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Enron scandal

The Enron scandal was an accounting scandal involving Enron Corporation, an American energy company based in Houston, Texas. When news of widespread fraud within the company became public in October 2001, the company declared bankruptcy and its accounting firm, Arthur Andersen – then one of the five largest audit and accountancy partnerships in the world – was effectively dissolved. In addition to being the largest bankruptcy reorganization in U.S. history at that time, Enron was cited as the biggest audit failure.[1]: 61 

Logo of Enron

Enron was formed in 1985 by Kenneth Lay after merging Houston Natural Gas and InterNorth. Several years later, when Jeffrey Skilling was hired, Lay developed a staff of executives that – by the use of accounting loopholes, the misuse of mark-to-market accounting, special purpose entities, and poor financial reporting – were able to hide billions of dollars in debt from failed deals and projects. Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow and other executives misled Enron's board of directors and audit committee on high-risk accounting practices and pressured Arthur Andersen to ignore the issues.

Shareholders filed a $40 billion lawsuit after the company's stock price, which achieved a high of US$90.75 per share in mid-2000, plummeted to less than $1 by the end of November 2001.[2] The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) began an investigation, and rival Houston competitor Dynegy offered to purchase the company at a very low price. The deal failed, and on December 2, 2001, Enron filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. Enron's $63.4 billion in assets made it the largest corporate bankruptcy in U.S. history until the WorldCom scandal the following year.[3]

Many executives at Enron were indicted for a variety of charges and some were later sentenced to prison, including Lay and Skilling. Arthur Andersen was found guilty of illegally destroying documents relevant to the SEC investigation, which voided its license to audit public companies and effectively closed the firm. By the time the ruling was overturned at the U.S. Supreme Court, Arthur Andersen had lost the majority of its customers and had ceased operating. Enron employees and shareholders received limited returns in lawsuits, despite losing billions in pensions and stock prices.

As a consequence of the scandal, new regulations and legislation were enacted to expand the accuracy of financial reporting for public companies.[4] One piece of legislation, the Sarbanes–Oxley Act, increased penalties for destroying, altering, or fabricating records in federal investigations or for attempting to defraud shareholders.[5] The act also increased the accountability of auditing firms to remain unbiased and independent of their clients.[4]

Rise of Enron Edit

 
Kenneth Lay in a July 2004 mugshot

In 1985, Kenneth Lay merged the natural gas pipeline companies of Houston Natural Gas and InterNorth to form Enron.[6]: 3  In the early 1990s, he helped to initiate the selling of electricity at market prices and, soon after, Congress approved legislation deregulating the sale of natural gas. The resulting markets made it possible for traders such as Enron to sell energy at higher prices, thereby significantly increasing its revenue.[7] After producers and local governments decried the resultant price volatility and asked for increased regulation, strong lobbying on the part of Enron and others prevented such regulation.[7][8]

As Enron became the largest seller of natural gas in North America by 1992, its trading of gas contracts earned $122 million (before interest and taxes), the second largest contributor to the company's net income. The November 1999 creation of the EnronOnline trading website allowed the company to better manage its contracts trading business.[6]: 7 

In an attempt to achieve further growth, Enron pursued a diversification strategy. The company owned and operated a variety of assets including gas pipelines, electricity plants, paper plants, water plants, and broadband services across the globe. Enron also gained additional revenue by trading contracts for the same array of products and services with which it was involved.[6]: 5  This included setting up power generation plants in developing countries and emerging markets including the Philippines (Subic Bay), Indonesia and India (Dabhol).[9]

Enron's stock increased from the start of the 1990s until year-end 1998 by 311%, only modestly higher than the average rate of growth in the Standard & Poor 500 index.[6]: 1  However, the stock increased by 56% in 1999 and a further 87% in 2000, compared to a 20% increase and a 10% decrease for the index during the same years. By December 31, 2000, Enron's stock was priced at $83.13 and its market capitalization exceeded $60 billion, 70 times earnings and six times book value, an indication of the stock market's high expectations about its future prospects. In addition, Enron was rated the most innovative large company in America in Fortune's Most Admired Companies survey.[6]: 1 

Causes of downfall Edit

 
Enron had published a manual of ethics earlier.

Enron's complex financial statements were confusing to shareholders and analysts.[1]: 6 [10] In addition, its complex business model and unethical practices required that the company use accounting limitations to misrepresent earnings and modify the balance sheet to indicate favorable performance.[6]: 9  Furthermore, some speculative business ventures proved disastrous.

The combination of these issues later resulted in the bankruptcy of Enron, and the majority of them were perpetuated by the indirect knowledge or direct actions of Lay, Jeffrey Skilling, Andrew Fastow, and other executives such as Rebecca Mark. Lay served as the chairman of Enron in its last few years, and approved of the actions of Skilling and Fastow, although he did not always inquire about the details. Skilling constantly focused on meeting Wall Street expectations, advocated the use of mark-to-market accounting (accounting based on market value, which was then inflated) and pressured Enron executives to find new ways to hide its debt. Fastow and other executives "created off-balance-sheet vehicles, complex financing structures, and deals so bewildering that few people could understand them."[11]: 132–133 

Revenue recognition Edit

Enron earned profits by providing services such as wholesale trading and risk management in addition to building and maintaining electric power plants, natural gas pipelines, storage, and processing facilities.[12] When accepting the risk of buying and selling products, merchants are allowed to report the selling price as revenues and the products' costs as cost of goods sold. In contrast, an "agent" provides a service to the customer, but does not take the same risks as merchants for buying and selling. Service providers, when classified as agents, may report trading and brokerage fees as revenue, although not for the full value of the transaction.[13]: 101–103 

Although trading companies such as Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch used the conventional "agent model" for reporting revenue (where only the trading or brokerage fee would be reported as revenue), Enron instead elected to report the entire value of each of its trades as revenue. This "merchant model" was considered much more aggressive in the accounting interpretation than the agent model.[13]: 102  Enron's method of reporting inflated trading revenue was later adopted by other companies in the energy trading industry in an attempt to stay competitive with the company's large increase in revenue. Other energy companies such as Duke Energy, Reliant Energy, and Dynegy joined Enron in the largest 50 of the revenue-based Fortune 500 owing mainly to their adoption of the same trading revenue accounting as Enron.[13]: 105 

Between 1996 and 2000, Enron's revenues increased by more than 750%, rising from $13.3 billion in 1996 to $100.7 billion in 2000. This expansion of 65% per year was extraordinary in any industry, including the energy industry, which typically considered growth of 2–3% per year to be respectable. For just the first nine months of 2001, Enron reported $138.7 billion in revenues, placing the company at the sixth position on the Fortune Global 500.[13]: 97–100 

Enron also used creative accounting tricks and purposefully misclassified loan transactions as sales close to quarterly reporting deadlines, similar to the Lehman Brothers Repo 105 scheme in the 2008 financial crisis, or the currency swap concealment of Greek debt by Goldman Sachs. In Enron's case, Merrill Lynch bought Nigerian barges with an alleged buyback guarantee by Enron shortly before the earnings deadline. According to the government, Enron misreported a bridge loan as a true sale, then bought back the barges a few months later. Merrill Lynch executives were tried and in November 2004 convicted for aiding Enron in fraudulent accounting activities.[14] These charges were thrown out on appeal in 2006, after the Merrill Lynch executives had spent nearly a year in prison, with the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans calling the conspiracy and wire fraud charges "flawed". Expert observers said that the reversal was highly unusual for the 5th Circuit, commenting that the conviction must have had serious issues in order to be overturned.[15] The Justice Department decided not to retry the case after the reversal of the verdict.[16][17]

Mark-to-market accounting Edit

In Enron's natural gas business, the accounting had been fairly straightforward: in each time period, the company listed actual costs of supplying the gas and actual revenues received from selling it. However, when Skilling joined Enron, he demanded that the trading business adopt mark-to-market accounting, claiming that it would represent "true economic value".[11]: 39–42  Enron became the first nonfinancial company to use the method to account for its complex long-term contracts.[18] Mark-to-market accounting requires that once a long-term contract has been signed, income is estimated as the present value of net future cash flow. Often, the viability of these contracts and their related costs were difficult to estimate.[6]: 10  Owing to the large discrepancies between reported profits and cash, investors were typically given false or misleading reports. Under this method, income from projects could be recorded, although the firm might never have received the money, with this income increasing financial earnings on the books. However, because in future years the profits could not be included, new and additional income had to be included from more projects to develop additional growth to appease investors.[11]: 39–42  As one Enron competitor stated, "If you accelerate your income, then you have to keep doing more and more deals to show the same or rising income."[18] Despite potential pitfalls, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved the accounting method for Enron in its trading of natural gas futures contracts on January 30, 1992.[11]: 39–42  However, Enron later expanded its use to other areas in the company to help it meet Wall Street projections.[11]: 127 

For one contract, in July 2000, Enron and Blockbuster Video signed a 20-year agreement to introduce on-demand entertainment to various U.S. cities by year's end. After several pilot projects, Enron claimed estimated profits of more than $110 million from the deal, even though analysts questioned the technical viability and market demand of the service.[6]: 10  When the network failed to work, Blockbuster withdrew from the contract. Enron continued to claim future profits, even though the deal resulted in a loss.[19]

Special purpose entities Edit

Enron used special purpose entities—limited partnerships or companies created to fulfill a temporary or specific purpose to fund or manage risks associated with specific assets. The company elected to disclose minimal details on its use of "special purpose entities".[6]: 11  These shell companies were created by a sponsor, but funded by independent equity investors and debt financing. For financial reporting purposes, a series of rules dictate whether a special purpose entity is a separate entity from the sponsor. In total, by 2001, Enron had used hundreds of special purpose entities to hide its debt.[6]: 10  The company used a number of special purpose entities, such as partnerships in its Thomas and Condor tax shelters, financial asset securitization investment trusts (FASITs) in the Apache deal, real estate mortgage investment conduits (REMICs) in the Steele deal, and REMICs and real estate investment trusts (REITs) in the Cochise deal.[20]

The special purpose entities were Tobashi schemes used for more than just circumventing accounting conventions. As a result of one violation, Enron's balance sheet understated its liabilities and overstated its equity, and its earnings were overstated.[6]: 11  Enron disclosed to its shareholders that it had hedged downside risk in its own illiquid investments using special purpose entities. However, investors were oblivious to the fact that the special purpose entities were actually using the company's own stock and financial guarantees to finance these hedges. This prevented Enron from being protected from the downside risk.[6]: 11 

JEDI and Chewco Edit

In 1993, Enron established a joint venture in energy investments with CalPERS, the California state pension fund, called the Joint Energy Development Investments (JEDI).[11]: 67  In 1997, Skilling, serving as Enron's chief operating officer (COO), asked CalPERS to join Enron in a separate investment. CalPERS was interested in the idea, but only if it could be terminated as a partner in JEDI.[1]: 30  However, Enron did not want to show any debt from assuming CalPERS' stake in JEDI on its balance sheet. Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Fastow developed the special purpose entity Chewco Investments, a limited partnership (L.P.) which raised debt guaranteed by Enron and was used to acquire CalPERS's joint venture stake for $383 million.[6]: 11  Because of Fastow's organization of Chewco, JEDI's losses were kept off of Enron's balance sheet.

In autumn 2001, CalPERS and Enron's arrangement was discovered, which required the discontinuation of Enron's prior accounting method for Chewco and JEDI. This disqualification revealed that Enron's reported earnings from 1997 to mid-2001 would need to be reduced by $405 million and that the company's indebtedness would increase by $628 million.[1]: 31 

Whitewing Edit

Whitewing was the name of a special purpose entity used as a financing method by Enron.[21] In December 1997, with funding of $579 million provided by Enron and $500 million by an outside investor, Whitewing Associates L.P. was formed. Two years later, the entity's arrangement was changed so that it would no longer be consolidated with Enron and be counted on the company's balance sheet. Whitewing was used to purchase Enron assets, including stakes in power plants, pipelines, stocks, and other investments.[22] Between 1999 and 2001, Whitewing bought assets from Enron worth $2 billion, using Enron stock as collateral. Although the transactions were approved by the Enron board, the asset transfers were not true sales and should have been treated instead as loans.[23]

LJM and Raptors Edit

In 1999, Fastow formulated two limited partnerships: LJM Cayman. L.P. (LJM1) and LJM2 Co-Investment L.P. (LJM2), for the purpose of buying Enron's poorly performing stocks and stakes to improve its financial statements. LJM 1 and 2 were created solely to serve as the outside equity investor needed for the special purpose entities that were being used by Enron.[1]: 31  Fastow had to go before the board of directors to receive an exemption from Enron's code of ethics (as he had the title of CFO) in order to manage the companies.[11]: 193, 197  The two partnerships were funded with around $390 million provided by Wachovia, J.P. Morgan Chase, Credit Suisse First Boston, Citigroup, and other investors. Merrill Lynch, which marketed the equity, also contributed $22 million to fund the entities.[1]: 31 

Enron transferred to "Raptor I-IV", four LJM-related special purpose entities named after the velociraptors in Jurassic Park, more than "$1.2 billion in assets, including millions of shares of Enron common stock and long term rights to purchase millions more shares, plus $150 million of Enron notes payable" as disclosed in the company's financial statement footnotes.[24][1]: 33 [25] The special purpose entities had been used to pay for all of this using the entities' debt instruments. The footnotes also declared that the instruments' face amount totaled $1.5 billion, and the entities notional amount of $2.1 billion had been used to enter into derivative contracts with Enron.[1]: 33 

Enron capitalized the Raptors, and, in a manner similar to the accounting employed when a company issues stock at a public offering, then booked the notes payable issued as assets on its balance sheet while increasing the shareholders' equity for the same amount.[1]: 38  This treatment later became an issue for Enron and its auditor Arthur Andersen, as removing it from the balance sheet resulted in a $1.2 billion decrease in net shareholders' equity.[26]

Eventually the derivative contracts worth $2.1 billion lost significant value. Swaps were established at the time the stock price achieved its maximum. During the ensuing year, the value of the portfolio under the swaps fell by $1.1 billion as the stock prices decreased (the loss of value meant that the special purpose entities technically now owed Enron $1.1 billion by the contracts). Enron, using its mark-to-market accounting method, claimed a $500 million gain on the swap contracts in its 2000 annual report. The gain was responsible for offsetting its stock portfolio losses and was attributed to nearly a third of Enron's earnings for 2000 (before it was properly restated in 2001).[1]: 39 

