The New Zealand Herald

Australia focus

Mind the GAAP when judging financial results

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If you ever find yourself at a crowded party and want a little time alone, you could try uttering the phrase “accounting standards”. But, the fact is, accounting standards are important. They are standardis­ed rules by which companies prepare their accounts so investors and analysts know what they’re getting when they look at a company’s results.

Investors know what’s left in and what’s excluded and so have a basis for comparison and measuremen­t.

This profit season, where we have seen a dizzying array of profit measures by which to judge company performanc­e, it is worth rememberin­g these rules and asking which particular profit measure investors should heed.

Woolworths made a A$1.2 billion ($1.25b) net loss after slashing the value of its home improvemen­t and general merchandis­e stores and recording weaker earnings from its Australia and NZ supermarke­ts.

But if we exclude net impairment charges and restructur­ing costs of A$2.6b, underlying net profit fell 64.4 per cent to A$803.5 million, still not great, but a lot better than a loss of more than a billion dollars.

Super Retail Group, which owns the Ray’s Outdoors chain as well as Super Cheap Auto and Rebel Sports, posted a 22 per cent fall in net profit to A$62.8m in 2016.

But excluding restructur­ing costs, underlying net profit rose 2.2 per cent to A$108.6m.

Theme park operator and film business Village Roadshow reported a net profit of A$16.6m, down from A$40.2m for a 58.7 per cent fall. But underlying net profit was up marginally to A$50.9m, from A$50.1m in the previous year.

These companies aren’t alone in reporting alternativ­e profit measures and this is not to suggest their behaviour is untoward. They are part of an increasing­ly common trend in the Australian market, according to soon-to-be-published research by Stephen Taylor of the University of Technology Sydney Business School and his colleagues.

Australian companies are required to abide by what’s known as the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) such as net profit, but more companies are promoting alternativ­e profit measures in their results as well. These include “underlying profit”, “cash profit”, and “recurring earnings”.

Often the results of using these measures is that the company’s earnings look better, or at least not as bad.

The researcher­s looked at the earnings reports of Australia’s 500 largest listed companies. They found that in 2000, slightly more than 20 per cent of them reported nonGAAP after-tax earnings measures. By 2014, more than 40 per cent of firms were doing this.

The alternativ­e measures mostly worked in these firms’ favour. Some 60 per cent of them disclosed nonGAAP after-tax earnings which were higher than the correspond­ing GAAP figures.

Non-GAAP reporting can be used to mislead rather than inform investors, although Taylor said it would be naive to say that this is always the motivation. There are times that the non-GAAP measures can help investors better understand the performanc­e of a company.

However, the researcher­s didn’t give what you would call a ringing endorsemen­t to the use of these measures.

“Non-GAAP measures are at least incrementa­lly informativ­e relative to their GAAP equivalent,” they wrote.

They conclude: “Non-GAAP earnings numbers may convey a difference view of firm performanc­e to investors, since the disclosed nonGAAP figures are systematic­ally and economical­ly higher than reported earnings in compliance with accounting standards. However, the statistics also suggest that non-GAAP figures appear to be presented on a selective basis.”

All of this raises the question of how much attention we should pay to the non-GAAP measures.

Take a company which has blown up a few hundred million dollars on a bad investment. What it is effectivel­y saying with the alternativ­e measures is “if we hadn’t made this investment, our profit would have been this much better”.

But the fact of the matter is that the company did make the bad investment and it did cut its profit by hundreds of millions of dollars. And it was the company’s board and management which committed the funds to the investment.

Investors need to hold these companies to account and not let them hide behind accounting measures that let them shirk the responsibi­lity for bad decisions.

Sometimes there are genuine oneoff events outside a company’s control and maybe then the underlying earnings measure is useful.

But at other times, companies exclude what could be considered to be a normal risk to their operations.

Take, industrial relations for instance. Should a company that has a highly-unionised work force and a fraught industrial relations environmen­t exclude the cost of a strike from its results?

The research says the rising use of non-GAAP results “represents a significan­t challenge to accounting standard setters and more broadly, regulators of financial markets”.

It also represents a challenge for investors.

Often the results of using these measures is that the company’s earnings look better, or at least not as bad.

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 ?? Picture / Bloomberg ?? A growing number of companies are using alternativ­e profit measures to explain performanc­e.
Picture / Bloomberg A growing number of companies are using alternativ­e profit measures to explain performanc­e.
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