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Testimony
of Frank Partnoy
Professor of Law, University of San Diego School of Law
Hearings before the United States Senate
Committee on Governmental Affairs, January 24, 2002
I am submitting testimony in response to this
Committee’s request that I address potential problems
associated with the unregulated status of derivatives used by
Enron Corporation.
I.
Introduction and Overview
I am a law professor at the University of San Diego
School of Law. I
teach and research in the areas of financial market
regulation, derivatives, and structured finance.
During the mid-1990s, I worked on Wall Street
structuring and selling financial instruments and investment
vehicles similar to those used by Enron.
As a lawyer, I have represented clients with problems
similar to Enron’s, but on a much smaller scale.
I have never received any payment from Enron or from
any Enron officer or employee.
Enron has been compared to Long-Term Capital Management, the
Greenwich, Connecticut, hedge fund
that lost $4.6 billion on more than $1 trillion of derivatives
and was rescued in September 1998 in a private bailout
engineered by the New York Federal Reserve.
For the past several weeks, I have conducted my own
investigation into Enron, and I believe the comparison is
inapt. Yes, there
are similarities in both firms’ use and abuse of financial
derivatives. But
the scope of Enron’s problems and their effects on its
investors and employees are far more sweeping.
According to Enron’s most recent annual report, the firm
made more money trading derivatives in the year 2000 alone
than Long-Term Capital Management made in its entire history.
Long-Term Capital Management generated losses of a few
billion dollars; by contrast, Enron not only wiped out $70
billion of shareholder value, but also defaulted on tens of
billions of dollars of debts.
Long-Term Capital Management employed only 200 people
worldwide, many of whom simply started a new hedge fund after
the bailout, while Enron employed 20,000 people, more than
4,000 of whom have been fired, and many more of whom lost
their life savings as Enron’s stock plummeted last fall.
In short, Enron makes Long-Term Capital Management look like a
lemonade stand.
It will surprise many investors to learn that Enron was, at
its core, a derivatives trading firm.
Nothing made this more clear than the layout of
Enron’s extravagant new building – still not completed
today, but mostly occupied – where the top executives’
offices on the seventh floor were designed to overlook the
crown jewel of Enron’s empire: a cavernous derivatives
trading pit on the sixth floor.
I believe there are two answers to the question of why Enron
collapsed, and both involve derivatives.
One relates to the use of derivatives “outside”
Enron, in transactions with some now-infamous special purpose
entities. The
other – which has not been publicized at all – relates to
the use of derivatives “inside” Enron.
Derivatives are complex financial instruments whose value is
based on one or more underlying variables, such as the price
of a stock or the cost of natural gas.
Derivatives can be traded in two ways: on regulated
exchanges or in unregulated over-the-counter (OTC) markets.
My testimony – and Enron’s activities – involve
the OTC derivatives markets.
Sometimes OTC derivatives can seem too esoteric to be relevant
to average investors. Even
the well-publicized OTC derivatives fiascos of a few years ago
– Procter & Gamble or Orange County, for example –
seem ages away.
But the OTC derivatives markets are too important to ignore,
and are critical to understanding Enron.
The size of derivatives markets typically is measured
in terms of the notional values of contracts.
Recent estimates of the size of the exchange-traded
derivatives market, which includes all contracts traded on the
major options and futures exchanges, are in the range of $13
to $14 trillion in notional amount.
By contrast, the estimated notional amount of
outstanding OTC derivatives as of year-end 2000 was $95.2
trillion. And
that estimate most likely is an understatement.
In other words, OTC derivatives markets, which for the most
part did not exist twenty (or, in some cases, even ten) years
ago, now comprise about 90 percent of the aggregate
derivatives market, with trillions of dollars at risk every
day. By those
measures, OTC derivatives markets are bigger than the markets
for U.S. stocks.
Enron may have been just an energy company when it was created
in 1985, but by the end it had become a full-blown OTC
derivatives trading firm.
Its OTC derivatives-related assets and liabilities
increased more than five-fold during 2000 alone.
And, let me repeat, the OTC derivatives markets are
largely unregulated. Enron’s trading operations were not regulated, or even
recently audited, by U.S. securities regulators, and the OTC
derivatives it traded are not deemed securities.
OTC derivatives trading is beyond the purview of
organized, regulated exchanges.
Thus, Enron – like many firms that trade OTC
derivatives – fell into a regulatory black hole.
After 360 customers lost $11.4 billion on derivatives
during the decade ending in March 1997, the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission began considering whether to regulate OTC
derivatives. But
its proposals were rejected, and in December 2000 Congress
made the deregulated status of derivatives clear when it
passed the Commodity Futures Modernization Act.
As a result, the OTC derivatives markets have become a
ticking time bomb, which Congress thus far has chosen not to
defuse.
Many parties are to blame for Enron’s collapse.
But as this Committee and others take a hard look at
Enron and its officers, directors, accountants, lawyers,
bankers, and analysts, Congress also should take a hard look
at the current state of OTC derivatives regulation.
(In the remainder of this testimony, when I refer
generally to “derivatives,” I am referring to these OTC
derivatives markets.)
II.
Derivatives “Outside” Enron
The first answer to the question of why Enron
collapsed relates to derivatives deals between Enron and
several of its 3,000-plus off-balance sheet subsidiaries and
partnerships. The
names of these byzantine financial entities – such as JEDI,
Raptor, and LJM – have been widely reported.
Such special purpose entities might seem odd to someone who
has not seen them used before, but they actually are very
common in modern financial markets.
Structured finance is a significant part of the U.S.
economy, and special purpose entities are involved in most
investors’ lives, even if they do not realize it.
For example, most credit card and mortgage payments
flow through special purpose entities, and financial services
firms typically use such entities as well.
