November 17, 2024

U.S.-China Audit Clash Could Have Broad Reach

SINGAPORE — Some major multinational companies are concerned that they could be drawn into a potential accounting crisis amid a continuing dispute between U.S. and Chinese financial regulators over access to corporate audit documents.

The standoff over Beijing’s refusal to give regulators in the United States access to audit records for nine Chinese companies listed in North America has the potential not only to force Chinese companies to delist from stock markets in the United States, but could also put American companies that do business in China in a position where they have difficulty producing audited accounts, according to accounting experts.

“The potential consequences of failure to find common ground are almost too frightening to contemplate,” Thomas Shoesmith, a partner at the law firm Pillsbury, said in a note to clients.

This past week, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charged the Chinese affiliates of five of the world’s biggest auditing firms with violations of U.S. securities law, raising fears that it could go further and ban the affiliates from working on audits of companies listed in the United States.

“If these five accounting firms are barred from practicing before the S.E.C., it seems certain that companies with major Chinese operations will find it difficult or impossible to find accountants,” Mr. Shoesmith said.

U.S. companies with major Chinese operations include businesses like the chip maker Advanced Micro Devices, the fast-food group Yum Brands, the technology firm Qualcomm and the construction equipment maker Caterpillar. Some have begun to show concern about the possible impact of the dispute.

“It would impact us and any other U.S. company with significant operations in China,” said Jonathan Blum, a spokesman for Yum, which operates KFC and Pizza Hut restaurants in China. “Essentially, there would be no auditors in China that the U.S. government would recognize. It will require a diplomatic resolution, I believe, and we are monitoring the situation.”

Caterpillar also appeared eager for a settlement. “As this issue revolves around differences between U.S. and Chinese regulators, Caterpillar hopes each side can work to resolve this issue while demonstrating mutual respect and understanding for the laws and regulations of each country,” the company said in an e-mailed response to questions.

Multinational companies operating in China commonly use Chinese affiliates of the so-called Big Four accounting firms — Deloitte, KPMG, PricewaterhouseCoopers and Ernst Young — to audit their Chinese business divisions.

In China, the affiliates say that they are prevented by state secrecy laws from releasing audit papers to U.S. regulators. Washington’s reach is also hampered by the structure of the auditing groups, which are set up as global networks of legally separate, national affiliates aimed at insulating the groups from difficulties encountered in specific jurisdictions.

The S.E.C. began proceedings last Monday against the Chinese affiliates of the Big Four as well as the second-tier audit firm BDO. The charges center on the affiliates’ refusal to turn over to the U.S. authorities the paperwork from audits of nine U.S.-listed Chinese companies suspected of possible wrongdoing.

Months of talks between the Chinese Securities Regulatory Commission and U.S. regulators have failed to reach a solution, and lawyers are struggling to see a way forward.

“The C.S.R.C. won’t back down on the State Secrecy Law,” James Zimmerman, a lawyer in Beijing at Sheppard Mullin Richter Hampton, said of the Chinese commission. “If the S.E.C. and C.S.R.C. are unable to find common ground and reach a consensus, China can expect that the U.S. will stall or refuse to cooperate in other ways in the future. Then it becomes tit-for-tat.”

China’s securities regulator has not commented on the issue since the S.E.C. charged the Chinese auditing affiliates, but it indicated recently that both sides were trying to reach a solution.

“Audit papers are very important to maintain market integrity and the C.S.R.C. is ready to cooperate with other jurisdictions on this issue,” Tong Daochi, the director general of international affairs at the C.S.R.C., said last week at a conference in Hong Kong.

Mr. Tong said his agency had talked with counterparts in the United States and Hong Kong regarding the issue of sharing Chinese audit working papers. “We are making progress and I think we should be able to work out a way to get them out,” he said.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/08/business/global/us-china-audit-clash-could-have-broad-reach.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

A Black Friday Rally

The stock market enjoyed some Black Friday cheer in a holiday-shortened trading session, rising solidly as shoppers braved the annual post-Thanksgiving retail rush. Major stock indexes closed one of their best weeks of the year.

