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Beazer Homes CEO's Bonus Targeted By SEC

MARK JEWELL   11/16/09 03:51 PM ET   AP

Beazer Homes Ceo

BOSTON — Federal regulators may try to collect bonus money awarded to the top executive of Beazer Homes USA Inc. covering periods when the homebuilder restated financial results.

Beazer Homes said in a regulatory filing Monday that Securities and Exchange Commission staff issued a so-called Wells notice to CEO Ian McCarthy, citing an anti-fraud law provision allowing the government to "claw back" compensation in some instances.

The notification comes more than a year after Atlanta-based Beazer settled a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation into its financial statements.

The notice disclosed Monday means SEC staff intends to recommend to the full commission that civil charges be filed against McCarthy. Beazer said McCarthy intends to respond to the notice, which is not a formal allegation nor a finding of wrongdoing.

Beazer said SEC staff recommended action against McCarthy "to collect certain incentive compensation and other amounts allegedly due" under the clawback provision of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. The company's filing did not disclose how much compensation is involved, or other details about the pay. Beazer spokeswoman Leslie Kratcoski declined to comment.

The company itself is not named in the notice.

Under Sarbanes-Oxley's Section 304, the government can try to claw back incentive-based compensation to executives covering periods when a company restated earnings. The broader law was an attempt to crack down on corporate America after accounting fraud at companies such as Enron and WorldCom.

In another case involving the clawback provision, the SEC in July said it was seeking more than $4 million from the former CEO of auto parts retailer CSK Auto Corp. That case accuses Maynard Jenkins of profiting while the Phoenix-based company allegedly defrauded shareholders. The SEC's lawsuit demands that Jenkins return the money – which was paid out in bonuses and stock sales – even though he is not facing fraud charges himself.

Beazer said in Monday's filing that SEC staff did not allege "any lack of due care" by McCarthy in connection with the company's financial statements.

Beazer did not admit or deny wrongdoing in September 2008 when it settled with the SEC after an investigation into the company's business practices in handling financial statements. Beazer said the probe focused on topics that the company's audit committee previously investigated.

According to Beazer's 2007 annual report, the audit committee's investigation of the company's mortgage origination business also discovered accounting and financial reporting errors that required restatements.

The SEC order instituting the settlement said Beazer "fraudulently misstated certain of its quarterly and annual net income by intentionally managing its earnings." The company underreported net income from about 2000 to 2005, which led to reserves used to smooth out Beazer's earnings and allow the company to meet Wall Street expectations in other periods. When the housing market began to decline in 2006, Beazer began reversing the reserves, the SEC found.

Beazer paid no fines or penalties under the settlement, but consented to a cease-and-desist order requiring future compliance.

In 2007, when the audit committee's investigation was under way, McCarthy received a compensation package valued at $3.2 million. More than half of it came from stock awarded to him as part of a bonus for his performance in 2006.

Shares of Beazer fell 28 cents, or 5.1 percent, to $5.21 in afternoon trading. The stock has ranged from 24 cents to $6.93 over the past year.

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Filed by Claire Schneiderman  | 
 
 
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03:09 PM on 11/18/2009
Once again, Obama fails to make progress with anything. All this traveling is a waste of tax payer dollars and never brings any resolution. We need less free trade and more manufacturing in America.

hat tip to http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com
Meanwhile, wall street makes record revenues and profits while unemployment shows no signs of abating. What a joke.
06:24 PM on 11/17/2009
"May try to collect?" Why wasn't this done yesterday? Do it now!
03:48 PM on 11/17/2009
Beazer's protection money bag must have been a little light last month. I'm sure they'll sort it all out so no one gets hurt.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mountainweb
Conservative Commonsense
03:23 PM on 11/17/2009
"Beazer paid no fines or penalties under the settlement, but consented to a cease-and-desist order requiring future compliance." So, someone please tell me what is the difference between this and a bank robber, caught in the act, being let go just for agreeing to stop robbing the bank he was caught in and promising not to rob another bank?
schatsie
banks are more dangerous than standing armies
08:18 AM on 11/18/2009
No fines or penalties,,,wasn't that white of them????
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
TeeLolly
01:15 PM on 11/17/2009
They need to figure out a way to "claw back" compensation paid to Goldman Sachs execs ...
schatsie
banks are more dangerous than standing armies
08:17 AM on 11/18/2009
Heck they need to take the cap off Payroll TAXES and put it on everything, including dividends and interest..... and replace the capital gains tax with the income tax..... NOW BEFORE THEY GET ONE MORE PENNY OF TAXPAYER MONEY.....
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
TeeLolly
12:38 PM on 11/18/2009
Just think--if they were to take your suggestion, they could fund healthcare for everyone and ensure Medicare's and Social Security's solvency forever ... And no one would have to give up any of the necessities to pay for it (unless seven or eight houses for one family count as a necessity).