Judul: SKANDAL AKUNTANSI KEUANGAN WORLDCOM
Penulis: Wahyu Setiawan
SKANDAL AKUNTANSI KEUANGAN WORLDCOM
Skandal WorldCom mencuat setelah perusahaan ini mengaku telah mengembungkan keuntungannya hingga US$ 3,8 milyar pada periode Januari 2001 dan Maret 2002. Pada tahun 2001 hingga awal 2002, WorldCom memasukan AS $ 3,8 milyar yang merupakan biaya operasi normal ke dalam pos investasi. Hal ini memungkinkan perusahaan tersebut menekan biaya selama bertahun-tahun. Dengan hilangnya pos biaya operasional ini, maka pos keuntungan menjadi lebih besar karena biaya yang seharusnya mengurangi keuntungan sudah diperkecil. Dengan keuntungan yang terlihat besar, maka akan menunjukkan bahwa kinerja WorldCom sangat bagus. Saham WorldCom yang dicatatkan di bursa tahun 1999 pada harga US$ 62, langsung anjlok 94 persen sejak Januari 2002 akibat mencuatnya skandal tersebut. Selain itu setelah perginya pendiri dan chief executive officer WorldCom, Bernie Ebbers, pada bulan April 2002, skandal lainnya mencuat. Diketahui Ebbers meminjam jutaan dollar AS dari perusahaan tersebut untuk menanggung kelebihan harga yang harus dibayarnya untuk saham-saham perusahaan itu sendiri. Dalam proses pengadilan selama 6 minggu itu, Jaksa menuding Ebbers pikirannya tergoda untuk menjaga saham Worldcom tetap tinggi dan menjadi panik oleh tudingan dia memperolah US$ 400 juta pinjaman pribadi yang dijamin dengan saham Worldcom. Pada akhir tahun 2000 hingga pertengahan tahun 2002, pemerintah AS mengklaim Ebbers mengintimidasi CFO (chief financial officer) Scott Sullivan untuk menutupi pengeluaran yang tidak terkontrol yang mencapai miliaran dolar dan menyebutnya sebagai pendapatan yang tidak selayaknya. "Ia adalah WorldCom dan WorldCom adalah Ebbers. Ia membangun perusahaan itu. Ia melarikan diri, tentu ia yang harus bertanggung jawab atas kebocoran itu," ujar Jaksa William Johnson kepada juri. Namun pengacara Ebbers membantah bahwa kebocoran itu adalah tanggung jawab Sullivan. Sebelumnya Sullivan yang bertindak sebagai saksi dari pihak pemerintah mengatakan bahwa Ebbers menginstruksikan dirinya untuk mencatatkan jumlah ke dalam neraca hingga memenuhi ekspektasi Wall Street. Jaksa Agung AS Alberto Gonzales menyebut keputusan ini sebagai 'kemenangan bagi sistem hukum'. Gonzales mengatakan, juri telah mengenali bahwa kecurangan itu ditimbulkan dari manajemen tingkat menengah hingga eksekutif puncaknya. Selain itu Ebbers juga masih menghadapi proses pengadulan sipil termasuk tuntutan dari perusahaan yang telah menjamin US$ 400 juta pinjaman prbadinya. Sementara itu 12 mantan direktur perusahaan termasuk satu bank investasi yang menjadi underwriter dan auditor Arthur Andersen juga akan menghadapi pengadilan sipil dari para investor yang marah.
SKANDAL CEO - BERNARD EBBERS
CEO Bernard Ebbers menjadi sangat kaya dari kenaikan harga sahamnya di saham WorldCom umum. Namun, pada tahun 2000, industri telekomunikasi memasuki masa krisis yang menyebabkan WorldCom mengalami kemunduran serius, menyebabkan pemerintah AS melalui Departemen Kehakiman memaksa perusahaan ini untuk membatalkan rencana merger dengan Sprint pada pertengahan 2000. Pada saat itu, saham WorldCom menurun dan Ebbers berada di bawah tekanan tinggi dari bank untuk menutupi kewajiban kekurangan margin pada saham WorldCom-nya yang digunakan untuk membiayai jenis usaha yang lainnya, seperti kayu, kapal pesiar. Oleh karena itu selama tahun 2001, Ebbers membujuk para dewan direksiWorldCom untuk memberinya kredit korporasi dan jaminan lebih dari AS $ 400 juta untuk menutupi kewajiban margin tersebut. Permohonan ini dikabulkan karena para dewan direksi berharap bahwa pinjaman yang diminta CEP Ebbers tersebut akan mencegah Ebbers untuk menjual sejumlah besar saham WorldCom pada akhirnya akibat tekanan di harga pasar saham yang kian anjlok. Namun, akhirnya strategi ini gagal dan Ebbers digulingkan sebagai CEO pada bulan April 2002 dan digantikan oleh John Sidgmore, mantan CEO UUNET Technologies, Inc.