Technology stocks surged after a few weeks of selling. Early reports from retailers suggested strong consumer spending.

“Foot traffic appears heavier than we’ve seen in recent years, there are a lot of positive statements out of the companies themselves and momentum appears to be strong,” said Joe Kinahan, chief derivatives strategist at the brokerage firm TD Ameritrade.

Many stores opened earlier than ever this year, Mr. Kinahan said, allowing for earlier informal reports about their performance.

The Nasdaq composite index rose 40.30 points, or 1.38 percent, to 2,966.85. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 172.79 points, or 1.35 percent, to 13,009.68, the first time since Election Day that the Dow closed above 13,000.

The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index added 18.12 points, or 1.3 percent, to 1,409.15. The rally gave the S. P. 500 its biggest weekly point gain since last December — 49 points, or 3.6 percent. The Dow industrials gained 3.3 percent and the Nasdaq 4 percent for the week.

Technology stocks jumped sharply. Dell, Advanced Micro Devices and Hewlett-Packard were the top three gainers in the S. P. Technology rose the most among the index’s 10 industry groups.

The stocks were bouncing back after a broad decline in confidence in tech stocks, Mr. Kinahan said.

Dell rose 49 cents, or 5.41 percent, to $9.55.

A.M.D. jumped 8 cents, or 4.28 percent, to $1.95. The shares dropped sharply in recent weeks as investors fretted about its solvency.

Shares of H.P. plunged 12 percent on Tuesday after executives said a company that H.P. bought for $10 billion last year lied about its finances. H.P. added 50 cents, or 4.19 percent, to $12.44.

Research in Motion jumped $1.40, or 13.65 percent, to $11.66 on growing optimism for an earlier-than-expected introduction of its delayed BlackBerry 10 smartphone. A senior RIM executive said earlier this month that the company would release the new smartphone “not long after” a Jan. 30 event. One analyst saw that as an indication that the products were to be unveiled in February.

Stocks started strong after news that German business confidence rose in November after six consecutive declines.

In the United States, shares of retailers showed strength as shoppers flocked to malls for Black Friday sales, beginning the period in which many retailers turn profitable for the year. Wal-Mart rose $1.31, or 1.9 percent, to $70.20. Macy’s gained 72 cents, or 1.76 percent, to $41.73.

MAP Pharmaceuticals rose $2.60, or 20.28 percent, to $15.42, after the company announced that the Food and Drug Administration would review its experimental migraine drug Levadex.

KIT Digital fell $1.33, or 64.3 percent, to 74 cents, after the video software and technology company’s former chief executive accused it of blaming previous management for its financial problems. Two days earlier, KIT said it would restate its financial results because of accounting errors.

In the bond market, the price of the 10-year note slipped 4/32, to 99 12/32, while its yield edged up to 1.69 percent from 1.68 percent late Wednesday.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/24/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

DealBook: Chiesi Sentenced in Galleon Insider Trading Case

Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

3:40 p.m. | Updated Danielle Chiesi, a former beauty queen turned hedge fund trader, got a thrill about pumping insiders and snaring secret tidbits about companies.

“It’s a conquest,” she said on a call recorded by the government. “It’s mentally fabulous for me.”

But her passion has landed her in prison

On Wednesday, a federal judge in Manhattan sentenced Ms. Chiesi to 30 months in prison for trafficking inside information.

The hearing was the latest chapter in the government’s sweeping crackdown on insider trading. The investigation centered on Raj Rajaratnam, the co-founder of the Galleon Group hedge fund, who was convicted in May.

While Ms. Chiesi did not testify against Mr. Rajaratnam, her recorded voice became a regular feature at his trial. Their damning conversations, along with the testimony of Adam Smith, a former Galleon employee, proved crucial. Mr. Rajaratnam is set to be sentenced on Sept. 27 and could face up to 25 years in prison.

In January, Ms. Chiesi pleaded guilty to three counts of participating in the conspiracy. She acknowledged leaking information about I.B.M., Advanced Micro Devices and Sun Microsystems. Her activities, prosecutors have said, earned her $1.7 million.

