Connect with us

Accounting

The problems PE solves | Accounting Today

Published

on

Whitman PE podcast screen.jpg

Private equity can solve many of a firm’s problems — but not necessarily all, according to Phil Whitman of Whitman Transition Advisors, and there are alternatives.

Transcription:

Transcripts are generated using a combination of speech recognition software and human transcribers, and may contain errors. Please check the corresponding audio for the authoritative record.

Dan Hood (00:04):
Welcome to On the Air With Accounting. Today, I’m editor-in-chief Dan Hood. Private equity is one of the hottest topics in accounting these days, and we’ve been exploring it over the past few episodes, and we wanted to complete our investigation of the topic by bringing in Phil Whitman, he’s the president and CEO of Whitman Transition Advisors. He’s been involved in lots of these deals and in introducing lots of accounting firms to the world of PE and vice versa. Phil, thanks for joining us.

Phil Whitman (00:26):
Thank you so much. Dan.

Dan Hood (00:27):
I should also mention you’re also the co-chair of our PE summit, which is happening November 20th and 21st in Chicago. And these episodes, and this is the last of these, are sort of meant to tee that event up because it’s pretty exciting stuff. We’re bringing a bunch of people together in Chicago to dive into all the topics we’re going to be talking to today, but in greater depth and in person. So we think that’s going to be pretty exciting. We’re looking forward to that. But for now, I want to dive right in. When you think about PE and accounting firms looking at pe, what sort of problems are they looking to solve when accounting firms look to partner up with private equity firms?

Phil Whitman (01:05):
So Dan, I think it’s a number of things. Obviously, probably the single largest challenge that most firms are facing is talent. And that’s certainly a big one. And I believe in our industry, if you were to ask a CPA firm that is struggling to hire people, they would say, we’ve tried everything. But you and I both know when someone says we’ve tried everything, that’s certainly usually isn’t the case. And we know this because some of these private equity groups, they’ve brought on a full-time recruiting team of staff. Obviously there’s private equity groups out there. I believe today many of them are aspirational. I think of the ones that I know of, there’s probably 25 PE groups that actually have a foundational firm. That number could be a little bit more, but at least the ones that I am aware of, and some of them are at the beginning of the beginning, they don’t have the back office, they don’t have the ability day one to solve the recruiting challenge, but there’s that promise that they are going to be building that back office.

(02:23)
And sometimes a CPA firm can get a first mover premium because I could go with P Group A, let’s say like an Ascend or a Crete who have built out that back office and have recruiters recruiting. And they can probably tell you that over the course of the year, they’ve hired a hundred plus CPAs for the firms that are under their umbrellas. And those are probably the same firms that said, oh, we’ve tried everything and we don’t have the ability to hire yet. You have a group that’s now focusing on this 24 7. It’s not a partner’s individual, partner’s obligation to spearhead HR for the firm and spearhead that recruiting. Or even a firm that has a full fledged recruiting department. I mean, even they have jounce. So I think talent is a big one. The second thing I think that they’re solving for is succession and look private equity.

(03:32):
We’ve done transactions with firms where sometimes I scratch my head when I see a 72-year-old managing partner, no future partners in the ranks, three or four partners all in their sixties. And prior to private equity coming into this space, this was what we and every CPA firm would’ve considered an end of life firm. It would’ve been a firm for which maybe it would’ve been an orphan. They would’ve closed the lights and turned the key and there would be no buyer. Or we’ll give ’em 60 cents on the dollar a collections based deal. And lo and behold, private equity comes in and because they have great clients, because they have stable staff, even though there’s no future partners in the rank, private equity acquires this firm or 60% of the firm and tucks it into one of their bigger firms, and somehow they’re able to go out and find the young partners or senior managers that are going to step in and into the partner’s shoes. And we all know there are partners in CPA firms out there that still put numbers in boxes. They’re still preparing returns. And I think private equity does have a better way.

Dan Hood (04:49):
There you go. Well, let’s talk a little bit more about that way, and particularly I’m curious because I think a lot of accounting firms know their own troubles. They know their own problems, they understand hope, they understand their issues and their business, but they often don’t understand private equity. So what don’t accounting firms know about private equity deals that they should?

