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http://www.salon.com

Enron, we hardly knew ye
Ironically, only one thing could have saved the now-imploding
corporate poster child for deregulation: Tougher regulations
requiring more financial "transparency."
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Andrew Leonard


Nov. 9, 2001 | It's never a good sign when a pack of Wall Street
Journal reporters start nipping at your heels, rending your financial
filings into tiny shreds and howling at every daily downgrade in your
stock price and bond credit rating. But such has been the fate of
Enron Corp. over the past two weeks: The company that Wall Street and
the financial press lauded above nearly all others at the turn of the
century is suddenly teetering on the brink, desperate for infusions
of capital, seeking a "white knight" buyer and suffering from the
unwanted attentions of a formal SEC investigation.

As the world economy sinks ever further into recession, stories of
high fliers brought down to earth are hardly unusual. But Enron's
abrupt transformation into dot-com blow-out wannabe deserves special
attention -- and for those of us who live in California, impels the
kind of schadenfreude that you can't shake, no matter how hard you
try.

Enron is the natural gas, electricity, pulp, paper and bandwidth
trader named by Fortune Magazine's readers as the most innovative
corporation in the land six years in a row. Enron's leader, Ken Lay,
is a close friend of the Bush family, and was the largest single
campaign donor to George W. But even though the business press was
anointing Enron's every move during the late '90s with capitalism's
finest holy water, the company didn't penetrate the wider public
consciousness until the California energy crisis.

Then, as Enron raked in billions of dollars of profits on its
electricity and gas trades nationwide while blackouts plagued
Californian citizens, Enron suddenly became the perfect symbol of the
new "robber barrons" -- the Texas energy companies who were
supposedly taking California to the cleaners (although Enron itself
played a much smaller role in California's crisis than other
companies). Not everyone saw Enron as villain. Sure, to many
Californians, Enron was a greedy price-gouger making hay off
environmentally obsessed yuppie SUV drivers; but from a free-market
point of view, Enron was the perfect avatar of deregulation -- a
company that profited by being smart, ruthless and constantly on the
lookout for new markets.

Ken Lay, who at one point was considered for the post of "energy
czar" in the Bush administration, did take every opportunity to use
California's woes to push his particular political line. The problem
with California's "flawed" deregulation plan, he noted, was that it
wasn't deregulated enough. And not only did California need more
deregulation, he said in interviews with the likes of CNBC and
Thestreet.com and anyone else who would listen, but it also needed
more "transparency" -- by which he meant that energy consumers,
producers and traders needed clearer information on demand and
pricing, and more freedom to move power around wherever it was
needed.

Far be it from me to defend California's electricity deregulation
plan in any way, shape or form -- "flawed" is a particularly limp
word to use to describe a strategy that was cooked up by Republican
appointees to the state's Public Utilities Commission at the behest
of California's own energy utilities but ended up driving those very
utilities to bankruptcy and beyond. But it is interesting to
contemplate, in light of recent Enron developments, this call
for "transparency."

Because "transparency" is precisely what Enron has long been dead set
on preventing with regard to its own operations -- not just for
competitors and consumers, but also for its investors, Wall Street
analysts and now, belatedly, the federal government. When the going
was good, and Enron was reporting mind-blowing profits, few people
cared that they couldn't make head nor tail of Enron's accounting
tricks, or that no one outside of the company could figure out
exactly how Enron was making its money. But once Enron started to
report losses, the emperor's clothes fell off with impressive
quickness.

Although it's still far from clear precisely what kind of games
Enron's executives were playing with their own numbers, the more we
learn suggests that it was precisely the kind of classic three-card-
monte hide-the-money finagling that true "transparency" would have
prevented. Now the company appears to be in big trouble -- on
Thursday, it restated its earnings for the last five years, and
according to reports in the Wall Street Journal and the New York
Times, it may be on the verge of being purchased by a much smaller
competitor, Dynegy.

One wonders if Enron could have avoided such an unhappy fate if it
had benefited from some stricter government supervision, or, dare we
say, regulation?

Rumors of trouble at Enron have been swirling since at least early
this spring. One of Enron's more recent initiatives was an attempt to
start trading bandwidth as a commodity, just as it did gas and
electricity. But its investments in fiber optic capacity, and other
telecommunications forays, proved disastrously expensive when the
entire telecom sector crashed.

Then came CEO Jeff Skilling's sudden resignation barely six months
after he was promoted as Lay's hand-picked successor. As the person
most identified with the transformation of Enron from old-economy
pipeline owner to new-economy wheeler and dealer, Skilling was the
epitome of Enron's smarter, better, more ruthless corporate culture.
His departure shocked Wall Street.

