• Professor Elam

    Thursday August 6, 2015

    Here is another down report on McDonalds MCD.  The chain has had lower results for multiple quarters. Now who does this remind you of?  Hmm how about

    General Motors

    Toyota

    Wal Mart

    At some point bigness breeds arrogance and the firm becomes oblivious to its mistakes. The reaction is to ignore or deny them. Finally it is too late to react with a firm grown so big.

    Come to think of it 2,800 years ago Greece was the premier civilization on earth, but look at it today. Greece still has a great climate, location, etc. but has tried to vote its way to a permanent welfare state. And now welfare Is what it is begging for from its neighbors.

  • Professor Elam

    Thursday August 6, 2015

     

    The SEC is beefing up its commitment to whistle blower protection.

    Good governance required that companies have a whistleblower policy in writing. This would explain how the process works, how the report is evaluated, and what is done in response to such reports.

  • Professor Elam

    Tuesday August 4, 2015

    A  Visit with ATKG CPAs

    I jumped at the chance to visit with ATKG LLP. Brandon Howard, son of Bruce Howard, a long-time friend of this campus, extended the invitation. The firm is located in the Comerica Bank Building at 13750 San Pedro, in front of the Home Depot at Bitters and San Pedro. There are about 30 team members.

    ATKG maintains a different business model from the traditional tax or audit firm. They specialize in tax and consulting with high net worth families and closely held businesses.  While the firm prepares tax returns, involvement in day to day consulting and decision making is the centerpiece of the relationship.   Annette Goodson, Manager, mentioned that the partner group works very hard to manage the client base to align it with the firm’s values.

    And unlike the traditional firm the long term relationship and the consulting environment brings a much more friendly work life balance for the employees.   Most work a regular 40 hour week with some extra times at actual filing deadlines.

    I was encouraged  by the business casual attire (If you know me you are aware all my neckties are in permanent storage….) and friendly nature of everyone I met. Indeed the Chief Operating Officer is not a CPA at all but an English major. Strategic planning is Debbie Roos’s specialty.

    We plan to have representatives of ATKG on our campus this fall to help with recruiting for SA CPA Society.   I understand they have a fine presentation on career options in the field of accounting called an Accounting Careers Forum.

    A few years back the Texas Society of CPAs had as its motto:

    Accounting Offers 360 degrees of possibilities!

     ATKG is certainly proof of that in its non-traditional approach to its business model!

    Thanks to Annette Goodson, Debbie Roos, and Brandon Howard for their hospitality!

    Learn More at the ATKG website

  • Professor Elam

    Tuesday August 4, 2015

    It was a busy semester as always. Texas A & M University Accounting Students and Faculty were involved in numerous activities. Here we wrap that up for you be fore Fall Classes begin.

    Texas A & M Accounting Professors  met with their Alamo College counterparts in early May 2015 at San Antonio College Campus. We wanted to get to know them better and had a light lunch catered in for that purpose. We of course found that all of us have similar goals and difficulties. As Texas A & M University San Antonio is an upper level campus, we depend on transfers from community colleges. Hence a positive and vibrant relation with our Alamo CC counterparts I conducive to our further growth.

    Ankur Chopra is a TAMUSA graduate.   He was featured as the San Antonio CPA Society Member of the month this spring. Ankur is teaching as an adjunct for us and promptly passed the CPA exam. He is now the Comptroller for a San Antonio based non profit.

    TAMUSA held its First Student Research Forum  in April. Professor Dennis Elam's Ethics Class participated in the Saturday session with some nine different topics and presentations.

    Feb 23 Graduate Accounting Student  Claude Nchanji received a $3,000 scholarship from TSCPA Fifth Year Fund.  thanks to Celila Velez in the Scholarship Office  for her help on that!

    Undergraduate accounting student Anna Fuentes received a $2,000 check from FEI as a result of being named a scholarship winner.

