Tesco
has suspended four executives, including its UK managing director, after the
supermarket overstated its half-year profit guidance by £250m.
That
would be almost a quarter of its expected profit for the period.
It
has launched an investigation headed by Deloitte, and says it is now working to
establish the impact of the issue on its full-year results.
"Disappointment
would be an understatement," said Tesco chief executive Dave Lewis.
Mr
Lewis, who only took the helm on 1 September, said it was "a serious
issue", but insisted "it doesn't take away from what I'm able to
build at Tesco".
Shares
fell 8% in early trading.
Mr
Lewis said "a number of people" had been suspended from duty "to
facilitate the fullest and deepest
investigation possible", but said this
was not "disciplinary or an admission of guilt".
UK
managing director Chris Bush is one of those suspended, according to Radio 5
Live presenter Adam Parsons.
Mr
Lewis said Robin Terrell, Tesco's multi-channel director, would be
"stepping in and running and leading the UK leadership team", but he
refused to confirm that Mr Bush had been suspended.
Tesco
is also believed to have suspended its UK finance director Carl Rogberg, its
food commercial director John Scouler and the head of food sourcing Matt
Simister.
Mr
Lewis said the issue was "something completely out of the ordinary"
and his priority was to carry out "a full and frank investigation".
"We
will take decisive action as the results of the investigation become
clear," he added.
Tesco
also confirmed that there had been no chief financial officer (CFO) at the
group over the past week, after its current CFO Laurie McIlwee left just over a
week ago following his resignation in April.
Marks
and Spencer's chief financial officer (CFO) Alan Stewart was announced as Mr
McIlwee's replacement in July, but is not due to join Tesco until December.
Tesco
chairman Sir Richard Broadbent rebuffed criticism that he should have
discovered the issue sooner.
"Things
are always unnoticed until they have been noticed." he said. "The
shareholders will have to decide for themselves whether I'm part of the
solution or part of the problem."
Results delayed
On
29 August, Tesco had said it expected its trading profit for the six months to
23 August to be about £1.1bn, lower than management had expected.
In
its latest statement, Tesco said the profits overstatement was
"principally due to the accelerated recognition of commercial income and
delayed accrual of costs".
It
also said some of the error - which referred to its expected profits for the
six months to 23 August - was due to the timing of the accounting of payments
between suppliers and Tesco.
Mr
Lewis said this meant "an element of" expected revenue from its
suppliers had been "reported in the wrong time period".
"It's
about revenue received versus when the activity took place," he added.
Tesco
said "an informed employee" had alerted the board to the issue on
Friday, and added it had already informed the UK's financial regulator, the
Financial Conduct Authority.
Tesco shopping
Tesco
has been battling falling sales and a decline in its market share
As a
result of the problem, Tesco has pushed back the release of its interim results
to 23 October, from 1 October.
Deloitte
will carry out its investigation with Freshfields, the group's external legal
advisers.
Tesco's
usual auditors are PricewaterhouseCoopers. The accountancy firm declined to
comment.
Shares
in Tesco reached an 11-year low in August after the firm cut its full-year
profit forecast to £2.4bn from £2.8bn.
The
supermarket group has been battling falling sales and a decline in its market
share as discount chains such as Aldi and Lidl have gained in popularity.
Previous
chief executive Philip Clarke stood down in July after his attempts to revive
Tesco's fortunes through a £1bn turnaround plan failed.
'Flabbergasted'
Analysts
widely criticised Tesco following the announcement.
Cantor
Fitzgerald said it had already warned last November that it believed Tesco was
"demanding/taking money from suppliers trading accounts".
"We
believed Tesco had been overstating its UK commercial gross profit by £200m+
per annum, via deducting monies from suppliers' trading accounts or extending
payment dates without notice," it added.
Professor
Ajay Bhalla of Cass Business School said "things could not be worse for
Tesco's management and shareholders".
"The
incoming CEO - Mr. Lewis has a momentous task in hand. Re-building the internal
culture and market reputation will be his number one priority," he said.
And
Shore Capital analyst Clive Black said he was "flabbergasted" by
Tesco's announcement.
"Such
an announcement is not the stuff of a well operated FTSE-100 organisation. This
development may raise, indeed must raise, much more fundamental questions over
the chairman's (Richard Broadbent) position and the nature, composition and
extent of the board."
BBC
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