Parmalat - The Fall of a Dairy Giant


IBS CDC IBS CDC IBS CDC IBS CDC RSS Feed
 
Case Studies | Case Study in Business, Management, Operations, Strategy, Case Study

ICMR HOME | Case Studies Collection

Case Details:

Case Code : FINC028
Case Length : 14 Pages
Period : 2003 - 2004
Pub. Date : 2004
Teaching Note : Available
Organization : Parmalat Finanziaria SpA
Industry : Dairy Products
Countries : Italy

To download Parmalat - The Fall of a Dairy Giant case study (Case Code: FINC028) click on the button below, and select the case from the list of available cases:



Price:

For delivery in electronic format: Rs. 400;
For delivery through courier (within India): Rs. 400 + Rs. 25 for Shipping & Handling Charges

» Finance Case Studies
» Short Case Studies
» View Detailed Pricing Info
» How To Order This Case
» Business Case Studies
» Case Studies by Area
» Case Studies by Industry
» Case Studies by Company



Please note:

This case study was compiled from published sources, and is intended to be used as a basis for class discussion. It is not intended to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a management situation. Nor is it a primary information source.

<< Previous

Excerpts

A Year That Went Wrong

Parmalat's troubles began early in 2003, leading eventually to the collapse of the company by the end of the year.

In January 2003, soon after the company declared its results for 2002, reports began circulating among bankers and investment firms about the company's balance sheet and its high levels of debt, in spite of having considerable assets and high cash reserves (Refer Exhibit-III for Balance Sheet of 2002).

This resulted in Consob, the Italian stock market regulatory authority, asking Parmalat to explain the rationale behind raising high levels of debt, given high cash reserves. Early in the year, the company was also forced to withdraw a bond issue valued at $360 million, after the company's share price fell by nine percent. Fausto Tonna (Tonna), Parmalat's long-standing CFO and aide of Tanzi, resigned in April 2003...

How it All Happened

A notable point in the Parmalat case was that, unlike other accounting scandals, no money had actually disappeared from the company.

However, a number of non-existent assets had been created to show money where it did not exist.

Analysts said that this was rather different from other cases of fraudulent accounting, where money was diverted from the company to enrich a few of the top people. In Parmalat's case, the money was either diverted to other companies (within the group or belonging to the Tanzi family) to keep them afloat or did not exist in the first place. Investigations revealed that the fraud had first begun in the late-1980s. The company had expanded very rapidly into international markets in the 1980s. However, not all the international operations were successful...

Excerpts Contd... >>

 

Case Studies Links:- Case Studies, Short Case Studies, Simplified Case Studies.

Other Case Studies:- Multimedia Case Studies, Cases in Other Languages.

Business Reports Link:- Business Reports.

Books:- Textbooks, Work Books, Case Study Volumes.