Arab Times

Kraft, former officials settle SEC charges for $62mn

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Federal regulators said that Kraft Heinz Co. will pay $62 million to settle charges of accounting wrongdoing that led the company to report overly rosy financial results, which were later corrected.

Two former senior executives of the food company agreed to pay civil penalties, the Securities and Exchange Commission said.

The SEC said that from late 2015 through 2018, Kraft boasted about cost savings that were actually unearned discounts and misleading reports about nearly 300 contracts with suppliers.

The company’s claims were widely picked up by Wall Street analysts, the SEC said, but in 2019 Kraft restated its financial results to correct $208 million in improperly recognized cost savings.

The SEC alleged that Klaus Hofmann, Kraft’s former chief procuremen­t officer, approved improper contracts. The agency said former Chief Operating Officer Eduardo Pelleisson­e was given many warning signs that expenses were being manipulate­d but didn’t address them and instead pressured the procuremen­t division to hit unrealisti­c savings targets. Pelleisson­e also approved the company’s financial statements.

Kraft did not admit or deny the SEC’s findings but agreed to avoid future violations and pay a civil penalty, the SEC said. Pelleisson­e will pay a civil penalty of $300,000, and Hofmann will pay a $100,000 fine and be barred from serving as an officer or director of a public company for five years, the agency said.

 ?? (AP) ?? This file photo shows the Kraft logo outside of the company’s headquarte­rs in Northfield, Illinois.
(AP) This file photo shows the Kraft logo outside of the company’s headquarte­rs in Northfield, Illinois.

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