Finance
Former Malaysian finance minister charged following Pandora Papers revelations – ICIJ
Malaysian authorities have charged former finance minister Daim Zainuddin and his wife for failing to disclose assets, as part of an anti-corruption probe stemming from Pandora Papers revelations.
Malaysia’s Anti-Corruption Commission began investigating Daim and his associates in 2023 after Malaysiakini, a media partner of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, exposed their ties to several British Virgin Islands companies and trusts holding assets worth $31 million. The findings were part of the 2021 Pandora Papers investigation led by ICIJ and based on a trove of nearly 12 million records leaked from 14 offshore financial services providers.
Daim, an 85-year-old businessman who served as finance minister from 1984 to 1991 and from 1999 to 2001, has denied wrongdoing and pleaded not guilty. Last week, he entered court in a wheelchair and was granted bail after his lawyer cited health issues, according to Reuters.
His wife Naimah Khalid has also pleaded not guilty.
The couple is now seeking a court order to quash the charges, Malaysian media reported.
MACC said its officials are also looking into another offshore family trust, worth an estimated $52.5 million, recently uncovered by ICIJ and Malaysiakini. The Cayman Islands-registered trust, which lists Naimah and Daim’s two youngest sons as beneficiaries, was used to invest in U.K. and U.S. properties, according to documents obtained by ICIJ.
In a statement, Naimah said the assets “were the product of legitimate business and investment activities, going back long before Daim joined politics in 1984.”
Daim faces up to five years in prison and a fine if found guilty of not declaring 71 assets, including luxury cars, real estate, and dozens of companies, according to Malaysiakini. The list did not include assets held overseas.
“We will try our best to get all the evidence, including from overseas, and this is one of the challenges that we are facing,” MACC chief Azam Baki told local reporters, adding that the agency had not set a deadline to complete its work.
Last year, investigators seized a 60-story skyscraper in Kuala Lumpur and froze bank accounts belonging to the Daim family.
The high-profile MACC probe is part of a sweeping government crackdown on corruption that has targeted several former politicians and their families.
MACC told Malaysian media that it had initiated inquiries into “all those associated and named” in both the Pandora Papers and the Panama Papers, another trove of leaked financial records at the center of a 2016 investigation by ICIJ and its media partners around the world.
The agency said it has so far questioned 10 people, including Daim, based on information uncovered in the two ICIJ investigations.
Last month, the agency asked Mirzan Mahathir, the eldest son of former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad, to declare all of his income since 1981, when his father was first elected.
Panama Papers documents examined by Malaysiakini in 2016, showed that Mirzan, a businessman, was listed as the shareholder of a British Virgin Islands company named Sergio International Ltd. in 2002. A representative for Mirzan told reporters at the time that Mirzan was not involved with the company.
ICIJ’s 2013 Offshore Leaks investigation found he was also the director and shareholder of three companies based in Labuan, a tax haven in Malaysia.
On Jan. 17, 2024, Mirzan was given 30 days to declare his assets to MACC.
His father Mahathir held office for 22 years before stepping down in 2003, then served again as prime minister from 2018 to 2020. He now supports the opposition Malay-Islamic alliance and reportedly criticized the anti-corruption blitz as politically motivated.
Finance
Board Advances Motion to Address LAHSA’s Failure to Pay Service Providers – Supervisor Lindsey P. Horvath
Board Advances Motion to Address LAHSA’s Failure to Pay Service Providers
Board Advances Motion to Address LAHSA’s Failure to Pay Service Providers
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Supervisor Lindsey P. Horvath
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Finance
How “impact accounting” can integrate sustainability with finance
Around three years ago, Charles Giancarlo, CEO of data platform Pure Storage, came back from Davos and asked his sustainability team to look into an idea he’d encountered at the meeting: Impact accounting, a method for integrating emissions and other externalities into company balance sheets.
The idea had been slowly picking up adherents in Europe for around a decade, but Pure Storage, which rebranded this month to Everpure, would go on to become the first U.S. company to join the Value Balancing Alliance (VBA), a group of 30 or so companies developing the approach. Trellis checked in last week with Everpure and the VBA for an update.
How does impact accounting work?
At the heart of the approach are a set of “valuation factors,” developed by third-party experts, that are used to convert activity data for emissions, water use, air pollution and other externalities into dollar figures that can be integrated into balance sheets. In the case of emissions, for example, the VBA uses $220 per ton of carbon dioxide equivalent, a figure based on the estimated social impact of rising greenhouse gases levels.
