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Gold/Mining/Energy : Enron - Natural Gas Industry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ms.smartest.person who wrote (965)11/30/2001 12:05:21 AM
From: ms.smartest.person  Respond to of 1433
 
WSJ/Major Business News: Energy Firms Figure Enron's Woes Could Cost Total of $600 Million

November 30, 2001
By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO and ELLIOTT SPAGAT
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

If Enron Corp. winds up in bankruptcy court, some of the world's biggest energy companies likely will fail to collect a total of more than $600 million that the energy-trading concern owes for hedging, commodities swaps and outstanding physical energy contracts.

Those affected will include other energy-trading companies, smaller oil-and-gas producers and some utilities. The losses aren't expected to cripple any of the companies, though they could dent fourth-quarter financial results.

About $400 million of the claims outstanding are concentrated at five companies. Duke Energy Corp., of Charlotte, N.C., says it is owed about $100 million, Williams Cos., of Tulsa, Okla., said it is owed "less than $100 million" and Reliant Resources Inc., of Houston, put its exposure at about $80 million. Dynegy Inc., the Houston energy company that this week called off its takeover of Enron, has claims totaling $75 million. Mirant Corp., of Atlanta, is owed $50 million to $60 million.

Analysts said the silver lining is that no company so far has reported more massive exposures and that the companies with the biggest potential losses are large and apparently healthy businesses. "For companies this size, at worst, that is not a very material amount," said Kit Konolige, an analyst with New York investment bank Morgan Stanley. "That is good news." Still, analysts caution that it could take months to gauge the full impact.

Still, energy merchants generally reveal little about their trading positions. Without knowing their portfolios and studying their contracts for the buying and selling of commodities, neither analysts nor the public can verify the figures independently, said Paul Patterson, an analyst at Dutch investment bank ABN Amro. "We're not sure from a three-paragraph press release exactly what the companies are disclosing," Mr. Konolige said.

Another point of uncertainty is whether the contracts will become part of any bankruptcy-court proceedings, forcing merchants to duel with such creditors as banks and other lenders for payments. Several analysts said most contracts are written to avoid such proceedings. Thus, for those holding contracts with Enron, calculating the value of each contract at current market conditions will be crucial. "It will likely be long and messy, which will cast a big dark cloud over all of the energy marketers," said Michael Barbis, an analyst at brokerage house Fulcrum Global Partners.

That could mean a more-cautious approach to the so-called merchant-trading industry, which has grown rapidly in recent years as markets for electric power and natural gas have deregulated. Merchant-trading companies play the role of middlemen between energy producers and suppliers, moving and delivering commodities to end-users and managing price risk for customers.

"This industry is as valuable to the economy, and as unlikely to go away, as is investment banking or insurance or even the junk-bond market," wrote New York investment bank Salomon Smith Barney in a note to its clients.

1See full coverage of the rise and fall of Enron

Many energy merchants have "master netting agreements" with Enron that require the merchants to liquidate either all or none of their contracts. This is intended to avoid bickering over which contracts should be honored. Analysts expect many merchants to liquidate and writedown the value of their contacts in order to put the mess behind them.

Mr. Barbis expects most merchants to liquidate all contracts, rather than enter a prolonged fight. "The sooner you resolve this, the better you're received in financial markets," he said. "You want to remove all connection to Enron."

One top executive at a rival energy company said Enron traders worked furiously Wednesday and Thursday to make gas deliveries and try to "wire around" their obligations and match buyers with sellers. "Enron is trying to work to preserve its trading business, to try to live to play another day," the executive said.

The big challenge for energy merchants, analysts say, will be replacing their contracts with Enron, since prices, particularly for natural gas, have changed considerably since the contracts were signed.

Some oil- and gas-exploration concerns are owed money for hedges entered this spring against future prices -- natural-gas prices began sliding in February from records of near $10 a million British thermal units, up from only $5 a million BTUs only a few months before. Many exploration companies took steps to lock in those higher prices.

Because Enron's downward spiral has evolved over several weeks, many companies have had time to unwind hedges with Enron. Anadarko Petroleum Corp. and Apache Corp., both of Houston and two of the biggest independent oil producers, don't have any unsecured claims outstanding with Enron. XTO Energy Inc. of Fort Worth, Texas, is owed about $30 million, the most of any producer, while EOG Resources Inc., of Houston, has claims totaling $18 million for hedges and physical contracts, a company spokeswoman said.

Write to Alexei Barrionuevo at alexei.barrionuevo@wsj.com2 and Elliott Spagat at elliott.spagat@wsj.com3

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To: ms.smartest.person who wrote (965)11/30/2001 12:10:19 AM
From: ms.smartest.person  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1433
 
WSJ/Major Business News: Enron's Financial Woes Ripple Out Across Asia
November 30, 2001
By JASON BOOTH, HENNY SENDER and RICHARD B. SCHMITT
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

The sudden deep financial troubles of U.S. energy giant Enron Corp. sent ripples of concern across Asia, damaging investments in Japan and potentially undermining businesses in South Korea and Australia.

