04/29/2010 01:20:00 PM EST
Who Blows the Whistle on Corporate Fraud?
It takes a
village.
Alexander Dyck, Adair
Morse, and Luigi Zingales found that fraud detection does
not rely on standard corporate governance actors. Instead they found that
employees, short sellers and analysts are the top sources in uncovering
corporate fraud.
The three researchers studied
reported fraud cases between 1996 and 2004 for U.S. companies with more than
$750 million in assets. They ended up with a sample of 216 cases, including the
high profile cases like Enron, HealthSouth and Worldcom.
They conclude that those in the best
position to spot fraud are those who gather a lot of relevant information as a
by-product of their normal work. Employees, industry regulators, and
analysts are at the top of the list.
Financial Reward
A monetary award, like the bounty
under the Federal Civil False Claims Act, seems to be a good incentive for
employees.
Short sellers are another group with
a financial incentive. The researchers looked at short selling activity
prior to revelation of fraud. When that activity three standard deviations
above the prior three month average they took that as indication that the short
sellers had identified a fraud. If you use that benchmark, the short-sellers
detected 22 of the fraud cases.
Reputation Reward
The other incentive is the
reputation reward that they largely attribute to journalists. A journalist who
uncovers a big fraud gets national attention and future career opportunities.
It is interesting that when they weight the frauds based on size, journalists
move farther up the list as the fraud detector. That seems a clear indication
that reporters are more interested in the big, splashy fraud cases. That also
means that we cannot expect the media to act as an effective monitor for
smaller companies or for technical violations.
Auditors
I'm sure Francine McKenna, of re: The Auditors, would be interested to
see their findings regarding auditors.
"We find very weak evidence of
auditor's incentives to blow the whistle. Auditing a fraudulent company is bad
for reputation, but conditional on doing so, bringing this information to light
has no benefit for an auditor: it is likely to cost him the account and it does
not make him gain new ones."
Read Who Blows the Whistle on Corporate Fraud? in its entirety on Compliance Building.
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