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Ethics in Finance

PGDM-Session 7
Characteristics of Management
Prone to Fraud
 Unduly aggressive financial Targets
 Domination by person or group without
controls
 Aggressive accounting practice to keep stock
prices high
 Pressure to reduce tax liabilities
 Major performance related compensation
 Non-Financial personnel involved in accounting
matters
Ethical issues in Finance

 Financial statements

 Hostile Takeovers

 Financial Markets
 Insider Trading
Fraud in Financial Statements

 Fictitious Revenues
 Concealed Liabilities and Expenses
 Fraudulent Asset Valuations
 Improper or Fraudulent Disclosures or
Omissions
Creative accounting – form of
fraudulent financial reporting so as to
provide misleading information.
Duties of an Auditor
 To give an accurate statement to the
members about the state of affairs of a
company
 To meet the objectives of the Companies
Act 1985 and also the Articles of
Association
 To be reasonably skillful and careful in
identifying the true nature of the accounts
Ethical Audit
 An audit that assess a business’s structures, procedures,
systems and policies.

 It measures the extent to which the activities of a


business comply with the standards it has publicly
declared to its external customers

 It measures business conduct against varied moral


standards of the community.
Objectives of Ethical Audit
 to provide a critical assessment of functioning of business

 To investigate into acquisition or restructuring operations

 To determine the type of training necessary for employees

 To establish ethical conduct of business

 To enhance, measure and promote the quality that increases


business performance by assessing them against the ethical
business objective

 To improve the quality of governance by evaluating the


performance and ensuring that financial information is both
available and reliable
Ethical Issues in Financial
Markets
 Deception: act of misrepresenting relevant
information
 Churning: Excessive or inappropriate trading for
clients account by a broker who has control over
the account with intent to generate commissions
rather than to benefit client
 Unsuitability
 Unfairness in Markets
Insider Trading
 Refers to trading on price sensitive
information by company employees or
individuals closely connected with the firm

 This information has not been disclosed to


other market participants
Ethics & Insider Trading

 It violates equality of opportunity


 Does not give a level playing field between
insiders and outsiders
 Might harm exchange as a whole because
investors might not be willing to trade on
exchange that does not give shareholders
their rights.
Hostile Takeovers
 Are those that elicit opposition from the
boards or employees of Target company

 Reasons for opposition are as follows:


 Disagreements over price

 Protecting their own interests


Anti-takeover defense measures
 Poison Pills

 Green mail

 Golden Parachute

 People Pill
Poison Pills
 An anti-takeover device used by company’s
management to make takeover
prohibitively expensive for the bidders

 Company under target changes AOA so


that group of Shareholders have special
rights to buy and sell preferred stock at
highly favorable prices (At times below
market price)
Ethics & Poison Pills

 Poison pills are prohibited in Britain by


takeover code because they prevent open
competition between bidders for shares

 Use of poison pills are ethical if they are


designed to protect the management from
unwanted takeover bids.
Greenmail
 It occurs where a potential takeover agent purchases
stock in a company
 After the purchases have totaled five percent the agent
must announce his intention to takeover the company,
if that is the intent
 Stock prices go up in anticipation of takeover battle
 Management of target company sends greenmails to
prevent a shareholder from taking over the company
 Takeover agent ends up selling the shares back to
company at an increased or higher negotiated price
Ethics & Greenmail

 Target company may be forced to incur


debts to raise funds to finance the buy
back of shares at premium price
Golden Parachute
 A company gives lucrative benefits to its
top executives such as stock options,
bonuses, etc

 Presence of parachute allows management


to evaluate takeover bid more objectively
People Pill
 Management threatens that in event of a
takeover the entire management team
will resign

 If managers act in their own interest


rather than company’s long term value
then they are acting unethically
Management Buyout
 It occurs when management decide to bid
for the company

 They convert the company into a private


company and at a later date, bring it back
to market to make substantial profits.
Ethics & Management Buyout
 Shareholder believe that management may resort
to unethical practices to bring down share prices
and buy out at cheaper rate

 Unethical activities can involve leaking


confidential information by managers for their
benefit during buy out
Thank You

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