Enron Corp

Enron Corporation

Enron Corporation U.S. company that in 2001 became the largest bankruptcy and stock collapse in U.S. history up to that time. The company was formed in 1985 when InterNorth purchased Houston Natural Gas to create the country's longest natural-gas pipeline network. Renamed Enron in 1986, the company transformed itself in the 1990s from a gas-pipeline business into a natural-gas and electricity trading giant. By 2000 it was the seventh largest U.S. corporation.

Enron employed shoddy and deceptive accounting practices to hide its financial losses (and occasionally its gains). The techniques of structured finance—complex financial transactions designed to hedge the risks involved in business activities—were used to enrich some of Enron's corporate officers and hide the firm's financial losses. Independent partnerships to which Enron sold assets were created, enabling Enron to convert loans and assets burdened with debt obligations into income, but the contracts with the partnerships contained guarantees and risky buy-back conditions that had potentially disastrous consequences for Enron. Enron also booked projected long-term income from trading contracts when those contracts were signed, but the income projections were often overly optimistic and inflated. In 2001, when one partnership deal was properly accounted for by Enron's outside auditor, Arthur Andersen, large quarterly losses resulted. Those losses and subsequent profit and debt restatements caused Enron's stock price to drop, triggering the unraveling of the partnership and resulting in a sudden and dramatic financial collapse that led to bankruptcy in Dec., 2001. The pensions of some 20,000 Enron employees were devastated in varying degrees as well; 62% of the company pension plan was in now worthless Enron stock.

Enron was also accused of manipulating the electricity markets during the California energy crisis of 2000–2001. There is evidence that its subsidiaries engaged in sham trading among themselves to drive up the price of electricity, and Enron traders arranged power supply deals with California that gave the appearance of creating power congestion, generating fraudulent fees when Enron then appeared to take steps relieve the nonexistent congestion. The large profits made during the crisis were partially hidden by manipulating Enron's financial reserves.

More than 30 people were charged with various crimes arising from Enron's business practices. More than 20 people, including its chairman, president, and chief financial officer, were ultimately convicted of or pleaded guilty to fraud, conspiracy, and other crimes, although the chairman, Kenneth L. Lay, had his conviction extinguished when he died in 2006 before being sentenced. The collapse also destroyed Arthur Andersen, Enron's accounting firm, which found itself accused of obstructing justice when it destroyed documents relating to the case in late 2001 after the Securities and Exchange Commission had begun investigating Enron. Arthur Andersen, which had been one of the top five accounting firms, quickly lost clients and partners when it came under SEC investigation for its role in Enron's collapse, and its federal criminal conviction for obstruction of justice in 2001 sealed the firm's fate. (The conviction was overturned in 2005 by the U.S. Supreme Court because of faulty instructions given by the judge to the jury.)

A number of financial institutions, including Citigroup and J. P. Morgan, paid hundreds of millions in fines and penalties for the roles they played in financing and setting up the independent partnerships that contributed to Enron's collapse. The firms also paid more than $7 billion to be used to repay creditors and investors, but Enron's creditors were owed more than $70 billion when the company collapsed.

Bibliography: See study by B. McLeon and P. Elkind (2003).

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Enron Scandal

ENRON SCANDAL

ENRON SCANDAL. Enron is an energy company that quickly grew to become one of the world's largest corporations before its financial practices caused its bankruptcy. Formed in 1985 by the merger of two gas pipeline companies, Houston Natural Gas and InterNorth, the company diversified under its manager, Kenneth Lay, into an energy trading company offering various services, including a massive e-commerce. It bought the name of the Houston Astros' ballpark and was named most innovative company of the year for five consecutive years by Fortune magazine. It peaked in the year 2000, with revenues of $100 billion and a share price of $90, its rapid growth attracting many investors.

In 2001, however, Enron's success appeared to be phony. The company had assigned billions of dollars of debt and risk to subsidiary companies, which then kept them off their books. Share prices began to fall precipitously. Enron's accounting firm, Arthur Anderson, was caught destroying Enron-related documents. On 2 December 2001, Enron filed for bankruptcy, along with sixty subsidiary companies. In 2002, its shares were traded at 11 cents. The company's collapse destroyed thousands of investors' savings. In July 2002, Arthur Andersen, Enron's accounting firm, was convicted of destroying evidence, although an appeal was pending at the time of this writing. Enron's officials were then undergoing further congressional hearings and criminal investigations, and numerous agencies were investigating other corporations for similar accounting and finance methods.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Fox, Loren. Enron: The Rise and Fall. New York: Wiley, 2002.

Barreveld, Dirk J. The ENRON Collapse. New York: Universe, 2002.

SteveSheppard

See alsoBusiness, Big ; Corporations ; Scandals .

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Enron Corp. reports higher earnings, schedules stock split.
Newspaper article from: The Oil Daily; 7/16/1993
Taking it to the source. (Enron Corp.) (Risk Management) (Company Profile)
Magazine article from: Futures (Cedar Falls, IA); 10/1/1993
Enron Corp. to post major earnings growth for fifth straight year, CEO Kinder...
Newspaper article from: The Oil Daily; 12/28/1993

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