# Introduction hareholders expect a maximization of their investments in the form of interest regularly, which is expected to impress them to invest more in the company and also encourage potential investors to invest in the organization. Due to this notion, management will always do anything possible either legally or illegally to give a colorful and impressive account to lure the shareholders. Adaramola and Oyerinde (2014) stated in their study that the movement of earnings management influences share prices; that is, financial accounting has a positive impact on share prices, which is expected to affect shareholders' wealth. Johannes (2014) reported that companies report earnings quarterly, and this brought about pressure on management to deliver acceptable earnings per share performance to excite the shareholders. A study conducted in India by Ali-Shah, Butt, and Tariq (2011) clearly showed how voodoo accounting was used by companies producing cement during financial crises in the country. These companies used the voodoo accounting techniques to remain afloat. These companies showed profits or minimized losses by the change of depreciation policy when demand and production of cement were low. This kept investors reasonably comfortable and staff relaxed by paying out dividends out of the profits. Shareholders' wealth was increased as per the reported profits. Even when demand and factory production improved, they still refused to put an end to the corrupt act. Ali-Shah et al. (2011) opined that creative accounting is a tool like a weapon that when used correctly, it can be beneficial to the user but a situation when it is wrongly used or mishandled, it can cause more harm than good. This show the level at which financial statement fraud is carried out to deceive the stakeholders. Some countries are also guilty of these financial frauds through the use of delaying payment. A research conducted in Spain by Benito, Montesinos and Bastida (2008) have through private financing initiative which is also known as Public Private Partnership boosted their financial results. This is done by delaying some payments in order to control deficit and debt without cutting investments in infrastructures and public services. The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE) in 2014 categorized fraud into three, which are financial fraud, corruption, and asset misappropriation. Voodoo accounting is any act designed to deceive others, often resulting in the victim suffering from the loss of their investments. Similarly, Fraud can be broken down into various types of fraud, including employee fraud, vendor fraud, customer fraud, investment fraud, and management fraud. Management fraud deals specifically with financial statement fraud wherein top management misrepresent the information found in the financial statements (Albrecht, Albrecht, Albrecht, & Zimbelman, 2011). From the research conducted by ACFE, it was discovered that financial fraud had 73% compared to corruption which was 18% and asset misappropriation of 9%. That shows that the level of corporate financial fraud is very alarming from the statistics of the ACFE, but other forms of fraud like corruption and asset misappropriation from public office holders overshadow it due to the publicity that is given. This corporate fraud and misconduct have remained a constant threat to public trust in the confidence-building of the capital market (Ma Carthy, 2017). Due to the regular events of these financial fraud, both potential S and existing stakeholders are finding it hard to trust the capital market. Voodoo accounting and misconduct remains a constant threat to public trust in the confidence building of the capital markets. Fraud is a deliberate act committed to secure an unfair or unlawful gain or advantage by the perpetrator (KPMG, 2006). Anytime the financial statement is manipulated, it creates disagreement between a company's financial performances and related non-financial measures of the company, such as employee head count, number of retail outlets, and warehouse space. This creates an inconsistency that represents a red flag for gatekeepers to suspect fraud in a financial statements prepared (Brazel, Jones & Zimbelman, 2009). According to the report from Permanent Sub-committee on Investigation of the U.S Senate, management of Enron Corp were guilty of the following actions that caused the collapse of the firm: fiduciary failure, high-risk accounting, inappropriate conflict of interest, extensive undisclosed off-balance-sheet activity, excessive compensation, and lack of independence of the external auditors. Popular forms of voodoo accounting include improper revenue recognition, overstatement of inventory, improper deferral of costs, failure to record liabilities, causing operating results between accounting periods to be more even, and inadequate disclosures in footnotes (Crawford & Weirich, 2011). Improper revenue recognition is the most prevalent financial reporting fraud. According to Crawford and Weirich (2011), there are over 100 accounting standards that pertain to revenue recognition which allow companies to misstate revenue although the most common are recording revenue too soon, recording fictitious revenue, boosting income using one time or unsustainable activities, shifting