3rdPartyFeeds News

Citron Research’s Andrew Left slams Jumia as a ‘fraud’ and ‘worthless’

Citron Research alleges discrepancies between a confidential investor presentation and the IPO filing from African e-commerce company Jumia. Read More...

Jumia Technologies AG shares sank nearly 40% this week after Citron Research’s Andrew Left, a noted short seller, alleged in a report Thursday that it has the “smoking gun” that shows why Jumia equity is “worthless.”

“In 18 years of publishing, Citron has never seen such an obvious fraud as Jumia,” the report said.

Jumia JMIA, -8.89%  said late Friday it would move up the date of its first-quarter results to Monday before the market opens. Jumia did not disclose the reason for the change, and set a conference call with analysts for 8:30 a.m. Eastern on Monday.

Jumia’s American depositary shares ended nearly 9% lower on Friday, bringing weekly losses to 37%.

In the report, Citron goes on to highlight what it calls “material discrepancies” between the confidential investor presentation from October 2018 and what the company told the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The differences include: inflating active customer and active merchant numbers by 20% to 30%; and that 41% of orders were returned, not delivered or canceled.

Among the risk factors highlighted in the IPO prospectus was the fact that many deliveries failed. Jumia said that 14.4% of GMV in 2018 either failed to deliver or was returned.

“Assuming 41% of orders were returned, not delivered, or canceled in 2018, this implies that almost 30% of orders were canceled in 2018,” Citron wrote. “Since Jumia primarily sells consumer electronics, which should not have this high of a cancellation rate, it wreaks of fraud.”

Don’t miss: 5 things about newly public African e-commerce site Jumia

Just this week, research analysts initiated coverage of Jumia stock with bullish assessments of the company’s future. Many cited the growth potential for Jumia as the African continent currently has less than 1% e-commerce penetration.

Moreover, Jumia has created payments and logistical platforms designed to grow digital transactions across the continent, which is still very reliant on cash transactions.

“We believe this deep local knowledge and [these] payments and logistics systems provide Jumia with competitive advantages versus potential new market entrants,” said Raymond James, which rated Raymond James stock market perform.

See also: African e-tailer Jumia shares soar as analysts see a number of tailwinds working in its favor

“When a company markets to investors ahead of its IPO and then a few months later omits material facts and makes material changes to its key financial metrics to make the business seem viable, this is securities fraud,” the report says.

Citron also references media from Nigeria, Jumia’s biggest market, accusing Jumia of fraudulent activity.

Jumia shares began trading on April 12, and had soared 160% as of early this week. Shares were priced at $14.50.

MarketWatch reached out to Jumia for comment but the company wasn’t immediately available.

Read More