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


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (2252)6/27/2002 9:45:37 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 3602
 
Senate Reviews Enron Documents

By JENNIFER COLEMAN
Associated Press Writer
Thursday June 27, 9:36 pm Eastern Time

Senate Committee Reviews Enron Documents, LADWP Energy Trades

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Electronic documents turned over by Enron Corp. to a state committee investigating the energy crisis were incomplete, and could have been purposely altered, a computer consultant testified Thursday.

The 10 compact discs were turned over in response to a subpoena by the Senate Select Committee to Investigate Price Manipulation of the Wholesale Energy Market.

But combined, the discs contained only enough data to fill two-thirds of a disc, and much of the information they contained wasn't relevant to the committee's subpoena, said Peter Sorokin, a forensic computer expert hired by the committee.

For example, he said, a 20 megabyte e-mail file was completely blank. Enron later replaced that disc, but Sorokin said the new disc didn't fully comply with the subpoena.

Though the committee had asked for e-mails from top Enron officials, the company's data included only 65 e-mails from former president Jeffrey Skilling and 18 e-mails from former CEO Ken Lay over a two-year period.

Sorokin said some of the e-mails referred Enron employees to an offsite Internet site that is no longer operating.

The committee also heard from representatives of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, who defended a "ricochet" energy transaction in 2000 that lawmakers said was similar to those outlined in recently released Enron memos.

The committee released transcripts between energy traders from LADWP, Pacific Gas and Electric Co.'s trading arm and the Independent System Operator, the managers of the state's power grid. The November 2000 sale of 50 megawatts started at the Imperial Irrigation District, which sold the power to PG&E's trading arm, called NEG, for $50.

The power was then sold to LADWP for $70, then shipped north to an interim point at the edge of the ISO's jurisdiction, then back to California, where it was eventually sold to the ISO for $250 per megawatt.

In the phone calls, the NEG trader compares the transaction to "printing like, really good money."

An ISO grid manager allowed one trade, then cancels it when the traders want to extend the deal for the next hour, calling it a "ricochet schedule."

LADWP officials told the lawmakers that their definition of a ricochet transaction differs from the definition of the strategies in the Enron documents.

"Enron hijacked the phrase ricochet," said Mark Ward, manager of wholesale trading at LADWP, adding that it was a coincidence that the same term was used in an e-mail from an NEG trader describing LADWP's trade.

Enron used the term to refer to trades that took energy out of state, then sold it back to California, skirting wholesale price caps. The LADWP trade never left ISO's control area, Ward said.

"We played by the rules," he said. "We didn't make profits beyond what was reasonable."

Larry Drivon, the committee's outside counsel, said the transaction's net result was to take 50 megawatts from Southern California and turn increase the price from $50 to $250 before selling them to California's energy market.



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (2252)6/27/2002 11:39:38 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3602
 
How to fix WCOM, LU, NT etc: Resurrect Hostile Takeover

June 26, 2002 Wall Street Journal

COMMENTARY

Bring Back the Hostile Takeover

By HENRY G. MANNE

Since Enron, there has been an outbreak of regulatory fever in Washington: A tide of "solutions" has sluiced from the pens of journalists and the mouths of politicians. Apparently forgotten is how Enron and other recent scandals were the direct result of regulatory and judicial efforts to stem abuses in the takeover arena 20 and more years ago. They still haven't learned just how high the cost of interfering with salutary market forces can be.

Among current proposed guardians of executive morality are auditors, lawyers, analysts, financial intermediaries, independent directors, and government officials. But no proposal involving these actors addresses the real problem. New scandals will continue until we bring back the most powerful market mechanism for displacing bad managers: hostile takeovers.

Gordon Gekko is good for the market.

wsj.com

The principle is simple: If a corporation is badly enough managed, its share price will decline relative to other companies in the industry. At that point it can be profitable for a new group to make a tender offer, bringing in more efficient leadership. Just the threat of a takeover provides incentive for managers to run companies in the interest of the shareholders.

In 1932, a book called "The Modern Corporation and Private Property" by Adolf Berle and Gardiner Means popularized the concept of the "separation of ownership and control." The book argued that the managers of large, publicly held corporations could cheat, manipulate, and steal blind the shareholders, since they were not subject to effective monitoring. Not least among the evils attributable to this separation were extravagant salaries, self-perpetuating boards of directors, insider trading and various perquisites for the top executives. For Berle and Means, the solution lay in the realm of political theory. If corporations could be made more democratic, shareholders could "vote the rascals out," and the effects of the separation could be averted.

By 1965 however, when I introduced the concept of a market for corporate control, economists and others began explicitly to recognize that the corporation was not a political institution but a creation and function of the marketplace. The separation of ownership and control problem, tidily renamed in modern corporate governance literature as the problem of "agency costs," was seen as largely amenable to the forces of a market for corporate control.

For a brief period in the late '50s, until the mid-'60s, when modern hostile takeover techniques were perfected, we had a pretty much unregulated market for corporate control. Shareholders received on average 40% over the pre-bid price for their shares. But the chorus of screams by threatened executives and their lawyers became politically excruciating enough that Congress, in 1968, passed the Williams Act, which made it vastly more expensive for outsiders to mount successful tender offers. The highly profitable element of surprise was removed entirely.

