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Non-Tech : The Enron Scandal - Unmoderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Oral Roberts who wrote (480)1/19/2002 1:36:20 PM
From: Carolyn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3602
 
POWER FOR SALE
Clinton `sweetheart` deal
sped up Enron`s collapse
After investing $1 billion in India plant, Lay couldn`t get state utility board to pay

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By Paul Sperry
© 2002 WorldNetDaily.com

WASHINGTON – A so-called `sweetheart` deal between Enron Corp. and India – brokered with the help of Clinton administration officials during controversial trade junkets in the mid-`90s – ultimately soured and sped the energy giant`s collapse, analysts say.

After investing more than $1 billion to help build a huge power plant near Bombay, Enron had problems last year getting paid for power generated by the plant – even after sources say former President Clinton lobbied Indian officials on Enron`s behalf during his April visit to India.

Desperate, Enron chairman Kenneth L. Lay on Sept. 14 fired off a letter to Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee threatening legal action to recover claims of up to $5 billion related to the Dabhol Power Co.

A month later, on Oct. 15, Lay called Commerce Secretary Don Evans, pleading for help with the nightmarish project.

The next day, Enron stunned Wall Street by announcing its first loss in more than four years. In the third quarter, the Houston-based company hemorrhaged $618 million.

Enron`s once-high-flying stock nose-dived, robbing many of its workers of their retirement nest eggs, and the company filed the biggest bankruptcy in U.S. history.

The gas-fired Dabhol project, which stopped production and construction in May, had been a black mark on Enron`s books from the start, analysts say.

`No doubt about it, it was always the trouble child,` said Carl Kirst, an analyst with Merrill Lynch Global Securities in Houston.

He says the Indian deal was `one of many factors` that hurt Enron.

`But clearly it was one of the better-known pressure points on the stock,` Kirst said in an interview with WorldNetDaily.

Costly boondoggle

Wall Street didn`t think much of the deal when it was announced in 1995 by the late Commerce Secretary Ron Brown and Lay during a trade mission to India. The more than $3 billion power-plant project was the single-largest foreign investment ever made in India, which was just opening up its economy to outsiders.

`In the mid-`90s, not many people were venturing into the international-development market like this, certainly not in India,` Kirst said. `So there was a good deal of risk built in.`

Of the four investors in the project, which is the largest gas-fired plant in the world, Enron put up the biggest stake –`north of $1 billion,` Kirst said.

Phase 1 of the project yielded an anemic 7-percent return on investment, he says, contributing roughly under a nickel a year to Enron`s earnings per share.

That was bad enough.

But by the time Phase 2, twice as big as Phase 1, was nearly completed, the local Indian electricity board reneged on payments, claiming the power bills were too high. If Phase 2 had come on line, the board would have owed a projected $1 billion-plus a year starting this year. Enron inked a 20-year contract with the state board.

`So here at a net investment of well over $1 billion, Enron almost had Phase 2 completed, but they never got anything for it,` Kirst said.

And the poor returns from Phase 1 weren`t covering the cost of developing Phase 2, he adds.

In short, Enron had a costly boondoggle on its hands, one that was starting to punish its financial statement.

`You can`t have over $1 billion of investment on your books and continue to earn only 7 percent, at best, and not open yourself up to write-downs,` Kirst said.

The best thing Enron could have done is unload the project, he says.

But Lay couldn`t find suitors.

`Enron hoped, ideally, that someone would buy them out at their book value – roughly $1 billion,` Kirst said. `That is, shall we say, optimistic at this point.`

There have been rumors of buyout offers of between $600 million and $800 million circulating since September, he says. Possible buyers mentioned in the past include Reliance, one of India`s largest industrial concerns, and China Light and Power Co.

But nothing has panned out.

It shouldn`t come as much of a surprise. The huge project was never popular.

Even back in 1993 – when Indian officials first proposed the idea of converting to gas as a main power source for Maharashtra, one of India`s most industrialized states and home to Bombay, the country`s financial center – economists were skeptical.

The World Bank, for example, concluded such a project was `not economically viable,` warning that the plants would produce power too costly for the state.

The New York Times, moreover, quoted a senior Indian official who said anyone who invested in such a project was `bankrupting yourself knowingly, willingly, deliberately.`

So why did Lay press ahead? Political opportunism.

`Sweetheart deal`

On May 19, 1994, Clinton met here with former Indian Prime Minister P.V. Rao. Rao told Clinton that India was interested in opening its centrally controlled economy up to American corporate investors.

Clinton, in turn, instructed then-Energy Secretary Hazel O`Leary to lead a delegation of corporate executives to India on a trade mission.

`The mission marked the first official visit to India by a U.S. cabinet secretary in many years,` Energy`s internal trip report states.

Enron executives joined O`Leary on the July 1994 junket, whereupon they planted the seeds of the ill-fated Dabhol deal.

Then in January 1995, Lay accompanied Brown on the Commerce trade mission that helped seal the deal.