Some special purpose entities generate great economic
benefits; others – as I will describe below – are used to
manipulate company’s financial reports to inflate assets, to
understate liabilities, to create false profits, and to hide
losses. In this
way, special purpose entities are a lot like fire: they can be
used for good or ill. Special
purpose entities, like derivatives, are unregulated.
The key problem at Enron involved the confluence of
derivatives and special purpose entities.
Enron entered into derivatives transactions with these
entities to shield volatile assets from quarterly financial
reporting and to inflate artificially the value of certain
Enron assets. These
derivatives included price swap derivatives (described below),
as well as call and put options.
Specifically, Enron used derivatives and special
purpose vehicles to manipulate its financial statements in
three ways. First,
it hid speculator losses it suffered on technology stocks.
Second, it hid huge debts incurred to finance
unprofitable new businesses, including retail energy services
for new customers. Third,
it inflated the value of other troubled businesses, including
its new ventures in fiber-optic bandwidth.
Although Enron was founded as an energy company, many
of these derivatives transactions did not involve energy at
all.
A.
Using Derivatives
to Hide Losses on Technology Stocks
First, Enron hid hundreds of millions of dollars of
losses on its speculative investments in various
technology-oriented firms, such as Rhythms Net Connections,
Inc., a start-up telecommunications company.
A subsidiary of Enron (along with other investors such
as Microsoft and Stanford University) invested a relatively
small amount of venture capital, on the order of $10 million,
in Rhythms Net Connections.
Enron also invested in other technology companies.
Rhythms Net Connections issued stock to the public in
an initial public offering on April 6, 1999, during the heyday
of the Internet boom, at a price of about $70 per share.
Enron’s stake was suddenly worth hundreds of millions
of dollars. Enron’s
other venture capital investments in technology companies also
rocketed at first, alongside the widespread run-up in the
value of dot.com stocks.
As is typical in IPOs, Enron was prohibited from
selling its stock for six months.
Next, Enron entered into a series of transactions with
a special purpose entity –apparently a limited partnership
called Raptor (actually there were several Raptor entities of
which the Rhythms New Connections Raptor was just one), which
was owned by a another Enron special purpose entity, called
LJM1 – in which Enron essentially exchanged its shares in
these technology companies for a loan, ultimately, from
Raptor. Raptor
then issued its own securities to investors and held the cash
proceeds from those investors.
The critical piece of this puzzle, the element that
made it all work, was a derivatives transaction – called a
“price swap derivative” – between Enron and Raptor.
In this price swap, Enron committed to give stock to
Raptor if Raptor’s assets declined in value. The more Raptor’s assets declined, the more of its own
stock Enron was required to post.
Because Enron had committed to maintain Raptor’s
value at $1.2 billion, if Enron’s stock declined in value,
Enron would need to give Raptor even more stock.
This derivatives transaction carried the risk of
diluting the ownership of Enron’s shareholders if either
Enron’s stock or the technology stocks Raptor held declined
in price. Enron
also apparently entered into options transactions with Raptor
and/or LJM1.
Because the securities Raptor issued were backed by
Enron’s promise to deliver more shares, investors in Raptor
essentially were buying Enron’s debt, not the stock of a
start-up telecommunications company.
In fact, the performance of Rhythms Net Connections was
irrelevant to these investors in Raptor.
Enron got the best of both worlds in accounting terms:
it recognized its gain on the technology stocks by recognizing
the value of the Raptor loan right away, and it avoided
recognizing on an interim basis any future losses on the
technology stocks, were such losses to occur.
It is painfully obvious how this story ends: the
dot.com bubble burst and by 2001 shares of Rhythms Net
Communications were worthless.
Enron had to deliver more shares to “make whole”
the investors in Raptor and other similar deals.
In all, Enron had derivative instruments on 54.8
million shares of Enron common stock at an average price of
$67.92 per share, or $3.7 billion in all.
In other words, at the start of these deals, Enron’s
obligation amounted to seven percent of all of its outstanding
shares. As
Enron’s share price declined, that obligation increased and
Enron’s shareholders were substantially diluted.
And here is the key point: even as Raptor’s assets
and Enron’s shares declined in value, Enron did not reflect
those declines in its quarterly financial statements.
B.
Using Derivatives
to Hide Debts Incurred by Unprofitable Businesses
A second example involved Enron using derivatives with
two special purpose entities to hide huge debts incurred to
finance unprofitable new businesses.
Essentially, some very complicated and unclear
accounting rules allowed Enron to avoid disclosing certain
assets and liabilities.
These two special purpose entities were Joint Energy
Development Investments Limited Partnership (JEDI) and Chewco
Investments, L.P. (Chewco).
Enron owned only 50 percent of JEDI, and therefore –
under applicable accounting rules – could (and did) report
JEDI as an unconsolidated equity affiliate.
If Enron had owned 51 percent of JEDI, accounting rules
would have required Enron to include all of JEDI’s financial
results in its financial statements. But at 50 percent, Enron did not.
JEDI, in turn, was subject to the same rules.
JEDI could issue equity and debt securities, and as
long as there was an outside investor with at least 50 percent
of the equity – in other words, with real economic exposure
to the risks of Chewco – JEDI would not need to consolidate
Chewco.
One way to minimize the applicability of this “50
percent rule” would be for a company to create a special
purpose entity with mostly debt and only a tiny sliver of
equity, say $1 worth, for which the company easily could find
an outside investor. Such
a transaction would be an obvious sham, and one might expect
to find a pronouncement by the accounting regulators that it
would not conform to Generally Acceptable Accounting
Principles. Unfortunately,
there are no such accounting regulators, and there was no such
pronouncement. The Financial Accounting Standards Board, a private entity
that sets most accounting rules and advises the Securities and
Exchange Commission, had not – and still has not –
answered the key accounting question: what constitutes
sufficient capital from an independent source, so that a
special purpose entity need not be consolidated?