Corporate governance Edit

On paper, Enron had a model board of directors comprising predominantly outsiders with significant ownership stakes and a talented audit committee. In its 2000 review of best corporate boards, Chief Executive included Enron among its five best boards.[27]: 21  Even with its complex corporate governance and network of intermediaries, Enron was still able to "attract large sums of capital to fund a questionable business model, conceal its true performance through a series of accounting and financing maneuvers, and hype its stock to unsustainable levels."[6]: 4 

Executive compensation Edit

Although Enron's compensation and performance management system was designed to retain and reward its most valuable employees, the system contributed to a dysfunctional corporate culture that became obsessed with short-term earnings to maximize bonuses. Employees constantly tried to start deals, often disregarding the quality of cash flow or profits, in order to get a better rating for their performance review. Additionally, accounting results were recorded as soon as possible to keep up with the company's stock price. This practice helped ensure deal-makers and executives received large cash bonuses and stock options.[13]: 112 

Enron was constantly emphasizing its stock price. Management was compensated extensively using stock options, similar to other U.S. companies. This policy of stock option awards caused management to create expectations of rapid growth in efforts to give the appearance of reported earnings to meet Wall Street's expectations.[28] Stock tickers were installed in lobbies, elevators, and on company computers.[11]: 187  At budget meetings, Skilling would develop target earnings by asking, "What earnings do you need to keep our stock price up?" and that number would be used, even if it was not feasible.[11]: 127  On December 31, 2000, Enron had 96 million shares outstanding as stock option plans (approximately 13% of common shares outstanding). Enron's proxy statement stated that, within three years, these awards were expected to be exercised.[6]: 13  Using Enron's January 2001 stock price of $83.13 and the directors' beneficial ownership reported in the 2001 proxy, the value of director stock ownership was $659 million for Lay, and $174 million for Skilling.[27]: 21 

Skilling believed that if Enron employees were constantly worried about cost, it would hinder original thinking.[11]: 119  As a result, extravagant spending was rampant throughout the company, especially among the executives. Employees had large expense accounts and many executives were paid sometimes twice as much as competitors.[11]: 401  In 1998, the top 200 highest-paid employees received $193 million from salaries, bonuses, and stock. Two years later, the figure jumped to $1.4 billion.[11]: 241 

Risk management Edit

Before its demise, Enron was lauded for its sophisticated financial risk management tools.[29] Risk management was crucial to Enron not only because of its regulatory environment, but also because of its business plan. Enron established long-term fixed commitments which needed to be hedged to prepare for the invariable fluctuation of future energy prices.[30]: 1171  Enron's downfall was attributed to its reckless use of derivatives and special purpose entities. By hedging its risks with special purpose entities which it owned, Enron retained the risks associated with the transactions. This arrangement had Enron implementing hedges with itself.[27]: 17 

Enron's aggressive accounting practices were not hidden from the board of directors, as later learned by a Senate subcommittee. The board was informed of the rationale for using the Whitewing, LJM, and Raptor transactions, and after approving them, received status updates on the entities' operations. Although not all of Enron's widespread improper accounting practices were revealed to the board, the practices were dependent on board decisions.[30]: 1170  Even though Enron extensively relied on derivatives for its business, the company's finance committee and board did not have enough experience with derivatives to understand what they were being told. The Senate subcommittee argued that had there been a detailed understanding of how the derivatives were organized, the board would have prevented their use.[30]: 1175 

Financial audit Edit

Enron's accounting firm, Arthur Andersen, was accused of applying reckless standards in its audits because of a conflict of interest over the significant consulting fees generated by Enron. During 2000, Andersen earned $25 million in audit fees and $27 million in consulting fees (this amount accounted for roughly 27% of the audit fees of public clients for Andersen's Houston office). The auditor's methods were questioned as either being completed solely to receive its annual fees or for its lack of expertise in properly reviewing Enron's revenue recognition, special entities, derivatives, and other accounting practices.[6]: 15 

Enron hired numerous Certified Public Accountants (CPAs) as well as accountants who had worked on developing accounting rules with the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB). The accountants searched for new ways to save the company money, including capitalizing on loopholes found in Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), the accounting industry's standards. One Enron accountant revealed "We tried to aggressively use the literature [GAAP] to our advantage. All the rules create all these opportunities. We got to where we did because we exploited that weakness."[11]: 142 

Andersen's auditors were pressured by Enron's management to defer recognizing the charges from the special purpose entities as its credit risks became known. Since the entities would never return a profit, accounting guidelines required that Enron should take a write-off, where the value of the entity was removed from the balance sheet at a loss. To pressure Andersen into meeting earnings expectations, Enron would occasionally allow accounting companies Ernst & Young or PricewaterhouseCoopers to complete accounting tasks to create the illusion of hiring a new company to replace Andersen.[11]: 148  Although Andersen was equipped with internal controls to protect against conflicted incentives of local partners, it failed to prevent conflict of interest. In one case, Andersen's Houston office, which performed the Enron audit, was able to overrule any critical reviews of Enron's accounting decisions by Andersen's Chicago partner. In addition, after news of SEC investigations of Enron were made public, Andersen would later shred several tons of relevant documents and delete nearly 30,000 e-mails and computer files, leading to accusations of a cover-up.[6]: 15 [31][11]: 383 

Revelations concerning Andersen's overall performance led to the break-up of the firm, and to the following assessment by the Powers Committee (appointed by Enron's board to look into the firm's accounting in October 2001): "The evidence available to us suggests that Andersen did not fulfill its professional responsibilities in connection with its audits of Enron's financial statements, or its obligation to bring to the attention of Enron's Board (or the Audit and Compliance Committee) concerns about Enron's internal contracts over the related-party transactions".[32]

Audit committee Edit

Corporate audit committees usually meet just a few times during the year, and their members typically have only modest experience with accounting and finance. Enron's audit committee had more expertise than many others. It included:[33]

Enron's audit committee was later criticized for its brief meetings that would cover large amounts of material. In one meeting on February 12, 2001, the committee met for an hour and a half. Enron's audit committee did not have the technical knowledge to question the auditors properly on accounting issues related to the company's special purpose entities. The committee was also unable to question the company's management due to pressures on the committee.[6]: 14  The United States Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Governmental Affairs' report accused the board members of allowing conflicts of interest to impede their duties as monitoring the company's accounting practices. When Enron's scandal became public, the audit committee's conflicts of interest were regarded with suspicion.[34]

Ethical and political analyses Edit

Commentators attributed the mismanagement behind Enron's fall to a variety of ethical and political-economic causes. Ethical explanations centered on executive greed and hubris, a lack of corporate social responsibility, situation ethics, and get-it-done business pragmatism.[35][36][37][38][39] Political-economic explanations cited post-1970s deregulation, and inadequate staff and funding for regulatory oversight.[40][41] A more libertarian analysis maintained that Enron's collapse resulted from the company's reliance on political lobbying, rent-seeking, and the gaming of regulations.[42]

Other accounting issues Edit

Enron made a habit of booking costs of cancelled projects as assets, with the rationale that no official letter had stated that the project was cancelled. This method was known as "the snowball", and although it was initially dictated that such practices be used only for projects worth less than $90 million, it was later increased to $200 million.[11]: 77 

In 1998, when analysts were given a tour of the Enron Energy Services office, they were impressed with how the employees were working so vigorously. In reality, Skilling had moved other employees to the office from other departments (instructing them to pretend to work hard) to create the appearance that the division was larger than it was.[11]: 179–180  This ruse was used several times to fool analysts about the progress of different areas of Enron to help improve the stock price.[citation needed]

Speculative business ventures Edit

Enron division Azurix, slated for an IPO, initially planned to bid between $321 million and $353 million for the rights to operate water system services for areas around Buenos Aires. This was at the high end of what Enron's Risk Assessment and Control Group advised. But as pressure to outbid all others and win the deal grew more intense with the approaching IPO, the Azurix executives decided to up their bid. They eventually bid $438.6 million, which turned out to be about twice as much as the next highest sealed bid. But when Enron executives arrived at the Argentine facilities, they found them in a shambles with all of the customer records destroyed.[43]

Timeline of downfall Edit

At the beginning of 2001, the Enron Corporation, the world's dominant energy trader, appeared unstoppable. The company's decade-long effort to persuade lawmakers to deregulate electricity markets had succeeded from California to New York. Its ties to the Bush administration assured that its views would be heard in Washington. Its sales, profits and stock were soaring.

—A. Berenson and R. A. Oppel, Jr. The New York Times, October 28, 2001.[44]

On September 20, 2000, a reporter at The Wall Street Journal bureau in Dallas wrote a story about how mark-to-market accounting had become prevalent in the energy industry. He noted that outsiders had no real way of knowing the assumptions on which companies that used mark-to-market based their earnings. While the story only appeared in the Texas Journal, the Texas regional edition of the Journal, short-seller Jim Chanos happened to read it and decided to check Enron's 10-K report for himself. Chanos did not think it made sense that Enron's broadband unit appeared to far outpace a then-troubled broadband industry. He also noticed that Enron was spending much of its invested capital, and was alarmed by the large amounts of stock being sold by insiders. In November 2000, he decided to short Enron's stock.[11]: 334–338 

In February 2001, Chief Accounting Officer Rick Causey told budget managers: "From an accounting standpoint, this will be our easiest year ever. We've got 2001 in the bag."[11]: 299  On March 5, Bethany McLean's Fortune article "Is Enron Overpriced?" questioned how Enron could maintain its high stock value, which was trading at 55 times its earnings, arguing that analysts and investors did not know exactly how the company made money.[45] McLean was first drawn to the company's financial situation after Chanos suggested she view the company's 10-K for herself.[11]: 338  In a post-mortem interview with The Washington Post, she recalled finding "strange transactions", "erratic cash flow", and "huge debt". The debt was the biggest red flag to McLean; she wondered how a supposedly profitable company could be "adding debt at such a rapid rate".[46] Later, in her book, The Smartest Guys in the Room, McLean recalled speaking off the record with a number of people in the investment community who were growing skeptical about Enron.[11]: 338 

McLean telephoned Skilling to discuss her findings prior to publishing the article, but he called her "unethical" for not properly researching his company.[47] Fastow claimed that Enron could not reveal earnings details as the company had more than 1,200 trading books for assorted commodities and did "... not want anyone to know what's on those books. We don't want to tell anyone where we're making money."[45]

In a conference call on April 17, 2001, then-Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Skilling verbally attacked Wall Street analyst Richard Grubman,[48] who questioned Enron's unusual accounting practices during a recorded conference call. When Grubman complained that Enron was the only company that could not release a balance sheet along with its earnings statements, Skilling stammered, "Well uh ... Thank you very much, we appreciate it ... Asshole."[49] This became an inside joke among many Enron employees, mocking Grubman for his perceived meddling rather than Skilling's offensiveness, with slogans such as, "Ask Why, Asshole", a variation on Enron's official slogan "Ask why".[50] However, Skilling's comment was met with dismay and astonishment by press and public, as he had previously disdained criticism of Enron coolly or humorously.[citation needed]

By the late 1990s Enron's stock was trading for $80–90 per share, and few seemed to concern themselves with the opacity of the company's financial disclosures. In mid-July 2001, Enron reported revenues of $50.1 billion, almost triple year-to-date, and beating analysts' estimates by 3 cents a share.[51] Despite this, Enron's profit margin had stayed at a modest average of about 2.1%, and its share price had decreased by more than 30% since the same quarter of 2000.[51]

As time passed, a number of serious concerns confronted the company. Enron had recently faced several serious operational challenges, namely logistical difficulties in operating a new broadband communications trading unit, and the losses from constructing the Dabhol Power project, a large gas powered power plant in India that had been mired in controversy since the beginning in relation to its high pricing and bribery at the highest level.[9] These were subsequently confirmed in the 2002 Senate investigation.[52] There was also increasing criticism of the company for the role that its subsidiary Enron Energy Services had in the California electricity crisis of 2000–2001.[citation needed]

There are no accounting issues, no trading issues, no reserve issues, no previously unknown problem issues. I think I can honestly say that the company is probably in the strongest and best shape that it has probably ever been in.

—Kenneth Lay answering an analyst's question on August 14, 2001.[11]: 347 

On August 14, Skilling announced he was resigning his position as CEO after only six months citing personal reasons.[53] Observers noted that in the months before his exit, Skilling had sold at minimum 450,000 shares of Enron at a value of around $33 million (though he still owned over a million shares at the date of his departure).[53] Nevertheless, Lay, who was serving as chairman at Enron, assured surprised market watchers that there would be "no change in the performance or outlook of the company going forward" from Skilling's departure.[53] Lay announced he himself would re-assume the position of chief executive officer.[citation needed]

On August 15, Sherron Watkins, vice president for corporate development, sent an anonymous letter to Lay warning him about the company's accounting practices. One statement in the letter said: "I am incredibly nervous that we will implode in a wave of accounting scandals."[54] Watkins contacted a friend who worked for Arthur Andersen and he drafted a memorandum to give to the audit partners about the points she raised. On August 22, Watkins met individually with Lay and gave him a six-page letter further explaining Enron's accounting issues. Lay questioned her as to whether she had told anyone outside of the company and then vowed to have the company's law firm, Vinson & Elkins, review the issues, despite Watkins arguing that using the law firm would present a conflict of interest.[11]: 357 [55] Lay consulted with other executives, and although they wanted to dismiss Watkins (as Texas law did not protect company whistleblowers), they decided against it to prevent a lawsuit.[11]: 358  On October 15, Vinson & Elkins announced that Enron had done nothing wrong in its accounting practices as Andersen had approved each issue.[56]

Investors' confidence declines Edit

Something is rotten with the state of Enron.