current expenses to a later period, employing other techniques to hide expenses or losses, shifting current income to a later period and shifting future expenses to an earlier period (Crawford & Weirich, 2011). Killen (2016) identified an overstatement of inventory as another form of financial statement reporting fraud, which is the overstating of inventory that can result into overstated assets, understated costs of goods sold which then concludes with overstated earnings. With improper deferral of costs, a company will capitalize operating expenses, which removes the expense from the income statement and posts as an asset on the balance sheet. This removal of expenses increases earnings. The failure to record liabilities and the related expense is difficult to detect because it does not require an accounting entry or the generation of a fraudulent document such as off-balance-sheet financing. Smoothing operating income between accounting periods will give the impression of consistent earnings growth. One way to smooth the earnings is to set aside reserves and use those reserves to cover costs in the current period (Crawford & Weirich, 2011). For these reasons, the study, therefore, examined the effect of voodoo accounting on shareholders' wealth in Nigeria. # II. # Methodology The study was exploratory research that nexuses voodoo accounting and shareholders' wealth to understand and critically examine the relationship between the two variables. The study made use of secondary data by examining previous literature, journals, articles, text books, and other relevant material. # III. # Conceptual Review a) Voodoo Accounting Voodoo accounting has defined by Kenton (2018) is the application of accounting gimmicks and techniques to increase the revenue or reduce the expenses of a company with the sole purpose of deceiving investors. Some of the practices adopted by the collapsed and failed companies include bloating their earnings to deceive tons of investors and even attract more. Voodoo accounting was identified by United States Security and Exchange Commission boss in 1999 during the Dot Com case. The Dot com case was popular in the United States (US) in the year 1999, which affected a majority of the internet, providing companies causing them to collapse a year after granting them a license to trade on the New York Stock Exchange. Hayes (2019) explained that these companies raised billions of dollars at the floor of the stock exchange even though they were running at a loss before going public. The bubble busted in the year 2000 when they could not keep inflating their profits, which dropped the share price from as high as $5,000 to $4. According to Kenton (2018), the origin of the term voodoo accounting lies in the fact that profits can be made to appear like magic with certain accounting tricks. The same profit also disappear like magic when those manipulated earnings are removed, and hidden expenses are also added thereby showcasing the true financial status of the company (Ezeani, Ogbonna, Ezemoyih & Okonye, 2012). # b) Reasons for Voodoo Accounting Discussions of Voodoo Accounting have focused mainly on the impact on the decision of investors in the stock market; reasons for the directors of listed companies to seek to manipulate the financial statement are as follows (Amat and Blake, 1996).Companies generally prefer to report a steady trend of growth in profit rather than to show volatile profits with a series of dramatic rises and fails. This is achieved by making unnecessarily high provisions for liabilities and against asset values in good years so that these provisions can be reduced, thereby improving reported profits, in bad years. It also avoids raising expectations so high in good years that the company is unable to deliver what is required subsequently. If the trading conditions of a business are in fact volatile, then investors have a right to know this. Income smoothing may conceal long-term changes in the profit trend. In countries with highly conservative accounting system, the income smoothing, effect can be particularly pronounced because of the high level of provisions that accumulate. Blake, Amat, Martinez and Gracia (1995), discuss a German example. Another bias that sometimes arises is called 'big bath' accounting where a company making a bad loss seeks to maximize the reported loss in that year so that future years will appear better. A variant on income smoothing is to manipulate profit to tie in to forecast. Fox (1997) reports on how accounting policies at Microsoft are designed within the normal accounting rules to match reported earnings to profit forecasts. When Microsoft sells software, a large port of the profit is deferred to future years to cover potential upgrade and customer support costs. This perfectly respectable, and highly conservative, accounting policy means that future earnings are easy to predict. Moreover company directors may keep an income-boosting accounting policy change in hand to distract attention from unwelcome news. According to Griffiths (1986) as cited by Amat and Blake (1999), creative accounting may help maintain or boost a company's share price by reducing the apparent levels of borrowing, thereby making the company less susceptible to risk, and by creating the