How did a Macy’s worker conceal up to $154 million in fake expenses? Experts weigh in

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Good morning. Macy’s is in crisis mode after disclosing that an employee cooked the books for years, using unethical accounting practices to hide well over $100 million in expenses. On Monday, the retailer announced it would delay the full release of its third-quarter earnings, scheduled for Nov. 26, until Dec. 11 to complete an investigation into the employee’s activities.

The person indicated, who was responsible for small package delivery expenses, is no longer an employee. According to Macy’s, the worker “intentionally made erroneous accounting accrual entries,” which served to hide between $132 to $154 million in delivery expenses from Q4 2021 through the fiscal quarter that ended Nov. 2. During this same time period, Macy’s accounting statements recognized around $4.36 billion in delivery expenses—suggesting that somewhere between 3% and 3.5% of those expenses were fictitious.

Macy’s, a Fortune 500 company, said there is “no indication that the erroneous accounting accrual entries” had any impact on cash management activities or vendor payments. The company promotes a “culture of ethical conduct,” CEO Tony Spring said in a statement. Macy’s is working diligently to complete the investigation and ensuring, “this matter is handled appropriately,” Spring said.

The statement issued by Macy’s didn’t explain the employee’s motives for the fraudulent entries, and the company declined to comment further. To get a better sense of what might be going on, I asked Adriana Carpenter, CFO of software company Emburse, for her assessment of the situation.

Carpenter noted that it is significant that P&L entries in the accounting statements were impacted while the cash flows were not.

“This leads me to hypothesize that the accountant changed the coding of these delivery transactions to charge the payments to a balance sheet account (versus a P&L account),” she explained. “As a result, while the payments were appropriately recorded as cash outflows (payments), the expense was never reported.”

The changing of the coding could have happened at the time the transaction occurred, Carpenter explained. Or it could have been initially recorded to the P&L, and a second journal entry was then posted to reverse the charge and move it to the balance sheet.

She recommends that CFOs enable end-to-end expense management solutions that capture all non-payroll-related-spend.

“It frankly happens all the time that somebody is fudging accounting numbers and hiding expenses,” Jo-Ellen Pozner, associate professor of management at Santa Clara University’s Leavey School of Business, told me.

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