Skandal akuntansi di dalam tubuh perusahaan ini sendiri dimulai sejak pertengahan tahun 1999 dan terus berlanjut hingga Mei 2002. Di bawah Bernard Ebbers (CEO), Scott Sullivan (CFO), David Myers (Pengawas) dan Buford "Buddy" Yates (Direktur Jenderal Akuntansi) memanipulasi laporan akuntansi perusahaan, membuat laporan akuntansi palsu untuk menutupi pendapatan WorldCom yang hakikatnya mengalami penurunan dengan membuat gambar pertumbuhan keuangan dan profitabilitas palsu untuk menopang harga saham WorldCom di pasar saham. Penipuan itu dilakukan terutama dalam dua cara:
1. Underreporting 'line cost` (biaya interkoneksi dengan perusahaan telekomunikasi lainnya)dengan memanfaatkan biaya-biaya pada neraca daripada fakta pengeluaran mereka.
2. Menggelembungkan pendapatan dengan memasukkan catatan akuntansi palsu dari "alokasi dana perusahaan yang belum diisi".
Pada tahun 2002, sebuah tim audit internal WorldCom bekerja secara rahasia, menyelidiki dan menggali kemana alokasi dana perusahaan yang hilang sebesar $ 3,8 milyar.Hingga pada akhirnya, mereka menemukan jawabannya bawa dana perusahaan tersebut telah diselewengkan oleh CEO dan rekan-rekan kerjanya untuk memperkaya diri mereka sendiri diluar standar pendapatan seharusnya. Segera kemudian komite audit perusahaan dan dewan direksi diberitahu oleh para audit mengenai masalah penipuan akuntansi ini. Tidak lama kemudian, mereka segera memanggil dan memecat CFO Scott Sullivan, dan David Myers segera mengundurkan diri. Kemudian pada tahun 2001, Arthur Andersen dan US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) meluncurkan sebuah investigasi masalah ini pada tanggal 26 Juni 2002. Sehingga pada akhir tahun 2003, diperkirakan bahwa total aset perusahaan ini ternyatatelah diselewengkan oleh CEO mereka sekitar $ 11 miliar.
Akibat masalah besar yang diakibatkannya, pada 15 Maret 2005 Bernard Ebbers dinyatakan bersalah dari semua tuduhan, karena telah terbukti melakukan kecurangan, konspirasi dan pengajuan dokumen palsu dengan regulator-semua terkait dengan skandal akuntansi AS $ 11 miliar di perusahaan telekomunikasi yang dia dirikan. Dia dijatuhi hukuman 25 tahun penjara. Pejabat WorldCom lainnya seperti mantan CFO Scott Sullivan dituntut dengan hukuman pidana dalam kaitannya pada tanggal 2 Maret 2004 untuk tuduhan penipuan sekuritas, konspirasi dan mengajukan laporan palsu. Sedangkan mantan pengawas keuangan David Myers juga telah mengaku bersalah atas penipuan sekuritas, konspirasi untuk melakukan penipuan sekuritas, dan mengajukan laporan palsu pada tanggal 27 September, 2002. Mantan direktur akuntansi Buford Yates juga telah mengaku bersalah atas konspirasi dan tuduhan penipuan pada 7 Oktober , 2002). Mantan-mantan manajer akuntansi Betty Vinson dan Troy Normand juga mengaku bersalah atas konspirasi dan penipuan sekuritas pada tanggal 10 Oktober 2002.Pada 13 Juli 2005 Bernard Ebbers menerima hukuman yang akan membuat dia dipenjara selama 25 tahun. Pada saat vonis dijatuhkan, Ebbers telah berusia 63 tahun. Pada tanggal 26 September 2006, Ebbers menyerahkan diri ke Biro Penjara Federal penjara di Oakdale, Louisiana, Federal Lembaga Pemasyarakatan Oakdale untuk mulai menjalani hukuman.
KEBANGKRUTAN
Pada tanggal 21 Juli 2002, WorldCom mengajukan perlindungan kebangkrutan.Pengajuan tersebut merupakan pengajuan kebangkrutan terbesar dalam sejarah Amerika Serikat hingga kebangkrutan berikutnya pada saat runtuhnya Lehman Brothers 2008. Proses kebangkrutan WorldCom diadakan sebelum US Federal Kepailitan Hakim Arthur J. Gonzalez yang bersamaan mendengar proses kebangkrutan Enron yang merupakan kasus kebangkrutan terbesar kedua yang dihasilkan oleh skandal akuntansi di dalam perusahaan. Tidak ada proses pidana terhadap WorldCom atas rujukan dari Gonzalez. Namun pada tanggal 14 April 2003, WorldCom berubah nama menjadi MCI dan memindahkan kantor pusat perusahaan dari Clinton, Mississippi, ke Dulles, Virginia. Berdasarkan perjanjian restrukturisasi kebangkrutan, perusahaan wajib membayar AS $ 750 juta kepada SEC secara tunai dan saham di MCI baru, hal dimaksudkan untuk membayar kerugian yang dialami para investor.
