March 6, 2015

When it comes to employee fraud, cash is by far the prime target.

But inventory stolen from warehouses or showrooms accounts for about one in five thefts, according to the 2014 Report to the Nations on Occupational Fraud and Abuse by the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners.

And the median loss of non-cash assets is one of the highest of any scheme – about $90,000 – showing that these crimes can cause a lot of financial damage quickly, the report said.inventory

Those inventory losses might be higher except for the fact that theft of inventory is discovered faster than any other kind of theft – a median of 12 months. Many types of fraud take double that amount of time to discover, including check tampering, payroll fraud, billing, expense reimbursements and financial statement fraud, according to the fraud examiners report.

Inventory theft occurs more often at larger businesses than small ones. While 23 percent of companies with over 100 employees had been victims of non-cash misappropriations, just 18 percent of businesses with fewer than 100 employees were the victims of employee theft, the 2014 ACFE report said.

The theft of inventory is the No. 1 type of fraud committed in the warehousing and transportation industry, with one-third of businesses experiencing theft. Billing fraud and corruption were the next two most prevalent types of fraud.

In the manufacturing industry, more than one-third of businesses had experienced inventory theft, but more than one-half had been the victim of corruption schemes. The 2014 ACFE report was based on the analysis of 1,483 cases of occupational fraud.

The misappropriation of non-cash assets is more commonly an act of collusion of two or more perpetrators, nearly one-third more often. Frequently, one of the thieves works for the company and the other is an outsider.

One of the key components of reducing warehouse theft is optimizing its layout by limiting the number of doors inventory can be taken through, as well as the proximity of dumpsters, containers, trucks, foliage and the parking lot where inventory can be easily hidden or quickly removed.

A 24-hour security camera system, gated security and an employee tips hotline are also top deterrents of inventory theft.

This article was originally posted on March 6, 2015 and the information may no longer be current. For questions, please contact GRF CPAs & Advisors at marketing@grfcpa.com.