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To: Jorj X Mckie who wrote (18975)12/30/2002 3:36:29 PM
From: MulhollandDrive  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 57110
 
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Message 18383086

U.S. bankruptcies smash record as fraud takes toll
(Reuters 12/30 08:52:37)

By Dena Aubin
NEW YORK, Dec 30 (Reuters) - U.S. public companies have
shattered bankruptcy records for a second straight year as
accounting fraud and the last decade's debt spree brought down
corporate giants, and experts are bracing for more such woes.
All told, 186 public companies with a staggering $368
billion in debt filed for bankruptcy in 2002, according to
tracking service BankruptcyData.com. That is the largest asset
total ever, sweeping past last year's record $259 billion.
The wreckage included five of the 10 largest bankruptcies
ever, led by phone company WorldCom Inc. <WCOEQ.PK>, with $104
billion in assets. Filings by Conseco Inc. <CNCEQ.OB>, Global
Crossing Ltd. <GBLXQ.PK>, Adelphia Communications Corp.
<ADELQ.PK> and UAL Corp. <UAL.N> also were among the top 10.
Accounting scandals figured in the failure of all of those but
UAL.
Bankruptcy experts are bracing for a new crop of failures
by companies that depended on companies that went bust.
"I don't think we're going to see any dip in bankruptcy
filings," said Alan Feld, a bankruptcy attorney with Manatt,
Phelps & Phillips in Los Angeles. "I think it's going to get
worse before it gets better."

BRACING FOR DOMINO EFFECT
The downfall of so many once-mighty companies has eroded
investor confidence around the globe, obliterated untold
shareholder wealth and led to billion-dollar write-downs by the
largest U.S. banks. Financial spasms will linger for some time,
experts said.
"The biggest fallout is the difficulty caused to companies
that do business with large companies in Chapter 11, whether
vendors, suppliers, landlords or lenders," said Feld. "The
larger the Chapter 11 case, the larger the domino effect."
Reasons for the bankruptcy wave are no secret. After a
dizzying run-up in stocks in the late 1990s, investors and
banks showered companies with cash, betting on growth that
never materialized. Debt-laden companies hit a cash crunch when
the economy slowed in 2001 and banks tightened lending
standards.
Accounting fraud at Enron Corp. <ENRNQ.PK> and its
bankruptcy last year prompted regulators to put more balance
sheets under the microscope, paving the way for some of this
year's failures. WorldCom buckled after disclosure of a $3.9
billion accounting fiasco, which has now ballooned to $9
billion. Experts say it is not surprising to see mammoth
bankruptcies and deceptive accounting go hand in hand.
"To have a really big bankruptcy, you have to both have a
company take on a huge amount of debt and either be badly run
or fraudulently run," said Andrew Hodge, U.S. economist for
forecasting firm Global Insight. "There has to be something
sufficiently attractive about the company that creditors
foolishly or mistakenly extend huge amounts of credit."

NEXT UP: POWER COMPANIES, RETAILERS
Telecommunications companies accounted for some of this
year's biggest bankruptcies. Companies such as Global Crossing
built too much capacity, betting on new technologies and
markets that did not live up to their promise.
The power sector and retailers, hurting from too much debt
and competition, could run into trouble next, experts say.
"One area of the economy really suffering is the franchise
business, both the restaurant and retail gasoline side," said
Feld, the bankruptcy attorney, who specializes in franchise
bankruptcies. Economic weakness, excess debt and competition
have hurt that sector, he said.
AmeriKing Inc., one of the largest Burger King franchises
with more than 350 stores, filed for bankruptcy this month,
hurt by industry pressures including a price war with No. 1
fast-food chain McDonald's Corp. <MCD.N>.
Defaults by convenience stores and service stations also
have been on the rise as supermarkets and other competitors eat
into their fuel and tobacco sales.
"While there may only be a handful of extremely large
companies that are household names filing for Chapter 11,
there's a constant volume of smaller and medium-sized
companies, often with assets well in excess of $100 million,
and filings of that size will very likely continue at the same
pace," Feld said.
Public scrutiny could curb the worst business excesses and
slow the mega-bankruptcies next year.
"People now know enough of what to look for, so the truly
felonious and toxic companies have been mostly discovered,"
said Global Insight's Hodge.
((Reporting by Dena Aubin, editing by James Dalgleish;
dena.aubin@reuters.com; Reuters Messaging:
dena.aubin.reuters.com@reuters.net; 646 223-6325))
REUTERS

S.RT WCOEQ-PK CNCEQ-OB GBLXQ-PK ADELQ-PK UAL ENRNQ-PK MCD NEWS.R RET.R ENR.R US.R USC.R LAW.R DBT.R BUS.R LOA.R FIN.R TEL.R INS.R PUB.R AIR.R FOD.R MCD-Z MCD-L MDO-R MCD'U-T