Namun hal ini belum cukup untuk membayar banyak kreditur kecil, yang telah menunggu selama dua tahun untuk pengembalian uang mereka di WorldCom. Sebagian besar dari para kreditur kecil itu adalah mantan karyawan WorldCom sendiri. Sehingga pada tanggal 7 Agustus 2002, kelompok exWorldCom 5100 diluncurkan. Mereka ini terdiri dari mantan karyawan WorldCom yang bertujuan mencari pembayaran penuh dari uang pesangon. The "5100" itu sendiri adalah singkatan untuk jumlah karyawan WorldCom yang terpaksa di PHK pada tanggal 28 Juni 2002 akibat kebangkrutan WorldCom. Hingga kemudian hari bersejarah itu tiba, dimana pada tanggal 14 Februari 2005, Verizon Communications setuju untuk mengakuisisi MCI sebesar $ 7,6 miliar. Menyelamatkan keberlangsungan kehidupan perusahaan ini dari ambang kematian.PRINCIPAL – AGENT PROBLEM
Dalam ilmu politik dan ekonomi, masalah principal-agent atau dilema lembagamemperlakukan kesulitan yang muncul dalam kondisi informasi yang tidak lengkap dan asimetrisketika seorang pemimpin menyewa atau membayar seorang agen, menimbulkan beberapa masalah seperti konflik moral hazard dan mengejar kepentingan-kepentingan dari kepala sekolah itu sendiri. Berbagai mekanisme dapat digunakan untuk mencoba menyelaraskankepentingan agen dalam solidaritas dengan orang-orang dari pemimpin, seperti mengatur tarifpotongan / komisi, pembagian keuntungan, upah efisiensi, pengukuran kinerja (termasuk laporan keuangan), agen postingan obligasi. Masalah principal-agent ditemukan di sebagian besar pada hubungan karyawan, misalnya, ketika pemegang saham mempekerjakan eksekutif puncakperusahaan. Yang mana para eksekutif tersebut kurang mendapat batasan-batasan sampai dimana mereka memiliki kewenangan dalam mengurusi usaha yang dipercayakan oleh principal kepadanya.Untuk itu perlu adanya sebuah kontrol wewenang dalam sebuah peraturan perusahaan yang berkenanaan dengan hal tersebut, agar masalah seperti kasus WorldCom tidak terjadi lagi dikemudian hari. Yaitu perlu adanya kontrak kerja yang jelas. Dalam konteks kontrak kerja,kontrak individual membentuk metode utama dari insentif restrukturisasi, dengan menghubungkan sedekat optimal informasi yang tersedia tentang kinerja karyawan, dan kompensasi untuk kinerja itu. Karena perbedaan dalam kuantitas dan kualitas informasi yang tersedia tentang kinerja karyawan individu, kemampuan karyawan untuk menanggung risiko,dan kemampuan karyawan untuk memanipulasi metode evaluasi, rincian struktural kontrak individual sangat bervariasi, termasuk mekanisme seperti sepotong tarif, pilihan, bonus yang bebas, promosi, pembagian keuntungan, efisiensi upah, kompensasi ditangguhkan, dan seterusnya. Biasanya, mekanisme ini digunakan dalam konteks berbagai jenis kerja: wiraniagasering menerima beberapa atau semua remunerasi mereka sebagai komisi, pekerja produksibiasanya dibayar per jam, sementara pekerja kantor biasanya dibayar (lembur yang dibayarkandan jika, biasanya pada tingkat yang lebih tinggi daripada tarif per jam tersirat oleh gaji) bulanan atau setengah bulanan.
Dengan kontrak kerja yang jelas, serta sistem pemberian insentif yang jelas dan sesuai dengan standar terjadi yang telah ditetapkan perusahaan, termasuk dengan perjanjian dengan pasal-pasal punishment apabila melanggar SOP perusahaan sebelum diadakan perekrutan, baik itu untuk karyawan di tingkat bawah maupun hingga karyawan di tingkat CEO. Sehingga sedikit banyak, hal ini dapat membantu mengurangi resiko-resiko penyalahgunaan wewenang yang mungkin saja akan dilakukan oleh agent-agent yang disewa oleh principal.
SEJARAH WORLDCOM
Long Distance Discount Services, Inc (LDDS) pada awalnya berdiri di Hattiesburg, Mississippi pada 1983. Kemudian pada tahun 1985 Bernard Ebbers LDDS dipilih menjadi CEO-nya. Perusahaan go public pada tahun 1989 melalui merger dengan Advantage Companies Inc. Sejak saat itu nama perusahaan diganti menjadi LDDS WorldCom pada tahun 1995, dan kemudian diganti hanya WorldCom pada tahun 2003.
