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


To: Labrador who wrote (1236)2/4/2002 10:15:44 AM
From: James Calladine  Respond to of 3602
 
I have not examined the source documents, but my understandng was:

-- Included on the balance sheet as a total figure
-- No details of what the total figure entailed in the notes

My understandig may be wrong. What can you tell us about it?

Namaste!

Jim



To: Labrador who wrote (1236)2/4/2002 10:39:38 AM
From: James Calladine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3602
 
Is TYCO the next ENRON? WSJ: Tyco purchased 700 companies for $8 billion that did not make public
quote.bloomberg.com.

Tyco Spent $8 Bln on Unannounced Purchases in 3 Years (Update1)
By Rachel Layne

Exeter, New Hampshire, Feb. 4 (Bloomberg) -- Tyco International Ltd., whose stock fell 40 percent this year on concern about its accounting, spent $8 billion in the past three fiscal years on more than 700 purchases it didn't make public.

Half of the acquisitions were made in the year ended Sept. 30 and cost $4.19 billion, said Tyco spokeswoman Maryanne Kane. That's about 37 percent of the total $11.3 billion the company spent that year on purchases.

Tyco lost about $46 billion in market value this year on concern the biggest maker of electronic connectors used acquisitions to mask slowing growth. Bowing to investor demands for greater transparency, Tyco said two weeks ago it plans to split into four companies and cut debt by about $11 billion.

The smaller acquisitions didn't need to be announced because they weren't ``material compared with the company's total assets,'' Chief Financial Officer Mark Swartz said in an interview. ``The income statement, balance sheet and cash flow statement would not have changed by one dollar if every one of these transactions'' had been announced.

In 2001, for example, the company didn't issue press releases for acquisitions of non-public companies of less than $220 million, Swartz said. Tyco reported $36.39 billion in revenue for the fiscal year ended Sept. 30.

`Quite Shocking'

``It's really quite shocking,'' said James Stettler, an analyst at Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein in London, who covers stocks of Tyco's European rivals such as Invensys Plc, ABB Ltd. and Schneider Electric SA. ``We all thought U.S. accounting standards were really the strictest you can get.''

The shares rose as much as 1.95 euros, or 4.7 percent, to 43.7 euros ($37.68) in Germany today after advancing 1.4 percent to $35.63 in U.S. trading on Friday. The stock reached a high of $63.21 on Jan. 29 last year.

Disclosures of shares being returned by Tyco Chief Executive Officer Dennis Kozlowski and Swartz in part to pay taxes, along with possible conflicts of interest on Tyco's board, have dragged down the stock. Enron Corp.'s accounting lapses, management conflicts and failure heightened concern of whether investors can trust the accounting of many companies.

Bonds Fall

Tyco's 685 million euros of 5.5 percent bonds maturing in 2008 fell to 85 percent of face value from 88 percent on Friday, traders said. The decline in price sent their yield rising to 8.49 percent from 7.84 percent.

Tyco spent about $2.3 billion in 2000 to buy 225 companies and $1.5 billion for as many as 175 companies in 1999 that weren't announced.

Swartz pointed to a footnote in the company's annual filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission where Tyco discloses the ``net'' amount paid for the companies -- what Tyco paid minus the cash at the acquired company, because that cash effectively lowers the purchase price.

In some cases the acquisitions were announced by the companies acquired or were listed on their Web sites, said Kane. The totals of the purchases were reported earlier by the Wall Street Journal.

More Information?

The company disclosed more detail about what it paid for the acquisitions as part of more detailed disclosure to analysts for years, Swartz said. That doesn't violate disclosure regulations because such detail doesn't change reported numbers, he said. The company may include the detail in future filings, he said.

``What we're talking about is to go to an even greater level of information, if that's what investors want,'' Swartz said.

Kozlowski, who oversaw $64 billion in acquisitions over eight years, is reversing strategy after failing to regain investor confidence that Tyco's accounting in sound. He predicted that splitting the company into four would bolster the value of the companies by 50 percent.

The company announced 42 transactions last year, including its $9.2 billion acquisition of finance company CIT Group Inc., according to Bloomberg data.

Tyco plans to sell its plastics unit and use proceeds from that and share sales of about 20 percent from three businesses to repay $11 billion of the $21.6 billion in debt at its industrial units. Tyco's finance business has about $35.5 billion in debt.

Share Sales

Kozlowski will run Tyco's electronics and security company that remains while finance, fire systems and flow control, and health care will be spun off following share sales. He said he'll consider selling the units if reasonable offers are made.

On Tuesday, Tyco's shares posted their biggest decline in at least two decades after the company disclosed it had paid $10 million to director Frank E. Walsh Jr., and contributed another $10 million to a charity of which Walsh is trustee, in exchange for his help in purchasing CIT Group.



