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Corinthian Colleges’ stock tumbles 23% since disclosing SEC probe

Student Daniel Morales, right, winces as a classmate takes a blood sample in a medical assistant class at WyoTech in Long Beach. WyoTech is one of 113 campuses run by Santa Ana-based Corinthian Colleges.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
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Shares of Corinthian Colleges Inc. fell 23% last week after the Santa Ana for-profit college chain disclosed that the Securities and Exchange Commission had launched an investigation into the company.

Corinthian said it received a subpoena this month from the SEC related to student recruitment, degree completion, job placement, loan defaults and compliance with U.S. Education Department rules, among other issues.

The company said in a securities filing it intends to cooperate with the SEC investigation. A company spokesman declined to comment further.

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Shares of Corinthian Colleges closed at $2.14 Friday, down 23% since the company disclosed the latest government inquiry.

In January, Corinthian said it had received a subpoena from the California attorney general’s office related to similar issues.

The company and its rivals in the for-profit college industry have been under scrutiny for years by federal and state officials over recruitment practices and high loan default rates among students.

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Founded in 1995, Corinthian operates 113 college campuses in the U.S. and Canada under the names Everest, Heald and WyoTech in addition to offering degrees online.

The for-profit education industry boomed during the recession, but enrollment has slipped amid improving job prospects in the economy and continued government scrutiny of high student debt.

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At the end of March, Corinthian said its student population was 87,776, down 6% from the same period a year ago. In response, the company has sought to cut some tuition rates to make degrees more affordable.

Forty-three percent of the company’s enrollment is in healthcare programs, 23% are studying business and 9% are in mechanical and other trades, according to the company.

Overall, company revenue for the most recent fiscal year declined 10% to $1.6 billion.

Corinthian has also been in a dispute with the U.S. Department of Education that relates to student access to federal loans.

Last year, the Education Department gave Corinthian a “financial responsibility score” below the government’s minimum requirement. Corinthian has appealed that decision, and it said earlier that no final determination has been made.

In April, Corinthian added two high-profile board members. They are former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Marc Morial, former New Orleans mayor and chief executive of the National Urban League.

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