Goods leave the warehouse. The invoice is generated. The management team celebrates a massive quarter. But has a sale actually occurred?
In financial accounting, the answer isn’t as straightforward as shipping a box. Under modern accounting frameworks—specifically IFRS 15 and Ind AS 115 (Revenue from Contracts with Customers)—a sale is officially recognized only when control of the good or service transfers to the buyer. It does not count simply because an item changed location, a bill was printed, or cash was wired.
When a company feels the pressure of missing quarterly market expectations, stretching this definition is one of the easiest ways to dress up weak financial reports. Here is how revenue manipulation works, and how you can spot the warning signs before the market catches on.
The Core Concept: Transfer of Control
To understand where companies bend the rules, you have to look at the exact moment control shifts. Control means the customer has the sole ability to direct the use of, and obtain substantially all the remaining benefits from, the asset.
There are two primary shipping arrangements that determine this timing:
-
FOB (Free on Board) Shipping Point: Control transfers to the buyer the moment the goods leave the seller’s loading dock. The buyer takes on the shipping cost and risk during transit.
-
FOB (Free on Board) Destination: Control transfers only when the goods physically arrive at the customer’s doorstep or warehouse. The seller retains all ownership risks while the product is on the road.
If a company ships massive amounts of inventory at the very end of March under “FOB Destination” terms, but records those shipments as immediate sales, they are prematurely inflating their quarterly numbers.
3 Common Ways Revenue Figures Are Manipulated
When companies want to make their performance look stronger than it is, they typically deploy variations of these three accounting tricks:
1. Channel Stuffing
This occurs when a manufacturer forces more products down its distribution channel (to distributors or retailers) than those partners can realistically sell to actual consumers. To induce this, the company might offer deep temporary discounts or generous return policies. The company books the revenue today, but a massive wave of product returns inevitably crashes into the next quarter’s balance sheet.
2. Bill-and-Hold Schemes
In a bill-and-hold arrangement, a company bills a customer for goods but retains physical possession of them until a later date. While legitimate under highly restrictive criteria (e.g., the buyer must explicitly request it for space constraints, and the goods must be complete and ready), struggling companies often abuse this by billing for incomplete or unrequested products to hit their targets.
3. Right-of-Return Abuse
If a company sells products with a standard right of return, it cannot book the full amount as pure profit. It must look at historical data and set aside a “refund liability” buffer. Intentionally underestimating how much inventory will be sent back allows a company to artificially puff up its top-line revenue numbers.
How to Spot the Bending of the Line
You don’t need a forensic accounting degree to spot potential revenue manipulation. If you are reviewing a company’s financial health, look for these key red flags:
Accounts Receivable Spiking Faster Than Sales
If a company’s revenue grows by 10%, but its accounts receivable (money owed by customers) skyrockets by 45%, it is a classic warning sign. It implies that the company is booking sales on paper, but isn’t actually collecting cash from its buyers.
A Sudden Drop in Asset Turnover
The asset turnover ratio measures how efficiently a company uses its assets to generate revenue:
If this ratio drops noticeably while reported sales look healthy, it suggests the balance sheet is being weighed down by bloated, uncollected receivables or stagnant inventory that was shipped out and promptly returned.
Sudden Revisions to Return Policies or Credit Terms
Always read the footnotes in financial statements. If a company quietly extends its credit payment windows from 30 days to 90 days near the end of the fiscal year, or suddenly eases its return policies, it is likely aggressively pulling future sales into the current period to make the present look brighter.