Since 1982, Financial Accounting Standard No. 57, Related
Party Disclosures, has contained a general requirement that companies
disclose the nature of relationships they have with related
parties, and describe transactions with them.
Accountants might debate whether Enron’s impenetrable
footnote disclosure satisfies FAS No. 57, but clearly the
disclosures currently made are not optimal.
Members of the SEC staff have been urging the
FASB to revise No. 57, but it has
not responded. In
1998, FASB adopted FAS No. 133, which includes new accounting
rules for derivatives. Now
at 800-plus pages, FAS No. 133’s instructions are an
incredibly detailed – but ultimately unhelpful – attempt
to rationalize other accounting rules for derivatives.
As a result, even after two decades, there is no clear
answer to the question about related parties.
Instead, some early guidance (developed in the context
of leases) has been grafted onto modern special purpose
entities. This
guidance is a 1991 letter from the Acting
Chief Accountant of the SEC in 1991, stating: “The
initial substantive residual equity investment should be
comparable to that expected for a substantive business
involved in similar [leasing] transactions with similar risks
and rewards. The SEC staff understands from discussions
with Working Group members that those members believe that 3
percent is the minimum acceptable investment. The SEC
staff believes a greater investment may be necessary depending
on the facts and circumstances, including the credit risk
associated with the lessee and the market risk factors
associated with the leased property.”
Based on this letter, and on opinions from auditors and
lawyers, companies have been pushing debt off their balance
sheets into unconsolidated special purpose entities so long as
(1) the company does not have more than 50 percent of the
equity of the special purpose entity, and (2) the equity of
the special purpose entity is at least 3 percent of its the
total capital. As
more companies have done such deals, more debt has moved off
balance-sheet, to the point that, today, it is difficult for
investors to know if they have an accurate picture of a
company’s debts. Even
if Enron had not tripped up and violated the letter of these
rules, it still would have been able to borrow 97 percent of
the capital of its special purpose entities without
recognizing those debts on its balance sheet.
Transactions designed to exploit these accounting rules have
polluted the financial statements of many U.S. companies.
Enron is not alone.
For example, Kmart Corporation – which was on the
verge of bankruptcy as of January 21, 2002, and clearly was
affected by Enron’s collapse – held 49 percent interests
in several unconsolidated equity affiliates.
I believe this Committee should take a hard look at
these widespread practices.
In short, derivatives enabled Enron to avoid
consolidating these special purpose entities.
Enron entered into a derivatives transaction with
Chewco similar to the one it entered into with Raptor,
effectively guaranteeing repayment to Chewco’s outside
investor. (The
investor’s sliver of equity ownership in Chewco was not
really equity from an economic perspective, because the
investor had nothing – other than Enron’s credit – at
risk.) In its
financial statements, Enron takes the position that although
it provides guarantees to unconsolidated subsidiaries, those
guarantees do not have a readily determinable fair value, and
management does not consider it likely that Enron would be
required to perform or otherwise incur losses associated with
guarantees. That
position enabled Enron to avoid recording its guarantees.
Even the guarantees listed in the footnotes are
recorded at only 10 percent of their nominal value.
(At least this amount is closer to the truth than the
amount listed as debt for unconsolidated subsidiaries: zero.)
Apparently, Arthur Andersen either did not discover
this derivatives transaction or decided that the transaction
did not require a finding that Enron controlled Chewco.
In any event, the Enron derivatives transaction meant
that Enron – not the 50 percent “investor” in Chewco –
had the real exposure to Chewco’s assets.
The ownership daisy chain unraveled once Enron was
deemed to own Chewco. JEDI
was forced to consolidate Chewco, and Enron was forced to
consolidate both limited partnerships – and all of their
losses – in its financial statements.
All of this complicated analysis will seem absurd to
the average investor. If the assets and liabilities are Enron’s in economic
terms, shouldn’t they be reported that way in accounting
terms? The
answer, of course, is yes.
Unfortunately, current rules allow companies to employ
derivatives and special purpose entities to make accounting
standards diverge from economic reality.
Enron used financial engineering as a kind of plastic
surgery, to make itself look better than it really was.
Many other companies do the same.
Of course, it is possible to detect the flaws in
plastic surgery, or financial engineering, if you look hard
enough and in the right places.
In 2000, Enron disclosed about $2.1 billion of such
derivatives transactions with related entities, and recognized
gains of about $500 million related to those transactions.
The disclosure related to these staggering numbers is
less than conspicuous, buried at page 48, footnote 16 of
Enron’s annual report, deep in the related party disclosures
for which Enron was notorious.
Still, the disclosure is there.
A few sophisticated analysts understood Enron’s
finances based on that disclosure; they bet against Enron’s
stock. Other
securities analysts likely understood the disclosures, but
chose not to speak, for fear of losing Enron’s banking
business. An
argument even can be made – although not a good one, in my
view – that Enron satisfied its disclosure obligations with
its opaque language. In
any event, the result of Enron’s method of disclosure was
that investors did not get a clear picture of the firm’s
finances.
Enron is not the only example of such abuse; accounting
subterfuge using derivatives is widespread.
I believe Congress should seriously consider
legislation explicitly requiring that financial statements
describe the economic reality of a company’s transactions.
Such a broad standard – backed by rigorous
enforcement – would go a long way towards eradicating the
schemes companies currently use to dress up their financial
statements.
Enron’s risk management manual stated the following:
“Reported earnings follow the rules and principles of
accounting. The
results do not always create measures consistent with
underlying economics. However,
corporate management’s performance is generally measured by
accounting income, not underlying economics.