    Beatrice Therwhanger  was named our Accounting Student of the Year. The plague was presented at the Screen Shot 2015-08-12 at 6.05.16 AMannual San Antonio CPA Society Academic Awards luncheon. The meeting was back at one of our favorite locations Oak Hills Country Club. Beatrice is also a on the Academic Relations Committee of San Antonio Institute of Internal Auditors.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Once again our students had the opportunity to assist at the Annual San Antonio Institute of Internal Auditors CPE Day. This year the topic was detecting fraud.   I missed the meeting  but here are

    photos and a write up on the 2014 meeting.

    Associate Professor Denis Elam featured on the podcast for Price Trends, Price Culture. Professor Elam made a presentation on how Social Mood Affects Accounting Regulations for the Socionomics Institute in Gainesville, GA. The reception for his remarks was positive in that in addition,  he was invited to speak at the next Socionomics Conference in April, 2016.

    Other Matters of Interest Not Directly Related to Accounting Dept

    Two years ago TAMUSA began its first Toastmasters Club. This was well planned with Lecturer Richard Jenkins as sponsor.  Texas Candidates for the CPA exam are required to take a communications class that emphasizes writing  Mr. Jenkins teaches that class. This is part of our overall campus development.

    New President Cynthia Teniente Matson received an award form the National Association of College and University Business Officers. She was confirmed as TAMUSA President in February 2015.

     

     

     

     

  • Professor Elam

    Tuesday Aug 4, 2015

    The new poll of 1,000 adults was conducted July 26-30 It found Americans in a darker mood than when the last Journal NBC News poll was conducted unnamed June.65% say the country is on the wrong track.  

    That is about the same percent as 1992 when Perot ran (71%) and in Sept 2007 (63%). The lesson was that both times the incumbent,first George H and then son George W was defeated. 

    Now to the next bombshell to drop. The solution to the 2008 financial crisis,brought  on by excess debt,was, yep,more debt.Some $550 billion has been loaned to Shale Producers. Now read Energy Debt Stings Investors.  We study bonds in ACCT 3312/3304. IN this article we learn that  bonds previously issued by Energy XII  are now trading at 30 cents on the dollar. 

    Or try this link

    So to prevent that from happening (it has) Franklin Funds and Oaktree, already the largest holders of such debt, have, how did you guess, agreed to buy half of another bond offering. Energy XXI  $1.45 billion in March. 

    So how is that working out for Energy XXI stockholders?  Well it's Back to the Future!

    Energy XXI

    Screen Shot 2015-08-04 at 7.13.37 AM

     

    For EXXI it is 2009 all over again.  EXXI is trading at 18% of book value.  Debt to equity is 506 to one. 

    Does this sound familiar,can we say sub prime mortgage leveraging all over again?  How many millions will Franklin and Oaktree commit to save the original 'investment?'

    In 2008 Lehman,Merrill,Bear all borrowed heavily to buy sub prime bonds.They borrowed short term via commercial paper to borrow 10x into long term junk debt.When the junk stopped paying,the commercial paper could not pay and the crisis was full blown. 

    As the price of oil continues to fall such companies fall below break even and cannot pay their debt. In the next few months we will find out just where that line in the oil shale sands lie. 

     

  • Professor Elam

  • Professor Elam

    Wed July 29, 2015

    This report suggests the real economic problem is the lack of capital spending. We are studying depreciation in Intermediate Accounting. This lack of spending and hoarding of cash in a low interest rate environment reflects the over regulation of  the economy and uncertainty of tax policy. 

    Is Dave Stockman right, is unemployment really 42.9%?

    ___________________

    Check out page C7 of today's WSJ, the Sears Tower in Chicago has sold for $1.3 Billion. This is the highest price ever paid for an office tower outside New York City. This is positive social mood in action. The Skyscraper Theory holds that big projects are planned during booms. So it figures that the biggest sale ever would happen at a stock market high. I assume the building is well rented, unlike a new office tower. 

  • Professor Elam

    Tuesday July 28, 2015

    BP had its worst quarter in ten years. A write down on Libyan investment and the spill settlement took profits lower. 

     

    Here is the WSJ summary.