To: Labrador who wrote (1236)2/4/2002 10:58:00 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3602
 
Enron's Lay Faces House Subpoena; Powers to Testify Today

By Jeff St.Onge and Susan Decker

Washington, Feb. 4 (Bloomberg) -- A House subcommittee chairman says he will subpoena Former Enron Corp. Chairman Kenneth Lay to force him to testify tomorrow, after Lay refused to appear before Congress voluntarily.

Lay canceled scheduled testimony today and tomorrow, a move his lawyer blamed on lawmakers' ``inflammatory'' comments about an internal company investigation.

The 203-page review concluded Enron executives enriched themselves while hiding at least $1 billion in losses in 3,000 partnerships, steps that led to the biggest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history. The study, commissioned by the board, was led by University of Texas Law School Dean William Powers.

Powers is scheduled to testify before the House Financial Services subcommittee this afternoon, along with Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Harvey Pitt.

Lay had been scheduled to testify before the same panel tomorrow and before the Senate Commerce Committee today. Representative Richard Baker, a Louisiana Republican who chairs the House Financial Services Capital Markets Subcommittee, will subpoena Lay to make him testify tomorrow, Baker's spokesman Michael DiResto said.

Democratic Senator Byron Dorgan, who was in charge of the Senate hearing, told NBC yesterday that the Powers report shows ``a culture of corporate corruption.'' Republican Senator Peter Fizgerald, a panel member, said the report depicts ``a giant pyramid scheme.'' House Energy and Commerce Committee chairman Billy Tauzin spoke of ``security fraud'' on NBC's ``Today'' show.

``These inflammatory statements show that judgments have been reached and the tenor of the hearing will be prosecutorial,'' Lay's attorney, Earl J. Silbert, said in a letter to the Senate Commerce Committee.

Andersen's Response

The report said the board's audit committee shared in the blame for inadequate disclosures in Enron's public filings, along with management, Arthur Andersen LLP and the company's longtime Houston law firm, Vinson & Elkins.

Enron lawyer Robert Bennett said the report showed a resolve to find the facts and proved that ``the board was not provided a great deal of information that it should have had.''

Andersen spokesman Patrick Dorton called the report ``self- serving'' in downplaying the board's responsibility. ``The authors, whose independence is already in question, were handpicked by Enron's board,'' Dorton said. ``The authors failed to consult with Andersen in any substantial way.''

`As Little as Possible'

The report said investigators were told ``by more than one person that the company spent considerable time and effort working to say as little as possible'' in documents about transactions with related parties that proved to be Enron's downfall.

``That impulse to avoid public exposure, coupled with the significance of the transactions for Enron's income statements and balance sheets, should have raised red flags for senior management, as well as for Enron's outside auditors and lawyers. Unfortunately, it apparently did not.''

U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill said he wants tougher penalties on senior executives who mislead investors, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing an interview.

Lay, a contributor to President George W. Bush, ``bears significant responsibility'' for ``flawed decisions'' in approving some transactions, the report said.

Top Executives Profited

Enron employees involved with affiliated partnerships enriched themselves ``by tens of millions of dollars they should never have received,'' the report said. Former Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow made at least $30 million, former General Manager Michael Kopper got at least $10 million and two other employees made at least $1 million each, the report said.

``This personal enrichment of Enron employees, however, was merely one aspect of a deeper and more serious problem,'' the report said. ``These partnerships -- (called) Chewco, LJM1 and LJM2 -- were used by Enron management to enter into transactions that it could not, or would not, do with unrelated commercial entities.''

Transactions used to hide debts and offset losses didn't follow accounting rules and were implemented ``improperly,'' the report said. The transactions resulted in Enron overstating earnings from the third quarter of 2000 through the third quarter of 2001 by about $1 billion, the report said.

Favorable Results

``Many of the most significant transactions apparently were designed to accomplish favorable financial statement results, not to achieve bona fide economic objectives or to transfer risk,'' the report said. ``They allowed Enron to conceal from the market very large losses resulting from Enron's merchant investments by creating an appearance that these investments were hedged.''

Enron lawyer Bennett said the report shows the board wasn't shown details of the partnerships. Tauzin, a Louisiana Republican, blamed the board.

Tauzin said the report raises questions about Skilling, whose signature, the report says, was missing on some deals. ``What does that say about his knowledge about whether these deals were dishonest or corrupt?'' Tauzin said. Skilling will testify before the House Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee on Thursday, Tauzin said. Fastow and Kopper will appear but will plead the Fifth Amendment.

In August 2001, Enron Vice President Sherron Watkins sent an anonymous letter to Lay raising questions about the partnership. Lay told the report's authors ``he viewed the letter as thoughtfully written and alarming.''

Enron, once the seventh-largest U.S. corporation, began to unravel in October after it said shareholder equity was reduced by around $1 billion because it used stock to pay off debt of a partnership run by Fastow. The writedown also raised questions about how Enron accounted for debt and losses of similar affiliated partnerships. On Nov. 8, it restated earnings back to 1997, lowering them by $586 million.

The company filed for bankruptcy Dec. 2 as its stock slid below $1 from more than $80 a year ago and the company was unable to finance its business.