U.S. SEC charges AT&T, executives with leaking information to analysts
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[March 06, 2021] By
Chris Prentice
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission on Friday sued AT&T Inc and three executives for
allegedly disclosing nonpublic information to research analysts to avoid
falling short of quarterly expectations in 2016.
AT&T allegedly learned in March 2016 that a steeper-than-expected
decline in first quarter smartphone sales would leave the company
falling short of analysts' estimates, so the phone company's chief
financial officer directed investor relations employees to "work the
analysts" to get them to lower their estimates, the SEC said in a court
filing.
The SEC said investor relations executives Christopher Womack, Michael
Black, and Kent Evans made private, one-on-one phone calls to analysts
at approximately 20 firms, disclosing material nonpublic information in
violation of securities laws.
AT&T denied the allegations in a lengthy statement published online,
noting: "Not only did AT&T publicly disclose this trend on multiple
occasions before the analyst calls in question, but AT&T also made clear
that the declining phone sales had no material impact on its earnings."
The firm also said its core business is selling wireless service, and a
decline in equipment revenue is not material to AT&T.
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The company logo for AT&T is displayed on a screen on the floor at
the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., September 18,
2019. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Counsel for Womack, Black and Evans did not respond immediately to
requests for comment.
The SEC said the leaks prompted analysts to lower their forecasts,
enabling AT&T to report better-than-expected revenue when it announced
quarterly results on April 26, 2016. AT&T's share price rose 1.7% the
next day.
The allegations would represent a violation of regulation that prohibits
firms from disclosing significant information to securities analysts
without sharing it with the public, the SEC said. The lawsuit was filed
in Manhattan.
(Additional reporting by Eric Beech in Washington and Jon Stempel in New
York; Editing by Mohammad Zargham, David Gregorio and Sonya Hepinstall)
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