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The Financial Failures Of Enron

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An American energy company based in Houston, Texas in 1985, was the world’s leading electricity, natural gas, communications and paper companies before it bankrupted in 2001. Its annual revenues rose from 9 billion dollars to 100 billion dollars. At the end of 2001 Enron’s stock price dropped from $90 to $1 per share, which caused shareholders lose $11 billion and finally resulted in $586 million in losses. It was one out of the five largest audit and accountancy partnerships in the world which undoubtedly was the biggest audit failure. It had taken Enron 16 years to go from about 10 billion assets to go to 65 billion of assets. It took them 24 days to go bankrupt. They manipulated with numbers and one tool for that was so called mark-to-market accounting. It allowed Enron to book potential future profits on …show more content…

The company assisted Enron in cooking its books by pretending to purchase an existing Enron asset when it was involved in a loan in fact. Merrill Lynch participated in the scheme to defraud purchasers of Enron securities and helped company to raise billions of dollars from investing public. In addition, Merrill Lynch was encompassed in structuring, creating and helping to finance of Enron fraud- the LJM2 partnership. They created “unusually attractive investment opportunity”, as Fastow had access to Enron’s information and he would do his best in order to have achieved to superior returns. Merrill Lynch was obtaining millions of dollars from Enron’s publicly traded debt securities. So if Enron had had bad reputation, Merrill Lynch would have made large losses as well, thus they wanted to help Enron to keep financial conditions look good. Merrill Lynch was willing to participate in ongoing fraudulent fiction because such participation would provide huge profits. Meanwhile Enron was receiving money from investors, Merrill Lynch was receiving huge fees for

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