The New York Times, September 9, 2001.[57]

By the end of August 2001, his company's stock value still falling, Lay named Greg Whalley, president and COO of Enron Wholesale Services, to succeed Skilling as president and COO of the entire company. He also named Mark Frevert as vice chairman, and appointed Whalley and Frevert to positions in the chairman's office. Some observers suggested that Enron's investors were in significant need of reassurance, not only because the company's business was difficult to understand (even "indecipherable")[57] but also because it was difficult to properly describe the company in financial statements.[58] One analyst stated "it's really hard for analysts to determine where [Enron] are making money in a given quarter and where they are losing money."[58] Lay accepted that Enron's business was very complex, but asserted that analysts would "never get all the information they want" to satisfy their curiosity. He also explained that the complexity of the business was due largely to tax strategies and position-hedging.[58] Lay's efforts seemed to meet with limited success; by September 9, one prominent hedge fund manager noted that "[Enron] stock is trading under a cloud."[57] The sudden departure of Skilling combined with the opacity of Enron's accounting books made proper assessment difficult for Wall Street. In addition, the company admitted to repeatedly using "related-party transactions", which some feared could be too-easily used to transfer losses that might otherwise appear on Enron's own balance sheet. A particularly troubling aspect of this technique was that several of the "related-party" entities had been or were being controlled by CFO Fastow.[57]

After the September 11 attacks, media attention shifted away from the company and its troubles. A little less than a month later, Enron announced its intention to begin the process of selling its lower-margin assets in favor of its core businesses of gas and electricity trading. This policy included selling Portland General Electric to another Oregon utility, Northwest Natural Gas, for about $1.9 billion in cash and stock, and possibly selling its 65% stake in the Dabhol project in India.[59]

Restructuring losses and SEC investigation Edit

On October 16, 2001, Enron announced that restatements to its financial statements for years 1997 to 2000 were necessary to correct accounting violations. The restatements for the period reduced earnings by $613 million (or 23% of reported profits during the period), increased liabilities at the end of 2000 by $628 million (6% of reported liabilities and 5.5% of reported equity), and reduced equity at the end of 2000 by $1.2 billion (10% of reported equity).[6]: 11  Additionally, in January Jeff Skilling had asserted that the broadband unit alone was worth $35 billion, a claim also mistrusted.[60] An analyst at Standard & Poor's said, "I don't think anyone knows what the broadband operation is worth."[60]

Enron's management team claimed the losses were mostly due to investment losses, along with charges such as about $180 million in money spent restructuring the company's troubled broadband trading unit. In a statement, Lay said, "After a thorough review of our businesses, we have decided to take these charges to clear away issues that have clouded the performance and earnings potential of our core energy businesses."[60] Some analysts were unnerved. David Fleischer at Goldman Sachs, an analyst termed previously 'one of the company's strongest supporters' asserted that the Enron management "... lost credibility and have to reprove themselves. They need to convince investors these earnings are real, that the company is for real and that growth will be realized."[60][61]

Fastow disclosed to Enron's board of directors on October 22 that he earned $30 million from compensation arrangements when managing the LJM limited partnerships. That day, the share price of Enron decreased to $20.65, down $5.40 in one day, after the announcement by the SEC that it was investigating several suspicious deals struck by Enron, characterizing them as "some of the most opaque transactions with insiders ever seen".[62] Attempting to explain the billion-dollar charge and calm investors, Enron's disclosures spoke of "share settled costless collar arrangements", "derivative instruments which eliminated the contingent nature of existing restricted forward contracts," and strategies that served "to hedge certain merchant investments and other assets." Such puzzling phraseology left many analysts feeling ignorant about just how Enron managed its business.[62] Regarding the SEC investigation, chairman and CEO Lay said, "We will cooperate fully with the SEC and look forward to the opportunity to put any concern about these transactions to rest."[62]

Two days later, on October 25, Fastow was removed as CFO, despite Lay's assurances as early as the previous day that he and the board had confidence in him. In announcing Fastow's ouster, Lay said, "In my continued discussions with the financial community, it became clear to me that restoring investor confidence would require us to replace Andy as CFO."[63] The move came after several banks refused to issue loans to Enron as long as Fastow remained CFO.[43] However, with Skilling and Fastow now both departed, some analysts feared that revealing the company's practices would be made all the more difficult.[63] Enron's stock was now trading at $16.41, having lost half its value in a little more than a week.[63]

Jeff McMahon, head of industrial markets, succeeded Fastow as CFO. His first task was to deal with a cash crisis. A day earlier, Enron discovered that it was unable to roll its commercial paper, effectively losing access to several billion dollars in financing. The company had actually experienced difficulty selling its commercial paper for a week, but was now unable to sell even overnight paper.[43] On October 27 the company began buying back all its commercial paper, valued at around $3.3 billion, in an effort to calm investor fears about Enron's supply of cash. Enron financed the re-purchase by depleting its lines of credit at several banks. While the company's debt rating was still considered investment-grade, its bonds were trading at levels slightly less, making future sales problematic.[64] It soon emerged that Fastow had been so focused on creating off-balance sheet vehicles that he had all but ignored some of the most rudimentary aspects of corporate finance. McMahon and a "financial SWAT team" put together to find a way out of the cash crisis discovered that under Fastow's watch, Enron only operated on a quarterly basis. Fastow never developed procedures for tracking cash or debt maturities that were common for companies of Enron's stature. For all intents and purposes, Enron was illiquid.[43][11]: 549 

As the month came to a close, serious concerns were being raised by some observers regarding Enron's possible manipulation of accepted accounting rules; however, analysis was claimed to be impossible based on the incomplete information provided by Enron.[65] Industry analysts feared that Enron was the new Long-Term Capital Management, the hedge fund whose bankruptcy in 1998 threatened systemic failure of the international financial markets. Enron's tremendous presence worried some about the consequences of the company's possible bankruptcy.[44] Enron executives accepted questions in written form only.[44]

Credit rating downgrade Edit

The main short-term danger to Enron's survival at the end of October 2001 seemed to be its credit rating. It was reported at the time that Moody's and Fitch, two of the three biggest credit-rating agencies, had slated Enron for review for possible downgrade.[44] Such a downgrade would force Enron to issue millions of shares of stock to cover loans it had guaranteed, which would decrease the value of existing stock further. Additionally, all manner of companies began reviewing their existing contracts with Enron, especially in the long term, in the event that Enron's rating were lowered below investment grade, a possible hindrance for future transactions.[44]

Analysts and observers continued their complaints regarding the difficulty or impossibility of properly assessing a company whose financial statements were so cryptic. Some feared that no one at Enron apart from Skilling and Fastow could completely explain years of mysterious transactions. "You're getting way over my head", said Lay during late August 2001 in response to detailed questions about Enron's business, a reaction that worried analysts.[44]

On October 29, responding to growing concerns that Enron might have insufficient cash on hand, news spread that Enron was seeking a further $1–2 billion in financing from banks.[66] The next day, as feared, Moody's lowered Enron's credit rating from Baa1 to Baa2, two levels above junk status. Standard & Poor's affirmed Enron's rating of BBB+, the equivalent of Moody's Baa1. Moody's also warned that it would downgrade Enron's commercial paper rating, the consequence of which would likely prevent the company from finding the further financing it sought to keep solvent.[67]

November began with the disclosure that the SEC was now pursuing a formal investigation, prompted by questions related to Enron's dealings with "related parties". Enron's board also announced that it would commission a special committee to investigate the transactions, directed by William C. Powers, the dean of the University of Texas law school.[68] The next day, an editorial in The New York Times demanded an "aggressive" investigation into the matter.[69] Enron was able to secure an additional $1 billion in financing from cross-town rival Dynegy on November 2, but the news was not universally admired in that the debt was secured by assets from the company's valuable Northern Natural Gas and Transwestern Pipeline.[70]

Proposed buyout by Dynegy Edit

Sources claimed that Enron was planning to explain its business practices more fully within the coming days, as a confidence-building gesture.[71] Enron's stock was now trading at around $7, and by this time it was obvious that Enron could not stay independent. However, investors worried that the company would not be able to find a buyer.[citation needed]

After Enron had received a wide spectrum of rejections, Enron management apparently found a buyer when the board of Dynegy, another energy trader based in Houston, voted late at night on November 7 to acquire Enron at a very low price of about $8 billion in stock.[72] Chevron Texaco, which at the time owned about a quarter of Dynegy, agreed to provide Enron with $2.5 billion in cash, specifically $1 billion at first and the rest when the deal was completed. Dynegy would also be required to assume nearly $13 billion of debt, plus any other debt hitherto occluded by the Enron management's secretive business practices,[72] possibly as much as $10 billion in "hidden" debt.[73] Dynegy and Enron confirmed their deal on November 8, 2001.[citation needed]

With Enron in a state of near collapse, the deal was largely on Dynegy's terms. Dynegy would be the surviving company, and Dynegy CEO Charles Watson and his management team would head the merged company. Enron shareholders would get a 40 percent stake in the enlarged Dynegy, and Enron would get three seats on the merged company's board. Lay would not have any management role, though it was presumed he would get one of Enron's seats on the board. Of Enron's senior executives, only Whalley would join the merged company's C-suite, as an executive vice president. Dynegy agreed to invest $1.5 billion into Enron to keep it alive until the deal closed.[43][11]: 395 

As a measure of how dire Enron's financial picture had become, the company initially balked at paying its bills for November until the credit agencies gave the merger their blessing and allowed Enron to keep its credit at investment grade. By this time, the Dynegy deal was virtually the only thing keeping the company alive, and Enron officials wanted to keep as much cash in the company's coffers in the event of bankruptcy.[43] Had the credit agencies balked at the deal and reduced Enron to junk status, its ability to trade would be severely limited if there was a reduction or elimination of its credit lines with competitors.[74][43] Ultimately, after Enron and Dynegy retooled the deal to make it harder for Dynegy to trigger the "material adverse change" clause and pull out, Moody's and S&P agreed to drop Enron to one notch above junk status, allowing Enron to pay its bills one day late with interest.[43]

Commentators remarked on the different corporate cultures between Dynegy and Enron, and on Watson's "straight-talking" personality.[8] Some wondered if Enron's troubles had not simply been the result of innocent accounting errors.[75] By November, Enron was asserting that the billion-plus "one-time charges" disclosed in October should in reality have been $200 million, with the rest of the amount simply corrections of dormant accounting mistakes.[76] Many feared other "mistakes" and restatements might yet be revealed.[74]

Another major correction of Enron's earnings was announced on November 9, with a reduction of $591 million of the stated revenue of years 1997–2000. The charges were said to come largely from two special purpose partnerships (JEDI and Chewco). The corrections resulted in the virtual elimination of profit for fiscal year 1997, with significant reductions for the other years. Despite this disclosure, Dynegy declared it still intended to purchase Enron.[76] Both companies were said to be anxious to receive an official assessment of the proposed sale from Moody's and S&P presumably to understand the effect the completion of any buyout transaction would have on Dynegy and Enron's credit rating. In addition, concerns were raised regarding antitrust regulatory restrictions resulting in possible divestiture, along with what to some observers were the radically different corporate cultures of Enron and Dynegy.[73]

Both companies promoted the deal aggressively, and some observers were hopeful; Watson was praised for attempting to create the largest company on the energy market.[74] At the time, Watson said: "We feel [Enron] is a very solid company with plenty of capacity to withstand whatever happens the next few months."[74] One analyst called the deal "a whopper ... a very good deal financially, certainly should be a good deal strategically, and provides some immediate balance-sheet backstop for Enron."[77]

Credit issues were becoming more critical, however. Around the time the buyout was made public, Moody's and S&P publicly announced that they had reduced Enron to just above junk status.[74] In a conference call, S&P affirmed that, were Enron not to be bought, S&P would reduce its rating to low BB or high B, ratings noted as being within junk status.[78] Additionally, many traders had limited their involvement with Enron, or stopped doing business altogether, fearing more bad news. Watson again attempted to re-assure, attesting at a presentation to investors that there was "nothing wrong with Enron's business".[77] He also acknowledged that remunerative steps (in the form of more stock options) would have to be taken to redress the animosity of many Enron employees towards management after it was revealed that Lay and other officials had sold hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of stock during the months prior to the crisis.[77] The situation was not helped by the disclosure that Lay, his "reputation in tatters",[79] stood to receive a payment of $60 million as a change-of-control fee subsequent to the Dynegy acquisition, while many Enron employees had seen their retirement accounts, which were based largely on Enron stock, ravaged as the price decreased 90% in a year. An official at a company owned by Enron stated "We had some married couples who both worked who lost as much as $800,000 or $900,000. It pretty much wiped out every employee's savings plan."[80]

Watson assured investors that the true nature of Enron's business had been made apparent to him: "We have comfort there is not another shoe to drop. If there is no shoe, this is a phenomenally good transaction."[78] Watson further asserted that Enron's energy trading part alone was worth the price Dynegy was paying for the whole company.[81]

By mid-November, Enron announced it was planning to sell about $8 billion worth of underperforming assets, along with a general plan to reduce its scale for the sake of financial stability.[82] On November 19 Enron disclosed to the public further evidence of its critical state of affairs, most pressingly that the company had debt repayment obligations in the range of $9 billion by the end of 2002. Such debts were "vastly in excess" of its available cash.[83] Also, the success of measures to preserve its solvency were not guaranteed, specifically as regarded asset sales and debt refinancing. In a statement, Enron revealed "An adverse outcome with respect to any of these matters would likely have a material adverse impact on Enron's ability to continue as a going concern."[83]

Two days later, on November 21, Wall Street expressed serious doubts that Dynegy would proceed with its deal at all, or would seek to radically renegotiate. Furthermore, Enron revealed in a 10-Q filing that almost all the money it had recently borrowed for purposes including buying its commercial paper, or about $5 billion, had been exhausted in just 50 days. Analysts were unnerved at the revelation, especially since Dynegy was reported to have also been unaware of Enron's rate of cash use.[84] In order to end the proposed buyout, Dynegy would need to legally demonstrate a "material change" in the circumstances of the transaction; as late as November 22, sources close to Dynegy were skeptical that the latest revelations constituted sufficient grounds.[85] Indeed, while Lay assumed that one of his underlings had shared the 10-Q with Dynegy officials, no one at Dynegy saw it until it was released to the public. It subsequently emerged that Enron's traders had grabbed much of the money from Dynegy's cash infusion and used it to guarantee payment to their trading partners when it came time to settle up.[43]

The SEC announced it had filed civil fraud complaints against Andersen.[86] A few days later, sources claimed Enron and Dynegy were renegotiating the terms of their arrangement.[87] Dynegy now demanded Enron agree to be bought for $4 billion rather than the previous $8 billion. Observers were reporting difficulties in ascertaining which of Enron's operations, if any, were profitable. Reports described an en masse shift of business to Enron's competitors for the sake of risk exposure reduction.[87]