Prosecutors sought a sentence of up to 46 months. Ms. Chiesi’s lawyers had asked for leniency, blaming her actions on a tormented love affair with her former boss. .

Standing before Judge Richard J. Holwell in a lower Manhattan courtroom, Ms. Chiesi apologized as she choked back tears.

“I know that there is a punishment for breaking the law, but it won’t happen again, said Ms. Chiesi, wearing a pink dress and matching pumps with her platinum-blond hair pulled back.

But Judge Holwell was unmoved. Along with the 30 month prison term, Ms. Chiesi was also sentenced to two years of supervised release, 250 hours of community service, $25,000 fine, and mandatory mental health and alcohol treatment. Prosecutors sought a sentence of up to 46 months.

“The message to Wall Street needs to be clear: if you trade on inside information, you will be caught,” Judge Holwell said.

The judge said the community service, in particular, would help “adjust her moral compass, which obviously fell by the wayside.” He did acknowledge that Ms. Chiesi, who previously told the judge that she was receiving psychiatric care, suffered from a borderline personality disorder.

On Wednesday, her lawyer Alan R. Kaufman said, “This is not a pleasant day by any means, but it is at least over.”

After the hearing ended, a smiling Ms. Chiesi approached federal prosecutors and agents for the Federal Bureau of Investigation. She told them that “if you’re ever going to knock on my door then do it in the afternoon,” in a nod to her early morning arrest in October 2009. Prosecutors wished her “good luck,” as Ms. Chiesi left with her mother, sister and two nieces,

The sentence brings her curious criminal saga to a close.

A Binghamton, N.Y., native, Ms. Chiesi began her Wall Street career in the late 1980s. She later landed at New Castle Funds, a hedge fund that was spun off from Bear Stearns.

Ms. Chiesi, 45, became known on Wall Street for her colorful personality and robust rolodex. Her specialty was the technology world, in which she built a network of sources whom she prodded for corporate secrets. Her tipsters included Robert W. Moffat Jr., a former senior executive at I.B.M., who has since pleaded guilty to participating in the scheme.

After gathering a few nuggets, Ms. Chiesi would pass on the information to Mr. Rajaratnam, among other traders. In July 2008, a source informed Ms. Chiesi that Akamai, an Internet company, was going to report less than stellar results. “I just got a call from my guy,” she later told Mr. Rajaratnam. “I played him like a finely tuned piano.”

Unbeknownst to the pair, the government was listening. Such secretly recorded tapes ultimately became the lynchpin in the government’s case.

They also provided a window into Ms. Chiesi’s flirtatious style.

She alternately referred to Mr. Rajaratnam as “baby” and “honey.” She also struck up romances with Mr. Moffat of I.B.M. and Mark Kurland, her boss at New Castle.

Her affair with the married Mr. Kurland lasted for nearly 20 years and spanned across jobs. A 22-year-old Ms. Chiesi met Mr. Kurland, then 40, in 1988 while working at a brokerage firm in New York. Mr. Kurland later launched New Castle, and hired his lover to join the team.

Both eventually joined the insider-trading ring. Mr. Kurland already pleaded guilty to insider trading, and was sentenced to 27 months in prison.

Ms. Chiesi’s lawyers blamed the affair — and Mr. Kurland — for involving her in the illicit plot.

Her “emotional and financial wellbeing were inextricably linked with Kurland,” her lawyer, Mr. Kaufman, said in a recent court filing. Her counsel continued to emphasize the connection at the sentencing.

“We continue to believe that Dani’s sentence should not have been any longer than the sentence received by her boss at New Castle,” Mr. Kaufman said on Wednesday. “But we respect the judges thoughtfulness and thoroughness.”

While Ms. Chiesi initially fought the charges, ultimately, the government’s secret recordings were insurmountable. Some of the recorded conversations even proved prophetic.

“You put me in jail if you talk,” she said on an August 2008 call with an associate. “I’m dead if this leaks. I really am, and my career is over.”

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=249106a6f2072d9abe7ad1f738a2ff35