Phil Whitman (05:11):
I think there’s a perception of private equity that is not in all cases accurate. Pick your partner carefully. Okay. So what I would tell you is yes, every CPA knows that they’ve had a client that’s done a transaction with private equity and it was a disaster. And private equity is going to come in and they’re going to slash and they’re going to cut and they’re going to burn. And all they care about is ROI. And the reality is we are a people business. And there are RP groups out there that are looking at this as we’re a people business. This is different. We can’t come in and slash and burn. Yes, we do want to make a return. There are groups that have patient capital. They’re not in this for the three to five years, and we’re going to hit a grand slam and sell this to someone else.

(06:07):
And I think many PE groups are finding the attractiveness of public accounting is such that, Hey, we’re making so much money. We really, I mean in many cases they have to because there’s a life of a fund. But I’ve been hearing where some of these PE groups, they might just bring it in, a new investor group, have a continuation vehicle. And when you look at some of the models that are being built, I think after there is an initial turn, which means when PE sells all or a portion to another PE group, I believe we’re still going to see people that are going to stay in the game for the long term operators. I dunno, some people might call them the sponsors, but I think there’s a fallacy. I mean, I hear from managing partners all the time, well, what’s going to happen in five years when they sell?

(07:09):
And here’s my answer. They’re going to sell. And yes, there will be a new capital partner, but for your rank and file staff member and for your line partners the day after that sale, I mean, the partners might get an additional check, but the work is going to continue. The clients need to be served. It’s not like, okay, they’re selling us and okay, our business is done. I mean, this is just a change of now there’s a new partner sitting in a seat that someone else was, and I’m sure they’re going to include the CPA firm because they want it to be a successful transaction. So I think there’s a lot of fear around it. And you and I, years ago, we did that fearful mindset, and that still remains the same that everyone knows of the horror story of private equity. I would say we’re still very early stage, even though we’re three plus years into when Eisner Emper got in and Citron Cooperman.

(08:23):
But with some of these smaller platform groups that are rolling up firms, I’d say any firm that’s looking at private equity right now, I think we’re still at the tip of the iceberg. It’s the beginning of the beginning. And I think you need to be a believer. You need to, if you are a naysayer, and we get a lot of people that come to the table, they don’t believe that this is the right solution, but after they meet with some of the groups that we’ve introduced them to, they seem to have an aha moment that, wow, this really can work. And it’s firms that were vehemently opposed to doing anything but felt as managing partner, I need to know what’s going on. So I’m going to take these news to get educated. And then once they got educated, and by the way, there’s a big education that needs to be had. I mean, all of a sudden you’re getting a letter of intent with things like TEV and TTN and enterprise value and how do they calculate this and all their spreadsheets. But what I will tell you is from an educational perspective, firms owe it to themselves and their partners to at the very least, explore so that they have an awareness of the possibilities that are after.

Dan Hood (09:54):
Because as you say, it’s a PE in accounting thus far certainly has acted very differently than our traditional sort of stereotype of pe, right? It’s not asset stripping. It’s not coming in and getting rid of all the staff and loading it down with debt and then moving on. It’s not sort of the traditional, as you say, mustache twiddling stereotype of PE if they seem to understand the business. And also, I think more importantly, to understand the parts of accounting that they don’t. If I had a dollar for every PE firm I’ve spoken to that said, we don’t want to run an accounting firm. We don’t know how to run an accounting firm, we want you to run an accounting firm, I’d have a lot of dollars.

Phil Whitman (10:31):
Absolutely. And running the CPA firm. And so that’s the other thing. There’s a fear of losing control. And I will tell you, even if a CPA firm sells 60% and they’re sitting in the minority seat holding 40%, they’re running the show, they’re running the firm on a day-to-day basis. You know what? You want to go out, you want to borrow money, you want to merge in a firm, you want to do something, promote someone to partner. You got a 60% partner there that you got to share a compelling reason why we should be doing that. But what we have seen, even in the allocation of the rollover equity, and for those of you that don’t know, the rollover equity is that equity that if a private equity group buy 60% and the CPA firm is holding 40%, that is the amount that they are invested in that thing that they’re going to get the second bite, that second bite. And some of the private equity groups, what they’re saying is, we want you the managing partner, the older managing partner of the CPA firm to ensure that some of that rollover equity, and in many cases they’ll say X percent of the rollover equity needs to be put in the hands of the up and comers in the firm, which is a wonderful incentive for them to continue along with the ride.

