A widely recognized financial trick known as the big bath occurs when a company makes huge unwarranted

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A widely recognized financial trick known as the "big bath" occurs when a company makes huge unwarranted asset write-offs that drastically overstate expenses. Outside auditors (CPAs) permit companies to engage in the practice because the assets being written off are of questionable value. Because the true value of the assets cannot be validated, auditors have little recourse but to accept the valuations suggested by management. Recent examples of write-offs include Motorola's $1.8 billion restructuring charge, Hewlett-Packard's $8 billion charge, and Microsoft's $7.6 billion charge.
Required
a. Why would managers want their companies to take a big bath?
b. Annual reports are financial reports issued to the public. The reports are the responsibility of auditors who are CPAs who operate under the ethical standards promulgated by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. As a result, attempts to manipulate annual report data are not restricted by the Institute of Management Accountants Statement of Ethical Professional Practice shown in Exhibit 1.17 of Chapter 1. Do you agree or disagree with these statements? Explain your position.
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Fundamental Managerial Accounting Concepts

ISBN: 978-1259569197

8th edition

Authors: Thomas Edmonds, Christopher Edmonds, Bor Yi Tsay, Philip Olds

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