Abstract
Longtop Financial Technologies (Longtop), a company registered in the Cayman Islands, went public on the NYSE in 2007. After four years of significantly above average revenues and profits, Citron Research, a research firm that specialized in exposing fraud among Chinese stocks, posted an online report on Longtop, accusing the company of fraudulent accounting: “It is the opinion of Citron that every financial statement from its IPO to this date is fraudulent”. In May 2011, Longtop’s auditor, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu CPA Ltd. China (Deloitte Shanghai), resigned. It said that Jia Xiao Gong, Longtop’s chairman, had admitted false profits and false cash flows recorded on the books in the previous years. On 14 December, the American Stock Exchange Committee (SEC) revoked the registration of Longtop for failing to file required annual reports and audited financial statements with the SEC. Longtop investors had already filed a lawsuit against the company to recover losses incurred on their securities being made substantially worthless as a result of allegations.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 4 |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2012 |
Case number
ACC-14-144Case normative number
ACC-14-144-CECase type
LibraryUpdate date
2016-07-02Published by
China Europe International Business SchoolKeywords
- Delist
- Financial Fraud
- Governance Structure
- Investment Decision
- Investment Risk
Case studies discipline
- Accounting
- Finance
Case studies industry
- Finance and Insurance