Corporate News
By MUGAMBI MUTEGI, pmutegi@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Thursday, May 21 2015 at 04:43
Posted Thursday, May 21 2015 at 04:43
In Summary
- Tiger Brands said that both external and internal auditors failed to pick up the irregularities at Haco.
- Several executives at Haco — including MD Geoffrey Kiarie — have been dismissed for the misconduct.
Top managers at Haco Tiger Brands, a
company co-owned by billionaire businessman Chris Kirubi and a South
African firm, have been accused of profit manipulation in a scandal that
has seen the managing director fired.
Another executive has also left the business, while at least three others may face sanctions.
The sacked MD, Geoffrey Mwathi Kiarie, is facing
accusations he falsified operating profits by Sh879 million, negatively
impacting the half-year results of the Johannesburg-listed Tiger Brands,
which owns 51 per cent of the Kenyan operation.
Mr Kirubi holds a 49 per cent stake in the joint venture.
“As the local shareholder of
Haco Tiger Brands, I’m disappointed with the managers involved in
manipulating figures,” Mr Kirubi said in messages sent out on social
media. “Their actions are unacceptable and I condemn them.”
Tiger Brands said on Wednesday
executives at its Kenyan unit altered financial statements and engaged
in pre-invoicing to reach their performance targets. Stock that was yet
to be sold was moved to third party warehouses to make it look like
performance targets had been hit.
Adjusting for this led to a 30 per cent drop in Haco Tiger Brands’ operating profit for the six months to March.
The Johannesburg-based firm,
which has operations in Kenya, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Nigeria, and
Zimbabwe, announced that its group operating income declined by three
per cent to Sh13.8 billion even as turnover increased seven per cent to
Sh129.4 billion. This drop, it said, was also attributable to foreign
exchange losses at in Nigeria business.
Peter Matlare, Haco Tiger Brands
chief executive, announced that the company had since fired several top
managers they considered culpable.
“They were key executives right
at the top. It was difficult to pick this up,” he said in Johannesburg
while releasing the half year results.
Explaining
that it was up to the majority shareholder to take the lead in dealing
with the matter, Mr Kirubi said the dismissals were a mutual decision
adding: “Tiger Brands is fully in control of this situation and I
support the decision. When one commits fraud, it’s important to let
justice take its course.”
Mr Matlare said that both external and internal auditors failed to pick up the irregularities.
Mr Kiarie, whose term as Haco
Tiger Brands MD was terminated in December, is set to face civil charges
related to the scandal. He was replaced, in an acting capacity, by Mr
Peter Kang’ethe.
Haco deals in BIC brand of pens, personal and household care products such as Ace, Jeyes, Miadi, Motions, TCB, Bloo and SoSoft and controls over 50 manufacturing facilities across the continent.
Haco deals in BIC brand of pens, personal and household care products such as Ace, Jeyes, Miadi, Motions, TCB, Bloo and SoSoft and controls over 50 manufacturing facilities across the continent.
Mr Matlare pointed to the
pre-invoicing scandal and foreign exchange losses in Nigeria as the two
main reasons why the group registered a three per cent decline in
operating income.
“The performance of the group’s
Kenyan business was particularly disappointing,” he said. “Haco’s
results were negatively affected by the effects of pre-invoicing and the
manipulation of profits in the previous financial year. Appropriate
corrective action has been implemented.”
Mr Geoffrey Kiarie was Haco Tiger Brands MD from June 2012, when he took over from Mr Polycarp Igathe.
He could not be reached for comment.
In an interview with Moneyweb
shortly after releasing the half year results, Matlare gave a more
specific description of what went wrong at Haco Tiger Brands.
“We realised they were chasing
their numbers… and got it horribly wrong. (They) ended up effectively
selling forward, moving product off site because the customers had not
collected (it) because they had not paid, although they’d sent the
invoices out. So it was quite a messy bit,” he said.
“The second (issue) is that they
put up a whole load of erroneous provisions and we have had to reverse
all of those. The third is there has been excess product in the market.
We’ve seen sales in our first quarter dip quite badly because we’re
trying to get the market to pick up all that extra volume. So that’s
taken a little while to get fixed… It will take us, I suspect, till the
end of this financial year to make sure we’ve cleaned it out.”
There are several ways in which companies can falsify accounts and various reasons why they do so.
The first one is where a company’s management, at
times in collaboration with its auditors, inflate revenues or
artificially decrease expenses.
These alterations paint a healthy image of the
company, which in turn keeps investors content and could also be used to
justify hefty increases the salaries and bonuses to top managers.
Profit alterations also work in the reverse. Accountants deflate a
company’s income or exaggerate the expenses, making a company come off
as performing poorly than it actually is.
This approach is used when a company wants to
dissuade potential acquirers or lump all bad performance to one period
and explain it using prevailing negative macro-economic factors. In the
subsequent period, the company will then seem to have bounced back to a
healthy position.
Haco Tiger Brands was born after the South African
firm bought a 51 per cent stake in the then Haco Industries (K) Ltd from
Mr Kirubi in 2008 for an undisclosed amount.
The South African business has since then invested
over Sh50 billion in the country, mostly in capacity expansion at its
Kasarani-based factory, which employs over 400 people. Tiger Brands has
in its past several annual reports praised the Kenyan business, terming
it a sound investment given its good performance since they bought a
majority stake seven years ago.
“Haco Tiger Brands continues to deliver strong
growth across its core categories in both local and export markets,” the
group chairman, Andre Parker, said in the most recently published
annual report for the year to September 2014.
“In Kenya, a stable price environment, favourable
category mix and continuous improvement benefits were the main drivers
of business performance. Strong growth was achieved in all East African
export territories.”
Mr Parker in the report praises the company, saying
its innovation strategy, operational efficiencies and focused
investment in core brands as well as innovative projects were its key
performance drivers.
Kenya has remained a critical
contributor to South African business, with company’s top management two
years ago stating that they were willing to spend Sh43 billion in new
acquisitions in the country.
The company last year ditched its
bid to acquire Kenya’s Rafiki Mills and Magic Oven Bakeries and bakery
for Sh2.1 billion following sharp differences on the valuation of the
business.
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