporate Fraud?

Corporate fraud consists of illegal or unethical and deceptive actions committed either by a company or an individual acting in their capacity as an employee of the company. Corporate fraud schemes are often extremely complicated and, therefore, difficult to identify. It often takes an office full of forensic accountants months to unravel a corporate fraud scheme in its entirety.

Corporate Fraud

When corporate fraud is perpetrated by the top executives of a large corporation, the fraud often extends to billions of dollars in scale. The victims of corporate fraud are consumers or clients, creditors, investors, other businesses, and eventually, the company that is the source of the fraud and its employees. When it is finally discovered, the company committing the fraud is often left in ruins and forced to declare bankruptcy.

Much of the money illegally obtained through corporate fraud is often never recovered, after being spent long ago by the perpetrators.

Summary

  • Corporate fraud consists of illegal, deceptive actions committed either by a company or an individual who is an employee of the company.
  • Many corporate fraud schemes are highly complicated accounting schemes used to inflate a company’s apparent profits and may take years to detect.
  • When massive corporate fraud is eventually discovered, it can take down even huge multinational companies with billions in annual revenues.

Why Does Corporate Fraud Happen?

1. The desire or perceived need to attract or retain investors

Corporate fraud commonly occurs for the same reason as any other fraud scheme – greed. However, amid the highly competitive global business environment of the modern world, it may also occur for other reasons. Many corporate fraud schemes consist of fraudulent accounting schemes used to make a company appear more profitable than it actually is. The impetus behind such schemes is the desire or perceived need to attract or retain investors.

2. Problems or defects with a company’s products

Another cause of corporate fraud may be problems or defects with a company’s products, which it tries to hide. Several recent corporate fraud cases have occurred with pharmaceutical companies that attempted to hide certain side effects or dangers associated with using certain medicines they manufactured and sold.

Government regulatory authorities, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in the United States, use laws and regulations to try to prevent, detect, and punish corporate fraud. However, fraud may go undetected for many years before it becomes apparent to authorities, especially if the guilty company is a private company that is not required to publicly disclose its financial records.

Examples – Major Corporate Fraud Cases

Due to the rise of so many large, multinational corporations and conglomerates, almost all of the largest corporate fraud cases have occurred within the past five decades. The following are some of the biggest incidences of corporate fraud on record:

Enron

One of the most notorious cases of corporate fraud is the Enron scandal. At its height, Enron, a major energy company, was raking in billions upon billions in profits. However, when the company began to face declining revenues and debt troubles, company executives hid the facts through massive accounting fraud.

In the end, both Enron and its accounting firm, Arthur Andersen, went under. Thousands of employees lost their jobs, and Enron’s creditors and investors lost billions.

The Enron accounting scandal is credited with resulting in the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which required more transparency in companies’ financial reporting and imposed significantly harsher penalties on any company caught committing accounting fraud.

Waste Management

Waste Management, the largest garbage and recyclables collector in the United States, appeared to be one of the most financially sound companies in the United States in the early 1990s. Investors eagerly bought up the company’s stock, driving its price steadily higher.

However, when a new CEO assumed the post in 1998, he eventually discovered that, like Enron, Waste Management previously perpetrated a multi-billion dollar accounting fraud in an attempt to pump up its profitability numbers.

Unlike Enron, Waste Management was able, under its new leadership, to survive the resulting scandal, penalties from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and a multi-million dollar lawsuit by investors.

ZZZZ Best

The story of ZZZZ Best, a carpet cleaning company founded by a 15-year-old, is a rags-to-riches-to-rags story. Within six years of the company’s founding, its entrepreneur owner was able to take the company public, with a valuation of approximately $300 million. There was just one problem – Barry Minkow, the founder and owner of ZZZZ Best, had totally made up out of thin air practically all of the company’s alleged “customers.”

Minkow was keeping the company afloat by using money acquired from new investors to pay off previous investors – in short, engaging in a classic Ponzi scheme. Before Minkow could generate enough business to cover his fraud tracks and hopefully right the company’s finances, his fraud scheme was discovered.

The result was that ZZZZ Best, once an inspiring success story, went completely bust just a few short months after the company’s initial public offering (IPO).

Wirecard

One of the more recent corporate fraud cases is that of Wirecard, a payment transfer and processing company in Germany. In early 2020, accounting auditors discovered a whopping $2 billion discrepancy between the company’s books and the actual money it held.

Like many corporate fraud schemes, Wirecard’s cooking its books had apparently been going on for several years before it was detected. Wirecard was forced to declare bankruptcy, and its CEO was arrested by German authorities.

Wells Fargo

The fraud case of Wells Fargo revealed the danger of companies putting high-pressure sales quotas on employees. The result of such a practice at Wells Fargo Bank led hundreds of its employees to open fake accounts for Wells Fargo clients.

Short-term profits went up by millions, but when the widespread fraud was uncovered, the bank’s fine imposed by the SEC ran into the billions. In addition, the bank lost hundreds, if not thousands, of clients.

More Resources

Thank you for reading CFI’s guide to Corporate Fraud. To keep learning and advancing your career, the following resources will be helpful:

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