Risk management strategies are therefore directed at
accounting rather than economic performance.”
This alarming statement is representative of the
accounting-driven focus of U.S. managers generally, who all
too frequently have little interest in maintaining controls to
monitor their firm’s economic realities.
C.
Using Derivatives
to Inflate the Value of Troubled Businesses
A third example is even more troubling.
It appears that Enron inflated the value of certain
assets it held by selling a small portion of those assets to a
special purpose entity at an inflated price, and then
revaluing the lion’s share of those assets it still held at
that higher price.
Consider the following sentence disclosed from the infamous
footnote 16 of Enron’s 2000 annual report, on page 49: “In
2000, Enron sold a portion of its dark fiber inventory to the
Related Party in exchange for $30 million cash and a $70
million note receivable that was subsequently repaid.
Enron recognized gross margin of $67 million on the
sale.” What
does this sentence mean?
It is possible to understand the sentence today, but only
after reading a January 7, 2002, article about the sale by
Daniel Fisher of Forbes magazine, together with an August 2001
memorandum describing the transaction (and others) from one
Enron employee, Sherron Watkins, to Enron Chairman Kenneth
Lay.
Here is my best understanding of what this sentence means:
First, the “Related Party” is LJM2, an Enron partnership
run by Enron’s Chief Financial Officer, Andrew Fastow.
(Fastow reportedly received $30 million from the LJM1
and LJM2 partnerships pursuant to compensation arrangements
Enron’s board of directors approved.)
Second, “dark fiber” refers to a type of bandwidth Enron
traded as part of its broadband business.
In this business, Enron traded the right to transmit
data through various fiber-optic cables, more than 40 million
miles of which various Internet-related companies had
installed in the United States.
Only a small percentage of these cables were “lit”
– meaning they could transmit the light waves required to
carry Internet data; the vast majority of cables were still
awaiting upgrades and were “dark.”
The rights associated with those “dark” cables were
called “dark fiber.”
As one might expect, the rights to transmit over
“dark fiber” are very difficult to value.
Third, Enron sold “dark fiber” it apparently valued at
only $33 million for triple that value: $100 million in all
– $30 million in cash plus $70 million in a note receivable.
It appears that this sale was at an inflated price,
thereby enabling Enron to record a $67 million profit on that
trade. LJM2
apparently obtained cash from investors by issuing securities
and used some of these proceeds to repay the note receivable
issued to Enron.
What the sentence in footnote 16 does not make plain is that
the investor in LJM2 was persuaded to pay what appears to be
an inflated price, because Enron entered into a “make
whole” derivatives contract with LJM2 (of the same type it
used with Raptor). Essentially,
the investor was buying Enron’s debt.
The investor was willing to buy securities in LJM2,
because if the “dark fiber” declined in price – as it
almost certainly would, from its inflated value – Enron
would make the investor whole.
In these transactions, Enron retained the economic risk
associated with the “dark fiber.”
Yet as the value of “dark fiber” plunged during
2000, Enron nevertheless was able to record a gain on its
sale, and avoid recognizing any losses on assets held by LJM2,
which was an unconsolidated affiliate of Enron, just like
JEDI.
As if all of this were not complicated enough, Enron’s sale
of “dark fiber” to LJM2 also magically generated an
inflated price, which Enron then could use in valuing any
remaining “dark fiber” it held.
The third-party investor in LJM2 had, in a sense,
“validated” the value of the “dark fiber” at the
higher price, and Enron then arguably could use that inflated
price in valuing other “dark fiber” assets it held.
I do not have any direct knowledge of this, although
public reports and Sherron Watkins’s letter indicate that
this is precisely what happened.
For example, suppose Enron started with ten units of “dark
fiber,” worth $100, and sold one to a special purpose entity
for $20 – double its actual value – using the above
scheme. Now,
Enron had an argument that each of its remaining nine units of
“dark fiber” also were worth $20 each, for a total of
$180.
Enron then could revalue its remaining nine units of “dark
fiber” at a total of $180.
If the assets used in the transaction were difficult to
value – as “dark fiber” clearly was – Enron’s
inflated valuation might not generate much suspicion, at least
initially. But
ultimately the valuations would be indefensible, and Enron
would need to recognize the associated losses.
It is an open question for this Committee and others whether
this transaction was unique, or whether Enron engaged in
other, similar deals. It
seems likely that the “dark fiber” deal was not the only
one of its kind. There
are many sentences in footnote 16.
D.
The
“Gatekeepers”
These are but three examples of how Enron’s derivatives
dealings with outside parties resulted in material information
not being reflected in market prices.
There are others, many within JEDI alone.
I have attempted to summarize this information for the
Committee. Clearly
it is important that investigators question the Enron
employees who were directly involved in these transactions to
get a sense of whether my summaries are complete.
Moreover, a thorough inquiry into these dealings also should
include the major financial market “gatekeepers” involved
with Enron: accounting firms, banks, law firms, and credit
rating agencies. Employees
of these firms are likely to have knowledge of these
transactions. Moreover,
these firms have a responsibility to come forward with
information relevant to these transactions.
They benefit directly and indirectly from the existence
of U.S. securities regulation, which in many instances both
forces companies to use the services of gatekeepers and
protects gatekeepers from liability.
Recent cases against accounting firms – including Arthur
Andersen – are eroding that protection, but the other
gatekeepers remain well insulated.
Gatekeepers are kept honest – at least in theory –
by the threat of legal liability, which is virtually
non-existent for some gatekeepers.
The capital markets would be more efficient if
companies were not required by law to use particular
gatekeepers (which only gives those firms market power), and
if gatekeepers were subject to a credible threat of liability
for their involvement in fraudulent transactions.
