Thursday, April 2, 2009
Hidden Financial Risk
Product Description
What went wrong and how to fix it
"This is a book that well represents the skeptical, probing, and doubting spirit of the time. Professor Ketz explores the ways corporate management and auditors can ‘spin’ financial reporting to misinform investors. It is written so that the individual investor can grasp the ideas but will be useful for investment analysts and audit committee members who need a lively briefing in how to spot questionable accounting."
–– John H. Biggs
Former chairman and Chief Executive Officer
TIAA - CREF
"Ed Ketz brilliantly illustrates how the improper application of accounting rules misleads users of financial statements. This book is an indispensable resource and greatly enhances one’s understanding of the many obscure footnotes found in today’s financial statements."
–– Albert Meyer
2nd Opinion Research, Plano, TX
It is now painfully clear that "earnings management" has managed little, other than some short-term gain for a handful of managers and a long-term catastrophic erosion of the public faith in financial reporting. But it is not too late for the accounting industry to turn back from the brink. Edward Ketz lays out several specific problems in the financial reporting arena, describes how the system failed to correct any of these problems, and suggests a compelling course of action for improvement in Hidden Financial Risk: Understanding Off-Balance Sheet Accounting.
Chapter by chapter, Ketz explains how firms hide debt using:
* The equity method
* Lease accounting
* Pension accounting
* Special Purpose Entities
and then illustrates the failures of directors, auditors, regulators, and investors to detect and eliminate these tools of deception. He concludes by drawing upon his thirty years’ experience to propose how the industry can learn to identify fraud and ultimately restore investor confidence. Executives, accountants, and individual and institutional investors will find Hidden Financial Risk to be a powerful examination of the present, shifting accounting landscape.
Product Details
* Amazon Sales Rank: #599421 in Books
* Published on: 2003-06-13
* Original language: English
* Number of items: 1
* Binding: Hardcover
* 288 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Ketz discussion is fascinating, although all too useful to future scamsters wanting to find out just how those clever guys at Enron did it." (UPI Business and Economics, August 11, 2003)
"Ketz' discussion is fascinating, although all too useful to future scamsters wanting to find out just how those clever guys at Enron did it." (UPI Business and Economics, August 11, 2003)
From the Inside Flap
The parade of catastrophic accounting scandals, chief among them the Enron debacle, has intrigued business and the general public as few corporate scandals ever have. The extraordinary number of people materially affected by these episodes, coupled with the irresistible spectacle of base human greed run wild, guarantees that public attention will not soon recede. Everyone agrees that "mistakes were made." There are two very different responses, however, on what to do about it. Are there simply a few bad apples whose just punishment will bring the financial stars back into alignment? Or are the scandals the product of profound systemic failures, the remedy for which can only be revolutionary reform? Accounting professor and renowned authority, Edward Ketz, emphatically proclaims the latter and offers a comprehensive analysis of how firms bury risk, why nobody stops them, and what to do about it in Hidden Financial Risk: Understanding Off-Balance Sheet Accounting.
In Hidden Financial Risk, Ketz thoroughly and accessibly explains the dubious methods by which firms hide debt and the failings by managers, directors, auditors, regulators, and investors who allowed these methods to poison financial reporting. Ketz places particular emphasis on understanding Special Purpose Entities (SPEs), Enron’s preferred method of deception. Among other services, this compelling analysis:
* Identifies the incentives for managers to deceive investors and creditors about the firm’s financial risk
* Illustrates the equity method, lease accounting, and pension accounting, popular methods of Off-Balance Sheet accounting, and explains how investors can deconstruct them
* Examines the failure of boards of directors, accountants, the FASB, and the SEC to minimize accounting failures
* Discusses what must be done to reduce the number of corporate managers who lie in financial reports
* Shows what individual investors must do to protect their investments in a world filled with accounting and auditing fraud
* Explains how the Sarbanes-Oxley bill will affect financial reporting
Ketz concludes with an illuminating look at Arthur Andersen who, while one of the biggest losers in the accounting scandals, may nevertheless hold the key to the industry’s resuscitation. Financial reporting is in critical condition. Edward Ketz supplies a compelling diagnosis, prescription, and vision of its road to recovery in Hidden Financial Risk.
From the Back Cover
What went wrong and how to fix it
"This is a book that well represents the skeptical, probing, and doubting spirit of the time. Professor Ketz explores the ways corporate management and auditors can ‘spin’ financial reporting to misinform investors. It is written so that the individual investor can grasp the ideas but will be useful for investment analysts and audit committee members who need a lively briefing in how to spot questionable accounting."
–– John H. Biggs
Former chairman and Chief Executive Officer
TIAA - CREF
"Ed Ketz brilliantly illustrates how the improper application of accounting rules misleads users of financial statements. This book is an indispensable resource and greatly enhances one’s understanding of the many obscure footnotes found in today’s financial statements."
–– Albert Meyer
2nd Opinion Research, Plano, TX
It is now painfully clear that "earnings management" has managed little, other than some short-term gain for a handful of managers and a long-term catastrophic erosion of the public faith in financial reporting. But it is not too late for the accounting industry to turn back from the brink. Edward Ketz lays out several specific problems in the financial reporting arena, describes how the system failed to correct any of these problems, and suggests a compelling course of action for improvement in Hidden Financial Risk: Understanding Off-Balance Sheet Accounting.
Chapter by chapter, Ketz explains how firms hide debt using:
* The equity method
* Lease accounting
* Pension accounting
* Special Purpose Entities
and then illustrates the failures of directors, auditors, regulators, and investors to detect and eliminate these tools of deception. He concludes by drawing upon his thirty years’ experience to propose how the industry can learn to identify fraud and ultimately restore investor confidence. Executives, accountants, and individual and institutional investors will find Hidden Financial Risk to be a powerful examination of the present, shifting accounting landscape.
Customer Reviews
Competent analysis of off balance sheet accounting4
An expert describes some the main devices used to distort financial information for public consumption, focusing on those which hide debt. I found it both informative and highly readable. Some background in business accounting is helpful but not necessary for the reader.
Accounting for the Investor5
While experts wring hands and say "mistakes were made," this book gives average investors the "how to" in order to make sense of annual reports and balance sheets. It seems to blow the lid off of the various methods that managers used to hide bad debt and shaking investments. Undoubtly, good for most investors who want to avoid a repeat of Enron. It also offers a pretty explanation of why major accounting and auditing firms can't be trusted. At last, a book that allows investors to keep their investments and earn money--instead of CEOs and corporate executives. Favorite Chapter: How to Hide Debt with Pension Accounting.
Labels:
Financial,
J. Edward Ketz