Pertumbuhan perusahaan WorldCom terutama didorong oleh akuisisi terhadap perusahaan-perusahaan telekomunikasi lainnya selama tahun 1990-an dan mencapai puncaknya dengan akuisisi MCI pada tahun 1998. Diantara perusahaan yang dibeli atau bergabung dengan WorldCom adalah Advanced Communications Corp. (1992), Metromedia Communication Corp.(1993), Resurgens Communications Group(1993), IDB Communications Group, Inc (1994), Williams Technology Group, Inc. (1995), and MFS Communications Company (1996. Akuisisi MFS termasuk UUNET Technologies, Inc, yang telah diakuisisi oleh MFS lama sebelum merger dengan WorldCom. Pada Februari 1998, WorldCom melakukan pembelian online CompuServe yang merupakan pelopor dari perusahaan induk Blok H & R nya. WorldCom kemudian mempertahankan Compuserve Divisi Layanan Jaringan, menjual layanan online untuk America Online, dan menerima pembagian jaringan AOL, ANS. Akuisisi Digex (DIGX) pada bulan Juni 2001 juga kompleks; Worldcom mengakuisisi perusahaan induk Digex itu, Intermedia Komunikasi, dan kemudian menjual semua non-Digex Intermedia aset untuk Allegiance Telecom.
Pada tanggal 10 November 1997, WorldCom dan MCI Communications mengumumkan merger senilai US $ 37 milyar untuk membentuk MCI WorldCom, sehingga hal ini merupakan merger terbesar dalam sejarah AS. Pada tanggal 15 September 1998, perusahaan baru, MCI WorldCom, mulai dibuka untuk bisnis. Pada 5 Oktober 1999 Sprint Corporation dan MCI WorldCom mengumumkan perjanjian merger antara dua perusahaansebesar $ 129 Milayar.Namun pada tanggal 13 Juli 2000, dewan direksi dari kedua pihakperusahaan bertindak untuk mengakhiri merger. Hal ini karena mendapat larangan dari pemerintahan AS, karena perjanjian kerjasama dua perusahaan telekomunikasi besar tersebutdianggap merupakan bagian praktik monopoli. Kini MCI WorldCom menamai dirinya dengan"WorldCom" tanpa Sprint menjadi bagian dari perusahaan. Perusahaan dengan kode saham Wcom di bursa Nasdaq ini telah memiliki 73.000 pegawai yang tersebar di seluruh dunia. Sebanyak 8.300 di antaranya adalah pegawai yang tinggal di Eropa, Timur Tengah, dan Afrika.Posted by Dian Pratiwi Hikari Ai ChanETHICS IN ACCOUNTING: THE WORLDCOM INC. SCANDAL
Conf.univ.dr. Lucian Cernuşca
"Aurel Vlaicu" University, Arad,
str. Pia#a Sporturilor, nr. 10, bl. 25, apt. 7, 310167 Arad, Phone: 0730468534, luciancernusca@gmail.com
What is ethics? What does ethics have to do with accounting? How does a scandal affect the business environment and the society? This article will explain just those questions by analyzing a "famous" fraud scandal: WorldCom Inc. The article discusses the chronology of events that lead to the WorldCom Inc. collapse and explains how the figures were manipulated for the owners' interest and what the accounting scam was. The article ends with the consequences of the scandal and what the effects were on the society and business environment in general.
JEL Classification: M4 Accounting and Auditing
Key words: ethics, accounting, bankruptcy, WorldCom Inc., expenses.
What is ethics? Why ethics in accounting?
Ethical values are the foundations on which a civilized society is based on. Without them, the civilization collapses. In business, the purpose of ethics is to direct business men and women to abide by a code of conduct that facilitates public confidence in their product and services. In the accounting field, professional accounting organizations recognize the accounting profession's responsibility to provide ethical guidelines to its members.
Ethics must and should be taught. People are not born with the desire to be ethical or be concerned with the welfare of others. And contrary to all beliefs, one person can make a difference. One of my favorite quotes says:
I am only one.
But still I am one.
I cannot do everything,
But still I can do something;
And because I cannot do everything
I will not refuse to do the something that I can do.
(Edward Everett Hale)
Accounting ethics is both a normative and descriptive discipline. Interest in business ethics and accounting ethics accelerated dramatically during the 1980s and 1990s, both within major corporations and within academia.
When we talk about accounting ethics, we always link the term with creative accounting, earnings management, misleading financial statements, securities fraud, insiders transactions, bribery, executive compensation and many more.
If you occupy a position of leadership, then your actions will profoundly influence those who follow your example. And the well known cases of fraud, WorldCom and Enron included, prove just that.
The WorldCom Inc. Scandal – Bankruptcy Information
On July 21, 2002, WorldCom Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, according to John Sidgmore, the company's chief executive. The bankruptcy is the largest in US history, being twice as large as Enron's record-setting filling in December 2001. WorldCom Inc. admitted on June 25, 2002, that it had falsely booked $3.85 billion in expenses to make the company appear more profitable. Arthur Anderson, the company's auditor, accused Scott Sullivan, WorldCom Inc.'s financial officer, of withholding crucial information about the company's bookkeeping. Sullivan was fired the same day.
