SunEdison Finds No Material Misstatements or Fraud
14 April 2016 - 11:20PM
Dow Jones News
SunEdison Inc. on Thursday said an internal investigation found
the solar-energy company lacked certain accounting controls, but it
uncovered no material misstatements or evidence of fraud.
Shares in the company, which have lost 93% of their value since
the start of the year, rose to 61 cents apiece in premarket
trading, a jump from its Wednesday close of 37 cents.
SunEdison in March disclosed an investigation by the U.S.
Justice Department and said it had received an inquiry from the
Securities and Exchange Commission over disclosures to investors
about cash on hand. SunEdison in February delayed filing its annual
financial statements, citing concerns about the accuracy of its
financial condition, and said that it had launched an internal
investigation.
On Thursday, the company said it had completed the internal
probe. In a regulatory filing, SunEdison said "certain assumptions
underlying the cash forecasts…were overly optimistic," and that it
lacked sufficient controls over its management of cash flow,
"including extensions of accounts payable and the use of cash
committed for projects."
Despite the findings, SunEdison said it identified no material
misstatement in historical financial statements, as well as "no
substantial evidence to support a finding of fraud or willful
misconduct of management."
The company found one instance of wrongdoing by a former
nonexecutive employee, in connection with negotiations to terminate
its acquisition of Vivint Solar Inc. SunEdison said it terminated
the employee, whom it didn't name, "promptly after the company
became aware of the wrongdoing."
SunEdison said it would implement improved cash-forecasting
systems "with the requisite controls to manage, monitor and fully
communicate changes in outlook directly to the board." Management
will also provide the board with more transparency over cash flow,
the company said, adding that "the recent hiring of a chief
financial officer designee will act as a remedy."
The Wall Street reported earlier this month that SunEdison was
likely headed for bankruptcy. The Maryland Heights, Mo., company
had grown to a market value of $10 billion last year, using a
combination of financial engineering and cheap debt to become one
of the country's biggest developers of renewable-power plants. Its
value as of Wednesday's close was about $120 million.
SunEdison's aggressive borrowing and the swift deterioration of
its "yieldco" financing strategy caught it in a financial squeeze.
SunEdison's two yieldcos, TerraForm Global Inc. and TerraForm Power
Inc., raise money from public investors to buy power projects from
developers, then sell power to utilities under long-term
contracts.
Investors initially rewarded the yieldco structure, attracted by
high dividend payouts during a time of ultralow interest rates, but
expectations of rising rates damped their enthusiasm. Meanwhile,
tumbling oil prices pushed energy stocks broadly lower, and
capital-market turbulence stoked concerns about SunEdison's ability
to continue financing acquisitions.
Earlier this month, TerraForm Global accused its parent of
diverting funds and Brian Wuebbels, SunEdison's former chief
financial officer and the chief executive of TerraForm, resigned
from TerraForm. He left SunEdison in March.
Write to Lisa Beilfuss at lisa.beilfuss@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
April 14, 2016 09:05 ET (13:05 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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