Congress should consider expanding the scope of
securities fraud liability by making it clear that these
gatekeepers will be liable for assisting companies in
transactions designed to distort the economic reality of
financial statements.
With respect to Enron, all of these gatekeepers have questions
to answer about the money they received, the quality of their
work, and the extent of their conflicts of interest.
It has been reported widely that Enron paid $52 million
in 2000 to its audit firm, Arthur Andersen, the majority of
which was for non-audit related consulting services, yet
Arthur Andersen failed to spot many of Enron’s losses.
It also seems likely that at least one of the other
“Big 5” accounting firms was involved at least one of
Enron’s special purpose entities.
Enron also paid several hundred million dollars in fees to
investment and commercial banks for work on various financial
aspects of its business, including fees for derivatives
transactions, and yet none of those firms pointed out to
investors any of the derivatives problems at Enron.
Instead, as late as October 2001 sixteen of seventeen
the securities analysts covering Enron rated it a “strong
buy” or “buy.”
Enron paid substantial fees to its outside law firm, which
previously had employed Enron’s general counsel, yet that
firm failed to correct or disclose the problems related to
derivatives and special purpose entities.
Other law firms also may have been involved in these
transactions; if so, they should be questioned, too.
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the three major credit
rating agencies – Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s, and
Fitch/IBCA – received substantial, but as yet undisclosed,
fees from Enron. Yet
just weeks prior to Enron’s bankruptcy filing – after most
of the negative news was out and Enron’s stock was trading
at just $3 per share – all three agencies still gave
investment grade ratings to Enron’s debt. The credit rating agencies in particular have benefited
greatly from a web of legal rules that essentially require
securities issuers to obtain ratings from them (and them
only), and at the same time protect those agencies from
outside competition and liability under the securities laws.
They are at least partially to blame for the Enron
mess.
An investment-grade credit rating was necessary to make
Enron’s special purpose entities work, and Enron lived on
the cusp of investment grade.
During 2001, it was rated just above the lowest
investment-grade rating by all three agencies: BBB+ by
Standard & Poor’s and Fitch IBCA, and Baa1 by Moody’s.
Just before Enron’s bankruptcy, all three rating
agencies lowered Enron’s rating two notches, to the lowest
investment grade rating.
Enron noted in its most recent annual report that its
“continued investment grade status is critical to the
success of its wholesale business as well as its ability to
maintain adequate liquidity.”
Many of Enron’s debt obligations were triggered by a
credit ratings downgrade; some of those obligations had been
scheduled to mature December 2001.
The importance of credit ratings at Enron and the
timing of Enron’s bankruptcy filing are not coincidences;
the credit rating agencies have some explaining to do.
Derivatives based on credit ratings – called
“credit derivatives” – are a booming business and they
raise serious systemic concerns.
The rating agencies seem to know this.
Even Moody’s appears worried, and recently asked
several securities firms for more detail about their dealings
in these instruments. It is particularly chilling that not even Moody’s – the
most sophisticated of the three credit rating agencies –
knows much about these derivatives deals.
III.
Derivatives “Inside” Enron
The derivatives problems at Enron went much deeper
than the use of special purpose entities with outside
investors. If
Enron had been making money in what it represented as its core
businesses, and had used derivatives simply to “dress up”
its financial statements, this Committee would not be meeting
here today. Even
after Enron restated its financial statements on November 8,
2001, it could have clarified its accounting treatment,
consolidated its debts, and assured the various analysts that
it was a viable entity. But
it could not. Why
not?
This question leads me to the second explanation of Enron’s
collapse: most of what Enron represented as its core
businesses were not making money.
Recall that Enron began as an energy firm.
Over time, Enron shifted its focus from the
bricks-and-mortar energy business to the trading of
derivatives. As
this shift occurred, it appears that some of its employees
began lying systematically about the profits and losses of
Enron’s derivatives trading operations. Simply put, Enron’s reported earnings from derivatives seem
to be more imagined than real.
Enron’s derivatives trading was profitable, but not
in the way an investor might expect based on the firm’s
financial statements. Instead,
some Enron employees seem to have misstated systematically
their profits and losses in order to make their trading
businesses appear less volatile than they were.
First, a caveat. During
the past few weeks, I have been gathering information about
Enron’s derivatives operations, and I have learned many
disturbing things. Obviously,
I cannot testify first hand to any of these matters.
I have never been on Enron’s trading floor, and I
have never been involved in Enron’s business.
I cannot offer fact testimony as to any of these
matters.
Nonetheless, I strongly believe the information I have
gathered is credible. It is from many sources, including written information,
e-mail correspondence, and telephone interviews.
Congressional investigators should be able to confirm
all of these facts. In
any event, even if only a fraction of the information in this
section of my testimony proves to be correct, it will be very
troubling indeed.
In a nutshell, it appears that some Enron employees
used dummy accounts and rigged valuation methodologies to
create false profit and loss entries for the derivatives Enron
traded. These
false entries were systematic and occurred over several years,
beginning as early as 1997.
They included not only the more esoteric financial
instruments Enron began trading recently – such as
fiber-optic bandwidth and weather derivatives – but also
Enron’s very profitable trading operations in natural gas
derivatives.
Enron derivatives traders faced intense pressure to
meet quarterly earnings targets imposed directly by management
and indirectly by securities analysts who covered Enron.
To ensure that Enron met these estimates, some traders
apparently hid losses and understated profits.
Traders apparently manipulated the reporting of their
“real” economic profits and losses in an attempt to fit
the “imagined” accounting profits and losses that drove
Enron management.
A.
Using
“Prudency” Reserves
Enron’s derivatives trading operations kept records
of the traders’ profits and losses.
