Big Fat Finance Blog

About This Blog Updated daily by members of the Business Finance Expert Network, The Big Fat Finance Blog is intended to arm finance professionals with innovative ideas and best practices that help finance organizations create value.

Archive for August, 2010

Information Governance Pays Off

A recent IBM survey found information governance emerging at the next big enterprise management trend. Of over 400 respondents to its information management study, 65 percent either had already implemented information governance or planned to do so by the end of 2011, while 70 percent expected information governance to grow in the next 3 to 5 years.


wiredFINANCE has covered aspects of information governance previously, as recently as a few weeks ago here. A failure of data governance can be quite costly. IBM reports that a large chemical manufacturer failed to destroy content and records in accordance with its corporate retention policy. So, during litigation the company had to spend over $12 million reviewing documents that should have been disposed of.


In response to the growing interest in information governance, IBM initiated an open information governance community. In addition to the survey, the company donated an open source model and some tools to the effort. More results from the survey follow. more

Blackstone Billionaire Apologizes for Comparing Obama Tax Policies to Hitler’s Invasion of Poland

It’s gracious — somewhat, I guess — of billionaire private equity honcho Stephen Schwarzman to say he’s sorry for describing President Obama’s business tax policies as “a war … like when Hitler invaded Poland in 1939,” as quoted in a New York Post story (hat tip to Paul Caron’s TaxProf blog). It’s just not good enough, though, on three counts: more

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At MDU Resources, ROIC Remains CFO’s Metric of Choice

A long-term highway funding bill designed to provide safer transportation routes and put thousands of construction workers back to work is just one of a number of legislative items being closely watched by the executives of MDU Resources of Bismarck, North Dakota.


Described frequently as a diversified natural resource company, MDU Resources today generates, transmits, and distributes electricity and natural gas in Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming. Moreover, it also operates a number of construction-related businesses, where of course a federal highway funding bill can have a sizable impact. more

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Getting the Jump on Performance Announcements

Last week, General Motors announced its return to steady financial footing. One equity analyst proclaimed in The Wall Street Journal that the automaker is now “lean, agile, and focused.” One can easily imagine boardrooms across the land resonating with those three words.


After all, companies with spare cash or ready access to cheap money — or, in GM’s case, a government bailout — have a strong economic incentive to invest in weight loss and muscle tone. With the U.S. economic outlook still calling for tepid growth, CFOs know better than to count on increasing sales volume or unit price increases. Pushing for productivity is the only way to go.


Large manufacturers, it seems, have digested this message. Some are shuttering redundant facilities, fleets, and people. Others are moving work from unionized to non-unionized plants. Many are redrawing supply chains and recalculating the costs vs. benefits of operating in various world regions.


But it’s easier said than done. Pulling off a complex right-sizing scheme without sending the culture careening is a managerial art form. Then again, figuring out what, when, and how to cut is, for better or worse, a science only a CFO can love. more

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Citigroup Attorney Says CFO Failed to “Pick Up On” Disclosure’s Tortuous Trail

“You can’t prosecute a company on the basis of [internal] miscommunication,” Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle told SEC lawyers earlier this week when she refused to approve an SEC settlement that required Citigroup to pay a $75 million fine.


The judge’s challenge represents yet another obstacle for the SEC as it tries to reprimand financial institutions for their role in the financial crisis. For its part, the SEC has charged that Citigroup led investors to believe that the bank’s subprime exposure was $13 billion when it was really over $50 billion. more

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