HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------


The Globalist
www.theglobalist.com
December 20, 2001

The Russian Roots of the Texan Mafia 

Stephan Richter, Publisher and Editor-in-Chief

During the 1990s, Russian energy companies were notorious for cooking
their books, defrauding their shareholders - and using political
connections to cover shadowy deals. So, readers of Russian newspapers
were not at all surprised over recent stories about an energy giant that
was misbehaving in this manner. What was unusual was that the company in
question was Enron - as quintessentially American as the Texan heartland
where it is based. 

After the Soviet Union's collapse, the country's centralized oil sector
was among the first to be privatized. In that process, a number of new,
private oil companies sprung up. They all boasted vast reserves - and a
huge potential of export revenues. 

Avoiding split-ups 

Meanwhile, Russia's natural gas industry avoided a split-up. It was
neatly folded into Gazprom, one of the largest natural resource
companies in the world.
 
Both Mr. Bush and Mr. Putin have one unfortunate thing in common - their
rise to the presidency, at least in part, was financed by
non-transparent energy giants.
 
Not surprisingly, the fantastic prospects of the Russian energy sector
became one of the leading global investment stories of the 1990s.
Foreign investors rushed headlong into Russia. Eventually, they
triggered the ascent of the Russian stock market, based on such energy
blue-chips as Gazprom, Lukoil, Surgutneft and Tatneft. 

And in those heady days of the go-go 1990s, many American officials grew
hoarse criticizing Russia's dubious financial management practices and
demanding better disclosure and shareholder protection. Almost
inevitably, most foreign investors ended up losing their money. 

Strange similarities 

Now let's switch the scenes completely. At least in hindsight, it's
uncanny how much events at Houston-based Enron ended up resembling the
story of Russia's crooked energy giants. 

In essence, Russian energy companies lacked transparency and hid
transactions and revenues in a Byzantine accounting system. As we are
now becoming aware, despite its much glitzier and perfectly polished
exterior, on the inside, the shenanigans of Enron senior management echo
the 1990s in Russia.
 
Only, in the ultimate analysis, Enron's feat must be considered that
much more stunning. After all, it did not happen in a fluid situation of
underdeveloped supervisory agencies - and in a country lacking the
appropriate depth in financial management skills.

The Enron fiasco occurred under the presumably watchful and experienced
eye of the SEC and an army of other highly-skilled professional
watchdogs in the United States.
 
The Enron fiasco occurred right under the presumably watchful and
experienced eye of the Securities and Exchange Commission, independent
auditors, market analysts, credit rating agencies and an army of other
highly-skilled professional watchdogs in the United States. 

Despite all these deep layers of professionalism, Enron was able to
engage in the same kinds of activities sported, if not pioneered, by its
Russian counterparts.

Just like Russian oil giants, Enron was able to hide losses and mislead
investors. Of course, one crucial difference was that Russian companies
usually tried to hide profits - in order to keep them from investors and
tax authorities. Enron, by contrast, deliberately overstated its profits
for a number of years to push up the value of its shares.

Dummy corporations

When trouble started at Enron, its senior managers appear to have sold
off their shares, leaving shareholders - including the employee pension
fund - holding the bag. Enron CFO Andrew Fastow, whose departure
prompted the company's meltdown, set up a number of private partnerships
on the side, which did business with Enron while he managed them. 

His actions have plenty of precedents in Russia. Take the case of
Gazprom's long-time management team which was investigated earlier this
year. It turned out that the company had routinely guaranteed loans and
also made investments into businesses set up by close relatives of
Gazprom senior executives.

Political ties

In Russia, such practices are often legal - or at least not expressly
forbidden. What's surprising is that in the United States, accountants
and rating agencies managed to maintain silence, or ignorance, about
Enron's practices for so long.

In the United States, Enron's political connections have not saved the
company. Investigations are under way - and a myriad of lawsuits have
been filed.
 
And legions of U.S. stock analysts were only too happy to tout Enron.
They must have been solidly asleep all along. It should have been a
warning to U.S. mutual fund owners that, in some cases, the analysts
pushing Enron's stocks were the same guys who had promoted Russian
energy companies just before the Russian stock market bubble burst in
August 1998. 

But the potentially most corrosive aspect of the Enron scandal lies in
the political realm. Russian energy companies have been able to fool
investors largely because they were protected by powerful political
connections. 

(Viktor Chernomyrdin, the long-serving Prime Minister in Boris Yelstin's
government, had previously been the head of Gazprom. He is rumored to
have become Russia's first billionaire as a result of that connection.)

Political protection for the worst offenders

Hence, it proved very difficult to sue any of the Russian investors in
court. Even if investors win a decision, it's pretty much impossible to
enforce it. Indeed, Russian regulators are too weak to go after them.
 
In hindsight, it's uncanny how events at Houston-based Enron resemble
the story of Russia's energy giants.
 
Enron seemed to have banked on a similar formula for success. Its
Chairman and CEO, Kenneth Lay, has close personal and business ties to
the Bush family. As one of the largest and earliest contributors to
George W. Bush's presidential campaign, he "earned" the title of a
"pioneer" - as one of those contributors whose contribution to the
President's campaign war chest exceeded $100,000. 

While Mr. Lay himself was considered a candidate for Energy Secretary,
other former Enron executives figure prominently in the Bush
administration. At the Pentagon, Thomas E. White serves as the Secretary
of the Army. Previously, he was Vice Chairman of Enron Energy Services.

Jail time for offenders?

There are differences, of course. No Russian oligarch has ever been
punished for defrauding investors - or taking minority shareholders and
tax authorities for a ride. On the contrary, most energy companies in
Russia rushed to support Vladimir Putin once he became Russian prime
minister in August 1999. 

They also helped finance his subsequent presidential campaign. Since
then, two of the largest energy concerns, Gazprom and Lukoil, helped
throttle the two remaining media groups that dared criticize the
government.

Russian energy companies lacked transparency and hid transactions and
revenues in a Byzantine accounting system - as did Enron. 
 
While Mr. Putin had promised voters to eliminate the oligarchs as a
class, in reality they have become more powerful and wealthier than ever
under his rule. At least, Mr. Putin sent his top assistant to clean up
the murky business affairs at Gazprom.

But in the United States, Enron's political connections have not saved
the company from bankruptcy. Investigations are under way, Congress is
looking closely into the matter - and a myriad of lawsuits have been
filed by duped shareholders. 

But despite this pivotal difference between the United States and
Russia, there is one discomforting parallel. For whatever reason, the
rise to political power is all too often financed by companies that can
only be characterized as having questionable accounting practices.

==^================================================================
This email was sent to: [email protected]

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?a84x2u.a9WB2D
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================

Reply via email to