|
Friday,
November 30, 2001
Enron
Corp. on the brink of bankruptcy
By
Kristen Hays
Associated Press
HOUSTON
The slick financing that helped turn Enron Corp. into
a mighty power-brokering dynamo became its Achilles
heel, leaving the energy trader teetering toward bankruptcy
after a smaller rival abandoned plans to buy it.
Enrons
swagger was bold when shares of the nations largest
buyer and seller of natural gas traded at about $85 per share
a year ago. That swagger became a limp Wednesday when shares
melted down to less than a dollar.
I
dont think that you see such a well-thought of company
falling down this quickly, Robert Christmas, a bankruptcy
lawyer with Nixon Peabody LLC in New York, said of Enrons
free fall over the last few weeks. I cant think
of one in recent history where it was this fast.
The collapse
made bankruptcy seem inevitable for a company that just after
revealing questionable partnerships and admitting it overstated
profits for four years.
In quick
succession Wednesday, two rating agencies dropped Enrons
credit rating to junk status, forcing it to pay billions of
dollars of debt it probably cant afford. Dynegy Inc.
immediately backed out of an $8.4 billion acquisition plan
after several days of efforts to re-negotiate the deal.
Investors
unloaded 339 million shares on the New York Stock Exchange
a record for one day and sent Enron stock down
85 percent to close at 61 cents.
The decline
continued on Thursday as Enron shares fell 31.2 percent, or
19 cents a share, to 42 cents by mid-afternoon in heavy trading
on the New York Stock Exchange.
Enron
also said Thursday it was evaluating whether previously declared
dividends will be paid on the corporations common and
preferred stock.
Enron
was valued at $80 billion little more than a year ago and
in 1999 the company agreed to spend $100 million over 30 years
to put its name on Houstons major league ballpark. By
Wednesday evening, the company was worth about $500 million
and one Enron share was worth less than one-sixth the
price of a $4 hot dog at Enron Field.
Enron
also wielded political clout. The company and its employees
were the largest single contributors to President Bushs
Texas and national campaigns last year.
But even the companys political connections couldnt
stop the slide, and analysts said Enron has no other knights
in shining armor.
Enrons
money-losing broadband unit and power operations in India
and Brazil are up for sale. Its inability to convince investors
or energy traders to stick with it has left Enron without
the outward confidence the company once so boldly displayed.
Im
not sure they have any other alternatives (to bankruptcy),
unless banks are willing to siphon more money into a black
hole, said Prudential Securities analyst Carol Coale.
Investors will not buy it.
The credit
rating downgrades by Standard & Poors and Moodys
Investors Service made $3.9 billion of Enron debt due immediately.
As much as $16 billion in other debt due next year may have
to be paid sooner.
Analysts
blamed the companys fall on a combination of arrogance
and a penchant for secrecy.
They
didnt explain things, said Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter analyst Jim McAuliffe. They are very cocky and
self-assured.
Enron,
which earned $979 million on $100.8 billion in revenue in
2000, last month revealed that partnerships run by its executives
had allowed the company to keep about $500 million in debt
off its books and let the executives profit from the arrangements.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating.
The company
ousted its chief financial officer, Andrew Fastow, in October,
and several weeks ago restated its earnings back to 1997
eliminating more than $580 million in reported income in that
time span.
Enron
tried to restore investor confidence by promising to sell
its money-losing businesses to shore up its once-profitable
trading business, but investors continued dumping more and
more shares.
McAuliffe
said that when the companys stock started to slip, he
said, Enron executives should have clearly explained what
was happening and actively recruited investors.
Instead,
the slide continued, prompting Dynegy invoke an escape clause
in the merger agreement to protect its interests.
Sometimes,
a companys best deals are the very ones it did not do,
Dynegy chairman and chief executive Chuck Watson said in a
conference call.
Dynegy
stopped trading with Enron, but emphasized that the dissolution
of the deal does not reflect a failure of the energy trading
business.
Enron
suspended payment of some debt and shut down its online trading
operation Wednesday. Executives were evaluating and
exploring other options to protect our core energy businesses,
said Kenneth L. Lay, the companys chairman and chief
executive.
Enron
also said it is reviewing Dynegys decision to exercise
the option and analysts are anticipating a battle over Enrons
assets in bankruptcy court.
Dazed
workers trickled out of Enrons downtown Houston headquarters
Wednesday afternoon, across the street from the companys
new $200 million, 40-story glass tower, saying they couldnt
predict Enrons future or their own.
I
dont know that there is a landing soft, said Enron
employee David Picone. Top to bottom this is a hard
landing for everybody.
|