Uploaded by Ahsan Khatri

Financial Accounting

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Financial Accounting (ACC-419)
Presented to:
Sumaira Khan
Presented By:
Raheel Ayub ()
Ahsan Arif Khatri (22871)
Summary
Calgary-based Obsidian Energy Ltd. and three
former employees are facing U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission charges for their
roles in an alleged accounting fraud.
Wednesday's action from the U.S. agency comes the same week Obsidian
formally changed its name from Penn West Petroleum Ltd. – a move
meant to mark the restructuring of the company, and an attempt to make
a break from its past poor performance. Like other oil producers, the
company has also been battered by nearly three years of low crude
prices.
The U.S. market watchdog says the Canadian energy company moved
hundreds of millions in expenses from one ledger to another between
2012 and early 2014 to give the appearance it was spending less money
than it actually was in its quest to get oil of out the ground. By the end of
the day, the stock had recovered somewhat to $1.66, or down 4.6 per
cent from the beginning of the day.
The commission complaint filed in New York Wednesday demands a jury
trial and alleges Obsidian "fraudulently moved hundreds of millions of
dollars in expenses from operating expense accounts to capital
expenditure accounts".
The object of the scheme was to deceive the investing public by
understating Penn West's publicly reported operating expenses and
related financial metrics and making the company appear to be managing
costs more efficiently than it actually was.
The U.S. agency also thanked the Alberta Securities Commission (ASC) for
its assistance in the case.
In 2014, Penn West made public details of accounting irregularities and
launched a review of its financial statements. It eventually restated its
financial reports for 2012, 2013 and the first quarter of 2014, and in 2016,
paid $53-million to settle class action lawsuits with U.S. and Canadian
investors.
The company has also sold assets and shrunk dramatically to reduce debt
and survive the oil price downturn. Where it once had operations in four
provinces, it now operates only in Alberta. It produces about 30,000
barrels of oil equivalent a day, compared with about 133,000 in 2013.
According to legal documents filed by the commission, Penn West had
also been considered one of the highest-cost producers in the oil and gas
industry.
With the goal of improving Penn West's financial picture, the commission
says the three men allegedly managed operating expenses to meet a
budget target. "According to the SEC's complaint, they frequently met
this target to the dollar by having the company record [a] large, round
number, and unsupported adjusting journal entries. Within the company,
this practice was referred to as 're-class to capital.'"
The SEC said it is seeking permanent injunctions and monetary relief
against all the defendants, officer-and-director bars from Mr. Takeyasu
and Mr. Curran and a clawback of incentive-based compensation
awarded to Mr. Takeyasu.
The SEC said its investigation found no personal misconduct by Penn
West's two former CEOs, Murray Nunns and David Roberts. The two men
"have reimbursed the company for cash bonuses and certain stock
awards they received during the period when the company allegedly
committed accounting violations."
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