Then came a $618 million third-quarter loss, including a $1.2 billion
writeoff of shareholder equity associated with the winding up of some
obscure partnerships that were involved in numerous transactions with
Enron. And that's when the vultures started coming home to roost.

Even close readers of the Wall Street Journal's recent coverage of
Enron can be excused for being confused. Enron executives refuse to
talk, and the company's filings with the SEC are infuriatingly obtuse
and lacking in detail.

But, in brief, what appears to have been happening is that executives
of Enron, including the former CFO (ousted last week) Andrew Fastow,
were involved in setting up partnerships that did business with
Enron. From outside sources, these partnerships borrowed billions of
dollars which were then invested in Enron -- in the purchase of
assets for Enron or in other ventures. Precisely what kind of assets
remains unclear; what is known, however, is that the executives of
Enron who were involved in the partnerships made millions of dollars
in management fees by brokering and administering the deals.

The potential conflicts of interest are obvious -- and have caught
the SEC's attention. Even those of us who are not adept in the ways
of high finance can sense that there might be something wrong with a
CFO getting a cut out of deals that he brokers with private
partnerships, of which he personally is a member. That seems to be
why, just a day after a conference call with Wall Street analysts in
which Ken Lay defended Fastow, the company unceremoniously dumped its
CFO. And on Thursday, two other high executives, including the
company's treasurer, were also dumped, on the heels of the news of
Enron's earnings restatements.

What's less obvious is how the shenanigans fit into Enron's overall
business strategy. By setting it up so outside partnerships borrowed
money that was then used to fuel Enron's growth, Enron avoided the
necessity of carrying that debt on its own books. The sums involved
total billions of dollars -- a ledger entry that would have had a
substantial impact on quarterly profit-and-loss figures.
Additionally, carrying that debt on the books would have lowered
Enron's overall credit rating, thus making it more difficult to raise
money to fuel further expansion.

Enron, as is well documented in a lengthy Texas Monthly feature on
the company this month, has always employed cutting-edge financial
accounting strategies. For example, while fuddy-duddy old-school
corporations would be inclined to book profits from a deal across the
whole course of the deal's term -- periods that could stretch for
years -- Enron apparently preferred booking all its profits up front,
and then moving on to the next speculative market. For Enron,
innovation wasn't confined to creating new markets for gas and
electricity, but also for blazing new trails in the arcane world of
bookkeeping.

Certainly it comes as no news flash that corporations play games with
their quarterly numbers in order to make the bottom line look good
and keep the stock price healthy. That's practically a business model
for many companies -- including many of our dear departed friends
from the dot-com world. What's depressing, if not surprising, is that
the investigations always come after the damage has already been
done -- after the investors have already been fleeced, and, in the
case of Enron, after the executives have already sold off hundreds of
millions of dollars worth of stock at the top of the market.

In a truly transparent marketplace, corporations wouldn't be able to
get away with that kind of shady business. If Wall Street's best
analysts can't understand a financial statement, then warning bells
should be going off at the SEC. Prevention is a lot cheaper than a
cure.

In the past, Enron has justified its opaque financial statements on
the grounds of competition -- it would lose its competitive
advantage, according to executives, if it told everybody exactly what
it was doing. And there is a certain amount of sense to that: It's
hard to compete if you let the world know exactly what you are up to,
every step of the way. But just the same, there are responsibilities
incurred by becoming a public company, and one of those is that you
are, well, public. You are taking the public's money and you owe it
an accounting. Already, class actions suits are mounting.

What Enron's case proves is that we can't trust companies to
determine what information should fairly be withheld for competitive
purposes and what should be revealed to the public. That ought to be
the government's job, which implies tighter scrutiny, stricter
regulations and more bite in penalties for violating them.

But don't hold your breath waiting for the results of the current SEC
investigation. This is George W.'s world now. And if his
administration is willing to broker a deal for Microsoft that lets
the company get off with the mildest of judgments -- even after a
conservative-dominated federal appeals court ruled that the company
illegally abused its monopoly power -- then what do we imagine might
be likely to happen to one of his best buddies, Ken Lay?

And there, at last, is our true transparency. Because the perks of
getting your man elected to the top job in the land are pretty easy
to see through.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
About the writer
Andrew Leonard is a senior editor at Salon.com and author of Salon's
Free Software Project, an online book-in-progress exploring the
history and culture of the free software movement.


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