Dan Hood (12:09):
Unless we paint two rows of a picture that you say that 60% partner, they’re also, I think the general impression is that they’re a partner who may be a little bit more, strict isn’t the right word, but they may be more likely to hold their partners accountable for their goals and that sort of thing. Accounting firms in general sort of have had a little bit of an issue with that ability to hold a partner group accountable in the sense of we set a bunch of plans and then if we don’t make it, well, we’re all partners, we’re all equal. It can be hard to make us all hit those numbers. Private equity firms are a little more likely, or in some cases a lot more likely to be like, no, no, these are the plans we agreed to. Why aren’t we hitting them? Right. That’s my impression is that they’re certainly going to be a little bit more strict in accountability or like I said, some cases maybe a lot more strict.

Phil Whitman (12:55):
Yeah. So what I would say is what I’ve seen in the transactions that have taken place thus far that we’ve been involved with, the goals that have been set for increases in EBITDA over a five year period have seemingly, to me been very reasonable. I’m working on a transaction right now where they’re saying, we want you to increase EBITDA 2% the first year, 5% the second year, and then 10% in each of the following three years. Those are the goals. And when I look at those goals and I look at additional service offerings that will most likely be added on, as well as, Hey, I’m now a partner, whether I’m the managing partner or the partner that’s in charge of hr, I just found 200 hours of time of the four or 500 that I’m spending on administration that I no longer have to spend, which means I have time to go out and develop business and service clients, wine and dine clients, and sell additional services to existing clients who should be our raving fans.

(14:16):
Anyway, so I see the goals that they’re setting as very, very achievable. But yes, private equity. At the end of the month, there’s going to be a board meeting and the managing partner, I think it was Charlie Weinstein that told me one of the differences, now he has someone that he has to answer to and he puts together data for board meetings and presents to his board. And in the past, I think it was partners in his firm and c-suite leaders that were putting stuff together for him to review. But so yeah. Is it a boss? Nah, it’s a partner. It’s just another partner sitting at the table. But Dan, you’re absolutely right. Accountability has been a very, very significant challenge for I would say 75 to 80% of the firms. You always have the, oh, that’s just Phil. Phil never gets his time in. Phil never gets his billing out. And after a while, firms become accepting of those behaviors. And it’s just sort of like that partnership model. Again, much more tolerant of that sort of stuff. I will say that as large firms like Citrin, Cooperman and Eisner, I think we’ve already seen it where non-productive partners and unnecessary administrative line people have been relieved of their jobs

Dan Hood (16:09):
And been invited to define success elsewhere.

Phil Whitman (16:12):
Exactly. And that might be an effort to further increase EBIT a as firms are getting ready for a sale.

Dan Hood (16:23):
Well, I mean that’s worth bringing up. As a point, the firms that are most attractive to private equity are going to be the firms that have already started moving in this direction anyways, right? They’ve already started cleaning themselves up and operating in a more corporate manner, a less of a collegial, hey, he said, Hey, that’s just Phil. He just does what he does, and that’s okay. They’ve already started the work of being more, like I said, sort of corporate is a shorthand for it, but it’s a tighter model and involves a little bit more accountability and a little bit more focus on the goals and alignment, universal alignment around those goals. So I think you put a good number on it in terms of how many platform firms are out there. I haven’t heard many more than that. And that’s got to involve maybe when you think of all their transactions together, maybe 150 firms total in terms of Tuck-ins and stuff like that haven’t got involved. That still leaves 43,800 or some other firms to look at, many of which may not be as attractive as that first wave of acquisitions.