appearance of a good profit trend. This helps the company to raise capital from new share issues, offer their own share in takeover bids, and resist takeover by other companies. However, where the directors engage in "insider dealing" in their company's shares, they can use creative accounting to delay the release of information, thereby enhancing their opportunity to benefit from inside knowledge. It should be noted that in an efficient market, analysts would not be fooled by cosmetic accounting choices. Indeed, the alert analyst will see income boosting accounting devices as a possible signal of weakness. Another reason for creative accounting arises because companies are subject to various forms of contractual rights, obligations and constraints based on the amounts reported in the accounts. Other reasons given by Bello (2016) may also include: # Income smoothing Companies generally prefer to report a steady trend of growth in profit rather than to show volatile profits with a series of dramatic rises and falls. This is achieved by making unnecessarily high provisions for liabilities and against asset values in good years so that these provisions can be reduced, thereby improving reported profits, in bad years. Advocates of this approach argue that it is a measure against the 'shorttermism' of judging an investment based on the yields achieved in the immediately following years. It also avoids raising expectations so high in good years that the company is unable to deliver what is required subsequently. # Manipulate profit to tie into forecasts This happens where managers attempt to meet up with the forecasted for the year. There were reports on how accounting policies at Microsoft are designed, within the normal accounting rules, to match reported earnings to profit forecasts. If Microsoft sells software, a large part of the profit is deferred to future years to cover potential upgrades and customer support costs. This perfectly respectable and highly conservative, accounting policy means that future earnings are easy to predict. # To maintain or boost the share price Creative accounting may help maintain or boost the share price both by reducing the apparent levels of borrowing, so making the company appear subject to less risk, and by creating the appearance of a good profit trend. This helps the company to raise capital from new share issues, offer their own shares in takeover bids, and resist takeover by other companies. # Insider dealing If the directors engage in 'insider dealing' in their company's shares they can use creative accounting to delay the release of information for the market, thereby enhancing their opportunity to benefit from inside knowledge. # Circumvent contractual rights, obligations and constraints This is prevalent where companies are subject to various forms of contractual rights, obligation, and constraints based on the amount reported on the accounts; # Avoid Government Regulations, Where the government regulates the activities of companies not to exploit the economy, companies tend to choose accounting methods that tend to reduce their reported profits. # c) Potentiality of Voodoo Accounting The prospective for Voodoo Accounting according to Bello (2016) which was also supported by Ezeani, Ogbonna, Ezemohih and Okonye (2012) can be found in five (5) principal areas, regulatory flexibility, and dearth of regulation, the timing of some transactions, the use of artificial transactions, and the reclassification and presentation of financial numbers. # Regulatory Flexibility Accounting regulation often permits a choice of policy, for example, in respect of asset valuation. For # Global Journal of Management and Business Research Volume XX Issue I Version I Year 2020 ( ) example, the international accounting standard permits a choice between carrying non-current assets at either revalued amounts or depreciated historical cost. Business entities may, quite validly, change their accounting policies. As Schipper (1989) points out, such changes may be relatively easy to identify in the year of change, but are much less readily discernible thereafter. # Dearth of Regulation Some areas are simply not fully regulated. For example, there are very few mandatory requirements in respect of accounting for stock options. In some countries, like Spain, accounting regulation is limited to, for example, the recognition and measurement of pension liabilities and certain aspects of accounting for financial instruments. Management has considerable scope for estimation in discretionary areas. # Timing of some transactions Genuine transactions can also be times so as to give the desired impression in the accounts. As an example, suppose business has an investment at historical cost, which can easily be sold for a higher sales price, being the current value. The managers of the business are free to choose in which year they sell the investment and so increase the profit in the accounts. # Use of artificial transactions Artificial transactions can be entered both to manipulate balance sheet amounts and move profits between accounting periods. This is achieved by entering into two or more related transactions with an obliging third party, normally a bank. For example, suppose an arrangement is made to sell an asset to a bank and