Bankruptcy Edit

 
Enron's stock price (former NYSE ticker symbol: ENE) from August 23, 2000 ($90) to January 11, 2002 ($0.12). As a result of the decrease of the stock price, shareholders incurred paper losses of nearly $11 billion.[3]

On November 28, 2001, Enron's two worst possible outcomes came true. Credit rating agencies all reduced Enron's credit rating to junk status, and Dynegy's board tore up the merger agreement on Watson's advice. Watson later said, "At the end, you couldn't give it [Enron] to me."[11]: 403  Although they had seemingly ironed out a number of outstanding issues at a meeting in New York over the previous weekend, ultimately Dynegy's concerns about Enron's liquidity and dwindling business proved insurmountable.[43] The company had very little cash with which to operate, let alone satisfy enormous debts. Its stock price fell to $0.61 at the end of the day's trading. One editorial observer wrote that "Enron is now shorthand for the perfect financial storm."[88]

Systemic consequences were felt, as Enron's creditors and other energy trading companies suffered the loss of several percentage points. Some analysts felt Enron's failure indicated the risks of the post-September 11 economy, and encouraged traders to lock in profits where they could.[89] The question now became how to determine the total exposure of the markets and other traders to Enron's failure. Early calculations estimated $18.7 billion. One adviser stated, "We don't really know who is out there exposed to Enron's credit. I'm telling my clients to prepare for the worst."[90]

Within 24 hours, speculation abounded that Enron would have no choice but to file for bankruptcy. Enron was estimated to have about $23 billion in liabilities from both debt outstanding and guaranteed loans. Citigroup and JP Morgan Chase in particular appeared to have significant amounts to lose with Enron's bankruptcy. Additionally, many of Enron's major assets were pledged to lenders in order to secure loans, causing doubt about what, if anything, unsecured creditors and eventually stockholders might receive in bankruptcy proceedings.[91] As it turned out, new corporate treasurer Ray Bowen had known as early as the day Dynegy pulled out of the deal that Enron was headed for bankruptcy. He spent most of the next two days scrambling to find a bank who would take Enron's remaining cash after pulling all of its money out of Citibank. He was ultimately forced to make do with a small Houston bank.[43]

By the close of business on November 30, 2001, it was obvious Enron was at the end of its tether. That day, Enron Europe, the holding company for Enron's operations in continental Europe, filed for bankruptcy.[92] The rest of Enron followed suit the following night, December 1, when the board voted unanimously to file for Chapter 11 protection.[43] It became the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history, surpassing the 1970 bankruptcy of the Penn Central (WorldCom's bankruptcy the next year surpassed Enron's bankruptcy so the title was short held), and resulted in 4,000 lost jobs.[3][93] The day that Enron filed for bankruptcy, thousands of employees were told to pack their belongings and given 30 minutes to vacate the building.[94] Nearly 62% of 15,000 employees' savings plans relied on Enron stock that was purchased at $83 in early 2001 and was now practically worthless.[95]

In its accounting work for Enron, Andersen had been sloppy and weak. But that's how Enron had always wanted it. In truth, even as they angrily pointed fingers, the two deserved each other.

Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind in The Smartest Guys in the Room.[11]: 393 

On January 17, 2002, Enron dismissed Arthur Andersen as its auditor, citing its accounting advice and the destruction of documents. Andersen countered that it had already ended its relationship with the company when Enron became bankrupt.[96]

Trials Edit

Enron Edit

Fastow and his wife, Lea, both pleaded guilty to charges against them. Fastow was initially charged with 98 counts of fraud, money laundering, insider trading, and conspiracy, among other crimes.[97] Fastow pleaded guilty to two charges of conspiracy and was sentenced to ten years with no parole in a plea bargain to testify against Lay, Skilling, and Causey.[98] Lea was indicted on six felony counts, but prosecutors later dismissed them in favor of a single misdemeanor tax charge. Lea was sentenced to one year for helping her husband hide income from the government.[99]

Lay and Skilling went on trial for their part in the Enron scandal in January 2006. The 53-count, 65-page indictment covers a broad range of financial crimes, including bank fraud, making false statements to banks and auditors, securities fraud, wire fraud, money laundering, conspiracy, and insider trading. United States District Judge Sim Lake had previously denied motions by the defendants to have separate trials and to relocate the case out of Houston, where the defendants argued the negative publicity concerning Enron's demise would make it impossible to get a fair trial. On May 25, 2006, the jury in the Lay and Skilling trial returned its verdicts. Skilling was convicted of 19 of 28 counts of securities fraud and wire fraud and acquitted on the remaining nine, including charges of insider trading. He was sentenced to 24 years and 4 months in prison.[100] In 2013 the United States Department of Justice reached a deal with Skilling, which resulted in ten years being cut from his sentence.[101]

Lay pleaded not guilty to the eleven criminal charges, and claimed that he was misled by those around him. He attributed the main cause for the company's demise to Fastow.[102] Lay was convicted of all six counts of securities and wire fraud for which he had been tried, and he was subject to a maximum total sentence of 45 years in prison.[103] However, before sentencing was scheduled, Lay died on July 5, 2006. At the time of his death, the SEC had been seeking more than $90 million from Lay in addition to civil fines. The case of Lay's wife, Linda, is a difficult one. She sold roughly 500,000 shares of Enron ten minutes to thirty minutes before the information that Enron was collapsing went public on November 28, 2001.[104] Linda was never charged with any of the events related to Enron.[105]

Although Michael Kopper worked at Enron for more than seven years, Lay did not know of Kopper even after the company's bankruptcy. Kopper was able to keep his name anonymous in the entire affair.[11]: 153  Kopper was the first Enron executive to plead guilty.[106] Chief Accounting Officer Rick Causey was indicted with six felony charges for disguising Enron's financial condition during his tenure.[107] After pleading not guilty, he later switched to guilty and was sentenced to seven years in prison.[108]

All told, sixteen people pleaded guilty for crimes committed at the company, and five others, including four former Merrill Lynch employees (three of whose convictions were subsequently overturned on appeal),[109][110][111] were found guilty. Eight former Enron executives testified—the main witness being Fastow—against Lay and Skilling, his former bosses.[93] Another was Kenneth Rice, the former chief of Enron Corp.'s high-speed Internet unit, who cooperated and whose testimony helped convict Skilling and Lay. In June 2007, he received a 27-month sentence.[112]

Michael W. Krautz, a former Enron accountant, was among the accused who was acquitted[113] of charges related to the scandal. Represented by Barry Pollack,[114][better source needed] Krautz was acquitted of federal criminal fraud charges after a month-long jury trial.[citation needed]

Arthur Andersen Edit

Arthur Andersen was charged with and found guilty of obstruction of justice for shredding the thousands of documents and deleting e-mails and company files that tied the firm to its audit of Enron.[115] Although only a small number of Arthur Andersen's employees were involved with the scandal, the firm was effectively put out of business; the SEC is not allowed to accept audits from convicted felons. The company surrendered its CPA license on August 31, 2002, and 85,000 employees lost their jobs.[116][117] The conviction was later overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court due to the jury not being properly instructed on the charge against Andersen.[118] The Supreme Court ruling theoretically left Andersen free to resume operations. However, the damage to the Andersen name has been so great that it has not returned as a viable business even on a limited scale.

NatWest Three Edit

Giles Darby, David Bermingham, and Gary Mulgrew worked for Greenwich NatWest. The three British men had worked with Fastow on a special purpose entity he had started called Swap Sub. When Fastow was being investigated by the SEC, the three men met with the British Financial Services Authority (FSA) in November 2001 to discuss their interactions with Fastow.[119] In June 2002, the U.S. issued warrants for their arrest on seven counts of wire fraud, and they were then extradited. On July 12, a potential Enron witness scheduled to be extradited to the U.S., Neil Coulbeck, was found dead in a park in north-east London.[120] Coulbeck's death was eventually ruled to have been a suicide.[citation needed] The U.S. case alleged that Coulbeck and others conspired with Fastow.[121] In a plea bargain in November 2007, the trio plead guilty to one count of wire fraud while the other six counts were dismissed.[122] Darby, Bermingham, and Mulgrew were each sentenced to 37 months in prison.[123] In August 2010, Bermingham and Mulgrew retracted their confessions.[124]

Aftermath Edit

Employees and shareholders Edit

 
Enron's headquarters in Downtown Houston was leased from a consortium of banks who had bought the property for $285 million in the 1990s. It was sold for $55.5 million, just before Enron moved out in 2004.[125]

While some employees, like John D. Arnold, received large bonuses in the final days of the company,[126] Enron's shareholders lost $74 billion in the four years before the company's bankruptcy ($40 to $45 billion was attributed to fraud).[127] As Enron had nearly $67 billion that it owed creditors, employees and shareholders received limited, if any, assistance aside from severance from Enron.[128] To pay its creditors, Enron held auctions to sell assets including art, photographs, logo signs, and its pipelines.[129][130][131]

A class action lawsuit on behalf of about 20,000 Enron employees who alleged mismanagement of their 401(k) plans resulted in a July 2005 settlement of $356 million against Enron and 401(k) manager Northern Trust.[132] A year later the settlement was reduced to $37.5 million in an agreement by Federal judge Melinda Harmon, with Northern Trust neither admitting or denying wrongdoing.[133]

In May 2004, more than 20,000 of Enron's former employees won a suit of $85 million for compensation of $2 billion that was lost from their pensions. From the settlement, the employees each received about $3,100.[134] The next year, investors received another settlement from several banks of $4.2 billion.[127] In September 2008, a $7.2-billion settlement from a $40-billion lawsuit, was reached on behalf of the shareholders. The settlement was distributed among the main plaintiff, University of California (UC), and 1.5 million individuals and groups. UC's law firm Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman and Robbins, received $688 million in fees, the highest in a U.S. securities fraud case.[135] At the distribution, UC announced in a press release "We are extremely pleased to be returning these funds to the members of the class. Getting here has required a long, challenging effort, but the results for Enron investors are unprecedented."[136]

Sarbanes–Oxley Act Edit

In the Titanic, the captain went down with the ship. And Enron looks to me like the captain first gave himself and his friends a bonus, then lowered himself and the top folks down the lifeboat and then hollered up and said, 'By the way, everything is going to be just fine.'

—U.S. Senator Byron Dorgan[137]

Between December 2001 and April 2002, the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs and the House Committee on Financial Services held multiple hearings about the Enron scandal and related accounting and investor protection issues. These hearings and the corporate scandals that followed Enron led to the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act on July 30, 2002.[138] The Act is nearly "a mirror image of Enron: the company's perceived corporate governance failings are matched virtually point for point in the principal provisions of the Act."[139]

The main provisions of the Sarbanes–Oxley Act included the establishment of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board to develop standards for the preparation of audit reports; the restriction of public accounting companies from providing any non-auditing services when auditing; provisions for the independence of audit committee members, executives being required to sign off on financial reports, and relinquishment of certain executives' bonuses in case of financial restatements; and expanded financial disclosure of companies' relationships with unconsolidated entities.[138]

On February 13, 2002, due to the instances of corporate malfeasances and accounting violations, the SEC recommended changes of the stock exchanges' regulations. In June 2002, the New York Stock Exchange announced a new governance proposal, which was approved by the SEC in November 2003. The main provisions of the final NYSE proposal include:[138]

  • All companies must have a majority of independent directors.
  • Independent directors must comply with an elaborate definition of independent directors.
  • The compensation committee, nominating committee, and audit committee shall consist of independent directors.
  • All audit committee members should be financially literate. In addition, at least one member of the audit committee is required to have accounting or related financial management expertise.
  • In addition to its regular sessions, the board should hold additional sessions without management.

Criticism of the Bush administration Edit

Kenneth Lay was a longtime supporter of U.S. president George W. Bush and a donor to his various political campaigns, including his successful bid for the presidency in 2000. As such, critics of Bush and his administration attempted to link them to the scandal. A January 2002 article in The Economist claimed that Lay had been a close personal friend of Bush's family and had backed him financially since his unsuccessful campaign for Congress in 1978. Allegedly, Lay was even rumored at one point to be in the running to serve as Secretary of Energy for Bush.[140]

In an article that same month, Time magazine accused the Bush administration of making desperate attempts to distance themselves from the scandal. According to author Frank Pellegrini, various Bush appointments held connections to Enron, including deputy White House Chief of Staff Karl Rove as a stockholder, Secretary of the Army Thomas E. White Jr. as a former executive, and SEC chairman Harvey Pitt, a former employee of Arthur Andersen. Former Montana governor Marc Racicot, whom Bush considered for appointment for Secretary of the Interior, briefly served as a lobbyist for the company after leaving office. After opening a criminal investigation into the scandal, Attorney General John Ashcroft recused himself and his chief of staff from the case when Democratic Congressman Henry Waxman accused Ashcroft of receiving $25,000 from Enron for his failed reelection campaign to the Senate in 2000. As Pellegrini wrote, "The Democrats will have the company-he-keeps, guilt-by-association thing on their side, and with all the ... general whiff of rich man's cover-up about the whole affair, they'll have a class warfare card to play this spring."[141]