Phil Whitman (17:26):
Exactly. And Dan, shortly after Eisner transacted, we were fortunate to tuck a firm, a very nice firm into Eisner er. And that’s where I first cut my teeth on what private equity looks like for a firm tucking into a large firm. And as I sat back, I said, you know what? This cannot only be for the largest of firms. And started talking to a lot of PE groups and CPA firms. And lo and behold, I mean, we’re working on a transaction right now. We’re a large private equity group. One of the large ones is having a conversation with a CPA firm that has one partner that’s doing a million dollars a year. He has a specialty that’s very interesting. But the reason I bring this up is it seems that there’s a place for everybody. These private equity groups, you can’t just lump them all into one basket because they come to the table with very different thesis or thesises, I’m not sure of that word.

(18:46):
Someone one day will tell me the right way to say that word. But they all have someone, small firms, some are long holders, some of them won’t start with a firm unless they’ve got five or $10 million of leave behind ebitda. For those of you that don’t know, leave behind EBITDA is the EBITDA that you and your firm are going to leave behind after you compensate your partners. And some of you might scratch your head and say, well, after we compensate our partners, there’s no leave behind ebitda. But the reality is they’re going to look at, if you make a million dollars a year, they’re probably going to say, well, you know what? We probably, if the person’s out there, we could go out and we can bring someone in at 350 or 400,000 to be a line partner and do what you do. The other 600,000 is a distribution of profits.

(19:49):
How much of that do you want to give up? And you might say, well, I need to make 500,000 to pay all my bills. So in that case, the leave buying EBITDA would be 500,000. And that’s what you’re going to get paid a multiple upon. So I mean, there’s a lot of education. Usually after firms go through two, three, sometimes four meetings or more, they sort of like, okay, I’m now expert. I understand the lingo, I understand all these acronyms. I understand what leave behind E, but there isn’t how we’re going to come up with an appropriate calculation.

Dan Hood (20:26):
It doesn’t, like you say, it’s a lot of education right to be done and you’re sort getting it on the fly as you’re sitting down to meet with a potential PE firm partner because it’s a very complicated and a very different approach to things I think than accounting firms have traditionally done. They’re used to a merger, an upward merger or an internal succession to be dealing with an entirely different industry with an entirely different set of acronyms and lingo. And that sort of stuff requires a fair amount of education, as you say.

Phil Whitman (20:55):
Yeah, absolutely. And to just give you a gist of how pervasive this doing a transaction with a private equity group has become last year in 2023 at Whitman Transition Advisors, probably 20% of the m and a transactions we did were with a strategic investor, like private equity could have been like a wealth management group, a family office. And 80% were traditional CPA firm to CPA firm transactions most with no money upfront. This year it’s flipped completely to the reverse where 80% of the transactions we’re doing are with strategic investors, private equity groups, and only 20% are just typical CPA firm to CPA firm. But the difference is in those CPA firm to CPA firm, usually now there’s cash upfront because in order to compete, they got to put cash upfront. And I truly believe, Dan, that with some of these top 100 firms, here’s what we’re going to see.

(22:15):
Managing partner I work with told me last week, Phil, I feel like my deal flow is drying up even you are showing me less because everyone’s talking about private equity. And this particular managing partner had a transaction he was working on and he was willing to put 3 million of cash upfront and he lost out to private equity. Private equity, put 10 billion of cash upfront. And the managing partner said to me, I think I need to explore because he sees the opportunities drying up and he can only get so much of an acquisition line of credit from this bank. And I think whether you are, and this is a firm that’s a hundred plus million in revenue, but whether you’re a hundred plus million in revenue or a $5 million firm that’s looking to tuck in smaller firms, everyone is going to be facing increasing competition from private equity and they’re coming to the table with a better succession solution for the baby boomer CPA firms, a big boomer managed owned CPA firms than there has ever been before. I’ve been saying, Dan, there’s never been a better time ever, ever, ever to be a CPA firm and the options available, and let me not say it’s not all private equity. There are firms we work with that still desire to remain independent, and they’re seeing a lot of opportunities coming from fallout from some of these private equity groups, like those people that are getting laid off.

Dan Hood (24:09):
Right. Well, I want to dive into that actually, it’s interesting because I want to dive into that. Next, I want to dive into the alternatives, maybe to private equity. The other options you may have, we do have to take a quick break real quick. Alright. And we’re back with Phil Whitman of Whitman Transition Advisors. We’re talking about PE and how it’s impacting the market, but you mentioned a couple of times you talked about family offices, you talked about wealth management firms, and then just before we went to the break, you were talking about the alternatives to private equity as a broad concept for firms that aren’t, for whatever reason, don’t end up going with a private equity firm. Maybe we can dive into that a little bit. What sort of alternatives are there other than taking on private equity?