For each trade, a trader would report either a profit
or a loss, typically in spreadsheet format. These profit and loss reports were designed to reflect
economic reality. Frequently,
they did not.
Instead of recording the entire profit for a trade in
one column, some traders reportedly split the profit from a
trade into two columns. The
first column reflected the portion of the actual profits the
trader intended to add to Enron’s current financial
statements. The
second column, ironically labeled the “prudency” reserve,
included the remainder.
To understand this concept of a “prudency” reserve,
suppose a derivatives trader earned a profit of $10 million.
Of that $10 million, the trader might record $9 million
as profit today, and enter $1 million into “prudency.”
An average deal would have “prudency” of up to $1
million, and all of the “prudency” entries might add up to
$10 to $15 million.
Enron’s “prudency” reserves did not depict
economic reality, nor could they have been intended to do so.
Instead, “prudency” was a slush fund that could be
used to smooth out profits and losses over time.
The portion of profits recorded as “prudency” could
be used to offset any future losses.
In essence, the traders were saving for a rainy day.
“Prudency” reserves would have been especially
effective for long-maturity derivatives contracts, because it
was more difficult to determine a precise valuation as of a
particular date for those contracts, and any “prudency”
cushion would have protected the traders from future losses
for several years going forward.
As luck would have it, some of the “prudency”
reserves turned out to be quite prudent.
In one quarter, some derivatives traders needed so much
accounting profit to meet their targets that they wiped out
all of their “prudency” accounts.
Saving for a rainy day is not necessarily a bad idea,
and it seems possible that derivatives traders at Enron did
not believe they were doing anything wrong. But “prudency” accounts are far from an accepted business
practice. A
trader who used a “prudency” account at a major Wall
Street firm would be seriously disciplined, or perhaps fired.
To the extent Enron was smoothing its income using
“prudency” entries, it was misstating the volatility and
current valuation of its trading businesses, and misleading
its investors. Indeed,
such fraudulent practices would have thwarted the very purpose
of Enron’s financial statements: to give investors an
accurate picture of a firm’s risks.
B.
Mismarking
Forward Curves
Not all of the misreporting of derivatives positions at
Enron was as brazen as “prudency.”
Another way derivatives frequently are used to misstate
profits and losses is by mismarking “forward curves.”
It appears that Enron traders did this, too.
A forward curve is a list of “forward rates” for a
range of maturities. In
simple terms, a forward rate is the rate at which a person can
buy something in the future.
For example, natural gas forward contracts trade on the
New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX).
A trader can commit to buy a particular type of natural
gas to be delivered in a few weeks, months, or even years.
The rate at which a trader can buy natural gas in one
year is the one-year forward rate.
The rate at which a trader can buy natural gas in ten
years is the ten-year forward rate.
The forward curve for a particular natural gas contract
is simply the list of forward rates for all maturities.
Forward curves are crucial to any derivatives trading
operation because they determine the value of a derivatives
contract today. Like
any firm involved in trading derivatives, Enron had risk
management and valuation systems that used forward curves to
generate profit and loss statements.
It appears that Enron traders selectively mismarked
their forward curves, typically in order to hide losses.
Traders are compensated based on their profits, so if a
trader can hide losses by mismarking forward curves, he or she
is likely to receive a larger bonus.
These losses apparently ranged in the tens of millions
of dollars for certain markets.
At times, a trader would manually input a forward curve
that was different from the market. For more complex deals, a trader would use a spreadsheet
model of the trade for valuation purposes, and tweak the
assumptions in the model to make a transaction appear more or
less valuable. Spreadsheet models are especially susceptible to mismarking.
Certain derivatives contracts were more susceptible to
mismarking than others. A
trader would be unlikely to mismark contracts that were
publicly traded – such as the natural gas contracts traded
on NYMEX – because quotations of the values of those
contracts are publicly available.
However, the NYMEX forward curve has a maturity of only
six years; accordingly, a trader would be more likely to
mismark a ten-year natural gas forward rate.
At Enron, forward curves apparently remained mismarked
for as long as three years.
In more esoteric areas, where markets were not as
liquid, traders apparently were even more aggressive.
One trader who already had recorded a substantial
profit for the year, and believed any additional profit would
not increase his bonus much, reportedly reduced his recorded
profits for one year, so he could push them forward into the
next year, which he wasn’t yet certain would be as
profitable. This
strategy would have resembled the “prudency” accounts
described earlier.
C.
Warning Signs
Why didn’t any of the “gatekeepers” tell
investors that Enron was so risky? There were numerous warning signs related to Enron’s
derivatives trading. Yet
the gatekeepers either failed utterly to spot those signs, or
spotted those signs and decided not to warn investors about
them. Either way,
the gatekeepers failed to do their job.
This was so even though there have been several recent
and high-profile cases involving internal misreporting of
derivatives.
Enron disclosed that it used “value at risk” (VAR)
methodologies that captured a 95 percent confidence interval
for a one-day holding period, and therefore did not disclose
worst-case scenarios for Enron’s trading operations. Enron said it relied on “the professional judgment of
experienced business and risk managers” to assess these
worst-case scenarios (which, apparently, Enron ultimately
encountered). Enron
reported only high and low month-end values for its trading,
and therefore had incentives to smooth its profits and losses
at month-end. Because
Enron did not report its maximum VAR during the year,
investors had no way of knowing just how much risk Enron was
taking.
Even the reported VAR figures are remarkable.
Enron reported VAR for what it called its “commodity
price” risk – including natural gas derivatives trading
– of $66 million, more than triple the 1999 value.
Enron reported VAR for its equity trading of $59
million, more than double the 1999 value.
A VAR of $66 million meant that Enron could expect
based on historical averages that on five percent of all
trading days (on average, twelve business days during the
year) its “commodity” derivatives trading operations alone
would gain or lose $66 million, a not trivial sum.
