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To: D.J.Smyth who wrote (170364)7/23/2002 6:16:58 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 176387
 
Message 17779849



To: D.J.Smyth who wrote (170364)7/23/2002 6:29:43 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 176387
 
Ease their pain

Editorial
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Posted on Tue, Jul. 23, 2002

To take some jitters out of the market, Bush should back Senate reform bill.

In the wake of the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history, it was supposed to be reassuring to hear tough talk from the White House's top economic official - that would be President Bush.

"I'm not a stockbroker or a stockpicker but I do believe the fundamentals for economic growth are for real," Mr. Bush said yesterday.

Problem solved - even with the Sunday bankruptcy of telecommunications giant WorldCom Inc., and all the likely fallout. Right?

Well, blue chip stocks did stage an afternoon comeback, amid ups and downs for the New York markets. But jittery investors who fueled a stocks slide heading into the weekend were still popping antacids.

To the extent Wall Street is looking to Washington for help in calming those investors, it appears the capital markets haven't yet seen it.

Some finance experts have concluded there is no Bush administration spokesman for the economy, what with the wisecracking utterances of Treasury Secretary Paul H. O'Neill often regarded as loose-cannon law. But they're not entirely correct, of course: There's the President himself.

It's too bad, then, that President Bush refuses to throw his weight behind meaningful corporate accounting overhaul. That would be the Senate-approved measure, as opposed to the House's reform-lite. And Mr. Bush needs to back the more robust reform.

Yet to hear the President discuss congressional negotiations over the bill, you'd think the overhaul was going to be delivered by the stork.

"Congress is going to get a bill that will help to take some of the uncertainty out of the market," he said.

Get a bill? They've got one, and it was approved 97-0 by the Senate. If the President gets behind it - instead of being so determinedly vague - the overhaul stands a chance.

This President has his own corporate track record to answer for, and that of top aides. So he should do all he can to distance his administration from today's deceptive accounting and cozy deals for CEOs and the like.

Post Enron and WorldCom, why would any policymaker pussyfoot about the need for change?

Reform must include: independent oversight of corporate numbers crunchers, conflict-of-interest rules so auditors don't become chummy with boardroom execs, and tougher penalties for financial fiddling.

Those reforms will work in tandem with the chastening effect of the market itself. By one measure, the market lost $7 trillion since late March. That figure and the pile of corporate corpses are bound to sober would-be book-cookers - a potent self-correction that should help restore investors' confidence.

For those who don't wise up, there's the cautionary tale of the WorldCom failure. Following its outrageous, $4-billion profit fudge, creditors may well insist on a management housecleaning. If so, good riddance.

As for whether these issues should galvanize the Bush administration to action, consider this: That $7 trillion out of mostly American pockets is a lot more than the Bush tax cuts put in.

philly.com

___________________

btw, I'm TOTALLY in favor of holding folks from both parties accountable for their actions...we should NOT let people like Rubin off the hook but we deserve to know more about Bush and Cheney's business dealings -- why won't they just put all the cards out on the table...??



To: D.J.Smyth who wrote (170364)7/23/2002 6:37:03 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 176387
 
Halliburton Preparing for 'Confesssion Day' &

Harken's Very Strange Family Tree

thedailyenron.com

<<...Halliburton is only now accounting for trouble that began under Cheney's watch. Besides changing the company's longstanding accounting practices, Cheney also pushed to acquire Dresser Industries, a purchase opposed by many Halliburton shareholders.

When Halliburton acquired Dresser Industries, it also acquired liability for over 300,000 asbestos-related health claims, which continue to be a significant drag on the company. At the time of the acquisition, Cheney lauded the purchase calling it "one of the most satisfying accomplishments" of his career.

Cheney also pushed the company to enter risky offshore drilling construction businesses that provided the company with cost-overrun opportunities - cost-overruns that could be booked as income. But, as Halliburton customers balked at the company's mounting cost-overruns, they began to insist on fixed cost contracts.

On Monday, Halliburton announced that its KBR unit would no longer pursue fixed-price offshore contracts.

Once anxious to flaunt his days at Halliburton, Vice President Cheney now refuses to discuss it, citing ongoing investigations...>>



To: D.J.Smyth who wrote (170364)7/23/2002 6:46:36 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 176387
 
Some interesting comments on 'parallels between the 73-74 bear and today'...

