Enron Stakeholders

BA 215    Spring 2007
Enron Stakeholder Assignment

    Enron was a dream come true for a lot of people, but it was also a nightmare waiting to happen for many more.  I am going to examine the collapse of Enron from the management perspective.  The three examples of Enron behaving badly that I am going to study are the incidents in Valhalla, the electricity trading in California and the conflict of interest between Andy Fastow and his special purpose entities (SPE).  These are just a few cases that led to the failure of the "World's Leading Company."  
    In 1985 Houston Natural Gas merged with InterNorth, of Omaha, Neb., to form Enron and Ken Lay was named chief executive officer.  The company was basically a producer of natural gas and had control over enormous reserves throughout the oil belt.  The Valhalla trading scandal was the beginning of the end for Enron.  Enron acquired the Valhalla trading group through the merger.  Valhalla did not produce oil, but bought and sold oil futures.  It bought oil long if it thought the market would rise and short if it thought oil prices would fall (2).  In January 1987, a security officer at Apple Bank in New York alerted Enron auditors of a strange set of transactions by two of the company's oil traders: Louis Borget and Thomas Mastroeni.  The bank security man said that $100,000 transfers were coming from an Enron account at Standard Chartered Bank in Britain's Channel Islands.  Transactions from the Channel Islands were a red flag to bank security men because the islands are a source of secret offshore bank accounts and frequently the address of convenience for firms of suspicious character.  The transfe ...
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