# Non-GAAP metrics: credibility, communication & the SEC's view
In August 2018, WeWork's IPO prospectus introduced the world to "Community-Adjusted EBITDAEBITDAEBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization) measures a company's operating profitability before financing and accounting decisions, used to compare core performance across firms.View full definition →", a metric that stripped out not only interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, but also marketing, general and administrative expenses, and development costs. The result transformed a $933 million loss into a $233 million profit. Eighteen months later, the IPO was dead, Adam Neumann was out, and the SEC had quietly added "non-GAAP creativity" to its top enforcement priorities. By 2023, the Commission had brought enforcement actions against DXC Technology ($8 million penalty), Polara Enterprises, and several others for the same sin: telling investors a story the auditors never signed off on.
Yet here's the paradox every CFO must navigate: non-GAAP metrics are not only legal, they're often essential. Amazon's free cash flow disclosures helped investors understand a business GAAP couldn't capture. Uber's segment-adjusted clarified the unit economics of a marketplace. The line between communication and deception is narrower than most finance chiefs appreciate, and in 2026, with the SEC's Compliance and Disclosure Interpretations (C&DIs) updated in late 2024 and AI-driven disclosure review tools now scanning every earnings release, the margin for error is shrinking.
GAAP and IFRS were designed for comparability, not storytelling. They impose rigid rules on revenue recognition, lease capitalization (IFRS 16 famously brought $3 trillion of operating leases onto balance sheets in 2019), share-based compensation, and acquisition accounting. For a CFO trying to communicate the underlying economics of the business, these rules can obscure as much as they reveal.
Consider three legitimate use cases:
1. Acquisition-heavy companies. Salesforce's GAAP earnings have been weighed down for years by amortization of acquired intangibles from Slack ($27.7B deal), Tableau ($15.7B), and MuleSoft ($6.5B). CFO Amy Weaver has consistently reported non-GAAP operating margin alongside GAAP, and in FY2024, that delta was roughly 2,000 basis points (non-GAAP operating margin of ~30% vs. GAAP of ~14%). Stripping out purchase accounting noise isn't manipulation; it's the only way to track operational discipline.
2. Stock-based compensation. This is where things get philosophically interesting. Tech companies routinely exclude SBC from non-GAAP earnings, arguing it's a non-cash item. Warren Buffett's counter is famous: "If compensation isn't an expense, what is it? And if expenses shouldn't go into the calculation of earnings, where in the world should they go?" The SEC tolerates the exclusion but increasingly demands prominent reconciliation.
3. One-time restructuring. When Meta took $4.2 billion in restructuring charges across 2022-2023 (severance, office consolidation, data center write-downs), excluding these from "adjusted" results gave investors a cleaner view of run-rate profitability.
The SEC's Division of Corporation Finance has been consistent since the 2003 Regulation G framework: non-GAAP metrics cannot be misleading, must be reconciled to the most directly comparable GAAP measure, and cannot be presented with greater prominence than GAAP figures. The 2016 and 2022 updates to the C&DIs sharpened these rules significantly, and the December 2022 update introduced the concept of "individually tailored accounting principles," meaning you can't just invent your own revenue recognition policy and call it non-GAAP.
Amazon has, since its 1997 letter to shareholders, prioritized free cash flowfree cash flowFree Cash Flow is the cash a company generates from operations after funding the capital expenditures needed to maintain and grow its asset base.View full definition → over GAAP earnings. Jeff Bezos and successive CFOs (Brian Olsavsky since 2015) have argued that a high-investment, working-capital-negative business is best measured by cash generation, not accrual earnings. In Amazon's 2023 10-KKThe average number of new users each existing user generates through referrals. Above 1.0, growth compounds on itself and becomes exponential.View full definition →, free cash flowfree cash flowFree Cash Flow is the cash a company generates from operations after funding the capital expenditures needed to maintain and grow its asset base.View full definition → was presented as $35.5 billion, but critically, Amazon also disclosed FCFFCFFree Cash Flow is the cash a company generates from operations after funding the capital expenditures needed to maintain and grow its asset base.View full definition → less equipment finance leases ($32.9B), FCFFCFFree Cash Flow is the cash a company generates from operations after funding the capital expenditures needed to maintain and grow its asset base.View full definition → less equipment finance leases and principal repayments ($20.2B), and three other variations. This *over*-disclosure is the model: give investors the metric, then give them every adjustment so they can compute their own version. The SEC has never challenged Amazon's framework.
When Uber filed its S-1 in April 2019, the company introduced a series of metrics, Core Platform Adjusted Net Revenue, Core Platform Contribution Margin, that effectively excluded driver incentives, refunds, and a portion of marketing. The SEC pushed back during the registration process, and Uber removed several of the more aggressive metrics before pricing. CFO Nelson Chai (and later Prashanth Mahendra-Rajah) shifted toward Adjusted EBITDAEBITDAEBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization) measures a company's operating profitability before financing and accounting decisions, used to compare core performance across firms.View full definition →, still non-GAAP, but more conventional. The lesson: even pre-IPO, the SEC reviews your S-1 with a fine-tooth comb on non-GAAP, and ambiguity gets flagged.
