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Atlantic Acceptance, a lending company, grew at 100% annually—an impossible rate for its industry. The secret was a Ponzi scheme: making risky loans competitors avoided while hiding the risk with fraudulent accounting. Extraordinary results in an ordinary industry demand extreme skepticism.

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A financial journalist warns that rapid growth in a new bank can be a red flag. It often signifies aggressive lending to win market share, but the quality of those loans and associated risks may not become apparent for several years. This makes fast-growing banks, like the new tech-focused Erbador Bank, a source of cautious skepticism.

The dot-com era's accounting fraud wasn't one-sided. Professional investors and Wall Street created a symbiotic relationship with executives by demanding impossibly smooth, predictable quarterly earnings. This intense pressure incentivized widespread financial engineering and manipulation to meet unrealistic expectations.

The 'bezel' is the inventory of hidden, fraudulent wealth that builds up during good economic times. Investor overconfidence, plentiful capital, and lax due diligence create the perfect environment for financial scams to flourish, with this phantom wealth only being discovered during a downturn.

Analyst Harry Markopoulos identified Madoff's Ponzi scheme in five minutes, not with insider information, but by recognizing his promised 14% returns with no risk were mathematically impossible. Consistently perfect results are a major red flag, as even the best investors have down periods.

A company with a 20x P/E could acquire a firm with a 5x P/E using stock. The acquired earnings were then instantly re-rated at the parent's higher multiple, manufacturing EPS growth and creating huge paper gains without any operational improvements. This financial engineering masqueraded as business genius.

The narrative of "0 to $100M in a year" often reflects a startup's dependence on a larger, fast-growing customer (like an AI foundation model company) rather than intrinsic product superiority. This growth is a market anomaly, similar to COVID testing labs, and can vanish as quickly as it appeared when competition normalizes prices and demand shifts.

Auto parts company FBG funded its acquisition spree with a sophisticated fraud using "invoice factoring," a corporate version of a payday loan. By selling the same tranche of invoices to multiple private creditors, it illegitimately raised funds, leading to a collapse with $2.3 billion unaccounted for.

Lenders allow struggling borrowers to skip cash interest payments by adding the amount to the loan's principal balance. This practice, called 'Payment in Kind' (PIK), hides defaults, artificially inflates asset values, and creates a deceptively low official default rate, masking escalating risk within the system.

A core conceit of fraud is faking business growth. Consequently, fraudulent enterprises often report growth rates that dwarf even the most successful legitimate companies. For example, the fraudulent 'Feeding Our Future' program claimed a 578% CAGR, more than double Uber's peak growth rate. This makes sorting by growth an effective detection method.

A simple framework for assessing financial products involves checking for three warning signs. If it's too complex to explain to a 12-year-old, seems too good to be true, or lacks proper auditing, it's a major red flag. This heuristic helps investors cut through hype and avoid potential blow-ups like MicroStrategy's.