Phil Whitman (24:53):
Sure. So obviously the first and most natural one is the do nothing, do nothing and just I’m going to continue to remain independent. I’m doing really well. I’m going to pick up the scraps that fall. I think doing nothing is for some firms, if they’re going to add advisory services, if they’re going to make themselves look more like a private equity backed firm, but it’s going to be very challenging to just sit there and do nothing because you can’t only grow organically. You need to be growing with some m and a, and that’s going to be very, very challenging. Alternatives to private equity though, we have clients that we’re working with in the wealth management arena, typically they’re looking for tax only practices, although we have some really, really large ones that have adopted an alternate practice structure. And we’ll bring on a firm that has 30% audit, 70% tax.

(25:56):
These are structured very differently. Some of them, they will pay a multiple of the eboc earnings. Before owner’s compensation, we did a transaction with a firm. They were a $10 million firm. They valued, they dropped 50% to the bottom line. They were valued at five times that 5 million. So that $10 million firm was valued at 25 million, and the wealth management firm bought 40%. So imagine this, they got 10 million of cash at closing, not paid out in the stream. Here’s $10 million. They still own 60% of their firm, and this wealth management group is now building a first class wealth management business for the firm. At the end of the day, depending on the exit, which might be an IPO, it’s a very, very large wealth management group. But in India, we’ve got wealth management, multiple wealth management groups. We’ve also seen family offices. We’re working with an organization that’s based out of India, and it’s backed by several Indian in family offices, billionaire family offices, everyone wants in this CPA for Marina, we’re working with a foreign pension fund.

(27:32):
We’re working with a family office that’s based out of Canada. That’s just been an absolutely, they’ve been in this professional service space, not the public accounting arena, but they’ve been very actively involved in rolling up wealth management firms. They’re in the wealth management business, but family office money is very significant. And there are multiple family offices. I don’t know if I mentioned it, but pension funds. Pension funds, there’s a couple of Canadian pension funds that we’ve had conversations with, and the newest one that we have, and I believe they’re going to be attending the wonderful event that Accounting Today is putting on in Chicago, that’s plug for all you out there to attend. It’s going to be a great conference, but it’s actually a bank holding company that said, we want to buy a CPA firm, and then from that platform continue to add onto it.

(28:47):
One of the things, Dan, I think there’s going to come a point in time, oh, before I come to that point in time also, we are going to see, my understanding is a very large tax only CPA firm is considering doing an IPO, and let’s not forget CBIZ. CBIZ is always an alternative. We saw Marcum transact with CBIZ, so I think we’ll see additional public companies coming into the space. But one of the points that I was going to make is there’s going to come a time when someone is going to be able to invest in an ETF that, in that ETF, it’s the CPA firm fund, and there’ll be 20 CPA firms that are publicly traded, and if someone wants a piece of the revenue, they’ll be able to invest in multiple CPA firms at the same time, years from now, maybe. Obviously we need to see a cascade of those going public, but I truly believe that’s going to happen. And there’s a reason. Think about it, even after paying partners, many firms, the scrape that’s available for private equity could be as high as 20% or more of the total revenues of the firm. CPA firms are very profitable businesses. I would venture to say that what the world does not know about is the many, many, many millionaires next door that the CPA firm profession has created.

Dan Hood (30:46):
Right, right. Well, they’re starting to realize it. As you say, all those alternatives to private equity, those are all people who look at this field and say, as you say, hugely profitable and potential for even more profit in half a dozen different strategic ways. You can get moving to advisory. You can get more streamlined in terms of how you deliver your cash services. They’re looking at a lot of different opportunities. But I love the picture of 10 years of buying an ETF for accounting firms. As you look out over the next five to 10 years, are there other big changes you see? I mean, obviously it sounds like you’re assuming PE will still be around and still be a player or,

Phil Whitman (31:23):
Yes, PE will absolutely be around what we think. So to date, our organization, we’ve met with almost 130 private equity groups and other strategic investors, and we track them and we track those that have transacted in the space. There are many, many that are aspirational and some of them that have actually transacted, they’re at the beginning of the beginning, and some of them are long holders, 10, 12, 15 years, some of these family offices. So I truly believe that private equity is here to stay. I think there are going to be winners and there will be some losers. There will be more winners than losers because I believe that every one of these private equity players that we’ve met with, we are dealing with brilliant young people that haven’t spent a lifetime entrenched in the CPA firm profession, and they bring the other ideas, other ways of doing it as well.

