5 601a Assignment 7 PDF
5 601a Assignment 7 PDF
5 601a Assignment 7 PDF
Group 5:
In April 2001 Enron disclosed it had owned $570 million by bankrupt California utility Pacific Gas & Electric
Co. While the top executives were likely aware of the debt and the illegal practices, the fraud was not
revealed to the public until October 2001 when Enron announced that the company was actually worth
$1.2 billion less than previously reported. This problem prompted an investigation by the Securities and
Exchange Commission1, which has revealed many levels of deception and illegal practices committed by
high-ranking Enron executives, investment banking partners, and the company’s accounting firm, Arthur
Anderson.
The Enron Scandal is considered to be one of the most notorious within American history. At the time of
Enron's collapse, it was the biggest corporate bankruptcy ever to hit the financial world. The Enron scandal
drew attention to accounting and corporate fraud, as its shareholders lost $74 billion in the four years
leading up to its bankruptcy, and its employees lost billions in pension benefits.
ENA's largest merchant asset was an oil and gas exploration company known as Mariner Energy
(Mariner), which Enron was required to book at "fair value" every quarter. During the fourth quarter of
2000, there was a shortfall of approximately $200 million in Enron's quarterly earnings objectives. Senior
Enron and ENA managers decided to increase artificially the value of the Mariner asset by approximately
$100 million in order to close half of this gap.
• Creates a new oversight board to regulate independent auditors of publicly traded companies –
a private sector entity operating under the oversight of the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
• Raises standards of auditor independence by prohibiting auditors from providing certain
consulting services to their audit clients and requiring preapproval by the client’s board of
directors for other non-audit services.
• Requires top corporate management and audit committees to assume more direct responsibility
for the accuracy of financial statements.
• Enhances disclosure requirements for certain transactions, such as stock sales by corporate
insiders, transactions with unconsolidated subsidiaries, and other significant events that may
require “real-time” disclosure.
• Establishes and/or increases criminal penalties for a variety of offenses related to securities
fraud, including misleading an auditor, mail and wire fraud, and destruction of records.
It is unethical but not illegal because creative accounting practices are used by the company without
violating the rules. Various creative accounting techniques are used by the companies to distort the true
and fair view of the financial position of the company resulting in serious corporate failure. The main
reason for creative accounting is the choice available with the companies to use any of the accounting
methods which are laid down in the system. The companies adopt different inventory pricing – FIFO
(first in first out), LIFO (last in first out), and average pricing method to take advantage of the different
market conditions. Even the methods of charging depreciation-WDM (written down method) and SLM
(Straight line method) gives different results of valuation of assets. The system itself authorizes the
companies to adopt any method without any accountability to the stakeholders.
Accounting scams are political and business scams which arise with the disclosure of misdeeds by
trusted executives of large public corporations. Such misdeeds typically involve complex methods for
misusing funds, overstating revenues, understating expenses, overstating the value of corporate assets
or underreporting the existence of liabilities, sometimes with the cooperation of officials in other
corporations or affiliates all the while violating the established accounting standards.
References:
• ifrs.org: issued-standards, list-of-standards
• iasplus.com: standards
• academia.edu: Enron Corporation A Case Study
• Investopedia
• indiainfoline.com