they lease that asset back for the rest of its useful life. The sale price under such a sale and lease back can be pitched above or below the current value of the asset, because the difference can be compensated for by increased or reduced rentals. # Reclassification and presentation of financial numbers The study by Fox (1997) suggests that firms may engage in balance sheet manipulation to reclassify liabilities in order to smooth reported liquidity and leverage rations. A special type of creative accounting relates to the presentation of financial numbers, based on cognitive reference points (Tsipouridou, 2012. # d) Techniques of Voodoo Accounting The potential for Voodoo Accounting may be found in six principal areas as given by Jones (2011) and improved by Bello (2016) are regulatory flexibility the dearth of regulation, and managerial judgment of assumptions about the future, the timing of some transactions, the use of artificial transactions, and the reclassification and presentation of financial numbers. Accounting regulation often permits a choice of policy, for example, in respect of asset variation. For example, the international accounting standard permits a choice between carrying non-current assets at either revalued amounts or depreciated historical cost. Business entities may, quite validly, change their accounting policies. As Schipper (1989) points out, such changes may be relatively easy to identify in the year of change but are much less readily discernible after that. # Dearth of Regulation Some areas are simply not totally regulated. For example, there are very few mandatory requirements in respect of accounting for stock options. In some countries, like Spain, accounting regulation is limited to, for example, the recognition and measurement of pension liabilities and certain aspects of accounting for financial instruments. Management has considerable scope for estimation in discretionary areas. Genuine transactions can also give the desired impression in the accounts. As an example, suppose business has an investment at historical cost, which can easily be sold for a higher sales price, is the current value. The managers of the business are free to choose in which year they sell the investment and so increase the profit in the accounts. # Artificial Transactions Artificial transactions can be entered both to manipulate balance sheet amounts and move profits between accounting periods. This is achieved by entering into two or more related transactions with an obliging third party, normally a bank. For example, suppose an arrangement is made to sell an asset to a bank, and they lease that asset back for the rest of its useful life. The sale price under such a sale and lease back can be pitched above or below the current value of the asset, because the difference can be compensated for by increased or reduced rentals. The study by Fox (1997) The changes in the value and structure of costs The accounting regulations allow a certain margin of maneuver in quantifying the costs of the financial year. For instance, a certain asset, only the maximum number of years in which they must be depreciated is indicated. A higher or smaller depreciation term affects the size of the result. # The change of the value and structure of revenues In certain situations, the recognition of revenues can be increased or slowed down applying the principle of prudence or the principle of connecting costs with revenues; # Change of the value of assets The existence of flexibility regarding the calculations of depreciation and provisions creates the possibility of increasing or reducing the net value of assets. Moreover, stock can be evaluated by various methods and consequently, their value may be different, which has a corresponding impact on the profit and loss statement. Such changes also alter the size of current and non-current assets. # The change of the value and structure of internal capital The change of revenues and expenses has an impact on the size of the result and, consequently on the size of reserves. Therefore, this modifies the value of internal capital and of all shares calculated based on this value. # The change in the value of liabilities In some countries, accounting regulations allow the regularization of certain liabilities, such as retirement liabilities, for some time. Consequently, an enterprise aiming to enhance its result will allocate the liability for the maximum period permitted. # The re-classification of assets or liabilities This happens in case of doubts regarding the category in which one item falls, especially securities. Depending on the intention of the enterprises, it must be registered in current assets or in on-current assets, which affects the shares calculated for their benefit. # f) Cases of Voodoo Accounting Practices The Enron Scandal is considered to be one of the most disreputable corporate fraud case in American history; an Enron scandal summary of events is considered by many historians and economists alike to have been an unofficial blueprint for a case study on White-collar Crime. White collar crime is defined as nonviolent, financially-based criminal activity typically undertaken within a setting in which its participants retain advanced education about employment that is considered to be