See also Edit

References Edit

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Bibliography Edit

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

  • The short film Enron Bankruptcy (February 7, 2002) is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive.
  • Documentary series from Court TV (now TruTV) "MUGSHOTS: Enron – Wall Street Scammers" episode (2002) at FilmRise

enron, scandal, accounting, scandal, involving, enron, corporation, american, energy, company, based, houston, texas, when, news, widespread, fraud, within, company, became, public, october, 2001, company, declared, bankruptcy, accounting, firm, arthur, anders. The Enron scandal was an accounting scandal involving Enron Corporation an American energy company based in Houston Texas When news of widespread fraud within the company became public in October 2001 the company declared bankruptcy and its accounting firm Arthur Andersen then one of the five largest audit and accountancy partnerships in the world was effectively dissolved In addition to being the largest bankruptcy reorganization in U S history at that time Enron was cited as the biggest audit failure 1 61 Logo of EnronEnron was formed in 1985 by Kenneth Lay after merging Houston Natural Gas and InterNorth Several years later when Jeffrey Skilling was hired Lay developed a staff of executives that by the use of accounting loopholes the misuse of mark to market accounting special purpose entities and poor financial reporting were able to hide billions of dollars in debt from failed deals and projects Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow and other executives misled Enron s board of directors and audit committee on high risk accounting practices and pressured Arthur Andersen to ignore the issues Shareholders filed a 40 billion lawsuit after the company s stock price which achieved a high of US 90 75 per share in mid 2000 plummeted to less than 1 by the end of November 2001 2 The U S Securities and Exchange Commission SEC began an investigation and rival Houston competitor Dynegy offered to purchase the company at a very low price The deal failed and on December 2 2001 Enron filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code Enron s 63 4 billion in assets made it the largest corporate bankruptcy in U S history until the WorldCom scandal the following year 3 Many executives at Enron were indicted for a variety of charges and some were later sentenced to prison including Lay and Skilling Arthur Andersen was found guilty of illegally destroying documents relevant to the SEC investigation which voided its license to audit public companies and effectively closed the firm By the time the ruling was overturned at the U S Supreme Court Arthur Andersen had lost the majority of its customers and had ceased operating Enron employees and shareholders received limited returns in lawsuits despite losing billions in pensions and stock prices As a consequence of the scandal new regulations and legislation were enacted to expand the accuracy of financial reporting for public companies 4 One piece of legislation the Sarbanes Oxley Act increased penalties for destroying altering or fabricating records in federal investigations or for attempting to defraud shareholders 5 The act also increased the accountability of auditing firms to remain unbiased and independent of their clients 4 Contents 1 Rise of Enron 2 Causes of downfall 2 1 Revenue recognition 2 2 Mark to market accounting 2 3 Special purpose entities 2 3 1 JEDI and Chewco 2 3 2 Whitewing 2 3 3 LJM and Raptors 2 4 Corporate governance 2 4 1 Executive compensation 2 4 2 Risk management 2 4 3 Financial audit 2 4 4 Audit committee 2 4 5 Ethical and political analyses 2 5 Other accounting issues 2 6 Speculative business ventures 3 Timeline of downfall 3 1 Investors confidence declines 3 2 Restructuring losses and SEC investigation 3 3 Credit rating downgrade 3 4 Proposed buyout by Dynegy 3 5 Bankruptcy 4 Trials 4 1 Enron 4 2 Arthur Andersen 4 3 NatWest Three 5 Aftermath 5 1 Employees and shareholders 5 2 Sarbanes Oxley Act 5 3 Criticism of the Bush administration 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksRise of Enron Edit nbsp Kenneth Lay in a July 2004 mugshotIn 1985 Kenneth Lay merged the natural gas pipeline companies of Houston Natural Gas and InterNorth to form Enron 6 3 In the early 1990s he helped to initiate the selling of electricity at market prices and soon after Congress approved legislation deregulating the sale of natural gas The resulting markets made it possible for traders such as Enron to sell energy at higher prices thereby significantly increasing its revenue 7 After producers and local governments decried the resultant price volatility and asked for increased regulation strong lobbying on the part of Enron and others prevented such regulation 7 8 As Enron became the largest seller of natural gas in North America by 1992 its trading of gas contracts earned 122 million before interest and taxes the second largest contributor to the company s net income The November 1999 creation of the EnronOnline trading website allowed the company to better manage its contracts trading business 6 7 In an attempt to achieve further growth Enron pursued a diversification strategy The company owned and operated a variety of assets including gas pipelines electricity plants paper plants water plants and broadband services across the globe Enron also gained additional revenue by trading contracts for the same array of products and services with which it was involved 6 5 This included setting up power generation plants in developing countries and emerging markets including the Philippines Subic Bay Indonesia and India Dabhol 9 Enron s stock increased from the start of the 1990s until year end 1998 by 311 only modestly higher than the average rate of growth in the Standard amp Poor 500 index 6 1 However the stock increased by 56 in 1999 and a further 87 in 2000 compared to a 20 increase and a 10 decrease for the index during the same years By December 31 2000 Enron s stock was priced at 83 13 and its market capitalization exceeded 60 billion 70 times earnings and six times book value an indication of the stock market s high expectations about its future prospects In addition Enron was rated the most innovative large company in America in Fortune s Most Admired Companies survey 6 1 Causes of downfall Edit nbsp Enron had published a manual of ethics earlier Enron s complex financial statements were confusing to shareholders and analysts 1 6 10 In addition its complex business model and unethical practices required that the company use accounting limitations to misrepresent earnings and modify the balance sheet to indicate favorable performance 6 9 Furthermore some speculative business ventures proved disastrous The combination of these issues later resulted in the bankruptcy of Enron and the majority of them were perpetuated by the indirect knowledge or direct actions of Lay Jeffrey Skilling Andrew Fastow and other executives such as Rebecca Mark Lay served as the chairman of Enron in its last few years and approved of the actions of Skilling and Fastow although he did not always inquire about the details Skilling constantly focused on meeting Wall Street expectations advocated the use of mark to market accounting accounting based on market value which was then inflated and pressured Enron executives to find new ways to hide its debt Fastow and other executives created off balance sheet vehicles complex financing structures and deals so bewildering that few people could understand them 11 132 133 Revenue recognition Edit Further information Revenue recognition Enron earned profits by providing services such as wholesale trading and risk management in addition to building and maintaining electric power plants natural gas pipelines storage and processing facilities 12 When accepting the risk of buying and selling products merchants are allowed to report the selling price as revenues and the products costs as cost of goods sold In contrast an agent provides a service to the customer but does not take the same risks as merchants for buying and selling Service providers when classified as agents may report trading and brokerage fees as revenue although not for the full value of the transaction 13 101 103 Although trading companies such as Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch used the conventional agent model for reporting revenue where only the trading or brokerage fee would be reported as revenue Enron instead elected to report the entire value of each of its trades as revenue This merchant model was considered much more aggressive in the accounting interpretation than the agent model 13 102 Enron s method of reporting inflated trading revenue was later adopted by other companies in the energy trading industry in an attempt to stay competitive with the company s large increase in revenue Other energy companies such as Duke Energy Reliant Energy and Dynegy joined Enron in the largest 50 of the revenue based Fortune 500 owing mainly to their adoption of the same trading revenue accounting as Enron 13 105 Between 1996 and 2000 Enron s revenues increased by more than 750 rising from 13 3 billion in 1996 to 100 7 billion in 2000 This expansion of 65 per year was extraordinary in any industry including the energy industry which typically considered growth of 2 3 per year to be respectable For just the first nine months of 2001 Enron reported 138 7 billion in revenues placing the company at the sixth position on the Fortune Global 500 13 97 100 Enron also used creative accounting tricks and purposefully misclassified loan transactions as sales close to quarterly reporting deadlines similar to the Lehman Brothers Repo 105 scheme in the 2008 financial crisis or the currency swap concealment of Greek debt by Goldman Sachs In Enron s case Merrill Lynch bought Nigerian barges with an alleged buyback guarantee by Enron shortly before the earnings deadline According to the government Enron misreported a bridge loan as a true sale then bought back the barges a few months later Merrill Lynch executives were tried and in November 2004 convicted for aiding Enron in fraudulent accounting activities 14 These charges were thrown out on appeal in 2006 after the Merrill Lynch executives had spent nearly a year in prison with the 5th U S Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans calling the conspiracy and wire fraud charges flawed Expert observers said that the reversal was highly unusual for the 5th Circuit commenting that the conviction must have had serious issues in order to be overturned 15 The Justice Department decided not to retry the case after the reversal of the verdict 16 17 Mark to market accounting Edit Further information Mark to market accounting In Enron s natural gas business the accounting had been fairly straightforward in each time period the company listed actual costs of supplying the gas and actual revenues received from selling it However when Skilling joined Enron he demanded that the trading business adopt mark to market accounting claiming that it would represent true economic value 11 39 42 Enron became the first nonfinancial company to use the method to account for its complex long term contracts 18 Mark to market accounting requires that once a long term contract has been signed income is estimated as the present value of net future cash flow Often the viability of these contracts and their related costs were difficult to estimate 6 10 Owing to the large discrepancies between reported profits and cash investors were typically given false or misleading reports Under this method income from projects could be recorded although the firm might never have received the money with this income increasing financial earnings on the books However because in future years the profits could not be included new and additional income had to be included from more projects to develop additional growth to appease investors 11 39 42 As one Enron competitor stated If you accelerate your income then you have to keep doing more and more deals to show the same or rising income 18 Despite potential pitfalls the U S Securities and Exchange Commission SEC approved the accounting method for Enron in its trading of natural gas futures contracts on January 30 1992 11 39 42 However Enron later expanded its use to other areas in the company to help it meet Wall Street projections 11 127 For one contract in July 2000 Enron and Blockbuster Video signed a 20 year agreement to introduce on demand entertainment to various U S cities by year s end After several pilot projects Enron claimed estimated profits of more than 110 million from the deal even though analysts questioned the technical viability and market demand of the service 6 10 When the network failed to work Blockbuster withdrew from the contract Enron continued to claim future profits even though the deal resulted in a loss 19 Special purpose entities Edit Further information Special purpose entity Enron used special purpose entities limited partnerships or companies created to fulfill a temporary or specific purpose to fund or manage risks associated with specific assets The company elected to disclose minimal details on its use of special purpose entities 6 11 These shell companies were created by a sponsor but funded by independent equity investors and debt financing For financial reporting purposes a series of rules dictate whether a special purpose entity is a separate entity from the sponsor In total by 2001 Enron had used hundreds of special purpose entities to hide its debt 6 10 The company used a number of special purpose entities such as partnerships in its Thomas and Condor tax shelters financial asset securitization investment trusts FASITs in the Apache deal real estate mortgage investment conduits REMICs in the Steele deal and REMICs and real estate investment trusts REITs in the Cochise deal 20 The special purpose entities were Tobashi schemes used for more than just circumventing accounting conventions As a result of one violation Enron s balance sheet understated its liabilities and overstated its equity and its earnings were overstated 6 11 Enron disclosed to its shareholders that it had hedged downside risk in its own illiquid investments using special purpose entities However investors were oblivious to the fact that the special purpose entities were actually using the company s own stock and financial guarantees to finance these hedges This prevented Enron from being protected from the downside risk 6 11 JEDI and Chewco Edit Main article Chewco In 1993 Enron established a joint venture in energy investments with CalPERS the California state pension fund called the Joint Energy Development Investments JEDI 11 67 In 1997 Skilling serving as Enron s chief operating officer COO asked CalPERS to join Enron in a separate investment CalPERS was interested in the idea but only if it could be terminated as a partner in JEDI 1 30 However Enron did not want to show any debt from assuming CalPERS stake in JEDI on its balance sheet Chief Financial Officer CFO Fastow developed the special purpose entity Chewco Investments a limited partnership L P which raised debt guaranteed by Enron and was used to acquire CalPERS s joint venture stake for 383 million 6 11 Because of Fastow s organization of Chewco JEDI s losses were kept off of Enron s balance sheet In autumn 2001 CalPERS and Enron s arrangement was discovered which required the discontinuation of Enron s prior accounting method for Chewco and JEDI This disqualification revealed that Enron s reported earnings from 1997 to mid 2001 would need to be reduced by 405 million and that the company s indebtedness would increase by 628 million 1 31 Whitewing Edit Whitewing was the name of a special purpose entity used as a financing method by Enron 21 In December 1997 with funding of 579 million provided by Enron and 500 million by an outside investor Whitewing Associates L P was formed Two years later the entity s arrangement was changed so that it would no longer be consolidated with Enron and be counted on the company s balance sheet Whitewing was used to purchase Enron assets including stakes in power plants pipelines stocks and other investments 22 Between 1999 and 2001 Whitewing bought assets from Enron worth 2 billion using Enron stock as collateral Although the transactions were approved by the Enron board the asset transfers were not true sales and should have been treated instead as loans 23 LJM and Raptors Edit Main article LJM Lea Jeffrey Matthew In 1999 Fastow formulated two limited partnerships LJM Cayman L P LJM1 and LJM2 Co Investment L P LJM2 for the purpose of buying Enron s poorly performing stocks and stakes to improve its financial statements LJM 1 and 2 were created solely to serve as the outside equity investor needed for the special purpose entities that were being used by Enron 1 31 Fastow had to go before the board of directors to receive an exemption from Enron s code of ethics as he had the title of CFO in order to manage the companies 11 193 197 The two partnerships were funded with around 390 million provided by Wachovia J P Morgan Chase Credit Suisse First Boston Citigroup and other investors Merrill Lynch which marketed the equity also contributed 22 million to fund the entities 1 31 Enron transferred to Raptor I IV four LJM related special purpose entities named after the velociraptors in Jurassic Park more than 1 2 billion in assets including millions of shares of Enron common stock and long term rights to purchase millions more shares plus 150 million of Enron notes payable as disclosed in the company s financial statement footnotes 24 1 33 25 The special purpose entities had been used to pay for all of this using the entities debt instruments The footnotes also declared that the instruments face amount totaled 1 5 billion and the entities notional amount of 2 1 billion had been used to enter into derivative contracts with Enron 1 33 Enron capitalized the Raptors and in a manner similar to the accounting employed when a company issues stock at a public offering then booked the notes payable issued as assets on its balance sheet while increasing the shareholders equity for the same amount 1 38 This treatment later became an issue for Enron and its auditor Arthur Andersen as removing it from the balance sheet resulted in a 1 2 billion decrease in net shareholders equity 26 Eventually the derivative contracts worth 2 1 billion lost significant value Swaps were established at the time the stock price achieved its maximum During the ensuing year the value of the portfolio under the swaps fell by 1 1 billion as the stock prices decreased the loss of value