But what is WorldCom Inc. and what's its history? During 1983, Murray Waldron and William Rector, both from USA, drafted a business plan to start a business offering long distance services at a discount. The company was created and was named "Long Distance Discount Services" (LDDS). Bernie Ebbers became the CEO for LDDS in 1985. He grew the company through a series of acquisitions – Advantage Companies Inc., Advanced Telecommunications Corp., Resurgens Communications Group Inc., Metromedia Communications Corp., IDSB Communication Group Inc. and Williams Telecommunications Group Inc. – and changed its name to WorldCom in 1995. The acquisitions continued and the new named WorldCom took over MFS Communications Inc. in 1996, UUNet Technologies Inc, in the same year, MCI Communications Corp. in 1998 for $40 billion, Brooks Fiber Properties Inc. and CompuServe Comp., also in 1998. The largest merger was in 2001 when WorldCom took over Intermedia Communication Inc., a provider of Internet and data services to businesses.
JUNE 18, 1999
VYb rid Com stock hits all-time highfor market value at $125B. $63.50.
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NOTE: STOCK PRICES FOR 1992, 1995 ARE AVERAGES, OTHERS CLOSE AT END OF MONTH
Figure 1 WordCom hits all-time high for market valueSource: Jake Ulick, 2002, WorldCom's financial bomb, at CNN Money ,http://money.cnn.com/2002/06/25/news/worldcom/ , visited Friday, June 15, 2007
At the peak of the telecom boom, WorldCom Inc. was valued at $180 billion. But from this stage onwards, WorldCom started facing job cuts, credit ranking down grades and enquires. The stock price fell from $64 (all-time high for market value) to $2.65. As a result, Ebbers resigned on April 30, 2002, right after the fall of stock price. Within 10 day from Ebbers' resignation, WorldCom's long-term debt ranking was reduced to junk status. Ebbers started selling stocks to repay his personal loans and in order to stop him from selling the stock WorldCom gave him the loan to repay his bets. It wasn't clear why that happened but the fact is with the ransom earned, Ebbers has built a nice mansion in Florida.
After the damage has been done by SEC1 and the credit ranking companies, on June 26, 2002 WorldCom made a statement saying that improper accounting has shed light on $3.8 billion in expenses which will wipe away the profits declared in 2001 and for the first semester of 2002. As a result, within a day the stock price has fallen to $0.09.
Figure 2 WorldCom hits all-time low stock priceSource: Jake Ulick, 2002, WorldCom's financial bomb, at CNN Money ,http://money.cnn.com/2002/06/25/news/worldcom/ , visited Friday, June 15, 2007
WordCom then started its own internal investigation. As a result, WordCom fired Scott D. Sullivan –the chief financial officer – and accepted the resignation submitted by David Myers. The CEO, John Sidgmore apologized to the investors for the accounting mistakes, while Scott D. Sullivan told that he informed Ebbers about the book-keeping maneuvers that made the company look better than it really was.
On July 21, 2002, WorldCom have filed for bankruptcy which was the largest bankruptcy in US history. Based on the investigation committee appointed by WorldCom and on an investigation conducted by the Auditors, few more facts have come to light. The Auditors have discovered some questionable accounting practices since 1999 in WorldCom. The internal auditors have uncovered an additional $3.831 billion in improper accounting, making the amount of WorldCom known accounting errors to more than $7.683 billion over the past 3-4 years, which makes WorldCom the
1 Securities and Exchange Commission
JUNE 25, 2002
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(SOUROES: ONWMONEY, FIRST CALL, HOOVER'S)
NOTE: STOCK PRICES FOR 1992, 1995 ARE AVERAGES, OTHERS CLOSE AT END OF MONTH
WorldCom admits to Overstating financials by $3.813. Stock trades under a dollar.
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ultimate corporate accounting fraud in the world. Andersen, WorldCom's auditor, declared that the internal audit report could not be relied on in the view of the accounting manipulations.
It is relatively easily for an auditor to detect error but earnings management can involve sophisticated fraud that is covert. The requirement for management to assert that the accounts have been prepared properly offers no protection where those managers have already entered into conscious deceit and fraud. Auditors need to distinguish fraud from error by identifying the presence of intention. Part of the difficulty lies in the accepted recognition that there is no such thing as a single "right" earnings figure and that it is possible for legitimate business practices to develop into unacceptable financial reporting.
Who paid for the frauds?
In the first instance, the employees who rapidly discovered that immediately after the bankruptcy announcement, 17,000 WorldCom workers got the push. Next in line were the investors as the shares dropped from over $60 to less than a dollar. But the scandal also blasted a huge hole through confidence in the telecom and technology sector and also hit the share prices in several other sectors. And of course, anyone with a pension would pay the price as well.
The White House saw the plunging stock prices as one of the most important threats for the economy. Right after the bankruptcy announcement, the stock plummeted in early trading reaction, followed by crawling back up and closing mixed. The Dow Jones industrial closed at 9,120.11, while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index closed at 973.53, after falling 6.71 and 2.61, respectively.
WorldCom Inc. –Chronology of Events
On February 8, 2002, WorldCom Inc. reduces the revenue and earnings projections for 2002 and announced second quarter expenses of $15-20 billion to write down some acquired operations. At the same time, the company's CEO, Bernard Ebbers, owes WorldCom $366 million to cover the loans he took to buy his own shares. A week later, WorldCom suspends three star employees and stops commissions of 15 salespeople over a booking scandal in three of the branch offices.