    LOW OIL PRICES, DEEPWATER HORIZON DEAL HIT BP

    BP PLC swung to a loss in the second quarter, a victim of lower oil prices and a $9.8 billion pretax charge relating to the deal it reached earlier this month to settle U.S. claims over the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster, The Wall Street Journal’s Sarah Kent reports. Also, bets on Libya and Russia failed to pay off. BP’s replacement cost loss, similar to net income reported by U.S. oil companies, was $6.27 billion as compared with a profit of $3.18 billion a year earlier.

    BP’s oil-trading results also declined, the Financial Times reports.

    The loss comes even though the oil giant has cut spending by freezing pay, selling assets and delaying projects with reserves of over 3.5 billion barrels of oil and gas, which is more, according to Wood Mackenzie, than any other big independent energy company.

    One bright spot for BP was its refining arm, which gained from the low oil prices. Pretax earnings increased to $1.6 billion from $933 million a year earlier for BP’s downstream business, which includes refining and marketing.

    Still, investors want to know how BP plans to move forward from the Deepwater Horizon incident, now that the settlement has given the oil giant some breathing room. “We’re entering into a period where the company needs to decide what it’s going to be,” said Paul Mumford, an investment manager at Cavendish Asset Management Ltd.

    Note, this is typical of the kind of press that happens as we approach a market low. I have no idea of how low oil prices will go but BP is going to be around, it is not going kaput. My point here is that amid all this torrent of bad news, most of which is now behind BP, one needs to use accounting analysis to really discern the strength of the company. 

    BP the long view

    Screen Shot 2015-07-28 at 5.57.16 AM

    Here is a weekly chart going back to the 2008 meltdown. Now it is possible BP will continue falling all the way to 22.5, if oil drops to $35. If so that would really be a great opportunity to buy. As it is BP is  going down to the blue uptrend line which has been in  place for several years. Let's watch to see if it has a good bounce  from the 35 level. 

    The key to investing is to buy low sell high. But most investors do the opposite, and are put off by bad news stories at market lows. This is where accounting knowledge is important. Will BP stay around, is the balance sheet strong enough to weather this?  What is the book value, how much cash flow does BP have, is it self sustaining?  That is what makes a study of both socionomics and accounting interesting. Social mood as evidenced by the first  article on BP is negative, that is what makes buying at lows difficult, but profitable. 

    Now look at this

    Screen Shot 2015-07-28 at 6.07.29 AM

    Yep BP is trading at book value! So how is cash flow?

    Screen Shot 2015-07-28 at 6.08.59 AM

    Back in the late 1970s a guy came in my office observing that Exxon was trading with a 10% dividend. He said I think that's a pretty good deal. Indeed it was. The Exxon Mobil merger in 1998-9 was another classic good deal. 

    At its current price the dividend is 6.6%. Notice the article suggests the CEO cut back the capital expenditures to 'protect the dividend.'   Why is that important?

    So with a 6.6% dividend and trading at book value, is BP a good buy amid all this negative news? How would you structure a buy program if at all?

    Good stuff this socionomics and accounting. 

  • Professor Elam

    Monday July 27, 2015

    SA Institute of Internal Auditors will sponsor an all day Fraud Seminar Monday September 14.

    Learn more at this link.

    I believe we will be furnishing student volunteers to help with registration and such. This will be a great opportunity to mix mingle and network with IA professionals as well as learn more about fraud detection.;

  • Professor Elam

    Monday July 27, 2015

    We have noted that fewer and fewer stocks are still advancing, this is both a divergence and shrinking leadership, a classic sign of an ending bull market. Into day's WSJ Page C1 we learn that six firms account for over half the $664 billion  value added to the NASDAQ this year. 

    Amazon, Google, Apple, Facebook, Netflix, and Gilead

    On page C6 Heard on the Street notes that peak demand for gasoline is now. Refineries are churning out plenty of gasoline and distillates given the low energy prices.  This suggests the market may may well take out the previous $42 low. That would be a fifth wave to the $35 range last seen in Dec 2008. Just speculating…