meant that the special purpose entities technically now owed Enron 1 1 billion by the contracts Enron using its mark to market accounting method claimed a 500 million gain on the swap contracts in its 2000 annual report The gain was responsible for offsetting its stock portfolio losses and was attributed to nearly a third of Enron s earnings for 2000 before it was properly restated in 2001 1 39 Corporate governance Edit Further information Corporate governance On paper Enron had a model board of directors comprising predominantly outsiders with significant ownership stakes and a talented audit committee In its 2000 review of best corporate boards Chief Executive included Enron among its five best boards 27 21 Even with its complex corporate governance and network of intermediaries Enron was still able to attract large sums of capital to fund a questionable business model conceal its true performance through a series of accounting and financing maneuvers and hype its stock to unsustainable levels 6 4 Executive compensation Edit Although Enron s compensation and performance management system was designed to retain and reward its most valuable employees the system contributed to a dysfunctional corporate culture that became obsessed with short term earnings to maximize bonuses Employees constantly tried to start deals often disregarding the quality of cash flow or profits in order to get a better rating for their performance review Additionally accounting results were recorded as soon as possible to keep up with the company s stock price This practice helped ensure deal makers and executives received large cash bonuses and stock options 13 112 Enron was constantly emphasizing its stock price Management was compensated extensively using stock options similar to other U S companies This policy of stock option awards caused management to create expectations of rapid growth in efforts to give the appearance of reported earnings to meet Wall Street s expectations 28 Stock tickers were installed in lobbies elevators and on company computers 11 187 At budget meetings Skilling would develop target earnings by asking What earnings do you need to keep our stock price up and that number would be used even if it was not feasible 11 127 On December 31 2000 Enron had 96 million shares outstanding as stock option plans approximately 13 of common shares outstanding Enron s proxy statement stated that within three years these awards were expected to be exercised 6 13 Using Enron s January 2001 stock price of 83 13 and the directors beneficial ownership reported in the 2001 proxy the value of director stock ownership was 659 million for Lay and 174 million for Skilling 27 21 Skilling believed that if Enron employees were constantly worried about cost it would hinder original thinking 11 119 As a result extravagant spending was rampant throughout the company especially among the executives Employees had large expense accounts and many executives were paid sometimes twice as much as competitors 11 401 In 1998 the top 200 highest paid employees received 193 million from salaries bonuses and stock Two years later the figure jumped to 1 4 billion 11 241 Risk management Edit Further information Risk management Before its demise Enron was lauded for its sophisticated financial risk management tools 29 Risk management was crucial to Enron not only because of its regulatory environment but also because of its business plan Enron established long term fixed commitments which needed to be hedged to prepare for the invariable fluctuation of future energy prices 30 1171 Enron s downfall was attributed to its reckless use of derivatives and special purpose entities By hedging its risks with special purpose entities which it owned Enron retained the risks associated with the transactions This arrangement had Enron implementing hedges with itself 27 17 Enron s aggressive accounting practices were not hidden from the board of directors as later learned by a Senate subcommittee The board was informed of the rationale for using the Whitewing LJM and Raptor transactions and after approving them received status updates on the entities operations Although not all of Enron s widespread improper accounting practices were revealed to the board the practices were dependent on board decisions 30 1170 Even though Enron extensively relied on derivatives for its business the company s finance committee and board did not have enough experience with derivatives to understand what they were being told The Senate subcommittee argued that had there been a detailed understanding of how the derivatives were organized the board would have prevented their use 30 1175 Financial audit Edit Further information Financial audit Enron s accounting firm Arthur Andersen was accused of applying reckless standards in its audits because of a conflict of interest over the significant consulting fees generated by Enron During 2000 Andersen earned 25 million in audit fees and 27 million in consulting fees this amount accounted for roughly 27 of the audit fees of public clients for Andersen s Houston office The auditor s methods were questioned as either being completed solely to receive its annual fees or for its lack of expertise in properly reviewing Enron s revenue recognition special entities derivatives and other accounting practices 6 15 Enron hired numerous Certified Public Accountants CPAs as well as accountants who had worked on developing accounting rules with the Financial Accounting Standards Board FASB The accountants searched for new ways to save the company money including capitalizing on loopholes found in Generally Accepted Accounting Principles GAAP the accounting industry s standards One Enron accountant revealed We tried to aggressively use the literature GAAP to our advantage All the rules create all these opportunities We got to where we did because we exploited that weakness 11 142 Andersen s auditors were pressured by Enron s management to defer recognizing the charges from the special purpose entities as its credit risks became known Since the entities would never return a profit accounting guidelines required that Enron should take a write off where the value of the entity was removed from the balance sheet at a loss To pressure Andersen into meeting earnings expectations Enron would occasionally allow accounting companies Ernst amp Young or PricewaterhouseCoopers to complete accounting tasks to create the illusion of hiring a new company to replace Andersen 11 148 Although Andersen was equipped with internal controls to protect against conflicted incentives of local partners it failed to prevent conflict of interest In one case Andersen s Houston office which performed the Enron audit was able to overrule any critical reviews of Enron s accounting decisions by Andersen s Chicago partner In addition after news of SEC investigations of Enron were made public Andersen would later shred several tons of relevant documents and delete nearly 30 000 e mails and computer files leading to accusations of a cover up 6 15 31 11 383 Revelations concerning Andersen s overall performance led to the break up of the firm and to the following assessment by the Powers Committee appointed by Enron s board to look into the firm s accounting in October 2001 The evidence available to us suggests that Andersen did not fulfill its professional responsibilities in connection with its audits of Enron s financial statements or its obligation to bring to the attention of Enron s Board or the Audit and Compliance Committee concerns about Enron s internal contracts over the related party transactions 32 Audit committee Edit Corporate audit committees usually meet just a few times during the year and their members typically have only modest experience with accounting and finance Enron s audit committee had more expertise than many others It included 33 Robert K Jaedicke an accounting professor at Stanford University and former dean of Stanford Business School John Mendelsohn President of the University of Texas M D Anderson Cancer Center Paulo Pereira former president and CEO of the State Bank of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil John Wakeham former United Kingdom Secretary of State for Energy and Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury Ronnie Chan Chairman of Hong Kong Hang Lung Group Wendy Gramm former Chair of U S Commodity Futures Trading CommissionEnron s audit committee was later criticized for its brief meetings that would cover large amounts of material In one meeting on February 12 2001 the committee met for an hour and a half Enron s audit committee did not have the technical knowledge to question the auditors properly on accounting issues related to the company s special purpose entities The committee was also unable to question the company s management due to pressures on the committee 6 14 The United States Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Governmental Affairs report accused the board members of allowing conflicts of interest to impede their duties as monitoring the company s accounting practices When Enron s scandal became public the audit committee s conflicts of interest were regarded with suspicion 34 Ethical and political analyses Edit Commentators attributed the mismanagement behind Enron s fall to a variety of ethical and political economic causes Ethical explanations centered on executive greed and hubris a lack of corporate social responsibility situation ethics and get it done business pragmatism 35 36 37 38 39 Political economic explanations cited post 1970s deregulation and inadequate staff and funding for regulatory oversight 40 41 A more libertarian analysis maintained that Enron s collapse resulted from the company s reliance on political lobbying rent seeking and the gaming of regulations 42 Other accounting issues Edit Enron made a habit of booking costs of cancelled projects as assets with the rationale that no official letter had stated that the project was cancelled This method was known as the snowball and although it was initially dictated that such practices be used only for projects worth less than 90 million it was later increased to 200 million 11 77 In 1998 when analysts were given a tour of the Enron Energy Services office they were impressed with how the employees were working so vigorously In reality Skilling had moved other employees to the office from other departments instructing them to pretend to work hard to create the appearance that the division was larger than it was 11 179 180 This ruse was used several times to fool analysts about the progress of different areas of Enron to help improve the stock price citation needed Speculative business ventures Edit Enron division Azurix slated for an IPO initially planned to bid between 321 million and 353 million for the rights to operate water system services for areas around Buenos Aires This was at the high end of what Enron s Risk Assessment and Control Group advised But as pressure to outbid all others and win the deal grew more intense with the approaching IPO the Azurix executives decided to up their bid They eventually bid 438 6 million which turned out to be about twice as much as the next highest sealed bid But when Enron executives arrived at the Argentine facilities they found them in a shambles with all of the customer records destroyed 43 Timeline of downfall EditAt the beginning of 2001 the Enron Corporation the world s dominant energy trader appeared unstoppable The company s decade long effort to persuade lawmakers to deregulate electricity markets had succeeded from California to New York Its ties to the Bush administration assured that its views would be heard in Washington Its sales profits and stock were soaring A Berenson and R A Oppel Jr The New York Times October 28 2001 44 On September 20 2000 a reporter at The Wall Street Journal bureau in Dallas wrote a story about how mark to market accounting had become prevalent in the energy industry He noted that outsiders had no real way of knowing the assumptions on which companies that used mark to market based their earnings While the story only appeared in the Texas Journal the Texas regional edition of the Journal short seller Jim Chanos happened to read it and decided to check Enron s 10 K report for himself Chanos did not think it made sense that Enron s broadband unit appeared to far outpace a then troubled broadband industry He also noticed that Enron was spending much of its invested capital and was alarmed by the large amounts of stock being sold by insiders In November 2000 he decided to short Enron s stock 11 334 338 In February 2001 Chief Accounting Officer Rick Causey told budget managers From an accounting standpoint this will be our easiest year ever We ve got 2001 in the bag 11 299 On March 5 Bethany McLean s Fortune article Is Enron Overpriced questioned how Enron could maintain its high stock value which was trading at 55 times its earnings arguing that analysts and investors did not know exactly how the company made money 45 McLean was first drawn to the company s financial situation after Chanos suggested she view the company s 10 K for herself 11 338 In a post mortem interview with The Washington Post she recalled finding strange transactions erratic cash flow and huge debt The debt was the biggest red flag to McLean she wondered how a supposedly profitable company could be adding debt at such a rapid rate 46 Later in her book The Smartest Guys in the Room McLean recalled speaking off the record with a number of people in the investment community who were growing skeptical about Enron 11 338 McLean telephoned Skilling to discuss her findings prior to publishing the article but he called her unethical for not properly researching his company 47 Fastow claimed that Enron could not reveal earnings details as the company had more than 1 200 trading books for assorted commodities and did not want anyone to know what s on those books We don t want to tell anyone where we re making money 45 In a conference call on April 17 2001 then Chief Executive Officer CEO Skilling verbally attacked Wall Street analyst Richard Grubman 48 who questioned Enron s unusual accounting practices during a recorded conference call When Grubman complained that Enron was the only company that could not release a balance sheet along with its earnings statements Skilling stammered Well uh Thank you very much we appreciate it Asshole 49 This became an inside joke among many Enron employees mocking Grubman for his perceived meddling rather than Skilling s offensiveness with slogans such as Ask Why Asshole a variation on Enron s official slogan Ask why 50 However Skilling s comment was met with dismay and astonishment by press and public as he had previously disdained criticism of Enron coolly or humorously citation needed By the late 1990s Enron s stock was trading for 80 90 per share and few seemed to concern themselves with the opacity of the company s financial disclosures In mid July 2001 Enron reported revenues of 50 1 billion almost triple year to date and beating analysts estimates by 3 cents a share 51 Despite this Enron s profit margin had stayed at a modest average of about 2 1 and its share price had decreased by more than 30 since the same quarter of 2000 51 As time passed a number of serious concerns confronted the company Enron had recently faced several serious operational challenges namely logistical difficulties in operating a new broadband communications trading unit and the losses from constructing the Dabhol Power project a large gas powered power plant in India that had been mired in controversy since the beginning in relation to its high pricing and bribery at the highest level 9 These were subsequently confirmed in the 2002 Senate investigation 52 There was also increasing criticism of the company for the role that its subsidiary Enron Energy Services had in the California electricity crisis of 2000 2001 citation needed There are no accounting issues no trading issues no reserve issues no previously unknown problem issues I think I can honestly say that the company is probably in the strongest and best shape that it has probably ever been in Kenneth Lay answering an analyst s question on August 14 2001 11 347 On August 14 Skilling announced he was resigning his position as CEO after only six months citing personal reasons 53 Observers noted that in the months before his exit Skilling had sold at minimum 450 000 shares of Enron at a value of around 33 million though he still owned over a million shares at the date of his departure 53 Nevertheless Lay who was serving as chairman at Enron assured surprised market watchers that there would be no change in the performance or outlook of the company going forward from Skilling s departure 53 Lay announced he himself would re assume the position of chief executive officer citation needed On August 15 Sherron Watkins vice president for corporate development sent an anonymous letter to Lay warning him about the company s accounting practices One statement in the letter said I am incredibly nervous that we will implode in a wave of accounting scandals 54 Watkins contacted a friend who worked for Arthur Andersen and he drafted a memorandum to give to the audit partners about the points she raised On August 22 Watkins met individually with Lay and gave him a six page letter further explaining Enron s accounting issues Lay questioned her as to whether she had told anyone outside of the company and then vowed to have the company s law firm Vinson amp Elkins review the issues despite Watkins arguing that using the law firm would present a conflict of interest 11 357 55 Lay consulted with other executives and although they wanted to dismiss Watkins as Texas law did not protect company whistleblowers they decided against it to prevent a lawsuit 11 358 On October 15 Vinson amp Elkins announced that Enron had done nothing wrong in its accounting practices as Andersen had approved each issue 56 Investors confidence declines Edit Something is rotten with the state of Enron The New York Times September 9 2001 57 By the end of August 2001 his company s stock value still falling Lay named Greg Whalley president and COO of Enron Wholesale Services to succeed Skilling as president and COO of the entire company He also named Mark Frevert as vice chairman and appointed Whalley and Frevert to positions in the chairman s office Some observers suggested that Enron s investors were in significant need of reassurance not only because the company s business was difficult to understand even indecipherable 57 but also because it was difficult to properly describe the company in financial statements 58 One analyst stated it s really hard for analysts