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CURRENT
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COVER STORY
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Every decade
has its corporate villains. But the scope and scale of the corporate
transgressions of the late 1990s, now coming to light, exceed
anything the U.S. has witnessed since before the Great Depression. |
By
DAVID WESSEL
Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
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Enron's top executives
reaped hundreds of millions of dollars as the company collapsed.
Arthur Andersen, Enron's auditor, was convicted this summer of obstructing
justice. Tyco International's once highly respected CEO is charged
with tax evasion and accused of secret pay deals with underlings.
Cable giant Adelphia Communications has admitted inflating its financial
numbers. Xerox paid a $10 million fine for overstating revenues.
Dynegy and CMS Energy simultaneously bought and sold electricity
in transactions with no point other than pumping up trading volumes.
Merrill Lynch paid $100 million to settle New York state charges
that its analysts misled investors, and other Wall Street firms
are now under scrutiny. And telecommunications giant WorldCom disclosed
an accounting trick that inflated its reported profits by billions
of dollars, then filed for the biggest bankruptcy in American history.
"I've never seen
anything of this magnitude with companies this large," says
Henry McKinnell, 59, CEO of the drug company Pfizer.
Investors Lose
Why is so much corporate
corruption surfacing now? Is there more of it, or is more attention
being paid? Did a few executives lose their ethics in the heady
days of the 1990s? Or did a few notorious offenders break rules
that many others merely bent? Is the entire system of corporate
governance and regulation flawed? Or was the system abused by a
few unscrupulous players?
The answer, put simply:
A stock-market bubble magnified changes in accepted business practices
and brought trends that had been building for years to a climax.
The victims: the very shareholders the executives were supposed
to serve.
When Federal Reserve
Chairman Alan Greenspan talks informally with business and other
groups, he says the greediness of human beings didn't increase in
the 1990s. What increased, he says, was the number of opportunities
to satisfy that greed. The run-up in stock prices meant there was
more to grab.
One culprit was stock
options, which gave executives huge incentives to boost short-term
stock prices regardless of the long-term consequences. These incentives
helped turn the widely practiced art of earnings management -- making
sure profits meet or barely exceed Wall Street expectations -- into
a gross distortion of reality at some companies.
And the institutions
that were created to check such abuses failed. The remnants of a
professional code of conduct in accounting, law and securities analysis
gave way to getting the maximum revenue per partner. The auditor's
signature on a corporate report didn't mean that the report was
an accurate snapshot, says Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill, but
rather "that a company had cooked the books to generally accepted
standards."
The current sordid
chapter in the history of American business opened on Aug. 14 last
year when Jeffrey Skilling quit as CEO of Enron, an unmistakable
sign that all was not well inside one of the country's most-admired
corporations.
Enron is "the
private sector's Watergate," says John Coffee, a Columbia University
securities-law professor. Although not all politicians were crooks,
Watergate bred cynicism about government among the public, the press
and even some politicians. Enron and all that followed threaten
to do the same to American business. "I have had a lot of e-mail
from shareholders who
think all corporate executives are
crooks and all accountants are sheep, just as some think all Catholic
priests are pedophiles," says mutual-fund manager James Gipson.
"None of those statements are true."
Bad Apples or Sick
Tree?
Measuring the volume of corporate mischief precisely is difficult.
More than 150 companies restated their earnings in each of the past
three years, an acknowledgment that they had misinformed investors.
That's more than triple the levels of the early 1990s, but represents
only 1% of publicly traded companies. One view, put forth by chief
executives and government officials, emphasizes that only a small
fraction of companies and executives stand accused of wrongdoing.
It's that "few bad apples" analysis. Pfizer's Mr. McKinnell
cautions against generalizing from "eight or 10 companies who
allegedly behaved in ways that are incomprehensible
and deserve
what they're getting."
For this camp, the
smart response is to punish the wrongdoers severely and tinker with
the parts of the system that are broken, taking care to avoid hasty
changes with unintended consequences. "Things aren't as broken
as they appear to be," says Mr. McKinnell.
But there's another
view: that the headline-making cases are symptoms of a broader disease
and a regulatory system that isn't up to the challenge. "A
few bad apples? Looks like we've got the whole peck here,"
says Stanley Sporkin, a former SEC enforcement chief.
"Everybody did
this," says Peter Temin, an economic historian at MIT. "The
people who got in trouble are those who are most at the edge. Enron
didn't get caught. Enron got so far out on the edge that it fell
off."
To this camp, the solution
is broader legislation and tougher regulation on the scale of the
1930s laws that created the SEC and the modern regulatory system.
(See related article on Page 10.)
Roller Coaster Ride
Stock options were
supposed to solve a problem of the past: entrenched corporate management
that wasn't serving the interests of shareholders. The solution,
widely embraced in American business, was to use stock options to
link executives' and shareholders' interests. It sounded reasonable:
Executives would benefit if they managed companies in a way that
lifted share prices.
It didn't work as intended.
A soaring stock market rewarded executives not for good strategic
management, but for riding the roller coaster. The incentives to
do almost anything to increase the stock price were huge. And the
incentives weren't to increase profits and share prices over a decade
or two, but rather to increase profits just long enough for executives
to cash in their options.
Stock options, Mr.
Pitt says, were "a device that was supposed to align shareholder
and manager interests -- and actually 'disaligned' them."
Of course, corporate
executives aren't supposed to be monarchs. All sorts of checks and
balances have been established during the past century: accountants,
lawyers, securities analysts, investment bankers, audit committees,
regulators, even the press.
Whether the rules were
adequate is still being debated. But there is little debate about
the failure of the professionals who are supposed to see that rules
are obeyed and executives are honest. The shortcomings of accounting
firms are now well exposed. The duplicity of some highly paid Wall
Street analysts is documented in internal e-mails that are now public.
The acquiescence of the lawyers inside Enron, Tyco and other companies
is readily apparent.
This disturbing pattern
is the biggest reason why the abuses of the 1990s can't easily be
dismissed as the fault of a few flawed human beings. "The professional
gatekeepers were greatly compromised by finding they could make
tremendous profits by deferring to management," says Columbia's
Prof. Coffee.
But not one of the
instances of egregious abuse of shareholder interest would have
occurred if the CEO had simply said, "No!"
Mr. Gipson, the mutual-fund
manager, divides offenders into two classes: the "confirmed
crooks" who deliberately and willfully ripped off shareholders,
and the "morally marginal who went right up to the line of
acceptable behavior" and then "when the line was moved
found themselves on the other side."
Treasury Secretary
O'Neill makes a similar point: "A little lie leads to ever
bigger ones in lots of cases without a recognition on the part of
the perpetrator that they ever told a lie, even when it gets grotesque.
They say, 'If only I had another 12 months
.'"
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