On March 12, 2002, SEC launches enquiry into the WorldCom Inc.'s accounting practices. Three weeks later, the company planned to layoff 7500 employees. At the end of April, WorldCom reduced at least $1 billion for its 2002 revenue projections and on April 30, 2002, Bernard Ebbers resigned.
On May 9, 2002 a rating company reduced WorldCom's debt to "junk" status and the company's shares plunged to a new low.
Figure 3 WorldCom Inc. hits a new low in May 2002Source: Jake Ulick, 2002, WorldCom's financial bomb, at CNN Money ,http://money.cnn.com/2002/06/25/news/worldcom/ , visited Friday, June 15, 2007
At the end of the month, the company eliminated its MCI Group tracking stock, in hope of saving some money that would have gone to the dividends.
At the beginning of June 2002, WorldCom announced its intension to cut further 15000 employees while restructuring and planning to sell its wireless unit. On June 24, 2002, analyst Jack Grubman wrote a negative report on the finances at WorldCom Inc. and the shares fell below $1 (see Figure 2).
At the end of June 2002, WorldCom Inc. announced that during the entire 2001 and first quarter of 2002, company's revenue expenditure had been treated as capital expenditure and, as a result, there has been an overstatement of profits by $3.852 billion in the financial results. Another declaration was made on August 9, 2002 which doubles the fraud figure declared earlier to more than $7.6 billion, which makes WorldCom the company with the highest figure fraud in history!
WorldCom's first announcement worked like a bombshell. Obviously investors were irritated, which resulted immediately in hitting down the Dow Industrials more than 140 points and NASDAQ Composite Index by more than 3%. The investors sold the WorldCom shares at any price realizable. While in June 1999, the WorldCom shares were traded at $62/share, they collapsed to $0.09 in August 2002.
Not surprisingly, on August 9, 2002 another $3.8 billion fraud was unearthed at WorldCom by the same auditors. The company also announced that since an internal investigation was going on, they might find more accounting problems. WorldCom declared they would restate their financial reports from 1999 onwards, as a result of the new findings.
With the experience of Enron, another "resounding" accounting scandal in Corporate America, SEC has immediately approached the court seeking orders prohibiting WorldCom and its affiliates from destroying, hiding or altering relevant documents and prohibiting the company to make any extraordinary payments.
MAY 21, 2002
Wo rid Com eliminates plan for MCI tracking stock. $1.65.
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{SOURCES: CNN/MONEY, FIRST CALL, HOOVER'S}
NOTE: STOCK PRICES FOR 1992, 1'3'35 ARE AVERAGES, OTHERS CLOSE AT END OF MONTH
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How was the fraud carried out?
Let us take a look at some selected financial data, from 1997 to 2001. In the Appendix, we also listed the "Consolidated statements of operations" and the "Consolidated Balance Sheets" of WorldCom Inc., for 1998 and 1999.
-$ in millions-
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
Revenue 7384 17678 35908 39090 35179
Operating Income 1018 (975) 7888 8153 3514
Total Assets 23596 86401 91072 98903 103914
Operating Margin (%) 13.78 (5.51) 21.96 20.85 9.98
WorldCom inc. financial dataAdapted from: V.R.K. Chary,2004, Ethics in Accounting. Global Cases and Experiences, WorldCom Inc., The ICFAIUniversity Press, India, pg. 47
During 1990s, when WorldCom Inc. was marching forward with endless takeovers and merges sprees, the market conditions for their services slowly started to deteriorate. The data shown above was before restatement figures. The point is to show how the accounting manipulations changed the data. The operating margin –which indicates the company's profitability – was not satisfactory even in 1998. Since the mergers didn't improve the margin either, the company realized during 1999 and 2000 that using accounting manipulations could lead to stable earnings. However, the planning was inadequate for maintaining the earnings by 2001. As a result, in 2001 the profit margin fell down to less than half when compared to the previous year's earnings.
During 2001, WorldCom Inc. split into two tracking stocks: MCI WorldCom Inc, the long-distance consumer carrier and WorldCom Inc, which sells voice and data services to corporations.
During January and February 2002 there were rumors about WorldCom's stability. In the wake of the Enron scandal, followed by Global Crossing, which also declared bankruptcy, there were ongoing questions about WorldCom. Investors started believing the rumors that WorldCom might have off-balance-sheet finances and its investment-grade debt might be downgraded to "junk" status. Looking back, all the rumors were indeed correct.
WorldCom's new CEO explained that "the entire industry was experiencing severe problems which were unprecedented!" and "while many competitors were experiencing difficulties and surviving, many have gone out of business". Indeed the economy went into recession during 2001, which lead to a fall in revenues and earnings for all companies, more so for the telecom industry. The rise of mobile phone culture during the end of 1990s also led to the fall of WorldCom's revenues. The company was at this point suffering from the ego of being a large organization combined with a quality of non-learning attitude for the changes of consumer's styles and the neglect to go into mobile phones.
