Barron’s (June 23 Issue)
“Non-GAAP numbers were to be used judiciously to explain extenuating or extraordinary circumstances, like a factory fire or the sale of a division.” Instead, they’ve become endemic. “For fiscal 2024, some 351 companies in the S&P 500 index, or 71%, reported either non-GAAP net income or non-GAAP earnings per share.” Of those, 89% of the adjustments made “their results look better” and the difference can be vast. “Intel had the biggest adjustment last year.” With “a GAAP loss of $19.2 billion” the chipmaker “categorized $18.6 billion as nonrecurring, so it reported a non-GAAP loss of $600 million.” And the sleight of hand can be performed year after year. For example, Oracle “has booked a restructuring charge every year for the past five years.” Especially in tech and healthcare, “non-GAAP numbers are now more accepted than the ‘generally accepted’ ones.”
Tags: Adjustments, Endemic, EPS, Extenuating, Extraordinary circumstances, Factory fire, Healthcare, Intel, Loss, Net income, Non-GAAP, Nonrecurring, Oracle, Restructuring, Results, S&P 500, Tech
