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Real EstateREIT

Accounting scandal at American Realty Capital claims more victims

By
Chris Matthews
Chris Matthews
By
Chris Matthews
Chris Matthews
December 15, 2014, 4:16 PM ET
Key Speakers At The Milken Institute Global Conference
Nicholas Schorsch, chairman and chief executive officer of American Realty Capital Properties Inc., listens at the annual Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., on Monday, April 29, 2013. Photographer: Jonathan Alcorn/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesPhotograph by Jonathan Alcorn — Bloomberg via Getty Images

Shares in American Realty Capital (ARCP) tumbled roughly 8.5% after the company announced that it’s founder and chairman, Nicholas Schorsch was stepping down from his post and leaving the boards of real estate funds managed by Cole Capital, a subsidiary of ARCP.

The move comes in the wake of an accounting scandal at the fund, which manages over $30 billion in real estate assets, including more than 500 Red Lobster locations and the largest portfolio of single-tenant houses in the country.

Its audit committee admitted to the SEC in late October that it overstated it’s adjusted funds from operations, a key earnings measure for REITs, by $23 million. The audit committee also suggested at the time that “the error was identified but not corrected” by ARCP executives. The announcement erased roughly a third of ARCP’s value at the time.

ARCP Chart

ARCP data by YCharts

The real estate investment trust also announced that CEO David Kay and COO Lisa Beeson were stepping down. William Stanley, who has been appointed Lead Independent Director and Interim CEO, said in a statement that “The steps taken today enhance ARCP’s corporate governance structure, increase transparency and further simplify its business relationships.”

Industry watchers argue that the personnel shake up could be aimed at restoring faith in the company on the part of investors, as a fund of this nature lives and dies through its ability to attract capital.

Kevin Gannon, a managing director at Robert A. Stanger & Co, an investment bank that tracks the REIT industry told The Wall Street Journal that the moves today suggests, “It doesn’t appear that the preliminary investigation is going well,” and that “It’s unprecedented to have three top executives at one of the largest REITs in the world step down on the same day.”

About the Author
By Chris Matthews
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