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


To: Baldur Fjvlnisson who wrote (4023)5/13/2002 12:33:23 PM
From: Baldur Fjvlnisson  Respond to of 5185
 
And how can junk like CSCO stock with over 7 billion

floating shares even move 5 cents on 10-20 million shares?

LOL.



To: Baldur Fjvlnisson who wrote (4023)5/13/2002 12:44:55 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5185
 
The Great Cheney and the Great Scandal.....coming to a white house near you!

George Skelton:
Capitol Journal
Smoking Gun Shoots Down Bush View of
Power Crisis
SACRAMENTO -- SACRAMENTO

That deep, mellow voice of Vice President Dick
Cheney still resonates in my ear. It's accentuated
now by reverberations from the Enron smoking
gun.

"Frankly, California is looked on by many folks as a
classic example of the kinds of problems that arise
when you do use price caps," Cheney told me in
April of last year. "Your problem is that your
demand for electricity is up and your supplies have
actually declined.... "Ultimately, of course, the peak
power period this summer will exceed any capacity
the state has and you'll end up in those rolling
brownouts. There's no magic wand that
Washington can wave."

Cheney was reflecting the laissez-faire, hidebound
ideology of the new Bush administration. And he
could not have been more wrong.

California then did not have wholesale price caps. It
had consumer rate caps that had left private utilities
short of enough money to pay their gouging
suppliers.

The power pirates--many of them pals and political patrons of Cheney and
President Bush--were reaping profits of 400% to 600%. The cost of electricity
that private utilities (Edison, PG&E, SDG&E) were sending consumers soared
from $7.4 billion in 1999 to

$27.6 billion in 2000 and seemed headed for $70 billion in 2001.

Demand had not been up significantly; indeed, it then was falling. Supplies were
rising.

There was a magic wand Washington could wave. And it finally did get waved
in June after dogged goading by Gov. Gray Davis, other West Coast
Democrats and a new Democratic U.S. Senate. The wand was regional price
caps, imposed by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

Those caps--so abhorred by the Bushies--worked with new long-term power
contracts negotiated by Davis, plus a mild summer, to quash the energy crisis.

Megawatts that had sold for $321--and frequently exceeded $1,000--were
capped at $92. They soon slid to $60 and now are back down to $30. That's
about where they were when California naively set out on its ill-fated
deregulation venture, which shifted control over most electricity from the state
Public Utilities Commission to the pro-profiteer FERC.

Despite Cheney's glum prophecy, there were no rolling brownouts last summer,
nor have there been any since.

Rather than the feared $70-billion electricity bill, the tab last year again was
about

$27 billion. Still, if you assume that 1999's $7-billion charge was reasonable, it
means the gougers--most of them out-of-staters--sucked $40 billion in excess
profits out of California over a two-year period. They broke Edison and
PG&E and forced the state into the power-buying business.

Davis is asking FERC to order refunds totaling $9 billion. Atty. Gen. Bill
Lockyer also is suing energy companies for billions in penalties, charging they
ripped off California.

Now comes the smoking gun, the Enron internal memos disclosed by FERC
that show clear evidence of market manipulation. The documents indicate that
not only Enron, but other companies were fleecing Californians by driving up
prices and triggering blackouts. The Enron sharpies had brazenly dubbed their
strategies Death Star, Fat Boy and Get Shorty.

One particularly galling scheme was to buy electricity produced by California
plants during blackout threats and sell it for huge profits in Oregon.

The California public--and the governor--had it right after all: The shortage was
not real, it was contrived by the power pirates. A Times poll in January 2001
found that most people believed the crisis was created by profiteers.

"This is going to be the most egregious example in history of greedy and
unethical corporate interests--with the complicity of the U.S.
government--going into a state and raping it economically," says Garry South,
Davis' chief political strategist.

Davis' problem is that although a smoking gun was found, he already had been
seriously wounded. His job performance rating plummeted a year ago because
of the energy crisis and never has recovered. (Approval 42%, disapproval
49% in the latest Field poll.)

Voters are irked because he procrastinated jumping into the fight in 2000 and
later signed

$43 billion in long-term contracts many consider overpriced. Some pacts have
been renegotiated.

How much will Davis benefit from the smoking gun?

The Republican theory is not a lot. Any benefits are counterbalanced by other
Davis baggage: a software scandal, obsessive fund-raising and a gaping budget
deficit.

However, he's bound to be cut some slack.

Davis' message will be that while the feds stood by, he fended off pirates.
Davis slew Goliath.

As for Bush and Cheney, people should listen skeptically to their future
messages about what's good for California.

CC