(32:36):
We haven’t touched on technology, but technology is changing faster than it ever has. And with artificial intelligence, I mean, there are dollars that firms are going to need to invest to compete, and I think private equity brings that capital stack five to 10 years, five years from now, still extremely, extremely robust. I mean, I would say in the next year to three years, we’ll see our first turns where, okay, are they going to be able to get a 12, a 15, ultimately a 20 x multiple? I believe it’s going to happen. I believe there’s some very large private equity groups out there that haven’t even dipped their toe in here because the check size that they want to write, they don’t have the ability to write that check. But once some of these players build these organizations into half a billion or a billion plus in revenues, they’re going to see new, larger billionaire private equity backed firms coming into the space. And then we’ll see five years from then, is there another turn? Is there a public offering? Does a pension fund buy the assets? Because clearly, I believe any pension fund would be thrilled if yet a guaranteed seven to 10% return on a portfolio for their beneficiaries. And I think that’s why we’re seeing some pension funds come in and it surprises me at the ground floor now instead of buying it for a much larger multiple five or seven years from now.

Dan Hood (34:37):
It’s exciting stuff, and this is an exciting conversation. I wish we had more time for it. Unfortunately, we’re just about out, but we’ll continue it in Chicago. As I said, I’ll give the final shameless plug, November 20th, 21st. Phil will be there at our PE summit so we can continue this conversation with him. But there’s also going to be a lot of other folks there, a lot of accounting firms, a lot of accounting firms, a lot of PE firms, a lot of deal makers, a lot of technical advisors, all the sorts of people you would want in a room to learn everything you ever wanted to know about private equity. And we’re afraid to ask, or I should say everything you want to know about private equity that you didn’t learn from this podcast because you covered a lot of ground, Phil, so I appreciate it. Phil Whitman of Whitman Transition Advisors, thanks again for joining us.

Phil Whitman (35:19):
Thank you, Dan. It’s absolute pleasure, and I’m looking forward to being side by side with you in Chicago, November.

Dan Hood (35:27):
It’s going to be great having all of you. Thank you for listening. We hope to see you help see you in Chicago. This episode of On the Air was produced by Accounting Today with audio production by Wen-Wyst Jean-Marie ready to review us on your favorite podcast platform and see the rest of our content on accounting today.com. Thanks again to our guest, and thank you for listening.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Accounting

Tax scheme star witness clams up at his own €428M trial

Published

on

Kai-Uwe Steck, a star witness who spilled the beans to German prosecutors and TV viewers about the Cum-Ex scandal, turned silent at a trial into his own alleged role in a €428 million ($446 million) tax scheme.

The tax lawyer, who for years has testified in countless Cum-Ex cases where he also extensively described his own role, “for now” won’t comment at his trial, a spokeswoman for the Bonn court said on Friday. He’s free to change his mind about that in the future, she added.

The 53-year old lawyer once was a key figure in what became a Cum-Ex industry, involving some of the world’s top banks. Steck was a law partner of Hanno Berger, the attorney dubbed “Mastermind” of the strategy that exploited how dividend tax was once collected. Their firm was instrumental in selling the business model to rich private investors. For years, they made millions from their work. After German prosecutors started to investigate, Steck flipped sides and became the first person to cooperate with the authorities in the probe.

Steck, who lives in Switzerland, traveled numerous times to police headquarters in Düsseldorf to testify and later was key to recruiting traders to follow his example. Under the fake name “Benjamin Frey” and wearing disguising make-up and a wig, he also appeared in German TV documentaries about the scandal.