The Clinton administration got two federal export-finance agencies – the Export-Import Bank and the Overseas Private Investment Corp. – to help underwrite the project by kicking in nearly $400 million in loans.

During the final negotiations, Clinton aide Thomas `Mack` McLarty rode herd on the project in Washington for Lay, his old energy-industry buddy.

He tracked the progress of Clinton`s ambassador to India, Frank Wisner, who was helping speed the deal along.

Even Clinton pitched in to help his golfing partner, Lay, by sending McLarty memos and articles on the project.

(The ex-president`s lobbying for the Enron deal even continued into the Bush administration, sources close to the Dabhol project say, when he visited Indian officials in Mumbai, India, in April. At the time, Enron was fighting the state electricity board for back payments.)

In June 1996, India gave final OK to Lay`s project. Four days before the approval, Enron gave $100,000 to Clinton`s party.

McLarty and Wisner were not forgotten. Lay snatched up McLarty for Enron when he left the White House. And Wisner got a seat on the board of an Enron subsidiary when he stepped down as ambassador in 1997.

Lay and McLarty have denied the Democratic Party gifts were tied to the Indian deal. And Wisner called `foolishness` any suggestion his board seat was payback for helping Enron close the deal in India.

But in India, local foes of the Dabhol project regarded it as a `sweetheart deal` from the start, and even charged that Enron bribed Indian officials. The charge, which Enron has denied, was never proved.

For his part, Lay blames the recession, not any bad deals he made, for his company`s collapse.

Ironically, for all the talk of Lay`s cronyism with President Bush, this administration has been relatively hands-off, at least when it comes to aiding Enron in its overseas deals.

No Enron executives got seats on last year`s sole Bush administration trade mission, which was to Russia.

And in March, Bush, who held no Enron stock directly in his 1999 financial disclosure, proposed slashing the next fiscal year`s budget of the Ex-Im Bank by 25 percent. What`s more, he proposed cutting the subsidies of the Overseas Private Investment Corp.

Under the Clinton administration, Enron had benefited famously from both agencies, which support corporate investments abroad.



To: Oral Roberts who wrote (480)1/19/2002 4:42:03 PM
From: MulhollandDrive  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3602
 
Yes....let's get real here. Employees became undiversified out of simple greed.....bore out of company matching programs...as long as the clownshares were moving up, everyone was happy..Not letting ANY Enron management off the hook for their malfeasance, but the shareholders have SOME responsibility for their OWN choices.

Well-known companies pack 401(k)s with own stock

In aftermath of Enron collapse, employees should have retirement plans that are diversified

By Adam Geller, Associated Press

NEW YORK -- For workers, the lesson of Enron's collapse is supposed to be that they shouldn't put all their retirement eggs in one basket of stock. But that is a lesson some of the nation's biggest companies and their employees have all but ignored.
Some high-profile firms -- including Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola and McDonald's -- have packed their 401(k) plans with far larger proportions of company stock than Enron, according to a recent survey. In P&G's case, much as 95 percent of all the assets in its retirement savings plan are in its own stock.

Many employees are opting to put their own retirement contributions into company stock. Companies often make their matching contributions in stock -- with the condition that it remain untouched for years.

On average, 43 percent of the savings in retirement plans run by the nation's largest employers are from their own stock, according to figures from the Profit Sharing/401k Council of America, which represents the firms.

But at some firms the number is much higher, according to research by an industry newsletter, DC Plan Investing.

At Sherwin-Williams Co., the Cleveland-based paint maker, nearly 92 percent of all money in the retirement plan is in company stock. At pharmaceutical giant Pfizer Inc., the figure is more than 86 percent. At McDonald's, more than 74 percent of the workers' nest egg is in company stock.

"To have a plan where participants are investing more than 90 percent of all assets in (any) stock is extremely high," said Ted Benna, a Pennsylvania retirement plan consultant generally regarded as one of the inventors of the 401(k) concept.

But to have the money all in a single company stock is "even more alarming. I mean, come on, you've got to be real. There's no stock that warrants that level of ownership, I don't care who they are," Benna said.

To be sure, the circumstances were unique at Enron, where the company's stock price plunged just as the company locked its workers out of making any changes in their 401(k) savings.

But the list of other firms with high concentrations of their own stock in retirement savings programs include several that have seen their share price drop in recent years.

At Textron Inc., 70 percent of employees' retirement savings is in company stock that, in the past three years, has plummeted from $98 to less than $40 a share.

At Coke, more than 81 percent of the 401(k) is in company stock that has fallen from a high of more than $70 to less than $45.

At P&G, the balance in retirement accounts relies on stock that fell from a high of about $117 a share to as low as $56, before recovering to around $80 recently.

Bob Gustafson, 55, of Loveland, Ohio, retired from P&G in June but doesn't blame the company for the huge drop in his savings.

"The fact that I was 100 percent in P&G when it went down was my own fault," he said. "I had opportunities to do some diversifying, but I didn't think the alternatives were as good because P&G had been doing so great."


January 18, 2002