By Keith Regan E-Commerce Times Part of the ECT News Network
03/16/04 7:44 AM PT
"A company has to put this behind them quickly, or else they risk it becoming a drag on their business, especially in the post-Enron and WorldCom era," Morningstar.com stock analyst Joseph Beaulieu told the E-Commerce Times.
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Nortel Networks (NYSE: NT) said it has suspended its two top financial executives pending the outcome of an internal audit, sparking fear that the telecommunications equipment maker could become the latest tech firm ravaged
by accounting scandal.
Shares of Nortel, which had been climbing to new heights as
the company began to see the effects of a resurgence in enterprise and
telecom spending, tumbled nearly 20 percent on Wall Street after the
company said it would delay the filing of an amended earnings
report until the probe has run its course.
Toronto, Canada-based Nortel said it has made temporary
appointments to the positions of chief financial officer and controller. The
executives formerly in those roles, CFO Douglas Beatty and controller Michael
Gollogly, were placed on paid leaves of absence.
At issue are the circumstances leading to the restatement of
Nortel's results in the early part of 2003. Nortel acknowledged it
may have to restate all of its 2003 earnings and "restate previously
filed financial results for one or more earlier periods." Nortel said last
October that it was reviewing results from as far back as 2000, when the
telecom slump first hit.
Jumping to Conclusions
Investors scurried to divest themselves of shares of the network and
telecom equipment maker in the wake of the news Monday, sending Nortel
stock down 18 percent to US$5.24 per share. The stock slipped further in early
trading Tuesday, losing another 6 percent and dipping below the $5 level.
Other technology companies have spent years wrestling with
misleading or incomplete financial statements from both the tech boom and
bust years. Accounting fraud helped drive WorldCom to file the largest bankruptcy
in U.S. history, while fellow phone equipment maker Lucent Technologies operated
under a cloud for two years before reaching a settlement with the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission that allowed it to put the matter
to rest.
Homestore.com, AOL and Gateway all have had accounting probes
by the SEC turn into criminal probes by federal investigators as well.
Fast Forward
"A company has to put this behind them quickly, or else they
risk it becoming a drag on their business, especially in the post-Enron and
WorldCom era," Morningstar.com stock analyst Joseph Beaulieu told the
E-Commerce Times. "In a field as competitive as the one Nortel is in,
where customers are considering investing thousands or millions of dollars
in their products, they can't have this cloud hanging over their heads for
long without it having a negative impact."
Nortel may be trying to address that dilemma by taking decisive
action, he added, "taking action to send a message that
they're going to get this behind them quickly."
But the timing of the matters addressed in the probe could be significant,
since current CEO Frank Dunn served as CFO for most of 2001.
Back on Track
Business has been improving for Nortel in recent quarters, and
its stock climbed to a new one-year high of $8.50 per share less
than a month ago.
In addition to renewed spending by its core customers,
Nortel is seeing business from China and other Asian countries on the
increase. It was one of several companies to reap a windfall of wireless
communications contracts doled out earlier this year and two weeks ago said
it had secured a contract to build a wireless communications network for
China's government-run railroad network.
IDC wireless infrastructure analyst Richard Dean told the E-Commerce Times
that Nortel has seen enterprises and telecom companies seeking to upgrade
their networks -- and that customers venturing back into spending mode are
increasingly value-conscious as they do so. Nortel has a solid foothold
in several industries, including financial services and retail, where
spending is growing the fastest among all industries.
"The bottom line is how well a company can deliver efficiency and
cost savings over time," Dean said. "I think that's what will determine how
well Nortel does in the long run, assuming they can move away from the
distractions."