Everyone
knows at least a little about the Enron story and the devastation it created in
the lives of is employees. It's a story that belongs in any discussion of
ethical accounting processes and what happens when accounting standards and
ethics are discarded for personal greed.
Enron began
in 1985 selling natural gas to gas companies and businesses. In 1996, energy
markets were changed so that the price of energy could now be decided by
competition among energy companies instead of being fixed by government
regulations. With this change, Enron began to function more as a middleman than
a traditional energy supplier, trading in energy contracts instead of buying
and selling natural gas. Enron's rapid
growth created excitement among investors and drove the stock price up. As
Enron grew, it expanded into other industries such as Internet services, and
its financial contracts became more complicated.
In order to
keep growing at this rate, Enron began to borrow money to invest in new
projects. However, because this debt would make their earnings look less
impressive, Enron began to create partnerships that would allow it to keep debt
off of its books. One partnership created by Enron, Chewco Investments (named
after the Star Wars character Chewbacca) allowed Enron to keep $600 million in
debt off of the books it showed to the government and to people who own Enron
stock. When this debt did not show up in Enron's reports, it made Enron seem
much more successful than it actually was. In December 2000, Enron claimed to
have tripled its profits in two years.
In August
2001, Enron vice president Sherron Watkins sent an anonymous letter to the CEO
of Enron, Kenneth Lay, describing accounting methods that she felt could lead
Enron to "implode in a wave of accounting scandals." Also in August,
CEO Kenneth Lay sent e-mails to his employees saying that he expected Enron
stock prices to go up. Meanwhile, he sold off his own stock in Enron.
On October
22nd, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced that Enron was
under investigation. On November 8th, Enron said that it has overstated
earnings for the past four years by $586 million and that it owed over $6 billion
in debt by next year.
With these
announcements, Enron's stock price took a dive. This drop triggered certain
agreements with investors that made it necessary for Enron to repay their money
immediately. When Enron could not come up with the cash to repay its creditors,
it declared for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
No comments:
Post a Comment