ToshIba, EY
(LO 1, 2, 3)
In 2015, the business press reported that Japan’s Toshiba Corp. over stated its operating profit by 151.8 billion yen ($1.22 billion) over several years through accounting irregularities involving top management. This overstatement represents approximately one-third of Toshiba’s pre-tax profits during the misstatement period. Toshiba had a corporate culture in which one could not go against the wishes of superiors. An investigation report noted that when top management presented ‘challenges’, division presidents, line managers and employees below them continually carried our inappropriate accounting practices to meet targets in line with the wishes of their superiors. Improper accounting included overstatements and booking profits early or pushing back the recording of losses or charges, and such steps often led to even higher targets being set for divisions in the following period.
The report said much of the improper accounting, stretching back to fiscal year 2008, was intentional and would have been difficult for auditors to detect. The audit firm during this misstatement period was EY (Ernst & Young ShinNihon) who incurred significant reputational damage after they were accused of failing to detect the misstatement and fined $17.4 million by Japanese regulators.
The investigation into Toshiba’s accounting practices was initially limited to its home country. However, in 2016 the U.S. Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission began looking into the case since part of the alleged fraud involved a Toshiba unit based in the US (Westinghouse Electric Company).
a. Based on this limited information, does this case represent a business failure, an audit failure, or both?
b. Should auditors be held liable if their client’s business fails or if the financial statements contain a fraud that the auditors did not detect?
c. Under what law would the SEC be likely to pursue this case?
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Chapter 4 Solutions
EBK AUDITING: A RISK BASED-APPROACH
- (Corporate income tax) Last year Sanderson, Inc. had sales of $3.8 million. The firm's cost of goods sold came to $2.5 million, its operating expenses excluding depreciation of $101,000 were $395,000, and the firm paid $152,000 in interest on its bank loans. Also, the corporation received $55,000 in dividend income (from a company in which it owned less than 20 percent of its shares) but paid $25,000 in the form of dividends to its own common stockholders. Use the corporate tax rates shown in the popup window, to calculate the corporation's tax liability. What are the firm's average and marginal tax rates? The firm's tax liability for the year is S (Round to the nearest dollar) The firm's average tax rate is %. (Round to two decimal places) The firm's marginal tax rate is %. (Round to the nearest integer) Data table Marginal Tax Rate 15% 25% 34% $100,001 $335,000 39% $335,001-$10,000,000 34% 35% 38% Over $18,333,333 35% (Click on the icon in order to copy its contents into a…arrow_forward(Corporate income tax) Last year Sanderson, Inc. had sales of $3.2 million. The firm's cost of goods sold came to $2.2 million, its operating expenses excluding depreciation of $98,000 were $408,000, and the firm paid $146,000 in interest on its bank loans. Also, the corporation received $48,000 in dividend income (from a company in which it owned less than 20 percent of its shares) but paid $22,000 in the form of dividends to its own common stockholders. Use the corporate tax rates shown in the popup window,, to calculate the corporation's tax liability. What are the firm's average and marginal tax rates? The firm's tax liability for the year is $ (Round to the nearest dollar.)arrow_forwardDiamond Foods, Inc. (LO 8, 9) In February 2012, the Wall Street Journal reported that Diamond Foods, Inc. fired its CEO and CFO, and would restate financial results for two years. The restatement was required after the company found that it had wrongly accounted for crop payments to walnut growers. The investigation focused primarily on whether payments to growers in September 2011 of approximately $60 million and payments to growers in August 2010 of approximately $20 million were accounted for in the correct periods. Shareholders suing the company allege the payments may have been used to shift costs from a prior fiscal year into a subsequent fiscal year. In a February 2012 filing with the SEC, the audit committee stated that Diamond had one or more material weak nesses in its internal control over financial reporting. In January 2014, the SEC charged Diamond Foods and two former executives for their roles in the accounting scheme to falsify walnut costs in order to boost earnings and meet estimates by stock analysts. Diamond Foods agreed to pay $5 million to settle the SEC’S charges. a. Does the restatement suggest that the company’s internal controls contained a material weakness? Explain your rationale. b. In September 2011, the company filed its annual report with the SEC for its fiscal year ended July 31, 2011. As part of that filing, the company maintained that it had effective internal controls over financial reporting as of its year-end date. Do you believe that management’s report on internal control over financial reporting was accurate? c. In February 2012, the audit committee indicated that the company had ineffective internal controls. What types of material weaknesses do you think might exist at Diamond?arrow_forward
- Which of the following would be most likely to occur in the year after Congress, in an effort to increase tax revenue, passed legislation that forced companies to depreciate equipment over longer lives? Assume that sales, other operating costs, and tax rates are not affected, and assume that the same depreciation method is used for tax and stockholder reporting purposes. A. Companies' reported net incomes would decline. B. Companies' net operating profits after taxes (NOPAT) would decline. C. Companies' physical stocks of fixed assets would increase. D. Companies' free cash flows would increase. E. Companies' cash positions would decline.arrow_forwardI need help in exercise 4.4 in accounting.arrow_forward(Corporate income tax) Last year Sanderson, Inc. had sales of $3.0 million. The firm's cost of goods sold came to $2.0 million, its operating expenses excluding depreciation of $100,000 were $400,000, and the firm paid $150,000 in interest on its bank loans. Also, the corporation received $50,000 in dividend income (from a company in which it owned less than 20 percent of its shares but paid $25,000 in the form of dividends to its own common stockholders. Use the corporate tax rates shown in the popup window,, to calculate the corporation's tax liability. What are the firm's average and marginal tax rates? Etext pages @ 2 The firm's tax liability for the year is $. (Round to the nearest dollar.) S W * X H Get more help - # 3 E D 80 13 C $ 4 900 000 14 R F V % 5 FS T G A 6 B MacBook Air F6 Y H & 7 N F7 U J * 8 DII Fa I M l 9 MOSISO D K DD 19 O V H - C 0 L F10 P > Clear all - : ; I F11 { [ command option + 11 = ? Check answer "1 1 13) F12 } 1 deletarrow_forward
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