DXC, the IT services spin-off from HP Enterprise, agreed to pay an $8 million penalty in March 2023 for materially misleading non-GAAP disclosures between 2018 and 2020. The specific violation: DXC's "non-GAAP transaction, separation, and integration-related costs" line item was used to include expenses that had nothing to do with transactions or separations, ordinary operating costs were being reclassified to inflate adjusted EPS. Over multiple quarters, the company beat consensus non-GAAP EPS estimates while its underlying operations deteriorated. The SEC also charged the company with failing to maintain adequate disclosure controls, a critical point for CFOs: it's not just the metric, it's the process behind it.
WeWork's S-1 in 2019 became a finance Twitter meme, but the underlying lesson is serious. By excluding marketing, G&A, and development expenses from EBITDAEBITDAEBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization) measures a company's operating profitability before financing and accounting decisions, used to compare core performance across firms.View full definition →, WeWork wasn't measuring "earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization", it was measuring something closer to "revenue minus rent." The metric implied that customer acquisition and overhead were temporary. The IPO collapsed in September 2019, the valuation fell from $47 billion to under $8 billion, and WeWork ultimately filed for Chapter 11 in November 2023. Adam Neumann's defenders argue the metric was clearly defined and reconciled. The market's response answered the question: transparency about a misleading framing doesn't redeem the framing.
Knowledge check
1. WeWork's 2018 'Community-Adjusted EBITDA' transformed the company's reported results in which way?
2. In the SEC's 2023 enforcement action against DXC Technology for non-GAAP misuse, what was the penalty imposed?
3. IFRS 16, referenced in the lesson, is best known for which 2019 balance sheet impact?
4. Select ALL correct answers about legitimate use cases for non-GAAP metrics identified or implied in the lesson.
Sélectionnez toutes les réponses correctes.
5. Select ALL correct answers about the 2026 non-GAAP disclosure environment described in the lesson.
Sélectionnez toutes les réponses correctes.
After studying dozens of SEC comment letters and enforcement actions, a clear framework emerges. When you walk into the audit committee meeting with proposed non-GAAP metrics for the next earnings release, run them through this five-part test.
If you exclude an item when it's a loss, do you also exclude it when it's a gain? This is the single most common SEC pushback. If you adjust out restructuring charges in Q1 but keep gains on lease terminations in Q3, you've violated the symmetry principle. The 2022 C&DI update was explicit: cherry-picking is misleading per se.
Practical application: Build a formal non-GAAP policy document, approved by the audit committee, that specifies *categories* of adjustments, not specific transactions. Then apply that policy mechanically, regardless of whether the result helps or hurts.
Calling something "non-recurring" when it recurs is a fast track to an SEC comment letter. The C&DIs specifically warn against labeling charges as "non-recurring, infrequent, or unusual" when "the nature of the charge or gain is such that it is reasonably likely to recur within two years."
Restructuring charges every single quarter? They're not restructuring, they're operating expenses. This caught Walgreens Boots Alliance in 2018, when the SEC questioned years of "transformation costs" that had become structural.
GAAP must appear with equal or greater prominence than non-GAAP. This means:
In 2024, the SEC issued comment letters to several mid-cap companies for press release headlines that read "Company X Reports Adjusted EPS of $2.45" without the GAAP figure in the same prominence.
Every non-GAAP metric must be quantitatively reconciled to its closest GAAP equivalent. "Closest" is doing a lot of work here. Adjusted EBITDAEBITDAEBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization) measures a company's operating profitability before financing and accounting decisions, used to compare core performance across firms.View full definition → reconciles to net income, *not* to operating income, despite what many companies have argued. Free cash flowFree cash flowFree Cash Flow is the cash a company generates from operations after funding the capital expenditures needed to maintain and grow its asset base.View full definition → reconciles to cash from operations, not to net income.
Forward-looking non-GAAP guidance has a special exception: you can provide it without quantitative reconciliation *if* such reconciliation requires "unreasonable efforts", but you must say so explicitly and identify the information you can't quantify.
Does the non-GAAP metric help investors understand the business, or does it help management hit a bonus target? The proxy disclosures of the last three years have made it embarrassingly clear when adjusted metrics align suspiciously with executive compensation plans. The SEC's Investor Advocate has flagged this repeatedly.
You're the CFO of a mid-cap SaaS company. Next Tuesday is your earnings release. Here's what you do today:
Pull your last eight quarters of non-GAAP adjustments. Build a matrix. Are restructuring charges appearing every quarter? Are "deal-related" costs showing up two years after the acquisition closed? Have stock-based compensation exclusions grown faster than revenue? These are the patterns that trigger comment letters.
Read the SEC's most recent comment letters to peer companies on EDGAR. They're free, public, and they tell you exactly what the staff is focused on this quarter. In late 2025, the focus shifted heavily to AI-related capexcapexCapital Expenditure (CapEx) is money spent to acquire, upgrade, or extend long-lived assets like equipment, property, or software that deliver value over multiple years.View full definition → amortization treatment, if you're not aware of this, you're already behind.
Review your earnings release template against the prominence rules. Have your IR team and external counsel both sign off. The cost of getting this wrong, restating prior periods, an SEC consent order, a Wells notice, dwarfs the benefit of a slightly better-looking adjusted number.
Talk to your audit committee chair. Non-GAAP policy belongs in audit committee oversight. If you don't have a written policy reviewed annually, you're operating on borrowed time.
1. Codify a written non-GAAP policy approved by the audit committee. Define ad