Enron
will go down as the mother of all corporate governance
fiascos. It falsified reported earnings by creating
off-balance-sheet "special purpose entities,"
into which it shoveled under-performing assets and
their related debt. Its executives ran the entities,
often making millions on the side. It paid Arthur
Andersen, its auditors, more for consulting than
for auditing, corrupting and nearly destroying what
was once a top firm in its field. It had undisclosed
financial dealings with some of its "independent"
board members.
Then,
as disaster approached, executives dumped millions
of shares of Enron stock while 401(K) participants
were stuck in a no-trade "blackout period."
Enron's collapse vaporized about $60 billion of
shareholder wealth, along with tens of thousands
of careers at the company and Arthur Andersen. Unfortunately,
it wasn't alone. Lots of other companies have pulled
various kinds of fast ones on their shareholders,
employees or both. Among them:
Wachovia
In April of 2001, North Carolina super regional
bank Wachovia agreed to be acquired by First Union.
Despite Wachovia's mediocre record over the previous
few years, the deal provided 58-year-old CEO L.M.
"Bud" Baker with a $2 million a year retirement
package for life, and his wife, should she survive
him, with "no less than 60 percent of such
benefit" over her lifetime.
The
proposed buyout price was only 6 percent higher
than Wachovia's pre-announcement market value, despite
the fact that a higher, hostile bid from Florida-based
SunTrust was on the table.
The resulting outcry threatened the deal. But by
the time of the Wachovia shareholder vote, First
Union's share price had risen dramatically, making
the offer acceptable to shareholders. "Who
was buying First Union stock, driving up the price
and putting a nail in the coffin of the SunTrust
offer?" asked W. David Moon, head of Knoxville,
Tenn.-based Moon Capital Management. "In the
three months prior to the shareholder vote, Wachovia
(using its shareholders' money) bought over $550
million of First Union stock."
Global
Crossing
The idea was to lay as much fiber optic cable as
possible, and then charge for its use when humanity
became addicted to bandwidth. Problem was, everyone
else had the same idea. Far too much cable was laid
and prices plunged, turning Global Crossing's projected
profits into huge losses. But instead of admitting
its mistakes and taking its lumps, it supported
its stock price through a series of "bandwidth
swaps," which, according to a shareholder lawsuit,
were designed solely to pump up reported revenues
and earnings. Along the way, insiders sold nearly
$1.3 billion of stock, while making glowing public
statements about the company's future. Global Crossing
is now bankrupt and its stock is worthless.
E*Trade
The pioneering online stockbroker has seen its share
price fall by 90 percent in the past two years.
Yet the company paid CEO Christos Cotsakos about
$80 million in 2001. He now has a golden parachute
worth $125 million should the firm be bought out,
and a retirement package worth nearly $9 million
a year.
WorldCom
After turning a sleepy little Mississippi phone
company into the United States' second-largest telecommunications
firm, CEO Bernie Ebbers went a little crazy, buying
truckloads of his company's stock on margin. The
stock went down, Ebbers got a margin call and WorldCom's
board agreed, in 2001, to lend Ebbers $430 million
(at an interest rate of 2.15 percent, no less) to
pay off the loans. Why? To protect shareholder value,
said a company spokesman at the time. A cynic might
wonder whether it was to keep Ebbers from having
to join many of his stockholders in bankruptcy.
Ebbers has since resigned, and the unsecured loan
appears on WorldCom's balance sheet under "other
assets."
Imclone
This high-profile biotech firm lent its two top
officials (and largest individual shareholders)
nearly $34 million in June of 2001. The purpose:
to allow them to exercise stock options just prior
to the announcement of a highly positive joint venture
with Bristol-Myers Squibb. More recently, the Securities
and Exchange Commission and a congressional subcommittee
are looking into the dumping of huge amounts of
stock by some family members of the company's former
CEO, Samuel Waksal. The stock sales came just prior
to an unfavorable ruling by the Federal Drug Administation
on an application for a cancer drug, sparking rumors
of insider trading, which the family members have
denied.
Qwest
Communications
The Denver-based telecom giant lent a joint venture
run by its founder, chairman and largest stockholder,
Philip Anschutz, nearly $85 million. Nine months
later, Qwest bought half of Mr. Anschutz's stake
in that affiliate for $43 million. The SEC is currently
probing this and other Qwest practices.
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