Here is a table containing a summer of the consolidation financial statements from 1999 to 2001. Notice that the cumulative loss appears to be $539 million for all three years.
-$ in millions-
1999 2000 2001
Revenue 35,908 39,090 35,179
Net income 2,294 2,608 1,407
Net income-RESTATED 2,085 (649) (1,975)
Total assets 91,072 98,903 103,914
Long-term Debt 17,209 17,696 30,038
Shareholders' funds 51,238 55,409 57,930
Intangible assets to total assets 48% 47% 52%
WorldCom's Consolidated Financial StatementsAdapted from: V.R.K. Chary,2004, Ethics in Accounting. Global Cases and Experiences, WorldCom Inc., The ICFAI
University Press, India, pg. 50
WorldCom has commenced its manipulations right from 1999, as the company's CEO declared, with the single purpose to obtain desired earnings to boost up stock market price. Before declaration of their intention to restate the earnings, Andersen, the Auditor, warned investors and others not to relay on the audit reports given by them earlier because the company was announcing accounting manipulations of transferring line costs to capital accounts. As per June 25, 2002 report, the quantum of such transfers were $797 million in 1Q 2002 and $3.055 billion during 2001.
As per the company's "game", it called certain revenue expenditure known as "line costs" as capital expenditure. Line costs are the amounts paid to a third party service provider whose telecommunication network will be used by WorldCom for getting a right to use the network for their activity. These payments are revenue expenses and NOT assets to capitalize. Every year, the company's major expense was the "line costs" which accounted for 40-45% from the revenue earned. But the company developed a strategy to capitalize the expenses. Post manipulation, the quantum of the "line costs" paid during 2001 were $14.739 billion. During the same year, the report profit was $1.407 billion while the line costs capitalized ALONE were $3.055 billion. Therefore, the company had a loss of $1648 millions but by using the account fraud they kept the top showing a profit of $1407 million.
On the other hand, capital expenditure generally includes investments in assets like machinery and other long-term asset purchases. In other words, it's an investment in an asset from which the company benefits for more than one year. The cost of the assets will be gradually deducted from earnings by depreciation2.
In other words, WorldCom capitalized line costs instead of expressing immediately and hence avoided a loss of about $7.6 billion in the financial statements. For several years, in such a way, billions of dollars worth of operating expenses started to appear in WorldCom's accounting
2 N.A. Depreciation = The reduction in the balance sheet value of a company asset to reflect its loss of value through age and wear and tear. From www.scottish-newcastle.com/sn/investor/services/glossary/ , visited on Wednesday, July 18, 2007
books as assets. The company violated the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) by treating the operating costs as capital assets and created worthless assets.
Instead of a conclusion...
It is astonishing to note how Arthur Andersen could miss such an elementary fraud. It was maybe the simplest fraud that could have been detected easily by anyone who cared to look carefully at the accounts. WorldCom hired Andersen to perform a standard audit, BUT not a fraud audit. Although WorldCom fraud was a straightforward lie that would not have been possible without the involvement of the entire group, the fraud could have been missed. To save their skin, Andersen blamed Sullivan for withholding information during the audit. However, when they discovered that certain expenses have been reported as investment, Andersen immediately announced that their reports on WorldCom's financial statements for 2001 should not be relied upon.
Ultimately, WorldCom Inc. had to go for bankruptcy, which was the biggest bankruptcy in the world. Immediately after bankruptcy, 17,000 employees were laid off –almost 20% of the company's workforce. Sullivan was fired and ultimately arrested for the accounting manipulations. Controller David Myers was also arrested on the same issue.
References:
Luisa Beltran, (2002), WorldCom files largest bankruptcy ever, at CNN Money http://money.cnn.com/2002/07/19/news/worldcom bankruptcy/ , visited Friday, June 15, 2007
Jake Ulick, (2002), WorldCom's financial bomb, at CNN Money , http://money.cnn.com/2002/06/25/news/worldcom/ , visited Friday, June 15, 2007
V.R.K. Chary, (2004), Ethics in Accounting. Global Cases and Experiences, WorldCom Inc., The ICFAI University Press, India, pg. 41-57.
