Top Financial News

01/29 15:27
U.S. Stocks Fall; Tyco, Williams Drop on Accounting Concerns
By Danielle Sessa


New York, Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks fell, driving the
Standard & Poor's to its biggest decline since September, as
investors unloaded shares of Tyco International Ltd. and Williams
Cos. on concern the companies may have misstated profits.

The declines reflect eroding confidence in corporate accounting
after bankrupt energy trader Enron Corp. hid debt from
shareholders. Tyco disclosed that it paid a director to help
arrange an acquisition, and Williams said it may have to write
off $2.15 billion from its telecommunications unit.

``Institutional investors are questioning whether they should be
long-term holders of any company that has accounting questions,''
said Diane Garnick, global investment strategist at State Street
Global Advisors, which manages $775 billion.

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Merrill Lynch Executives Invested in Enron Partnership Used to
Hide Debt

Top Financial News


01/29 12:18

Merrill Top Managers Invested in Enron Partnership (Update3)
By Mark Lake and Stephen Cohen


New York, Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Merrill Lynch & Co. executives
invested in a limited partnership Enron Corp. used to inflate
earnings and hide debt from shareholders, according to people
familiar with the situation.

Merrill invited executives, including some managing directors and
other senior officials, to invest after helping the Houston-
based energy trader raise $349 million for the partnership, known
as LJM2, from pension funds and other institutional investors.

The investments may come under congressional scrutiny. The House
Energy and Commerce Committee has subpoenaed Enron's partnership
records, including the identities of investors. Enron's
disclosure on Nov. 8 that Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow
made $30 million managing two partnerships, including LJM2,
hastened the company's collapse.

``It raises questions about conflicts of interest and how
objective Merrill could be about Enron,'' said Joel Seligman, the
dean of the Washington University law school in St. Louis.

In an internal e-mail, Merrill said that LJM2 was expected to
return more than 30 percent a year. That's triple the average
return on the Standard & Poor's 500 Index, the benchmark for U.S.
stocks, over the past 75 years. Members of the investment banking
executive committee were encouraged to invest by Daniel Bayly,
then head of the group, said one investor.

``The investment partnership was reviewed and deemed appropriate
by parties on all sides of the transaction,'' said Merrill
spokesman Joe Cohen. ``Consistent with common industry practice,
it was offered to qualified external as well as internal
investors, and this is not a conflict of interest.''

Bayly, who is now the chairman of investment banking, declined to
comment. Merrill's shares fell $1.50, or 2.8 percent, to $51.46,
outpacing today's 2.4 percent decline by the Bloomberg Wall
Street Index.

The investments by senior Merrill executives shows the
conflicting roles that may have made investment banks less
skeptical of Enron, said Seligman. At the same time that the firm
was doing business with the company, Merrill officials had a
vested interest in Enron's performance, he said.

Merrill's Role

LJM2 was one of dozens of partnerships Enron officials set up to
move as much as $3 billion in debt off the company's balance
sheet and by doing so make the company appear more profitable.
Enron also exaggerated profit by recording sales of assets to the
partnerships as gains. The company in November restated earnings
for the three full years between 1997 and 2000, reducing profit
by $586 million because of losses from the partnerships. It also
reduced its reported earnings for the first three quarters of
2001 by $1.2 billion.

Enron created LJM2 in October 1999 to hold or sell Enron assets,
including fiber-optic cable that it bought at a premium from
Enron in June 2000 and resold six months later to another
partnership controlled by Fastow.

The company sought to attract some pension funds by promising
outsized returns. Danny Bowers, chief investment officer for the
Houston Firefighters Relief and Retirement Fund, which manages
about $1.7 billion, said Fastow indicated an investor could
expect to double their money.

Arranged Business

Enron chose Merrill to raise the money for LJM2 in part because
the firm arranged bond sales for Enron, the people said.
According to Bloomberg data, Merrill arranged more than one third
of the 29 bonds Enron has outstanding. The firm also has one of
the biggest private equity operations on Wall Street. Kevin
Albert, head of that business, didn't return calls for comment.

Merrill, the largest securities firm by capital, rounded up
investors for LJM2 by touting Fastow's participation, according
to a 42-page presentation sent to pension funds. ``A. Fastow's
dual role creates advantages for the fund and Enron,'' the
prospectus said, adding that Fastow had invested $2 million of
his own money in the venture, giving him an interest in helping
it succeed.

The partnership attracted investors, including American
International Group Inc., Citigroup Inc. units Citicorp and
Travelers Insurance Co., Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and
General Electric Co. unit GE Capital Services, among other firms.

Pension Funds Skeptical

Some pension fund managers declined to invest because they saw a
conflict. David L. Long, who manages $1.3 billion on behalf of
20,000 members of the Houston Municipal Employees Pension System,
said he declined to invest in LJM2 after Merrill salesman Mark
Murphy arranged a meeting for him with Enron about the
partnership.

``We had a lot of discussion about potential conflicts of
interest,'' said Long, who, along with the pension fund's chief
investment officer, investment manager and a consultant, met
Fastow in his office at Enron headquarters. ``You had the CFO of
Enron who's an employee of Enron acting as general partner of a
partnership which for the most part could be construed to be
adversarial to Enron.''

Lawmakers such as Representative Billy Tauzin, a Louisiana
Republican who chairs the House Energy and Commerce Committee,
have demanded Enron release the names of the investors in its
partnerships. Congress is probing for any inappropriate business
relationships investors had with the company.

Perk for Executives

Many securities firms allow senior executives to invest in
venture capital funds set up for clients as a perk. The former
Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Inc., now part of Credit Suisse
First Boston, was among the firms on Wall Street that extended
the opportunity to many of its managing directors.

LJM2 was one of only a handful of private placements Merrill has
offered its employees. One previous example was Merrill's sale of
$22 million of its investment in failed hedge fund Long Term
Capital Management LP to its own executives, including Chairman
David Komansky. Merrill helped Long Term Capital collect about
half its initial capital when it was established in 1994.

In March 2000, Merrill offered stakes in LJM2 to some of its
senior managing directors and top executives. One former Merrill
managing director who invested said the prospectus didn't provide
details of what the partnership would own.

Cash Distributions

Since it was created, the partnership has made three cash payouts
to its investors, including one in 2000 and two last year, the
people said. The partnership produced returns of almost 50
percent for the first year, according to one investor.

After Enron restated more than four years of earnings in early
November, investors in LJM2 received a request for additional
capital. Merrill complained and the executives weren't required
to invest more, people familiar with the situation said.

After Enron filed for bankruptcy protection on Dec. 2, the
biggest such filing ever, Merrill set up an internal committee to
oversee requests for information from employees who invested, one
of the people said.

Merrill Lynch is a passive, minority investor in Bloomberg LP,
the parent of Bloomberg News.



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