In an opening statement on Thursday, his defense lawyer Gerhard Strate asked the court to drop the case because of human rights violations. His client had confessed to the crimes as early as 2017 but was charged only seven years later, in violation of the right to a speedy trial. Instead, Cologne prosecutors “used” him as a witness, degrading him to a mere “object,” according to the attorney.  

A ‘pawn’

“He became a pawn in the tactical considerations of the prosecution and had to testify as a witness at each of the trials held in Bonn from the fall of 2019 until this year,” Strate said, according to a verbatim of the statement published on his website. “Now he is being thrown under the bus by the beneficiaries of his risktaking and courage.”

Strate said Cologne prosecutors promised to drop his case before trial because of his extensive collaboration but failed to put that deal into writing and now it can’t be found in their files. This bad example will stop others from cooperating, he warned.  

Steck, who for years hoped he could dodge trial, had fired his long-time defense team after he was indicted in April. He hired a new pair of attorneys, including Strate. 

Just a month earlier, Steck had testified in the case of the former head of M.M. Warburg & Co. At the time, he said Cologne prosecutors “at no time” promised him anything. His attorney Strate didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment on the March testimony.

Steck is also scheduled to testify next week in the Munich Cum-Ex trial of the two founders of Avana Invest GmbH. 

Steck’s case is: LG Bonn, 62 KLS 1/24.

Continue Reading

Accounting

UPS hit with $45M penalty by SEC over improper valuation

Published

on

United Parcel Service Inc. will pay $45 million to settle claims by the Securities and Exchange Commission that the courier misrepresented its financial results by improperly valuing its freight business.

The company failed to follow GAAP when it evaluated its less-than-truckload operations in 2019 and 2020, the SEC said Friday in a statement. “Had UPS properly valued Freight, its earnings and other reported items would have been materially lower,” the agency said.

UPS, which didn’t admit or deny the findings, agreed to avoid future violations, the SEC said. The company didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment from Bloomberg.

A UPS truck in San Francisco with pedestrians passing by
A UPS truck in San Francisco

David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

The SEC’s order alleges that UPS used an outside consultant to value the business without providing certain information such as the company’s own internal analysis of the freight business. UPS didn’t tell the consultant it had concluded that “a prospective buyer would expect Freight to generate significantly less profit after it was sold because it would no longer benefit from synergies and other cost savings it was getting as part of UPS,” according to the order.

UPS sold its freight business to TFI International in 2021 for $800 million. 

Shares of UPS rose 1.1% as of 9:40 a.m. in New York.

Continue Reading

Accounting

Intuit falls after giving tepid outlook despite new AI tools

Published

on

Intuit Inc., the maker of the TurboTax tax preparation software, dropped in extended trading after giving a sales and profit outlook for the current quarter that fell short of analysts’ estimates, disappointing investors looking for a boost from the company’s new AI products.

Revenue will be about $3.83 billion in the period ending Jan. 31, the company said Thursday in a statement. Analysts, on average, estimated $3.86 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Earnings, excluding some items, will be about $2.58 a share in the fiscal first quarter, also missing estimates. 

Intuit, however, affirmed its fiscal year forecast issued in September for sales of about $18.25 billion and adjusted profit of about $19.26 a share.

Intuit TurboTax packages at store
Intuit TurboTax packages at store in Brooklyn

Eilon Paz/Bloomberg

The financial software company is working on implementing artificial intelligence features through its applications including tax preparation program TurboTax. Earlier this week, Intuit launched an AI assistant tool for QuickBooks, which helps businesses manage taxes and other financial results.

The shares declined about 8% in extended trading after closing at $678.70 in New York. The stock has gained 8.6% this year. 

Intuit’s stock dropped earlier this week after the Washington Post reported that the leaders of President-elect Donald Trump’s “Department of Government Efficiency” have discussed creating a mobile app for Americans to file their taxes for free. Intuit reported in May that it lost 1 million customers who use the free version of TurboTax, although executives have said the company is working to cater the software to those with more complicated tax situations who would buy the product.

In the fiscal first quarter, sales rose 10% to $3.28 billion. Analysts, on average, projected $3.14 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Those gains were led by Credit Karma, which jumped 29% to $524 million, topping estimates. The unit aggregates loans and helps users track cash flow.

Continue Reading

Trending