Dr. Katerine T.Smith, Dr.L.Murphy Smith, Business and Accounting Ethics, at http://acct.tamu.edu/smith/ethics/ethics.htm , visited Tuesday, July 17, 2007
Sam Zuckerman, (2002), Bush promises investigation of WorldCom, San Francisco Chronicle, http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2002/06/27/MN180882.DTL , visited Tuesday, June 19, 2007
***, WorldCom, Inc., at http://www.scripophily.net/worldcominc.html, visited Monday, May 28, 2007
***, WorldCom: Why it matters, at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/2066959.stm visited Tuesday, June 19, 2007
***, Financial: MCI WorldCom Q1 1999 Results, Earnings Per Share of $0.37, Compared with $0.10, Operating Margins Improve on Revenue Mix and Merger Synergies - Company Financial Information, (1999), at http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi m0UNZ/is 1999 May 3/ai 54528477, visited on Wednesday, July 18, 2007
***, Glossary, at www.scottish-newcastle.com/sn/investor/services/glossary/ , visited on Wednesday, July 18, 2007
Appendix
WorldCom Inc. and Subsidiaries3CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
For the three months ended March 31, 1998 and 1999
UNAUDITED, in $ millions, except per share data
Excluding EmbratelBEFORE CHANGES
Reported1 Q 1998 Pro Forma1 Q 1998 Reported1 Q 1999
Revenues: Voice 1,162 4,754 5,095
Data 496 1,304 1,702
Internet 392 474 758
International 230 230 357
Communication Services 2,280 6,762 1,912
Information technology and 40 490 403
3 Source: Financial: MCI WorldCom Q1 1999 Results, Earnings Per Share of $0.37, Compared with $0.10, Operating Margins
Improve on Revenue Mix and Merger Synergies - Company Financial Information, (1999), at http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi m0UNZ/is 1999 May 3/ai 54528477, visited on Wednesday, July 18, 2007
otherTotal 2,320 7,252 8,315
Operating expenses: Line costs 1,117 3,607 3,767
Selling, general and 478 2,011 2,137
administrative 299 1,029 960
Depreciation and amortization 1,894 6,647 6,864
Total 426 605 1,451
Operating income: Other income (expense): (102) (276) (260)
Interest expense 12 32 105
Miscellaneous 336 361 1,296
Income before income taxes 143 170 551
Provision for income taxes 193 191 745
Net income Distributions on subsidiary trust mandatorily redeemable - 15 16
preferred securities 7 7 -
Preferred dividend requirement 186 169 729
Net income applicable to common shareholders Earnings per commons share –Net income applicable to common shareholders: Basic 0.18 0.10 0.39
Diluted 0.18 0.10 0.38
Shares utilized in calculations: Basic 1,012 1,744 1,848
Diluted 1,074 1,829 1,922
WorldCom Inc. and Subsidiaries4CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETSUNAUDITED, in $ millionsReported, Excluding Embratel
March 31, 1999 December 31,1998
ASSETS Current assets: Cash and cash equivalents 287 999
Accounts receivable, net 5,166 4,810
Other current assets 3,484 3,031
Total current assets 8.937 8.840
Property and equipment, net 19.852 19,259
Goodwill and other intangibles, net 45,815 45,468
4 Source: Financial: MCI WorldCom Q1 1999 Results, Earnings Per Share of $0.37, Compared with $0.10, Operating Margins
Improve on Revenue Mix and Merger Synergies - Company Financial Information, (1999), at http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi m0UNZ/is 1999 May 3/ai 54528477, visited on Wednesday, July 18, 2007
Other assets 7,160
81,764 6,626
80,193
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' INVESTMENT Current liabilities: 6,507 4,628
Short-term debt and current maturities of long-term 10,095 9,886
debt 16,602 14,514
Other current liabilities Total current liabilities 12,186 14,345
Long-term liabilities, less current portion: 927 1,315
Long-term debt 4,108 4,226
Note payable –Embratel 17,221 19,886
Other liabilities Total long-term liabilities Mandatorily redeemable preferred securities 798 798
Total shareholders' investment 47,143 44,995
81,764 80,193
Additional bibliography:
Joni J. Young and Marcia Annisette (2007) Cultivating imagination: Ethics, education and literature, Critical Perspectives on Accounting
A. Craig Keller, Katherine T. Smith and L. Murphy Smith (2007) Do gender, educational level, religiosity, and work experience affect the ethical decision-making of U.S. accountants?, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, Volume 18, Issue 3, March 2007, Pages 299-314
Ken McPhail (2003) Relocating accounting and business ethics: reflections on a business ethics retreat in Scotland's National Park, The British Accounting Review, Volume 35, Issue 4, December 2003, Pages 349-366
Linda Thorne (2001) Refocusing ethics education in accounting: an examination of accounting students' tendency to use their cognitive moral capability, Journal of Accounting Education, Volume 19, Issue 2, Summer 2001, Pages 103-117
Steven M. Mintz (2006) Accounting ethics education: Integrating reflective learning and virtue ethics, Journal of Accounting Education, Volume 24, Issues 2-3
Mary Beth Armstrong, J. Edward Ketz and Dwight Owsen (2003) Ethics education in accounting: moving toward ethical motivation and ethical behavior, Journal of Accounting Education, Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages 1-16
Sivakumar Velayutham (2003) THE ACCOUNTING PROFESSION'S CODE OF ETHICS: IS IT A CODE OF ETHICS OR A CODE OF QUALITY ASSURANCE?
Critical Perspectives on Accounting, Volume 14, Issue 4, May, Pages 483-503
Teri Shearer (2002) Ethics and accountability: from the for-itself to the for-the-other Accounting, Organizations and Society, Volume 27, Issue 6, August, Pages 541-573
Stephen E. Loeb (1999) Accounting ethics research, Journal of Accounting and Public Policy, Volume 18, Issues 4-5, Winter, Pages 333-334
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