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Apria’s Chief Fends Off Talk of Slippery Accounting

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<i> Dow Jones</i>

Apria Healthcare Group Inc.’s chief executive said he is comfortable with analysts’ expectations for the second quarter and dismissed as “ridiculous” accusations of accounting irregularities raised by short-sellers.

In an interview, Philip Carter said there is no truth to the market talk that Apria Healthcare, a Costa Mesa home health care company, is improperly adjusting its accounts-receivable figure.

The rumors apparently helped trigger an 11% drop in the company’s shares Wednesday. The shares fell $2.39 to $19.13, though they had been as low as $17.88 during the day.

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Some eyebrows were raised when the company reported its first-quarter results and showed a write-off for accounts receivable that was “lower than it’s ever been,” Carter said.

In the first quarter, the provision for doubtful accounts was $8.6 million, compared with $13.8 million a year earlier.

Accounts receivable write-offs follow a strict formula that doesn’t allow for creative accounting, he said.

The lower figure was not the result of any accounting sleight of hand but “the fruit of the work that I was brought in here to do,” said Carter, an accountant hired a year ago in a management shake-up designed to help turn the struggling company around after deep losses and an aborted attempt to find a buyer.

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