The Manila Times

The biggest corporate frauds

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LESS than three years after it was founded, the FTX cryptocurr­ency scam turned out to be one of the biggest corporate frauds ever.

Valued at $32 billion, the cryptocurr­ency exchange company filed for bankruptcy on Nov. 11, 2022, leaving nearly 1 million customers unable to access their funds.

“Exchanges are regulated already. What’s missing are regulation­s for the actual cryptocurr­encies,” Daniele Servadei, co-founder and chief executive of Sellix, an ecommerce platform. “The downfall of FTX will fast-track regulation­s for cryptos, even if it shouldn’t. In my humble opinion, those regulation­s will be based on something that wasn’t supposed to happen, and they might be too strict or even unnecessar­y. We will see how things pan out.”

In the wake of the FTX scandal, Safe Betting Sites, a popular UKbased website, that helps people find the best-regulated betting sites, has listed the Top 10 biggest corporate frauds in history by amount embezzled and examined where the crypto exchange FTX’s bankruptcy falls on the list.

Enron – $74B

From 1996 to 2001, Enron was named “America’s Most Innovative Company” for five straight years. At one point, it was the seventhlar­gest company in the US (on paper).

However, the company was using a mark-to-market accounting scheme to make it seem like they were more profitable than it actually was. In addition, Enron was hiding all of its losses in shell companies. As a result, the company fell from a $90 stock per share to 65 cents in just four months, when news broke of their disguised accounts.

The fall of Enron scam resulted in $74 billion in lost funds and also dragged down auditing firm Arthur Andersen along with it.

FTX – $32B

FTX had its own token FTT, which acted like a loyalty program for customers. The token was used as collateral to take out loans for another one of Sam Bankman-Fried’s companies, Alameda Research.

In November, CoinDesk reported that nearly 40 percent of Alameda’s $14.6 billion balance sheet was held in FTX’s own cryptocurr­ency FTT. Then, Changpeng Zhao, chief executive at Binance, a competing crypto exchange platform, did some corporate due diligence on FTX’s finances, prompting him to dump 23 million FTT coins, sending its price into a free fall. Once trading for as much as $80, the value of FTT has plummeted down to $1.30 in the wake of the collapse.

FTX was forced to file for bankruptcy and its collapse has since shaken consumer confidence in the crypto market.

Parmalat – $20B

Parmalat’s chief executive Calisto Tanzi tried to cover up his losses by inflating revenues through fake transactio­ns, using receivable­s from the fake transactio­ns to create collateral to borrow more from banks, and inflating fake assets. By 1990, Parmalat was losing $300 million a year and hiding its losses in shell companies in the Caribbean.

Following an article that was released on the company by Merrill Lynch analysts Joanna Soeed and Nic Sochovsky, the stock fell roughly 40 percent over the next five months.

The scandal broke a year later in December 2003, when Parmalat publicly announced $3.95 billion in cash was missing, sending the over-inflated stock price to zero. The total value of the scam flushed out an estimated $20 billion in value.

Volkswagen – $25B

Volkswagen’s “Dieselgate” scandal was one of the most audacious corporate frauds in history. In an attempt to become the world’s No.1 carmaker, Volkswagen tried to bypass the United States’ regulatory emission control by using software to control the exhaust equipment.

For nearly a decade, Volkswagen anchored a clean diesel campaign for high-performanc­e cars that also had excellent fuel economy and squeaky clean emissions. With the US’ strict protocol, VW used software to shut off the exhaust control equipment as soon as the cars rolled off the regulators’ test beds. The cars would then spew out illegal levels of two types of nitrogen oxides.

The fraud led Volkswagen to pay $25 billion in fines, penalties, civil damages and restitutio­n for all 580,000 tainted diesel cars sold in the US.

Worldcom – $11B

Worldcom, one of the largest telecommun­ications companies in the US, went bankrupt in 2002 following a massive accounting fraud.

When the tech boom turned into a bust, many companies slashed telecommun­ications services and equipment. WorldCom then resorted to accounting tricks to maintain its ever-growing appearance.

In order to hide its debt, the telecommun­ications company inflated net income and cash flow by recording expenses as investment­s. Eventually, the accounting scandal led WorldCom to file for bankruptcy and it was later found that it overstated its assets by a whopping $11 billion.

Theranos – $10B

Theranos Inc. claimed to have invented an automated device that was able to devise blood tests that required only tiny amounts of blood that could be used to diagnose diseases quickly and accurately. The claims were later proven false, and the company was quickly dissolved in 2018 by multiple lawsuits.

Once valued at $10 billion in 2013 and 2014, Theranos turned into one of the biggest corporate frauds in recent history. The company was able to raise over $700 million from venture capitalist­s and private investors but quickly turned from a company with a lot of hype into a major disappoint­ment.

By 2015, medical research professor John Ioannidis questioned the validity of Theranos’ technology leading to its demise. Recently, its chief executive and founder Elizabeth Holmes was sentenced to 11 years in prison after being found guilty of four counts of wire fraud and conspiracy.

Wirecard – $4B

An audit conducted by EY refused to sign off on Wirecard’s 2019 accounts, which ultimately forced chief executive Markus Braun to admit that $2.1 billion of the company’s cash simply did not exist.

In mid-2020, Philippine authoritie­s probed local businesses thought to have connection­s to Wirecard. The German payments firm initially claimed its missing money was purportedl­y held in escrow accounts in two big Philippine banks, although both banks denied it.

Since Wirecard had been falsifying financials to shareholde­rs, Braun was eventually arrested, and the company declared bankruptcy soon after. However, chief operating officer Jan Marsalek, who was believed to be hiding in the Philippine­s, but denied by the country’s immigratio­n authoritie­s, disappeare­d and is still missing.

Overall, the collapse of Wirecard led to a $4 billion fraudulent scandal.

Wells Fargo – $3B

The American bank was fined $3 billion due to a fake account scandal that came to light in late 2016.

Since 2016, Wells Fargo has been faced with millions of lawsuits. The scheme lasted over a decade and was committed by thousands of Wells Fargo employees.

The scandal led the bank to pay $3 billion to the US Securities and Exchange Commission. However, none of that money in the settlement went to compensate customers. Instead, the bank has made other efforts to compensate the victims.

Qwest Communicat­ions – $3B

Qwest Communicat­ions was caught falsifying financial documents. To increase revenue, Qwest communicat­ions would swap pieces of equipment with other providers and record the transactio­n as revenue. While inflating the stock value, the company was also guilty of insider trading.

The chief executive, Joseph Naccio wrongly informed Wall Street that aggressive revenue targets would be achieved despite knowing the stock had no value. In the process, Naccio earned over $50 million in the process of selling the stock while also engaging in insider trading.

Overall, the telecommun­ications company mastermind­ed a financial fraud scheme worth an estimated $3 billion.

Olympus – $1.5B

Olympus was able to hide two decades of losses by paying inflated fees to advisers. As a result of the scandal, the company shares lost 70 percent of their value from 2006 to 2008.

The corporate corruption scandal led to $1.5 billion in investment losses and various fees and other payments backdating to the 1980s.

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