Moreover, because Enron’s derivatives frequently had
long maturities – maximum terms ranged from 6 to 29 years
– there often were not prices from liquid markets to use as
benchmarks. For
those long-dated derivatives, professional judgment was
especially important. For
a simple instrument, Enron might calculate the discounted
present value of cash flows using Enron’s borrowing rates.
But more complex instruments required more complex
methodologies. For
example, Enron completed over 5,000 weather derivatives deals,
with a notional value of more than $4.5 billion, and many of
those deals could not be valued without a healthy dose of
professional judgment. The
same was true of Enron’s trading of fiber-optic bandwidth.
And finally there was the following flashing red light
in Enron’s most recent annual report: “In 2000, the value
at risk model utilized for equity trading market risk was
refined to more closely correlate with the valuation
methodologies used for merchant activities.”
Enron’s financial statements do not describe these
refinements, and their effects, but given the failure of the
risk and valuation models even at a sophisticated hedge fund
such as Long-Term Capital Management – which employed
“rocket scientists” and Nobel laureates to design various
sophisticated computer models – there should have been
reason for concern when Enron spoke of “refining” its own
models.
It was Arthur Andersen’s responsibility not only to
audit Enron’s financial statements, but also to assess Enron
management’s internal controls on derivatives trading.
When Arthur Andersen signed Enron’s 2000 annual
report, it expressed approval in general terms of Enron’s
system of internal controls during 1998 through 2000.
Yet it does not appear that Arthur Andersen
systematically and independently verified Enron’s valuations
of certain complex trades, or even of its forward curves.
Arthur Andersen apparently examined day-to-day changes
in these values, as reported by traders, and checked to see if
each daily change was recorded accurately.
But this Committee – and others investigating Enron
– should inquire about whether Arthur Andersen did anything
more than sporadically check Enron’s forward curves.
To Arthur Andersen’s credit as an auditor, much of
the relevant risk information is contained in Enron’s
financial statements. What
is unclear is whether Arthur Andersen adequately considered
this information in opining that Enron management’s internal
controls were adequate. To
the extent Arthur Andersen alleges – as I understand many
accounting firms do – that their control opinion does not
cover all types of control failures and necessarily is based
on management’s “assertions,” it is worth noting that
the very information Arthur Andersen audited raised
substantial questions about potential control problems at
Enron. In other
words, Arthur Andersen has been hoisted by its own petard.
But Arthur Andersen was not alone in failing to heed
these warning signs. Securities analysts and credit rating agencies arguably
should have spotted them, too.
Why were so many of these firms giving Enron favorable
ratings, when publicly available information indicated that
there were reasons for worry?
Did these firms look the other way because they were
subject to conflicts of interest?
Individual investors rely on these institutions to
interpret the detailed footnote disclosures in Enron’s
reports, and those institutions have failed utterly.
The investigation into Arthur Andersen so far has
generated a great deal of detail about that firm’s approach
to auditing Enron, but the same questions should be asked of
the other gatekeepers, too.
Specifically, this Committee should ask for and closely
examine all of the analyst reports on Enron from the relevant
financial services firms and credit rating agencies.
Finally, to clarify this point, consider how much
Enron’s businesses had changed during its last years.
Consider the change in Enron’s assets.
Arthur Andersen’s most recent audit took place during
2000, when Enron’s derivatives-related assets increased from
$2.2 billion to $12 billion, and Enron’s derivatives-related
liabilities increased from $1.8 billion to $10.5 billion.
These numbers are staggering.
Most of this growth was due to increased trading
through EnronOnline. But
EnronOnline’s assets and revenues were qualitatively
different from Enron’s other derivatives trading. Whereas Enron’s derivatives operations included speculative
positions in various contracts, EnronOnline’s operations
simply matched buyers and sellers.
The “revenues” associated with EnronOnline arguably
do not belong in Enron’s financial statements.
In any event, the exponential increase in the volume of
trading through EnronOnline did not generate substantial
profits for Enron.
Enron’s aggressive additions to revenues meant that
it was the “seventh-largest U.S. company” in title only.
In reality, Enron was a much smaller operation, whose
primary money-making business – a substantial and
speculative derivatives trading operation – covered up poor
performance in Enron’s other, smaller businesses, including
EnronOnline. Enron’s
public disclosures show that during the past three years the
firm was not making money on its non-derivatives businesses.
Gross margins from these businesses were essentially
zero from 1998 through 2000.
To see this, consider the table below, which sets forth
Enron’s income statement separated into its non-derivatives
and derivatives businesses.
I put together this table based on the numbers in
Enron’s 2000 income statement, after learning from the
footnote 1, page 36, that the meaning of the “Other
revenues” entry on Enron’s income statement is – as far
as I can tell – essentially “Gain (loss) from
derivatives”:
Enron Corp. and Subsidiaries 2000 Consolidated Income
Statement (in millions)
|
|
2000
|
1999
|
1998
|
|
Non-derivatives
revenues
|
93,557
|
34,774
|
27,215
|
|
Non-derivatives
expenses
|
94,517
|
34,761
|
26,381
|
|
Non-derivatives
gross margin
|
(960)
|
13
|
834
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gain
(loss) from derivatives
|
7,232
|
5,338
|
4,045
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other
expenses
|
(4,319)
|
(4,549)
|
(3,501)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Operating
income
|
1,953
|
802
|
1,378
|
This
chart demonstrates four key facts.
First, the recent and dramatic increase in Enron’s
overall non-derivatives revenues – the statistic that
supposedly made Enron the seventh-largest U.S. company – was
offset by an increase in non-derivatives expenses.