prestigious. By misrepresenting earnings reports while continuing to enjoy the revenue provided by the investors not privy to the true financial condition of ENRON, the executives of ENRON embezzled funds funneling in from investments while reporting fraudulent earnings to those investors. This not only increased investments from current shareholders but also attracted new investors desiring to enjoy the apparent financial gains enjoyed by the ENRON Corporation. Calloway is known for making numerous types of golf equipment, including clubs, putters, balls, and drivers. In March 2002, Due to the concern of the audit committee over the future of the firm, the board of directors dismissed Arthur Andersen. Callaway hired KPMG to replace Arthur Andersen. In December 2002, Callaway Golf dismissed KPMG due to disagreements with management about accounting for Callaway's warranty reserves. The company thought that the changes in the warranty reserve should be treated as a change in estimate while KPMG thought that the change should be treated as a correction error. When the two parties could not agree, the company dismissed KPMG. How could a publicly listed company have four different auditors in the same year becomes a big issue for the company? The case of M/S Satyam Computer (M/s SCSL) was perhaps India's major corporate fraud case where (M/s SCSL) caused loss to the investors to the tune of Rs.14, 162 crore. The company head, Ramalinga Raju, and members of his family secured illegal gains to the tune of about Rs. 2,743 crore through various tricks. The fraud was perpetrated by inflating the revenue of the company through false sales invoices and showing corresponding gains by forging the bank statements with the connivance of the Statutory and Internal Auditors of the company. The annual financial statements of the company with inflated revenue were published for several years, and this lead to a higher price of the scrip in the market. In the process, innocent investors were lured into investing in the company. Attempts were made to conceal the fraud by acquiring the companies of kith and kin. Like several other cases of this type, the Satyam case also came to the CBI as soon as the country got wind of it. The CBI constituted a Multi-Disciplinary Investigation Team (MDIT) that investigate fraud related cases. The team worked hard in revealing the dealings of the management and achieved success in a record time of 45 days when it filed its first charge sheet against the accused of offenses of criminal conspiracy, cheating, forgery and falsification of accounts. ). From the quantitative analysis for 2014, the Quality of Earnings was -2.036, which is due to the net loss, and the Altman Z-Score was 1.35. The red flag benchmark for the Altman Z-Score is a Z-score of less than 1.8 (Grove and Clouse, 2015). These two indicators show that the company has a possible bankruptcy problem. However, we did not see any other indication of fraudulent financial reporting in KT's 2014 financial statements. In recent years, Creative accounting practices have been on the increase in the Nigerian industry as some institutions present grossly exaggerated, misleading, and deceptive state of financial affairs to attract unsuspecting investors or obtain undeserved accounting-based rewards. It is evident that the extent of window dressing of financial statements in Nigeria has greatly violated all known ethical standards of the accounting and auditing profession. The list of cases linked to creative accounting practices is on the rise as more corporate bodies in Nigeria are being investigated. The change of board members in Cadbury Plc, Nigeria, was a result of doctoring of accounts to cover up certain inadequacies and corrupt deals engaged by the management. Likewise, the corporate failures of most Nigerian bank Chief Executive Officers and investigations into their activities by the Anti-graft agency, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) are largely due to fraudulent financial reporting. In 2009, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) sacked five (5) Bank managing directors and Executive Directors for mismanagement and alleged fraud. This has affected the stability and growth of the Nigerian financial system. Some of the said banks are Intercontinental Bank, Oceanic Bank, and Fin Bank which are no longer operational. It is therefore arguable that the practice of voodoo accounting is unfavorable to the continual growth of the Nigerian economy. # IV. Conclusion and Recommendation The study examined the effect of voodoo accounting practices and shareholders' wealth in Nigeria by reviewing articles and journals in relation to the study. Previous studies about this have focused more on how creative accounting, earnings management, but voodoo accounting differ from each other and how they can be used negatively or positively. This study is unique because it specifically focused on how the use of negative creative accounting, which was coined in this study to be voodoo accounting, affects the shareholders' wealth in Nigeria. It is within this purview and the fact that there exists a paucity of studies of this nature in predicting business failure in Nigeria that this study sought to empirically investigate the effect of voodoo accounting