The even stronger inhibition on takeovers resulted from actions taken by state legislatures and state courts in the '80s. The number of hostile tender offers dropped precipitously and with it the most effective device for policing top managers of large, publicly held companies.

There continue to be changes of control in publicly held corporations even if hostile tender offers are discouraged. But now, with the legal power to shift control in the hands of the incumbents, they, rather than shareholders, will receive any premium paid for control. Ironically, this is the same premium that has been made larger by their own poor management.

This transfer of control may take the form of a merger, or simply a series of agreed-upon high-level resignations after a new board has been put in place. The compensation paid the managers for their assent to such a change may take the form of a lucrative consulting arrangement, stock or stock options in the acquiring company, a generous severance package, or some other bonus. But the salient fact in each of these situations is that the managers and not the shareholders receive the premium being paid for control.

It should come as no surprise then that, as hostile takeovers declined to 4% from 14% of all mergers, executive compensation started a steep climb, eventually ending for some companies with bankruptcy and management scandal. The largely mythical abuses alleged to result from an unfettered takeover system were less costly to investors than what has occurred since.

Every statute, adjudication, or regulation that in any way inhibited the free functioning of the market for corporate control simply raised the real cost of ousting inappropriate managers. Dollar for dollar, every increase in those costs could be claimed by incumbent managers, either in greater rewards to themselves or in inefficient management policies. Until the real cost of wastefulness equals the cost of a successful takeover fight, they remain secure behind a legal barrier to their ouster, at least until the whole house of cards collapses. Enron is a predictable consequence of rules that inhibit the efficient functioning of the market for corporate control.

The solution is straightforward but by no means simple: repeal and reverse all the many statutes, rules, and case holdings that interfere with tender offers. American corporations would have to restructure themselves, as they did in the '70s and '80s, to live in a more deregulated market. There would be heavy human costs in the ensuing dislocations, and we could expect a screeching replay of the spurious arguments that won the day in the late '60s and mid-'80s.

But with such a reversal of policy, however unlikely, executive compensation would begin to plummet, there would be less pressure on accountants to cook the books, and American corporations would probably enter another period of innovation, efficiency, and profitability.
________________________
Mr. Manne is dean and professor emeritus of George Mason University School of Law.

wsj.com

Updated June 26, 2002



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (2252)6/28/2002 2:20:33 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3602
 
Bush worried about fallout from accounting scandals

By Adam Entous


KANANASKIS, Alberta, June 27 (Reuters) - U.S. President George W. Bush said on Thursday he was worried about the consequences of accounting scandals at U.S. firms like WorldCom Inc (NasdaqNM:WCOM - News), but sought to reassure U.S. allies of his commitment to keep financial markets sound.

"I'm concerned about the economic impact of the fact that there are some corporate leaders who have not upheld their responsibility," Bush told reporters ahead of a one-on-one meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin on the sidelines of a rich country summit in Canada.

"If you are a responsible citizen and you run a corporation in America, you must fully disclose all assets and liabilities, and you must treat your shareholders and employees with respect," Bush added, in his second comments in two days about the WorldCom mess.

Putin said Bush had discussed concerns about U.S. accounting practices and the stock market with the leaders of the Group of Eight nations at their meeting in the Canadian Rockies resort of Kananaskis.

Bush's national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, said the president wanted to reassure markets around the world.

"One reason the president spoke out about this here is because he wanted to reassure everybody, not just American investors. Of course it's a global market," She said on CNBC's Capital Report.

"The United States expects the highest of ethical behavior and truth and transparency from its corporate leaders," Rice said.

The high-profile scandals at WorldCom and at some other big corporations by no means represented the totality of American business, she said, but just "a small portion."

WorldCom, the second-largest U.S. long-distance carrier, has admitted it booked expenses improperly to boost profits -- a $3.8 billion accounting scandal. The company said it would restate results for the last five quarters, erasing all profits from the beginning of 2001.

Bush has promised a full investigation, and aides said he was "mad as hell" about the lack of corporate responsibility in America. "We will fully investigate and hold people accountable," Bush said on Wednesday.

After giving piecemeal comments in various speeches recently, Bush is planning to devote an entire speech on the subject of corporate governance next month, an administration official said.

Putin welcomed Bush's comments to the G8 on the issue, citing the implications of U.S. market turmoil on the global economy.

"Yesterday, the president (Bush) devoted much attention to this problem during the general discussion. His opinion on this was of considerable importance to me and our other colleagues because in this age of globalization, a great deal of what happens in the world depends on the state of the American economy," said Putin.

"Therefore the American president's conviction that there must be transparency in the affairs of U.S. business and in the securities markets ... is very important, a very good signal."

Seeking to reassure anxious U.S. and foreign investors, Bush declared on Wednesday that the U.S. economy was "strong."

A senior U.S. official on Thursday said most of the leaders had an upbeat feeling about their economies.

"(There was) a general sense, obviously, of some optimism as we see growth picking up in almost all of the G8 and I think across the board leaders saw higher growth later this year as well as next year but there was no prediction of global growth that came out of this," one official told reporters.