The increase in revenues reflected in the first line of
the chart was substantially from EnronOnline, and did not help
Enron’s bottom line, because it included an increase in
expenses reflected in the second line of the chart.
Although Enron itself apparently was the counterparty
to all of the trades, EnronOnline simply matched buyers
(“revenue”) with sellers (“expenses”).
Indeed, as non-derivatives revenues more than tripled,
non-derivatives expenses increased even more.
Second, a related point: Enron’s non-derivatives
businesses were not performing well in 1998 and were
deteriorating through 2000.
The third row, “Non-derivatives gross margin,” is
the difference between non-derivatives revenues and
non-derivatives expenses.
The downward trajectory of Enron’s non-derivatives
gross margin shows, in a general sense, that Enron’s
non-derivatives businesses made some money in 1998, broke even
in 1999, and actually lost money in 2000.
Third, Enron’s positive reported operating income
(the last row) was due primarily to gains from derivatives
(the fourth row).
Enron – like many firms – shied from using the word
“derivatives” and substituted the euphemism “Price Risk
Management,” but as Enron makes plain in its public filings,
the two are the same.
Excluding the gains from derivatives, Enron would have
reported substantially negative operating income for all three
years.
Fourth, Enron’s gains from derivatives were very
substantial.
Enron gained more than $16 billion from these
activities in three years.
To place the numbers in perspective, these gains were
roughly comparable to the annual net revenue for all trading
activities (including stocks, bonds, and derivatives) at the
premier investment firm, Goldman Sachs & Co., during the
same periods, a time in which Goldman Sachs first issued
shares to the public.
The key difference between Enron and Goldman Sachs is
that Goldman Sachs seems to have been upfront with investors
about the volatility of its trading operations.
In contrast, Enron officials represented that it was
not a trading firm, and that derivatives were used for hedging
purposes.
As a result, Enron’s stock traded at much higher
multiples of earnings than more candid trading-oriented firms.
The size and scope of Enron’s derivatives trading
operations remain unclear.
Enron reported gains from derivatives of $7.2 billion
in 2000, and reported notional amounts of derivatives
contracts as of December 31, 2000, of only $21.6 billion.
Either Enron was generating 33 percent annual returns
from derivatives (indicating that the underlying contracts
were very risky), or Enron actually had large positions and
reduced the notional values of its outstanding derivatives
contracts at year-end for cosmetic purposes.
Neither conclusion appears in Enron’s financial
statements.
IV.
Conclusion
How did Enron lose so much money?
That question has dumbfounded investors and experts in
recent months.
But the basic answer is now apparent: Enron was a
derivatives trading firm; it made billions trading
derivatives, but it lost billions on virtually everything else
it did, including projects in fiber-optic bandwidth, retail
gas and power, water systems, and even technology stocks.
Enron used its expertise in derivatives to hide these
losses.
For most people, the fact that Enron had transformed
itself from an energy company into a derivatives trading firm
is a surprise.
Enron is to blame for much of this, of course.
The temptations associated with derivatives have proved
too great for many companies, and Enron is no exception.
The conflicts of interest among Enron’s officers have
been widely reported.
Nevertheless, it remains unclear how much top officials
knew about the various misdeeds at Enron.
They should and will be asked.
At least some officers must have been aware of how
deeply derivatives penetrated Enron’s businesses; Enron even
distributed thick multi-volume Derivatives Training Manuals to
new employees.
(The Committee should ask to see these manuals.)
Enron’s directors likely have some regrets.
Enron’s Audit Committee in particular failed to
uncover a range of external and internal financial gimmickry.
However, it remains unclear how much of the inner
workings at Enron were hidden from the outside directors; some
directors may very well have learned a great deal from recent
media accounts, or even perhaps from this testimony.
Enron’s general counsel, on the other hand, will have
some questions to answer.
But too much focus on Enron misses the mark.
As long as ownership of companies is separated from
their control – and in the U.S. securities market it almost
always will be – managers of companies will have incentives
to be aggressive in reporting financial data.
The securities laws recognize this fact of life, and
create and subsidize “gatekeeper” institutions to monitor
this conflict between managers and shareholders.
The collapse of Enron makes it plain that the key
gatekeeper institutions that support our system of market
capitalism have failed.
The institutions sharing the blame include auditors,
law firms, banks, securities analysts, independent directors,
and credit rating agencies.
All of the facts I have described in my testimony were
available to the gatekeepers.
I obtained this information in a matter of weeks by
sitting at a computer in my office in San Diego, and by
picking up a telephone.
The gatekeepers’ failure to discover this
information, and to communicate it effectively to investors,
is simply inexcusable.
The difficult question is what to do about the
gatekeepers.
They occupy a special place in securities regulation,
and receive great benefits as a result.
Employees at gatekeeper firms are among the most
highly-paid people in the world.
They have access to superior information and supposedly
have greater expertise than average investors at deciphering
that information.
Yet, with respect to Enron, the gatekeepers clearly did
not do their job.
One potential answer is to eliminate the legal
requirements that companies use particular gatekeepers
(especially credit rating agencies), while expanding the scope
of securities fraud liability and enforcement to make it clear
that all gatekeepers will be liable for assisting companies in
transactions designed to distort the economic reality of
financial statements.
A good starting point before considering such
legislation would be to call the key gatekeeper employees to
testify.
Congress also must decide whether, after ten years of
steady deregulation, the post-Enron derivatives markets should
remain exempt from the regulation that covers all other
investment contracts.
In my view, the answer is no.
A headline in Enron’s 2000 annual report states,
“In Volatile Markets, Everything Changes But Us.”
Sadly, Enron got it wrong.
In volatile markets, everything changes, and the laws
should change, too.
It is time for Congress to act to ensure that this
motto does not apply to U.S. financial market regulation. |