to determine where Enron are making money in a given quarter and where they are losing money 58 Lay accepted that Enron s business was very complex but asserted that analysts would never get all the information they want to satisfy their curiosity He also explained that the complexity of the business was due largely to tax strategies and position hedging 58 Lay s efforts seemed to meet with limited success by September 9 one prominent hedge fund manager noted that Enron stock is trading under a cloud 57 The sudden departure of Skilling combined with the opacity of Enron s accounting books made proper assessment difficult for Wall Street In addition the company admitted to repeatedly using related party transactions which some feared could be too easily used to transfer losses that might otherwise appear on Enron s own balance sheet A particularly troubling aspect of this technique was that several of the related party entities had been or were being controlled by CFO Fastow 57 After the September 11 attacks media attention shifted away from the company and its troubles A little less than a month later Enron announced its intention to begin the process of selling its lower margin assets in favor of its core businesses of gas and electricity trading This policy included selling Portland General Electric to another Oregon utility Northwest Natural Gas for about 1 9 billion in cash and stock and possibly selling its 65 stake in the Dabhol project in India 59 Restructuring losses and SEC investigation Edit On October 16 2001 Enron announced that restatements to its financial statements for years 1997 to 2000 were necessary to correct accounting violations The restatements for the period reduced earnings by 613 million or 23 of reported profits during the period increased liabilities at the end of 2000 by 628 million 6 of reported liabilities and 5 5 of reported equity and reduced equity at the end of 2000 by 1 2 billion 10 of reported equity 6 11 Additionally in January Jeff Skilling had asserted that the broadband unit alone was worth 35 billion a claim also mistrusted 60 An analyst at Standard amp Poor s said I don t think anyone knows what the broadband operation is worth 60 Enron s management team claimed the losses were mostly due to investment losses along with charges such as about 180 million in money spent restructuring the company s troubled broadband trading unit In a statement Lay said After a thorough review of our businesses we have decided to take these charges to clear away issues that have clouded the performance and earnings potential of our core energy businesses 60 Some analysts were unnerved David Fleischer at Goldman Sachs an analyst termed previously one of the company s strongest supporters asserted that the Enron management lost credibility and have to reprove themselves They need to convince investors these earnings are real that the company is for real and that growth will be realized 60 61 Fastow disclosed to Enron s board of directors on October 22 that he earned 30 million from compensation arrangements when managing the LJM limited partnerships That day the share price of Enron decreased to 20 65 down 5 40 in one day after the announcement by the SEC that it was investigating several suspicious deals struck by Enron characterizing them as some of the most opaque transactions with insiders ever seen 62 Attempting to explain the billion dollar charge and calm investors Enron s disclosures spoke of share settled costless collar arrangements derivative instruments which eliminated the contingent nature of existing restricted forward contracts and strategies that served to hedge certain merchant investments and other assets Such puzzling phraseology left many analysts feeling ignorant about just how Enron managed its business 62 Regarding the SEC investigation chairman and CEO Lay said We will cooperate fully with the SEC and look forward to the opportunity to put any concern about these transactions to rest 62 Two days later on October 25 Fastow was removed as CFO despite Lay s assurances as early as the previous day that he and the board had confidence in him In announcing Fastow s ouster Lay said In my continued discussions with the financial community it became clear to me that restoring investor confidence would require us to replace Andy as CFO 63 The move came after several banks refused to issue loans to Enron as long as Fastow remained CFO 43 However with Skilling and Fastow now both departed some analysts feared that revealing the company s practices would be made all the more difficult 63 Enron s stock was now trading at 16 41 having lost half its value in a little more than a week 63 Jeff McMahon head of industrial markets succeeded Fastow as CFO His first task was to deal with a cash crisis A day earlier Enron discovered that it was unable to roll its commercial paper effectively losing access to several billion dollars in financing The company had actually experienced difficulty selling its commercial paper for a week but was now unable to sell even overnight paper 43 On October 27 the company began buying back all its commercial paper valued at around 3 3 billion in an effort to calm investor fears about Enron s supply of cash Enron financed the re purchase by depleting its lines of credit at several banks While the company s debt rating was still considered investment grade its bonds were trading at levels slightly less making future sales problematic 64 It soon emerged that Fastow had been so focused on creating off balance sheet vehicles that he had all but ignored some of the most rudimentary aspects of corporate finance McMahon and a financial SWAT team put together to find a way out of the cash crisis discovered that under Fastow s watch Enron only operated on a quarterly basis Fastow never developed procedures for tracking cash or debt maturities that were common for companies of Enron s stature For all intents and purposes Enron was illiquid 43 11 549 As the month came to a close serious concerns were being raised by some observers regarding Enron s possible manipulation of accepted accounting rules however analysis was claimed to be impossible based on the incomplete information provided by Enron 65 Industry analysts feared that Enron was the new Long Term Capital Management the hedge fund whose bankruptcy in 1998 threatened systemic failure of the international financial markets Enron s tremendous presence worried some about the consequences of the company s possible bankruptcy 44 Enron executives accepted questions in written form only 44 Credit rating downgrade Edit The main short term danger to Enron s survival at the end of October 2001 seemed to be its credit rating It was reported at the time that Moody s and Fitch two of the three biggest credit rating agencies had slated Enron for review for possible downgrade 44 Such a downgrade would force Enron to issue millions of shares of stock to cover loans it had guaranteed which would decrease the value of existing stock further Additionally all manner of companies began reviewing their existing contracts with Enron especially in the long term in the event that Enron s rating were lowered below investment grade a possible hindrance for future transactions 44 Analysts and observers continued their complaints regarding the difficulty or impossibility of properly assessing a company whose financial statements were so cryptic Some feared that no one at Enron apart from Skilling and Fastow could completely explain years of mysterious transactions You re getting way over my head said Lay during late August 2001 in response to detailed questions about Enron s business a reaction that worried analysts 44 On October 29 responding to growing concerns that Enron might have insufficient cash on hand news spread that Enron was seeking a further 1 2 billion in financing from banks 66 The next day as feared Moody s lowered Enron s credit rating from Baa1 to Baa2 two levels above junk status Standard amp Poor s affirmed Enron s rating of BBB the equivalent of Moody s Baa1 Moody s also warned that it would downgrade Enron s commercial paper rating the consequence of which would likely prevent the company from finding the further financing it sought to keep solvent 67 November began with the disclosure that the SEC was now pursuing a formal investigation prompted by questions related to Enron s dealings with related parties Enron s board also announced that it would commission a special committee to investigate the transactions directed by William C Powers the dean of the University of Texas law school 68 The next day an editorial in The New York Times demanded an aggressive investigation into the matter 69 Enron was able to secure an additional 1 billion in financing from cross town rival Dynegy on November 2 but the news was not universally admired in that the debt was secured by assets from the company s valuable Northern Natural Gas and Transwestern Pipeline 70 Proposed buyout by Dynegy Edit Sources claimed that Enron was planning to explain its business practices more fully within the coming days as a confidence building gesture 71 Enron s stock was now trading at around 7 and by this time it was obvious that Enron could not stay independent However investors worried that the company would not be able to find a buyer citation needed After Enron had received a wide spectrum of rejections Enron management apparently found a buyer when the board of Dynegy another energy trader based in Houston voted late at night on November 7 to acquire Enron at a very low price of about 8 billion in stock 72 Chevron Texaco which at the time owned about a quarter of Dynegy agreed to provide Enron with 2 5 billion in cash specifically 1 billion at first and the rest when the deal was completed Dynegy would also be required to assume nearly 13 billion of debt plus any other debt hitherto occluded by the Enron management s secretive business practices 72 possibly as much as 10 billion in hidden debt 73 Dynegy and Enron confirmed their deal on November 8 2001 citation needed With Enron in a state of near collapse the deal was largely on Dynegy s terms Dynegy would be the surviving company and Dynegy CEO Charles Watson and his management team would head the merged company Enron shareholders would get a 40 percent stake in the enlarged Dynegy and Enron would get three seats on the merged company s board Lay would not have any management role though it was presumed he would get one of Enron s seats on the board Of Enron s senior executives only Whalley would join the merged company s C suite as an executive vice president Dynegy agreed to invest 1 5 billion into Enron to keep it alive until the deal closed 43 11 395 As a measure of how dire Enron s financial picture had become the company initially balked at paying its bills for November until the credit agencies gave the merger their blessing and allowed Enron to keep its credit at investment grade By this time the Dynegy deal was virtually the only thing keeping the company alive and Enron officials wanted to keep as much cash in the company s coffers in the event of bankruptcy 43 Had the credit agencies balked at the deal and reduced Enron to junk status its ability to trade would be severely limited if there was a reduction or elimination of its credit lines with competitors 74 43 Ultimately after Enron and Dynegy retooled the deal to make it harder for Dynegy to trigger the material adverse change clause and pull out Moody s and S amp P agreed to drop Enron to one notch above junk status allowing Enron to pay its bills one day late with interest 43 Commentators remarked on the different corporate cultures between Dynegy and Enron and on Watson s straight talking personality 8 Some wondered if Enron s troubles had not simply been the result of innocent accounting errors 75 By November Enron was asserting that the billion plus one time charges disclosed in October should in reality have been 200 million with the rest of the amount simply corrections of dormant accounting mistakes 76 Many feared other mistakes and restatements might yet be revealed 74 Another major correction of Enron s earnings was announced on November 9 with a reduction of 591 million of the stated revenue of years 1997 2000 The charges were said to come largely from two special purpose partnerships JEDI and Chewco The corrections resulted in the virtual elimination of profit for fiscal year 1997 with significant reductions for the other years Despite this disclosure Dynegy declared it still intended to purchase Enron 76 Both companies were said to be anxious to receive an official assessment of the proposed sale from Moody s and S amp P presumably to understand the effect the completion of any buyout transaction would have on Dynegy and Enron s credit rating In addition concerns were raised regarding antitrust regulatory restrictions resulting in possible divestiture along with what to some observers were the radically different corporate cultures of Enron and Dynegy 73 Both companies promoted the deal aggressively and some observers were hopeful Watson was praised for attempting to create the largest company on the energy market 74 At the time Watson said We feel Enron is a very solid company with plenty of capacity to withstand whatever happens the next few months 74 One analyst called the deal a whopper a very good deal financially certainly should be a good deal strategically and provides some immediate balance sheet backstop for Enron 77 Credit issues were becoming more critical however Around the time the buyout was made public Moody s and S amp P publicly announced that they had reduced Enron to just above junk status 74 In a conference call S amp P affirmed that were Enron not to be bought S amp P would reduce its rating to low BB or high B ratings noted as being within junk status 78 Additionally many traders had limited their involvement with Enron or stopped doing business altogether fearing more bad news Watson again attempted to re assure attesting at a presentation to investors that there was nothing wrong with Enron s business 77 He also acknowledged that remunerative steps in the form of more stock options would have to be taken to redress the animosity of many Enron employees towards management after it was revealed that Lay and other officials had sold hundreds of millions of dollars worth of stock during the months prior to the crisis 77 The situation was not helped by the disclosure that Lay his reputation in tatters 79 stood to receive a payment of 60 million as a change of control fee subsequent to the Dynegy acquisition while many Enron employees had seen their retirement accounts which were based largely on Enron stock ravaged as the price decreased 90 in a year An official at a company owned by Enron stated We had some married couples who both worked who lost as much as 800 000 or 900 000 It pretty much wiped out every employee s savings plan 80 Watson assured investors that the true nature of Enron s business had been made apparent to him We have comfort there is not another shoe to drop If there is no shoe this is a phenomenally good transaction 78 Watson further asserted that Enron s energy trading part alone was worth the price Dynegy was paying for the whole company 81 By mid November Enron announced it was planning to sell about 8 billion worth of underperforming assets along with a general plan to reduce its scale for the sake of financial stability 82 On November 19 Enron disclosed to the public further evidence of its critical state of affairs most pressingly that the company had debt repayment obligations in the range of 9 billion by the end of 2002 Such debts were vastly in excess of its available cash 83 Also the success of measures to preserve its solvency were not guaranteed specifically as regarded asset sales and debt refinancing In a statement Enron revealed An adverse outcome with respect to any of these matters would likely have a material adverse impact on Enron s ability to continue as a going concern 83 Two days later on November 21 Wall Street expressed serious doubts that Dynegy would proceed with its deal at all or would seek to radically renegotiate Furthermore Enron revealed in a 10 Q filing that almost all the money it had recently borrowed for purposes including buying its commercial paper or about 5 billion had been exhausted in just 50 days Analysts were unnerved at the revelation especially since Dynegy was reported to have also been unaware of Enron s rate of cash use 84 In order to end the proposed buyout Dynegy would need to legally demonstrate a material change in the circumstances of the transaction as late as November 22 sources close to Dynegy were skeptical that the latest revelations constituted sufficient grounds 85 Indeed while Lay assumed that one of his underlings had shared the 10 Q with Dynegy officials no one at Dynegy saw it until it was released to the public It subsequently emerged that Enron s traders had grabbed much of the money from Dynegy s cash infusion and used it to guarantee payment to their trading partners when it came time to settle up 43 The SEC announced it had filed civil fraud complaints against Andersen 86 A few days later sources claimed Enron and Dynegy were renegotiating the terms of their arrangement 87 Dynegy now demanded Enron agree to be bought for 4 billion rather than the previous 8 billion Observers were reporting difficulties in ascertaining which of Enron s operations if any were profitable Reports described an en masse shift of business to Enron s competitors for the sake of risk exposure reduction 87 Bankruptcy Edit nbsp Enron s stock price former NYSE ticker symbol ENE from August 23 2000 90 to January 11 2002 0 12 As a result of the decrease of the stock price shareholders incurred paper losses of nearly 11 billion 3 On November 28 2001 Enron s two worst possible outcomes came true Credit rating agencies all reduced Enron s credit rating to junk status and Dynegy s board tore up the merger agreement on Watson s advice Watson later said At the end you couldn t give it Enron to me 11 403 Although they had seemingly ironed out a number of outstanding issues at a meeting in New York over the previous weekend ultimately Dynegy s concerns about Enron s liquidity and dwindling business proved insurmountable 43 The company had very little cash with which to operate let alone satisfy enormous debts Its stock price fell to 0 61 at the end of the day s trading One editorial observer wrote that Enron is now shorthand for the perfect financial storm 88 Systemic consequences were felt as Enron s creditors and other energy trading companies suffered the loss of several percentage points Some analysts felt Enron s failure indicated