on shareholders' wealth. Thus, from the existing exploratory review done, it can be established that voodoo accounting causes havoc to the shareholders' wealth which means that investors are at great risk when voodoo accounting practices are applied. The study recommended that supervisory departments of regulatory bodies should carefully study and review techniques of voodoo accounting to prevent manipulations in the account and protect the interest of investors. Other analytical methods of reviewing financial statements like the Beneish M-score model and Altman Z score should be introduced and enforced by regulatory bodies to be put into use by externals to discover earnings manipulations and predict business failure. # Global Voodoo Accounting and Shareholders' Wealth in Nigeriae) The Effects of Voodoo Accounting TechniquesCarlos, Begona, and Martha (2018) identifiedthe impactful aftermath that the use of voodooaccounting techniques may have on the presentation ofinformation from annual statements are identified asfollows:Regulatoy FlexibilityYear 2020Volume XX Issue I Version I)D(Global Journal of Management and Business ResearchOpportunities for creative accountingOpportunity for Creative AccountingSolution AvailableChoice of accounting methodReduced permitted choiceBias estimates and predictionReduced scope for estimateEnter into artificial transactionsSubstance over formTiming of genuine transactionsPrescribe revaluationSource: Amat and Blake (1996)© 2020 Global Journals development of electrical equipment in Japan. By 2000,Toshiba had become the world's fourth-largest chipmanufacturer and third-largest notebook computermanufacturer. Following its purchase of WestinghouseElectric Company in 2006 and subsequentmacroeconomic events between 2008 and 2014,Toshiba faced declining profits. In response, Toshibaengaged in earnings management through twoaccounting treatments. First, it delayed the recognitionof losses under long-term contracts. Second, itinappropriately applied price masking to account fortransfers of components between itself and contractmanufacturers. By March 2017, Westinghouse was filed for bankruptcy protection, and in 2018, Toshiba sold it for $4.6 Billion and discontinued all productions about the company after making a loss of $9.6 Billion in 2016Year 2020alone.KT Corporation (NYSE: KT), South Korea'ssecond-largest mobile carrier, provides integrated wired/wireless telecommunication services (KT Corporation Website). In 2013, prosecutors probed allegations that the company incurred losses on asset selloffs and bad investments. In 2014, KT ENS Co., affiliated with KT Corporation, was investigated over suspicion of illegally taking out approximately $260 million in loans from 16 local banks by forging documents (Yonhap News, 2013Volume XX Issue I Version I)(Global Journal of Management and Business Research © 2020 Global JournalsVoodoo Accounting and Shareholders' Wealth in Nigeria * Value relevance of financial accounting information of quoted companies in Nigeria. A trend analysis AOAdaramola AAOyerinde Research Journal of Finance and Accounting 5 8 2014 * Fraud Examination WSAlbrecht CCAlbrecht COAlbrecht MZimbelman 2011 Thomson South-Western 4 Ohio * Use or abuse of creative accounting techniques SZAli-Shah SButt YBTariq International Journal of Trade 2 6 2011 Economics and Finance * OAmat JBlake Contabdidad Creative Barcelona Gestian 1996. 2000 * The continuing problem of International accounting diversity OAmat JBlake DMartinez FGracia Company Accountant 4 2 1995 * Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE) 2014 Fraud and Corruption cases. Retrieved from SMC Blackboard Learning Resource * Assessment of factors influencing creative accounting. An unpublished thesis for the award of MSc degree from Usmandu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto from the department of accounting ABello 2016 * An example of creative accounting in public sector: The private financing of infrastructures in Spain BBenito VMontesinos FBastida Critical Perspectives of Accounting 19 3 2008 * Using nonfinancial measures to assess fraud risk JBrazel KJones MZimbelman Journal of Accounting Research 47 5 2009 * Fraud guidance for corporate counsel reviewing financial statements and reports RCrawford TWeirich Journal of Financial Crime 18 4 2011 * The effect of creative accounting on the job performance of accountants in reporting financial statements in Nigeria. Kuwait Chapter NSEzeani MFOgbonna CMEzemoyih EEOkonye Arabian Journal of Business and Management Review 1 9 2012 * Learn to play the earnings game JFox Fortune 7 1 1997 * New creative accounting: how to make your profits what you want to be IGriffiths 1986 Londra, City Editeur * Earnings management and performance of Banks TJohannes Accounting London Journals 2 1 2014 * Voodoo accounting WKenton 2018 * Using Altman Z-score and Beneish M-score to detect financial fraud and corporate failure: A case study of Enron Corporation JMac Carthy International Journal of Finance and Accounting 6 6 2017 * Commentary on creative accounting KSchipper Accounting Horizons 12 1 1989 * Earnings management and the role of auditors in an unusual International Financial Reporting Standard context: The case of Greece. Accounting, Auditing and Taxation MCTsipouridou 2012 2