The accusations of suspect accounting at
the British technology firm Autonomy before its 2011 acquisition by
Hewlett-Packard have taken a fresh turn.
Meg Whitman, the chief executive who took over as the acquisition was being completed, blamed a "wilful effort" to inflate the company's figures, and that they "severely impacted HP management's ability to fairly value Autonomy at the time of the deal".
Meg Whitman, the chief executive who took over as the acquisition was being completed, blamed a "wilful effort" to inflate the company's figures, and that they "severely impacted HP management's ability to fairly value Autonomy at the time of the deal".
HP has now filed papers in court accusing both
Michael Lynch the founder and former CEO of Autonomy and Sushovan Hussain
former CFO of fraud.
HP bought Autonomy in 2011 for £6.6 billion
and had to to write down £5.2billion of the company’s value a year later.
Previously Deloitte who audited Autonomy’s accounts said “it
accepted decisions of management” to recognise hardware sales in its accounts
as “sales and marketing”.
Hewlett-Packard says that this was a mechanism of covering up
hardware sales and that Autonomy booked revenues before they were received and
used a number of acquisitions to inflate the company’s value before the
turnover.
Currently the FBI and the Serious Fraud Office continue to trawl
through some 75,000 emails.
Meanwhile the US$ 5 billion battle continues, begging the
questions that during the due diligence process how many Auditors
examined the validity of the reported accounts.
This is not an isolated event, think of the Japanese camera giant Olympus, the company admitted to hiding losses on securities investments for decades.
To conduct this $1.7 billion fraud Olympus executives secretly liquidated hundreds of millions of dollars of Olympus investments, and then lied to auditors by certifying that the investments still existed.
This is not an isolated event, think of the Japanese camera giant Olympus, the company admitted to hiding losses on securities investments for decades.
To conduct this $1.7 billion fraud Olympus executives secretly liquidated hundreds of millions of dollars of Olympus investments, and then lied to auditors by certifying that the investments still existed.
Ultimately the validity of a company’s accounts reflects the
integrity of the company which is being audited.
If the company’s results are misrepresented through fraud,
deviousness or sheer incompetence then the fall-out will be disastrous.
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