Monday 2 March 2015

Lumber Liquidators flooring fails safety tests: '60 Minutes'

Peter Gridley | Photographer's Choice | Getty Images
Trading was halted Monday in Lumber Liquidators after its shares dropped more than 20 percent following a CBS report that the company sold flooring with higher levels of formaldehyde than permitted under California's health and safety standards.
The trading was halted for pending news. The stock had fallen 24.8 percent before the market opened Monday.
The "60 Minutes" on Sunday said it tested Lumber Liquidators' flooring in Virginia, Florida, Texas, Illinois and New York for levels of formaldehyde, a cancer-causing chemical.
"Out of the 31 samples of Chinese-made laminate flooring, only one was compliant with formaldehyde emissions standards. Some were more than 13x over the California limit," according to CBS.
Lumber Liquidators said it complies with applicable regulations
regarding its products, including California standards for formaldehyde emissions.
"These attacks are driven by a small group of short-selling investors who are working together for the sole purpose of making money by lowering our stock price," the company said in a statement.
Lumber Liquidators' shares plunged as much as 24 percent last week after Chief Executive Robert Lynch said CBS's "60 minutes" news program will feature the company in an "unfavorable light with regard to sourcing and product quality, specifically related to laminates."
"We will vigorously challenge any false allegations or incorrect presentations," Lynch said on an earnings call with analysts last week.
Lumber Liquidators also said the U.S. Department of Justice may seek criminal charges against the company under an act aimed at curbing illegal harvest of tropical hardwoods.

No comments:

Post a Comment