At Everpure, one long-term goal is to have cost centers be aware of the dollar impact of relevant externalities. After an initial focus on identifying and collecting the most material data, the team is now rolling out a dashboard containing several years of impact accounting numbers.
“It’s catered to different personas,” explained Adrienne Uphoff, Everpure’s ESG regulations and impact accounting manager. Finance was an initial use case, with product managers also on the roadmap. “You can compare it to financial numbers to really understand the impact intensity.”
What value does the approach bring?
“The essence of impact accounting is that you’re translating all these different metrics in the sustainability space into the language the decision makers understand,” said Christian Heller, the VBA’s CEO. “Everyone understands what you’re talking about, and you get a sense of the magnitude of your impact and the risks and opportunities.”
This has allowed Everpure to calculate what Uphoff called the “environmental costs of goods sold” and to estimate the impact of circular strategies, such as refurbishing hardware. The analysis reveals “impact savings across the full value chain across five different environmental topics all in a single dollar unit,” she said.
Analyses like that can then be shared with customers and used to distinguish Everpure from competitors. “The long-term winners in this space are going to be those that can perform against sustainability goals,” said Kathy Mulvany, Everpure’s global head of sustainability. “Impact accounting gives us a way to bring comparability, so companies can understand how they’re truly stacking up.”
What does it take to implement impact accounting?
A great deal of technical work goes into creating valuation factors, but the system is designed so that outside experts create the numbers and hand them to sustainability professionals for use. Still, not every company will have the in-house environmental data that is also needed. Many companies have been collecting emissions data for five years or more, for example, but detailed datasets for water use are less common.
Internal teams also need to be familiar with the concepts. “One of the key learnings from our impact accounting implementation is that the socialization curve is longer than you expect,” said Uphoff. “Attaching monetary values on externalities introduces new metrics and mental models, and that can naturally make people a little nervous at first. It takes time and dialogue for teams to build confidence in how to interpret this new lens on performance.”
What’s next?
In the early days of impact accounting, companies and consultancies worked independently on different methodologies. Now that work is coalescing, said Heller. The International Standards Organization will start work on a standard this summer, he added, and the VBA is having conversations with the IFRS Foundation, which creates international financial reporting standards.
The approach may also be integrated into mandatory disclosure standards. Heller noted that the European Union’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive mentions the potential benefits of companies putting a dollar figure on some environmental impacts. “It’s the next evolutionary step of any kind of sustainability disclosure regulations,” he said.
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Finance
2 Aspira charter high schools to close by April due to financial issues
Chicago Public Schools is shutting down two Aspira charter high schools by the middle of the year, following financial issues over the past year.
School leaders are calling the move “unprecedented.”
Students at the Aspira Business and Finance High School at 2989 N. Milwaukee Ave. in Avondale held a walkout right outside of Aspira after the CEO said they only have enough money to stay open for the next four to five weeks.
Students wanted their questions answered as to why they’re being transferred to other schools.
Angelina Mota is a senior at the high school and said she is concerned about her future.
“It’s very difficult, especially for us, hearing that credits might not go all the way with us. That our graduation might just be taken back. It’s very disappointing,” she said.
This is the first time a CPS school will close before the end of the school year. Both Aspira and CPS said the charter network won’t have the funds to stay open past April.
“The burden on our seniors has got to be… they don’t give a damn about the kids. The seniors,” Aspira of Illinois CEO Edgar Lopez said while fighting back his emotions.
The school is facing a $2.9 million deficit, impacting 540 students and dozens of staff.
CPS said they have already given more than $2.5 million to the charter school to help sustain operations. They said under Illinois law, it reached the legal limit of funding it can provide.
This has been a year-long effort in compliance with state charter school law.
In a statement, CPS said, “Aspira has not submitted required documentation, including evidence of funding to support operations through this school year.”
The documents CPS said are overdue include the school’s fiscal year 25 financial audit, general ledger, and payroll.
“We’re not hiding nothing. The financial documents that they were asking for, Jose told them, we’ll have them to you by Friday. Then they send a letter by Thursday. They didn’t even give us a chance,” Lopez said.
CPS said they’re initiating this due to the lack of financial transparency and solvency.
“We know we don’t want to go anywhere else because we’re used to the routine we have here,” said student Arichely Molina.
“Please let us (stay) open. at least until we graduate,” Mota said.
CPS said their main goal is to ensure the kids have a safety net as they transition to another school.
The second school is located at 3986 W. Barry Ave., also in the Avondale neighborhood.
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