the risks of the post September 11 economy and encouraged traders to lock in profits where they could 89 The question now became how to determine the total exposure of the markets and other traders to Enron s failure Early calculations estimated 18 7 billion One adviser stated We don t really know who is out there exposed to Enron s credit I m telling my clients to prepare for the worst 90 Within 24 hours speculation abounded that Enron would have no choice but to file for bankruptcy Enron was estimated to have about 23 billion in liabilities from both debt outstanding and guaranteed loans Citigroup and JP Morgan Chase in particular appeared to have significant amounts to lose with Enron s bankruptcy Additionally many of Enron s major assets were pledged to lenders in order to secure loans causing doubt about what if anything unsecured creditors and eventually stockholders might receive in bankruptcy proceedings 91 As it turned out new corporate treasurer Ray Bowen had known as early as the day Dynegy pulled out of the deal that Enron was headed for bankruptcy He spent most of the next two days scrambling to find a bank who would take Enron s remaining cash after pulling all of its money out of Citibank He was ultimately forced to make do with a small Houston bank 43 By the close of business on November 30 2001 it was obvious Enron was at the end of its tether That day Enron Europe the holding company for Enron s operations in continental Europe filed for bankruptcy 92 The rest of Enron followed suit the following night December 1 when the board voted unanimously to file for Chapter 11 protection 43 It became the largest bankruptcy in U S history surpassing the 1970 bankruptcy of the Penn Central WorldCom s bankruptcy the next year surpassed Enron s bankruptcy so the title was short held and resulted in 4 000 lost jobs 3 93 The day that Enron filed for bankruptcy thousands of employees were told to pack their belongings and given 30 minutes to vacate the building 94 Nearly 62 of 15 000 employees savings plans relied on Enron stock that was purchased at 83 in early 2001 and was now practically worthless 95 In its accounting work for Enron Andersen had been sloppy and weak But that s how Enron had always wanted it In truth even as they angrily pointed fingers the two deserved each other Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind in The Smartest Guys in the Room 11 393 On January 17 2002 Enron dismissed Arthur Andersen as its auditor citing its accounting advice and the destruction of documents Andersen countered that it had already ended its relationship with the company when Enron became bankrupt 96 Trials EditEnron Edit Main article Trial of Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling Fastow and his wife Lea both pleaded guilty to charges against them Fastow was initially charged with 98 counts of fraud money laundering insider trading and conspiracy among other crimes 97 Fastow pleaded guilty to two charges of conspiracy and was sentenced to ten years with no parole in a plea bargain to testify against Lay Skilling and Causey 98 Lea was indicted on six felony counts but prosecutors later dismissed them in favor of a single misdemeanor tax charge Lea was sentenced to one year for helping her husband hide income from the government 99 Lay and Skilling went on trial for their part in the Enron scandal in January 2006 The 53 count 65 page indictment covers a broad range of financial crimes including bank fraud making false statements to banks and auditors securities fraud wire fraud money laundering conspiracy and insider trading United States District Judge Sim Lake had previously denied motions by the defendants to have separate trials and to relocate the case out of Houston where the defendants argued the negative publicity concerning Enron s demise would make it impossible to get a fair trial On May 25 2006 the jury in the Lay and Skilling trial returned its verdicts Skilling was convicted of 19 of 28 counts of securities fraud and wire fraud and acquitted on the remaining nine including charges of insider trading He was sentenced to 24 years and 4 months in prison 100 In 2013 the United States Department of Justice reached a deal with Skilling which resulted in ten years being cut from his sentence 101 Lay pleaded not guilty to the eleven criminal charges and claimed that he was misled by those around him He attributed the main cause for the company s demise to Fastow 102 Lay was convicted of all six counts of securities and wire fraud for which he had been tried and he was subject to a maximum total sentence of 45 years in prison 103 However before sentencing was scheduled Lay died on July 5 2006 At the time of his death the SEC had been seeking more than 90 million from Lay in addition to civil fines The case of Lay s wife Linda is a difficult one She sold roughly 500 000 shares of Enron ten minutes to thirty minutes before the information that Enron was collapsing went public on November 28 2001 104 Linda was never charged with any of the events related to Enron 105 Although Michael Kopper worked at Enron for more than seven years Lay did not know of Kopper even after the company s bankruptcy Kopper was able to keep his name anonymous in the entire affair 11 153 Kopper was the first Enron executive to plead guilty 106 Chief Accounting Officer Rick Causey was indicted with six felony charges for disguising Enron s financial condition during his tenure 107 After pleading not guilty he later switched to guilty and was sentenced to seven years in prison 108 All told sixteen people pleaded guilty for crimes committed at the company and five others including four former Merrill Lynch employees three of whose convictions were subsequently overturned on appeal 109 110 111 were found guilty Eight former Enron executives testified the main witness being Fastow against Lay and Skilling his former bosses 93 Another was Kenneth Rice the former chief of Enron Corp s high speed Internet unit who cooperated and whose testimony helped convict Skilling and Lay In June 2007 he received a 27 month sentence 112 Michael W Krautz a former Enron accountant was among the accused who was acquitted 113 of charges related to the scandal Represented by Barry Pollack 114 better source needed Krautz was acquitted of federal criminal fraud charges after a month long jury trial citation needed Arthur Andersen Edit Main article Arthur Andersen LLP v United States Arthur Andersen was charged with and found guilty of obstruction of justice for shredding the thousands of documents and deleting e mails and company files that tied the firm to its audit of Enron 115 Although only a small number of Arthur Andersen s employees were involved with the scandal the firm was effectively put out of business the SEC is not allowed to accept audits from convicted felons The company surrendered its CPA license on August 31 2002 and 85 000 employees lost their jobs 116 117 The conviction was later overturned by the U S Supreme Court due to the jury not being properly instructed on the charge against Andersen 118 The Supreme Court ruling theoretically left Andersen free to resume operations However the damage to the Andersen name has been so great that it has not returned as a viable business even on a limited scale NatWest Three Edit Main article NatWest Three Giles Darby David Bermingham and Gary Mulgrew worked for Greenwich NatWest The three British men had worked with Fastow on a special purpose entity he had started called Swap Sub When Fastow was being investigated by the SEC the three men met with the British Financial Services Authority FSA in November 2001 to discuss their interactions with Fastow 119 In June 2002 the U S issued warrants for their arrest on seven counts of wire fraud and they were then extradited On July 12 a potential Enron witness scheduled to be extradited to the U S Neil Coulbeck was found dead in a park in north east London 120 Coulbeck s death was eventually ruled to have been a suicide citation needed The U S case alleged that Coulbeck and others conspired with Fastow 121 In a plea bargain in November 2007 the trio plead guilty to one count of wire fraud while the other six counts were dismissed 122 Darby Bermingham and Mulgrew were each sentenced to 37 months in prison 123 In August 2010 Bermingham and Mulgrew retracted their confessions 124 Aftermath EditEmployees and shareholders Edit nbsp Enron s headquarters in Downtown Houston was leased from a consortium of banks who had bought the property for 285 million in the 1990s It was sold for 55 5 million just before Enron moved out in 2004 125 While some employees like John D Arnold received large bonuses in the final days of the company 126 Enron s shareholders lost 74 billion in the four years before the company s bankruptcy 40 to 45 billion was attributed to fraud 127 As Enron had nearly 67 billion that it owed creditors employees and shareholders received limited if any assistance aside from severance from Enron 128 To pay its creditors Enron held auctions to sell assets including art photographs logo signs and its pipelines 129 130 131 A class action lawsuit on behalf of about 20 000 Enron employees who alleged mismanagement of their 401 k plans resulted in a July 2005 settlement of 356 million against Enron and 401 k manager Northern Trust 132 A year later the settlement was reduced to 37 5 million in an agreement by Federal judge Melinda Harmon with Northern Trust neither admitting or denying wrongdoing 133 In May 2004 more than 20 000 of Enron s former employees won a suit of 85 million for compensation of 2 billion that was lost from their pensions From the settlement the employees each received about 3 100 134 The next year investors received another settlement from several banks of 4 2 billion 127 In September 2008 a 7 2 billion settlement from a 40 billion lawsuit was reached on behalf of the shareholders The settlement was distributed among the main plaintiff University of California UC and 1 5 million individuals and groups UC s law firm Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman and Robbins received 688 million in fees the highest in a U S securities fraud case 135 At the distribution UC announced in a press release We are extremely pleased to be returning these funds to the members of the class Getting here has required a long challenging effort but the results for Enron investors are unprecedented 136 Sarbanes Oxley Act Edit In the Titanic the captain went down with the ship And Enron looks to me like the captain first gave himself and his friends a bonus then lowered himself and the top folks down the lifeboat and then hollered up and said By the way everything is going to be just fine U S Senator Byron Dorgan 137 Main article Sarbanes Oxley Act Between December 2001 and April 2002 the Senate Committee on Banking Housing and Urban Affairs and the House Committee on Financial Services held multiple hearings about the Enron scandal and related accounting and investor protection issues These hearings and the corporate scandals that followed Enron led to the passage of the Sarbanes Oxley Act on July 30 2002 138 The Act is nearly a mirror image of Enron the company s perceived corporate governance failings are matched virtually point for point in the principal provisions of the Act 139 The main provisions of the Sarbanes Oxley Act included the establishment of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board to develop standards for the preparation of audit reports the restriction of public accounting companies from providing any non auditing services when auditing provisions for the independence of audit committee members executives being required to sign off on financial reports and relinquishment of certain executives bonuses in case of financial restatements and expanded financial disclosure of companies relationships with unconsolidated entities 138 On February 13 2002 due to the instances of corporate malfeasances and accounting violations the SEC recommended changes of the stock exchanges regulations In June 2002 the New York Stock Exchange announced a new governance proposal which was approved by the SEC in November 2003 The main provisions of the final NYSE proposal include 138 All companies must have a majority of independent directors Independent directors must comply with an elaborate definition of independent directors The compensation committee nominating committee and audit committee shall consist of independent directors All audit committee members should be financially literate In addition at least one member of the audit committee is required to have accounting or related financial management expertise In addition to its regular sessions the board should hold additional sessions without management Criticism of the Bush administration Edit Kenneth Lay was a longtime supporter of U S president George W Bush and a donor to his various political campaigns including his successful bid for the presidency in 2000 As such critics of Bush and his administration attempted to link them to the scandal A January 2002 article in The Economist claimed that Lay had been a close personal friend of Bush s family and had backed him financially since his unsuccessful campaign for Congress in 1978 Allegedly Lay was even rumored at one point to be in the running to serve as Secretary of Energy for Bush 140 In an article that same month Time magazine accused the Bush administration of making desperate attempts to distance themselves from the scandal According to author Frank Pellegrini various Bush appointments held connections to Enron including deputy White House Chief of Staff Karl Rove as a stockholder Secretary of the Army Thomas E White Jr as a former executive and SEC chairman Harvey Pitt a former employee of Arthur Andersen Former Montana governor Marc Racicot whom Bush considered for appointment for Secretary of the Interior briefly served as a lobbyist for the company after leaving office After opening a criminal investigation into the scandal Attorney General John Ashcroft recused himself and his chief of staff from the case when Democratic Congressman Henry Waxman accused Ashcroft of receiving 25 000 from Enron for his failed reelection campaign to the Senate in 2000 As Pellegrini wrote The Democrats will have the company he keeps guilt by association thing on their side and with all the general whiff of rich man s cover up about the whole affair they ll have a class warfare card to play this spring 141 See also Edit nbsp Texas portalThe Crooked E The Unshredded Truth About Enron television film about the rise and fall of Enron based on Anatomy of Greed a 2002 book by an ex employee Enron The Smartest Guys in the Room 2005 documentary based on the eponymous 2003 book about the scandal Law amp Order Criminal Intent episode Tuxedo Hill 2002 television episode inspired by the Enron Scandal ENRON 2009 play by 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October 17 2010 Shulz Ellen May 14 2004 Enron Settles With Employees Who Lost Retirement Money The Wall Street Journal New York City Retrieved January 11 2020 Tom Fowler July 26 2006 Judge approves 37 5 million Enron 401 k settlement The Houston Chronicle accessed January 11 2020 Doran James May 14 2004 Enron Staff win 85m The Times London Archived from the original on June 12 2011 Retrieved October 17 2010 DeBare Ilana September 10 2008 Billions to be shared by Enron shareholders San Francisco Chronicle Archived from the original on January 11 2012 Retrieved October 17 2010 Davis Trey December 18 2008 UC begins distributing Enron settlement money University of California Archived from the original on June 13 2011 Retrieved October 17 2010 Enron The Smartest Guys in the Room DVD Magnolia Pictures January 17 2006 Event occurs at 6 06 a b c Chhaochharia Vidhi Yaniv Grinstein March 2007 Corporate Governance and Firm Value the Impact of the 2002 Governance Rules PDF Johnson School Research Paper Series No 23 06 Johnson School of Management 7 9 Archived from the original PDF on July 16 2011 Retrieved October 17 2010 Deakin Simon Suzanne J Konzelmann September 2003 Learning from Enron PDF ESRC Centre for Business Research University of Cambridge Working Paper No 274 1 Archived from the original PDF on December 24 2010 Retrieved October 17 2010 Bush and Enron s collapse The Economist January 11 2002 Retrieved June 20 2018 The problem for Mr Bush is that the ties between the company and his administration were especially intricate and close Mr Lay has been a supporter of Mr Bush ever since the president s unsuccessful campaign for Congress in 1978 and has been known as a close personal friend of Mr Bush and his family At one stage Mr Lay was mooted as a possible energy secretary under Mr Bush Pellegrini Frank January 10 2002 Bush s Enron Problem Time Time Inc Retrieved June 20 2018 Bibliography Edit McLean Bethany Peter Elkind 2003 The Smartest Guys in the Room New York Portfolio Trade ISBN 978 1 59184 008 4 Dharan Bala G William R Bufkins 2004 Enron Corporate Fiascos and Their Implications Foundation Press ISBN 978 1 58778 578 8 Further reading EditBryce Robert December 17 2008 Pipe Dreams Greed Ego and the Death of Enron PublicAffairs ISBN 978 1 58648 201 5 Collins Denis May 24 2006 Behaving Badly Ethical Lessons from Enron Dog Ear Publishing LLC ISBN 978 1 59858 160 7 Cruver Brian September 1 2003 Anatomy of Greed Telling the Unshredded Truth from Inside Enron Basic Books ISBN 978 0 7867 1205 2 Eichenwald Kurt December 27 2005 Conspiracy of Fools A True Story Broadway Books ISBN 978 0 7679 1179 5 Fox Loren December 22 2003 Enron The Rise and Fall John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 47888 1 Fusaro Peter C Ross M Miller June 21 2002 What Went Wrong at Enron Everyone s Guide to the Largest Bankruptcy in U S History John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 26574 0 Salter Malcolm S June 30 2008 Innovation Corrupted The Origins and Legacy of Enron s Collapse Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 02825 8 Swartz Mary Sherron Watkins March 9 2004 Power Failure The Inside Story of the Collapse of Enron Broadway Business ISBN 978 0 7679 1368 3 Toffler Barbara Ley Jennifer Reingold April 13 2004 Final Accounting Ambition Greed and the Fall of Arthur Andersen Broadway Business ISBN 978 0 7679 1383 6 External links EditThe short film Enron Bankruptcy February 7 2002 is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive Documentary series from Court TV now TruTV MUGSHOTS Enron Wall Street Scammers episode 2002 at FilmRise Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Enron scandal amp oldid 1179166864, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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