The uncertainty for Asia is likely just beginning. If Enron files for protection under Chapter 11 of the federal Bankruptcy Code in the U.S., as many investors and financial experts now expect, it is likely to be one of the messiest, most complex bankruptcy cases ever, lawyers say. That is because of the multifaceted nature of Enron's once highflying operations, which combined a global energy business with a massive financial-trading operation involving tens of billions of dollars in complex contracts. A filing by Enron, with about $13 billion in debt, would rank among the largest bankruptcy filings ever. Enron has about 800 trading partners or creditors.

The scale of the Enron collapse is huge, experts say. "There is nothing to compare it to," said Edward Tillinghast, a bankruptcy specialist with Coudert Brothers in New York. "The business was so large. There were so many different kinds of operating entities under the Enron umbrella."

On Wednesday, as the last-ditch merger with Dynegy Inc. unraveled, the company's credit was downgraded to "junk" status by rating agency Standard & Poor's Corp. The stock market, signaling that a bankruptcy filing is expected, hammered Enron stock, which was halted for a time on Wednesday, and knocked lower some of its financial backers' shares. Enron shares closed at 4 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading at 61 cents, down $3.50, or 85%. Thursday morning in New York, Enron was trading down 33%, or 20 cents, to 41 cents. On Wednesday, Enron bonds also fell sharply, dropping to 50 cents on the dollar from around 55 cents, reflecting concerns over how much creditors might receive if the company does seek bankruptcy-court protection.

Enron spokeswoman Karen Denne said the company is exploring its options and wouldn't comment on whether it has retained bankruptcy counsel.

The fallout in Asia was felt immediately on Thursday. The biggest news was in Sydney, where Enron Australia said it was suspending operations pending further developments regarding its U.S. parent. "We are now waiting for clarification about Enron's situation globally and will advise the local market once we have received that advice," legal counsel Rob McGrory said.

The announcement followed a warning by Standard & Poor's about counterparty exposure in the Australian electricity market, citing the overnight downgrade of Enron. "The recent developments with Enron serve as a further example of the credit risks faced by energy market participants as they seek to manage their market risks in Australia's volatile power market," said Laurie Conheady, an associate director at Standard & Poor's.

Similarly, Enron's presence in South Korea appears to be nearing an end. According to officials at SK Corp., Enron plans to sell its 50% stake in joint venture energy distribution firm SK-Enron Co. SK-Enron was formed in 1999, and controls about 25% of South Korea's natural-gas market, according to the firm's Web site.

Analysts said that Enron had offered to sell its stake to SK Corp., yet the Korean partner said it has no plans to buy the shares. "We already hold 50% ... we don't need the rest," said a company spokesman, Daniel Youn.

Enron was also considered a potential buyer of power generation assets from South Korean government-controlled Korea Electric Power Corp. Kepco is looking to sell assets as past of a wider privatization drive.

Pressure elsewhere in the region was felt primarily in the financial markets. In Tokyo, the value of money management funds Nikko Asset Management Co., UFJ Partners Asset Management Co., Japan Investment Trust Management Co. and Sumisei Global Investment Trust Management Co., fell due to their exposure to Enron debt, which amounted to about 40 billion yen ($324.9 million). Enron news also sparked volatility in the copper and U.S. dollar market, according to traders.

Other financial backers of Enron were negatively effected as well. J.P. Morgan Chase and Citigroup, which have invested hundreds of millions of dollars in hopes of keeping the Enron-Dynegy deal alive, saw their stocks fall on Wednesday trading in the U.S. On Thursday morning Citigroup shares posted slight gains, rising 19 cents to $47.99, while J.P. Morgan Chase shares were flat at $37.50. J.P. Morgan Chase said in a statement it has about $500 million of unsecured exposure to Enron entities, including loans, letters of credit and derivatives. It said it also has secured exposures, including $400 million in loans secured by Enron pipelines.

Besides banks and bondholders, dozens of companies, municipalities and utilities in the U.S. that had signed multiyear power contracts with Enron may be left in the lurch. Over the years, the likes of retailer J.C. Penney Co., and shopping-mall company Simon Property Group signed on with Enron, as it undercut local utilities in newly deregulated markets.

-- Rebecca Smith and Robin Sidel contributed to this article.

Write to Jason Booth at jason.booth@awsj.com1, Henny Sender at henny.sender@wsj.com2 and Richard B. Schmitt at rick.schmitt@wsj.com3.

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Copyright © 2001 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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