Message 17783172



To: D.J.Smyth who wrote (170364)7/24/2002 12:50:12 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 176387
 
Warren Buffet Speaks Up...

Who Really Cooks the Books?
By WARREN E. BUFFETT
Editorial / Op-Ed
The New York Times
July 24, 2002

OMAHA — There is a crisis of confidence today about corporate earnings reports and the credibility of chief executives. And it's justified.

For many years, I've had little confidence in the earnings numbers reported by most corporations. I'm not talking about Enron and WorldCom — examples of outright crookedness. Rather, I am referring to the legal, but improper, accounting methods used by chief executives to inflate reported earnings.

The most flagrant deceptions have occurred in stock-option accounting and in assumptions about pension-fund returns. The aggregate misrepresentation in these two areas dwarfs the lies of Enron and WorldCom.

In calculating the pension costs that directly affect their earnings, companies in the Standard & Poor's index of 500 stocks are today using assumptions about investment return rates that go as high as 11 percent. The rate chosen is important: in many cases, an upward change of a single percentage point will increase the annual earnings a company reports by more than $100 million. It's no surprise, therefore, that many chief executives opt for assumptions that are wildly optimistic, even as their pension assets perform miserably. These C.E.O.'s simply ignore this unpleasant reality and their obliging actuaries and auditors bless whatever rate the company selects. How convenient: Client A, using a 6.5 percent rate, receives a clean audit opinion — and so does client B, which opts for an 11 percent rate.

All that is bad, but the far greater sin has been option accounting. Options are a huge cost for many corporations and a huge benefit to executives. No wonder, then, that they have fought ferociously to avoid making a charge against their earnings. Without blushing, almost all C.E.O.'s have told their shareholders that options are cost-free.

For these C.E.O.'s I have a proposition: Berkshire Hathaway will sell you insurance, carpeting or any of our other products in exchange for options identical to those you grant yourselves. It'll all be cash-free. But do you really think your corporation will not have incurred a cost when you hand over the options in exchange for the carpeting? Or do you really think that placing a value on the option is just too difficult to do, one of your other excuses for not expensing them? If these are the opinions you honestly hold, call me collect. We can do business.

Chief executives frequently claim that options have no cost because their issuance is cashless. But when they do so, they ignore the fact that many C.E.O.'s regularly include pension income in their earnings, though this item doesn't deliver a dime to their companies. They also ignore another reality: When corporations grant restricted stock to their executives these grants are routinely, and properly, expensed, even though no cash changes hands.

When a company gives something of value to its employees in return for their services, it is clearly a compensation expense. And if expenses don't belong in the earnings statement, where in the world do they belong?

To clean up their act on these fronts, C.E.O.'s don't need "independent" directors, oversight committees or auditors absolutely free of conflicts of interest. They simply need to do what's right. As Alan Greenspan forcefully declared last week, the attitudes and actions of C.E.O.'s are what determine corporate conduct.

Indeed, actions by Congress and the Securities and Exchange Commission have the potential of creating a smoke screen that will prevent real accounting reform. The Senate itself is the major reason corporations have been able to duck option expensing. On May 3, 1994, the Senate, led by Senator Joseph Lieberman, pushed the Financial Accounting Standards Board and Arthur Levitt, then chairman of the S.E.C., into backing down from mandating that options be expensed. Mr. Levitt has said that he regrets this retreat more than any other move he made during his tenure as chairman. Unfortunately, current S.E.C. leadership seems uninterested in correcting this matter.

I don't believe in Congress setting accounting rules. But the Senate opened the floodgates in 1994 to an anything-goes reporting system, and it should close them now. Rather than holding hearings and fulminating, why doesn't the Senate just free the standards board by rescinding its 1994 action?

C.E.O.'s want to be respected and believed. They will be — and should be — only when they deserve to be. They should quit talking about some bad apples and reflect instead on their own behavior.

Recently, a few C.E.O.'s have stepped forward to adopt honest accounting. But most continue to spend their shareholders' money, directly or through trade associations, to lobby against real reform. They talk principle, but, for most, their motive is pocketbook.

For their shareholders' interest, and for the country's, C.E.O.'s should tell their accounting departments today to quit recording illusory pension-fund income and start recording all compensation costs. They don't need studies or new rules to do that. They just need to act.

______________________________________________
Warren E. Buffett is the chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., a diversified holding company.

nytimes.com