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Strategies & Market Trends : Good Investment Theses: VALUATIONS w/ FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: hoyasaxa who wrote (24)3/13/1999 5:24:00 PM
From: Dayuhan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 160
 
Interesting reading from Buffet's latest letter to the shareholders:

berkshirehathaway.com

"...In recent years, probity has eroded. Many major corporations still play things straight, but a significant and growing
number of otherwise high-grade managers -- CEOs you would be happy to have as spouses for your children or as trustees
under your will -- have come to the view that it's okay to manipulate earnings to satisfy what they believe are Wall Street's
desires. Indeed, many CEOs think this kind of manipulation is not only okay, but actually their duty.

These managers start with the assumption, all too common, that their job at all times is to encourage the highest stock
price possible (a premise with which we adamantly disagree). To pump the price, they strive, admirably, for operational
excellence. But when operations don't produce the result hoped for, these CEOs resort to unadmirable accounting stratagems.
These either manufacture the desired "earnings" or set the stage for them in the future.

Rationalizing this behavior, these managers often say that their shareholders will be hurt if their currency for doing deals --
that is, their stock -- is not fully-priced, and they also argue that in using accounting shenanigans to get the figures they want,
they are only doing what everybody else does. Once such an everybody's-doing-it attitude takes hold, ethical misgivings vanish.
Call this behavior Son of Gresham: Bad accounting drives out good....

In the acquisition arena, restructuring has been raised to an art form: Managements now frequently use mergers to dishonestly rearrange the value of assets and liabilities in ways that will allow them to both smooth and swell future earnings. Indeed, at deal time, major auditing firms sometimes point out the possibilities for a little accounting magic (or for a lot). Getting this push from the pulpit, first-class people will frequently stoop to third-class tactics. CEOs understandably do not find it easy to reject auditor-blessed strategies that lead to increased future "earnings."