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Finance: How Do Some Accountants "Cook the Books"? 103 Views
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Description:
How do some accountants “cook the books”? Cooking the books refers to accountants making company’s financials look much better than they are. They can do this in a bunch of different ways, including accounting for revenue that isn’t promised, pushing back payments owed, and messing with what is owed to employees, among other fancy tricks.
- Social Studies / Finance
- Finance / Financial Responsibility
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- Subjects / Finance and Economics
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- Terms and Concepts / Accounting
- Terms and Concepts / Bonds
- Terms and Concepts / Careers
- Terms and Concepts / Company Management
- Terms and Concepts / Company Valuation
- Terms and Concepts / Credit
- Terms and Concepts / Econ
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Transcript
- 00:00
Finance allah shmoop we'll have new Some accountants cook the
- 00:05
books Ah those hollywood accountants You know they just make
- 00:10
up numbers to mess with poor naive innocent little actors
- 00:14
and actresses Brad pitiful is making a movie about an
- 00:18
alien who comes to earth and gets elected president brad
Full Transcript
- 00:22
gets fifteen percent of the movie's profits as compensation Well
- 00:25
the flick is a block but a a monster hit
- 00:29
doing two hundred million box the box office another one
- 00:31
hundred million in licensing revenues from netflix the network's youtube
- 00:35
and like well brad has his eye on a shiny
- 00:38
new g six jet and has all said to buy
- 00:41
one when the studio says sorry no profits Well how
- 00:45
can this be He wonders the studio accountant lucky jim
- 00:49
here does the math Well the two hundred million dollars
- 00:52
was just box office sales and the theaters keep half
- 00:55
the money So that's one hundred million bucks to us
- 00:58
Same deal with the aftermarket hundred million So only fifty
- 01:02
million came to us Brad says don't i get fifteen
- 01:04
million of that new small thing called production costs while
- 01:09
we needed toe actually make and then market your movie
- 01:12
Well the movie cost eighty million dollars a shoot And
- 01:14
then we spent thirty million dollars to market it Well
- 01:17
brad sighs thinking about a much smaller plane and says
- 01:20
well then okay that's one hundred fifty million to you
- 01:23
and one hundred ten million in expenses So we made
- 01:27
forty million dollars and i get six million write Well
- 01:31
here comes the book cooking paradigm that eighty million dollars
- 01:34
wasn't spent the day before the movie rolled out into
- 01:37
theaters It was spent years beforehand and renting money costs
- 01:43
money so the studio had to use its credit I
- 01:46
even rent money from banks and partners to fund the
- 01:49
movie's production Well the studio borrowed eighty million bucks for
- 01:52
five years in fact and then another thirty million for
- 01:55
two years The market it now this is extremely risky
- 01:59
capital And if this movie had bombed then the banks
- 02:02
might have lost everything So if you were the bank
- 02:05
would you charge just three percent for that extremely risky
- 02:09
capital You have no way So the studio could have
- 02:12
rightly told the producer tio go fund himself you know
- 02:15
to fund the movie elsewhere and get whatever interest rate
- 02:18
on the money he could find and the studio would
- 02:21
match it And surprise surprise Other than in somalia there
- 02:24
were no takers Not a single lender was willing to
- 02:27
take on such enormous risk even at a twenty percent
- 02:30
interest rate So the studio generously loans the production money
- 02:34
at fifteen percent interest and here's the math fifteen percent
- 02:38
on eighty million dollars for five years That's twelve million
- 02:41
of interest per year for five years or so sixty
- 02:44
million dollars in total And that fifteen percent interest rate
- 02:47
was a gift The real market price was more like
- 02:50
twenty percent Well then fifteen percent on the thirty million
- 02:53
for two years to market it Yeah at another nine
- 02:56
million dollars of interest costs So what happened here Well
- 02:59
the interest charges ate up all the profits Yes the
- 03:03
film had operating profit ignoring interest costs over forty million
- 03:06
dollars But it had to rent the money to go
- 03:08
make the film the rental cost or the interest costs
- 03:12
of the money with sixty million dollars for the production
- 03:14
and nine million for the marketing Oh and there's this
- 03:16
other little thing called a distribution fee that studios taken
- 03:20
Return for pushing the film into the difficult to deal
- 03:24
with theater owners and usually that's thirty percent off the
- 03:27
top but those are details So were the books cooked
- 03:29
here No not at all If making movies was such
- 03:32
an easy profitable business well there would be legions of
- 03:35
venture capitalists throwing money at the business the way there
- 03:38
are in silicon valley with computer software engineers Unfortunately hollywood's
- 03:43
heyday was a half century ago and economically hollywood is
- 03:47
dying The studio and the banks behind it have to
- 03:50
charge a very high interest rate to accommodate for the
- 03:53
sad fact that most movies don't make back the money
- 03:57
invested in them Most movies lose money so the one
- 04:00
in ten movies that actually make money have to be
- 04:03
Hey for all the rest of the studio only charged
- 04:06
three percent interest for years I work out great for
- 04:09
brad pitiful in his profit sharing story In a world
- 04:12
where the movie made forty million dollars in revenue and
- 04:14
had only ten million in interest costs With then thirty
- 04:17
million of you know pretax profit well then brad would
- 04:21
have gotten fifteen percent of thirty million or four point
- 04:24
Five million in bonus dough But that's not the way
- 04:26
things work The books aren't being cooked here People They're
- 04:29
just being zapped by interest costs It's almost enough to 00:04:33.104 --> [endTime] make you lose your
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