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Enron fallout is spreading
By Nick Beams
21 February 2002
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The collapse of Enron appears, at least so far, to have caused
relatively little disturbance in energy markets where it primarily
traded. One reason for this less-than-expected outcome may be
that Enrons practice of listing the full value of the trades
it arranged as sales, rather than just the income it secured,
vastly inflated its size. But when it comes to the financial markets
more generally, the shock waves from the Enron collapse are having
a major impact and widening in their scope.
Last Tuesday, for example, Wall Streets Dow Jones index
fell by almost 160 points, or 1.6 percent, while the Nasdaq index
dropped by more than 3 percent on fears that the accounting methods
developed by Enron to boost profits and hide debts were very widespread.
Indeed it appears that the rot starts right at the top. IBM,
regarded as the bluest of the blue chip stocks, recorded one of
the biggest slides. Its shares went down by more than 3 percent
following concerns that its complex accounting methods could cause
problems. According to one analyst, they represent a can
of worms that hasnt been opened yet.
Telecommunications companies are another area of concern. Fears
over their future in the aftermath of the Enron debacle were heightened
last month when Global Crossing filed for bankruptcy protection,
in the biggest collapse to emerge from the telecom industry.
Just as Enron inflated its results, there are fears that telecom
companies engaged in similar practices. As an article published
in the Financial Times of February 12 put it, their reports
of booming profits in the 1990s may have had a hollow ring.
Many telecoms companies, it noted, traded
with each other, exchanging capacity on each others networks,
and treated their trades as revenues. But some of those deals
may have been hollow swaps, artificial deals concocted
merely to create the illusion of activity, according to a growing
chorus of industry analysts.
One of those to come under investigation for such practices
is Qwest Communications, which has received a subpoena from the
US Securities and Exchange Commission for documents relating to
its dealings with Global Crossing. The investigation was triggered
by claims by a former Global Crossing accounting executive that
swap transactions were artificial and aimed at inflating the companys
stated revenue.
Concerns over accounting practices have significant financial
consequences. One of these is to shut companies coming under suspicion
out of commercial financial markets. Qwest Communications has
been forced to turn to the banks for $4 billion in funding after
investors would not back it with short-term credit. There are
predictions that other well-known firms will be excluded from
the commercial paper market, one of the chief sources of corporate
funding.
JP Morgan Chase has already warned the US telecom firm, Sprint,
is overextended in the commercial paper market and
that there is a reasonable chance that Sprint will have
to look elsewhere for financing. The forecasts are that
Sprint will need up to $2 billion to meet its funding needs this
year.
One measure of the nervousness is the contraction in the size
of the market. Figures from the Federal Reserve show that the
amount of non-financial commercial paper has fallen to $209 billion,
down 40 percent from its peak in November 2000.
A wider accounting crisis
But the problems extend far beyond the companies whose accounting
practices have been called into question. According to the former
head of the US Federal Reserve, Paul Volcker: Accounting
and auditing in this country is in a state of crisis.
An article in the New York Times of February 12 reported
that in 1998 a survey of 160 financial officers at public companies
found that two thirds of them had been asked by their executives
to misrepresent their companies results. Twelve percent
admitted they had done so.
Last year, it continued, a study by Financial
International, a trade group for corporate executives found that
public companies had revised their financial results 464 times
between 1998 and 2000, nearly as many restatements as in the 20
previous years combined, and the problem probably worsened last
year.
Some of the worlds best-known companies, including
IBM and AOL Time Warner, are on the list of companies that allegedly
use aggressive accounting practices to lift their earnings.
The level of concern generated in financial circles by the
Enron debacle and its implications for the financial system as
a whole can be gauged by the tone of a series of articles published
in the Financial Times this week.
An editorial covering the four-part series began as follows:
Individual greed on a spectacular scale. A shocking willingness
to overlook questionable practices by institutions claiming to
uphold the highest standards. A shameful determination to cover
up evidence. Politicians eager to accept money from a company
subsequently shown to be a sham. These are the hallmarks of the
Enron scandal.
The editorial warned that the accounting practices that accompanied
the high-technology bubble, the hiding of debts off balance sheets
and rogue trading have shaken public confidence in big business
and the way it is conducted.
Enrons collapse had to mark a watershed. Just as the
collapse of banks and utility companies in the 1930s led to regulatory
reform, so Enrons demise should set in train a similar
process not only in the US but also on a world scale.
However, the FT counselled against the introduction
of more detailed rules and regulations.
Detailed prescriptions suffer from a fatal flaw. By spelling
out in excruciating detail what auditors, directors, bank managers
and other responsible parties must do, they create the possibility
of observing merely the letter of the law. As long as you have
complied with the manualor persuaded some luckless auditor
that you have done soyour real actions and purposes can
be as reckless or flagrant as you like. Since no set of regulations,
not matter how detailed, can outmanoeuvre a really determined
manipulator, the rules provide, in effect, a road map for abuse.
Rather than the detailed prescriptions of the US Generally
Accepted Accounting Principles it called for the development of
standards devised by the International Accounting Standards Board
that call for an emphasis on substance rather than form. But,
like everything else in the business world, accounting standards
and rules are a matter of fierce competition and the IASB approach
has been treated with mild suspicion in the US.
But in the view of the editorial, new measures will have to
be set in place, along with a new determination on the part
of all participants to act in accordance with their letter.
While this would not stop fraud, it would restore public trust
in routine transactions and stop the poisonous erosion of
confidence in everyday activities and financial reports that has
been so marked a feature of the past weeks.
The conclusion of the editorial revealed some of the fears
in ruling circles about the political implications of the Enron
disaster. Describing trustworthy business standards as among
the most important social capital the developed world possesses,
it warned that the weaknesses revealed by Enron, if left
unremedied, could ultimately imperil a precious collective achievement.
See Also:
White House stonewalls Congressional
probe into Enron links
[4 February 2002]
The Enron collapse and the
crisis of the profit system
[29 January 2002]
The strange and convenient
death of J. Clifford Baxter--Enron executive found shot to death
[28 January 2002]
Enron and the Bush administration:
kindred spirits in fraud and criminality
[18 January 2002]
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