Pop open your preferred earnings web destination for comparing
earnings estimates to actual results and you will find that DTS
Inc., a company that provides digital audio technology, handily
beat its expectations last quarter. A Reuters article
immediately declared, “DTS posts higher Q2 profit, ups FY
2009 outlook.”
What Reuters did not report – what they did not have time
to investigate and report – was that DTS executives were
probably engaged in the business of misleading their investors, for
the second straight quarter in a row.
On their Q2 call, DTS refused to give an actual settlement
amount for a dispute that was included in their GAAP figure, noting
the terms of their settlement agreement with Zoran
Corporation. Zoran, on the other hand, did not seem as
secretive. In Zoran Corporation's 10-Q filing, there is an 11
million expense, "in connection with settlement of various
intellectual property disputes." They had not had this type
of expense in their previous quarterly filings.
DTS on its earnings call refused to give non-GAAP figures
– which would have translated into a rather large miss
– citing the settlement agreement they made with Zoran.
That was despite the fact that on the previous quarter call, DTS
had insisted that investors and analysts should focus on non-GAAP
numbers:
"We essentially have for the purposes of keeping
everybody on an apples-to-apples kind of comparison basis, [the
Zoran lawsuit has] been excluded - both the expenses as well as any
potential financial recovery that might stem from it,"
said DTS' CEO Jon Kirchner.
The "apples-to-apples kind of comparison," suddenly disappeared
in the next conference call. And now, for the second quarter
in a row, DTS executives were asking their investors to focus on
different numbers with the same excuse of the intellectual property
dispute, except in Q4 they wanted the one-time settlement to be
included, in Q1 they wanted it to be excluded, and in Q2 they
wanted the settlement to be included – in each case
conveniently focusing on the better looking numbers.
So in Q4 they insisted that investors and analysts should look
at their GAAP numbers. In Q1 they told them to look at
non-GAAP numbers. In Q2 they even refused to provide non-GAAP
number comparisons and told investors and analysts that they must
focus back on GAAP numbers. In each case, an
“apples-to-apples kind of comparison,” would have
presented a big miss.
Despite significantly missing their own previous quarter
guidance when excluding the settlement, CEO Kirchner also stated in
the last call, “we are pleased with our
performance.”
Massaging numbers are a delicate performance, indeed.
The SEC would better serve investors by not allowing a company
to conveniently go back and forth with non-GAAP and GAAP figures in
this way. It is clearly an abused system by companies that
are below the radar.