New York Post

Fake-milk fakery?

Oatly denies hedgie claim of bogus earnings reports

- By LISA FICKENSCHE­R lfickensch­er@nypost.com

Oatly is allegedly bamboozlin­g its investors, overstatin­g revenues and profits even as it loses market share, according to an explosive report by a short-seller.

The Swedish maker of oatbased milk substitute­s — which listed its shares on the Nasdaq in a splashy May debut that valued it at more than $12 billion — has likewise been “greenwashi­ng,” or misleading customers about its sustainabi­lity practices, according to the Wednesday report from Spruce Point Capital Management.

Among the allegation­s is that Oatly has been employing shady accounting methods — “We believe Oatly has misstated revenues” — and that its chief financial officer and audit committee chair were previously involved in corporate accounting scandals.

The 25-year-old company has “plowed through” three auditors in six years, a fact it does not disclose in its investment prospectus, according to the report.

After falling as much as 7 percent in early Wednesday trades, Oatly shares closed 2.8 percent down at $20.54.

“The company is aware that a short- seller is making false and misleading claims regarding the company,” an Oatly spokesman said in a statement. “This short-seller stands to financiall­y benefit from a decline in Oatly’s stock price caused by these false reports. Oatly rejects all these false claims by the short-seller and stands behind all activities and financial reporting.”

Oatly, which is sold at mass-market retailers including Walmart, Target, Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods, costs about $5 for half a gallon — nearly double the price of regular milk. It’s also offered at major coffee chains, including Starbucks. It made its US debut as plant-based milk substitute­s were taking off about five years ago.

Last year, Oatly scored some high-profile backers, including a group led by Blackstone Group investing more than $200 million that included Oprah Winfrey, Natalie Portman, Jay-Z’s entertainm­ent agency and former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz.

Spruce Point also accuses Oatly of misleading the public about its sustainabi­lity initiative­s, pointing to a New Jersey facility that is out of compliance with the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and has high levels of wastewater emissions.

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