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How Did You Manage That, Synovus Financial?

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In 2000, General Electric posted its 100th consecutive quarter of growth in continuing operations. That's 25 years. Raise your hand if that sounds just a bit suspicious. Whatever business you're in, that feat just isn't possible unless your company's managing its reported earnings.

According to a 1998 survey, 78% of CFOs attending a given conference said they'd been asked to "cast financial results in a better light" without running afoul of GAAP. Half said they'd done it. Nearly half said they'd been asked to misrepresent their company's numbers, and 38% admitted they'd done so. Another survey at a different conference found that more than half of the CFOs attending had been asked to juice their numbers, and 17% had agreed to do so.

It's easy to understand why companies succumb to the incredible pressure to make it look like they've met or beaten targets or Wall Street expectations. Consistent growth is a feather in any CEO's cap, and a rising stock price often increases many executives' compensation, especially from stock options. But when companies stray from merely managing their numbers within GAAP into outright fudging them -- Enron, Sunbeam, we're looking at you here -- they can ruin themselves and their shareholders.

How can we spot suspicious earnings patterns soon enough to save ourselves? We can track how closely a company meets earnings expectations, monitor its frequency of year-over-year growth, and compare those stats to numbers from a few competitors, which should be affected similarly by changes in the business cycle. Any company that lands eerily close to earnings-per-share (EPS) expectations, and grows earnings year-over-year with unusual reliability, should raise a yellow flag and invite us to look closer.

Here's a look at what Synovus Financial (NYSE: SNV  ) , the regional bank, has done over the past few years. I've also included a couple of other businesses playing in the same space for comparison.

Company

Reported EPS Within $0.02 of Estimates?

How Close to Estimates, on Average

How Often It Reported Growth

Synovus Financial

12 times in last 26 quarters.

($0.16)

10 times in last 22 quarters.

BB&T (NYSE: BBT  )

14 times in last 26 quarters.

$0.01

10 times in last 22 quarters.

Fifth Third Bancorp (Nasdaq: FITB  )

10 times in last 26 quarters.

($0.10)

3 times in last 22 quarters.

Source: Earnings.com and author's calculation. Difference in number of quarters counted due to data source.

No real yellow flags that I can spot here. The three banks don't come close to estimates at a high enough rate to set any sort of alarms off and yearly growth is not consistent, just as you'd expect over the past few years given what they've been like. Nothing to concern me here.

Note that I'm not concentrating on managing estimates here -- though management does that, too. However, if a management team always seems to deliver on estimates time and time again, you should probably dig a bit deeper, to see whether its interpretation of GAAP is getting a bit too fast and loose.

Investors crave consistency. That's one reason why its string of reliable results spurred GE's stock price to rise so much in the 1980s and 1990s. But the real world isn't consistent, and Foolish investors should account for that. If a company's results seem too steady to be true, Fools should proceed with caution.

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Fool analyst Jim Mueller is a beneficial owner of General Electric, but doesn't have a position in any other company mentioned. He works with the Stock Advisor newsletter service. The Fool is all about investors writing for investors.

True to its name, The Motley Fool is made up of a motley assortment of writers and analysts, each with a unique perspective; sometimes we agree, sometimes we disagree, but we all believe in the power of learning from each other through our Foolish community.


Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On September 13, 2010, at 9:52 AM, TwentyTwoHands wrote:

    Put yourself in this situation. You are a CEO and your quarterly earnings call with analysts and the media is scheduled. You have just been given word that the financial climate for your company may be headed south, and you could be headed for trouble. Not a good seat to be in. You have two choices. You go out to the media, analysts and stockholders and proclaim that things do not look good on the horizon and you could be headed for trouble. By the end of the day, that financial trouble that you thought could be on the horizon is now staring you right in the face. You have just assured your companies demise. The stock price will tank, your lenders and customers will lose confidence and you will be plastered all over the financial news channels.

    Your second choice would be to go before those same analysts, media and stockholders, and paint a potentially frosy picture to keep things positive for what could be a very short time. OK, so you dodged a bullet so to speak, your quarterly earnings will look good and your stock price stays strong, but you have just actually committed fraud by painting a picture that did not reflect the actual events. Say the company crashes and burns after all...you may be looking at jail time for civil fraud.

    The above two scenarios are not pretty. Obviously a no win situation for that executive. But is this the scenario that was played out by many of the top executives of the companies that we taxpayers just bailed out? Only time will tell, but we will eventually get the truth because the prosecutors and investigators are hot on the heels of many of these CEO's who may have faced one of the two scenarios spelled out above. So you have to ask yourself; are these guys criminals for supplying false information when they potentially knew that their businesses were tanking? Because or their inability to come clean with financial facts, thousands if not millions of people have lost huge sums of money in their stock portfolios, 401K's, pension funds and other retirement accounts. What makes matters worse, this has not been isolated; it has affected companies across the world and the ripple effect has been unimaginable. Investors are angry and they want someones hide.

    ----------------------------------

    Money without intelligence is like a car without a road.

    http://www.intelligentinvestingtips.com

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Related Tickers

5/25/2012 4:04 PM
SNV $1.89 Down -0.03 -1.56%
Synovus Financial… CAPS Rating: ****
FITB $13.52 Down -0.05 -0.37%
Fifth Third Bancor… CAPS Rating: **
BBT $30.43 Up +0.17 +0.56%
BB&T Corp CAPS Rating: ***

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