Acquired - Enron
Episode Date: November 29, 2022The FTX fraud has dominated headlines now for weeks, during which we’ve debated if and how Acquired could uniquely add to the conversation. Then we realized there was an angle so perfect th...at we had to drop everything and enter Acquired research overdrive: Enron. Travel back with us to the granddaddy fraud of them all, 2001’s then-largest bankruptcy in US history and the impetus for the famous Sarbanes-Oxley Act. So much of Enron’s history parallels FTX that the uncanniness is almost unbelievable — right down to the same CEO running the two bankruptcies. Sit back and enjoy this crazy tale of villainy, greed, and the nature of humans and money. Maybe just don’t take notes on this one… Sponsors:ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagentsHuntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntressVanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvantaMore Acquired!:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!Links:Book Andy Fastow as a speaker for your next corporate event! 🤔Episode sourcesCarve outs!:Enron: The MusicalAndorBrooks Addiction WalkersHoka SlidesJCal on the Tim Ferriss ShowNote: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Obviously, the context is we're doing this episode because of FTX.
Right. It's a related party transaction, one could say.
It's like LJM.
It's like, you know, the Raptors.
You know what LJM stands for, right?
It's his kids and his wife, right?
What a psychopath.
Can't possibly be fraud if it's named after my family.
I feel like this story is like American Psycho in Houston.
Yes. Oh my God, yes.
Who got the truth?
Is it you? Is it you? Is it you? Who got the truth now? go in Houston. Yes. Oh my God, yes. Welcome to Season 11, Episode 7 of Acquired, the podcast about great technology companies.
Well, sometimes not so great companies and the stories and playbooks behind them.
Not so great companies and the stories and cooked books behind them.
Oh, there you go.
That's a dad joke.
That is a dad joke.
I am Ben Gilbert, and I'm the co-founder and managing director of Seattle-based Pioneer Square Labs and our venture fund, PSL Ventures. And I'm David Rosenthal, and I'm an angel investor
based in San Francisco. And we are your hosts. Well, listeners, it brings me no joy to do this
episode, but it seems all too appropriate in this moment in 2022. Today, we tell the story of Enron. It was the seventh biggest company in
America by market cap. It was heralded as the pioneer of a new business model during a new
technology era. Executives had endorsements, or at least friendships and public appearances with
multiple U.S. presidents. It had the Houston Astros baseball stadium, Enron Field, bearing its name. It was
even named Fortune Magazine's most innovative company six years in a row. Including in 2001,
the year it went bankrupt. Unbelievable. Less than a year after its stock hit an all-time high,
Enron filed for the largest bankruptcy in American history to that point. This story is every bit as
crazy as the FTX story that we are all watching play out in real time. The parallels are totally
uncanny. A financial trading company that got over leveraged, thought they could do no wrong,
and got tangled up in a web of self-dealing to try and paper over their problems. Individuals
profited richly while shareholders
were none the wiser. The biggest difference really is that somehow Enron managed to do it all as a
public company in plain daylight the entire time and with much bigger dollar amounts.
We have a big thank you to say here. The idea for this episode came from our good friend and
past acquired guest, Andrew Marks. I was in New York on the way back from Lisbon,
and I had breakfast with Andrew,
and we were talking about FTX, of course, and everything going on.
And I was like, how can Acquired add to the conversation right now about FTX?
And he was like, I've got a good idea.
You guys should do Enron.
And I was like, boom, that is what Acquired can add to this conversation.
Well, on the FTX note, suffice to say, we will definitely be appending a new intro to that
episode. Indeed. Okay, listeners, now is a great time to tell you about longtime friend of the show
ServiceNow. Yes, as you know, ServiceNow is the AI platform for business
transformation. And they have some new news to share. ServiceNow is introducing AI agents. So
only the ServiceNow platform puts AI agents to work across every corner of your business.
Yep. And as you know, from listening to us all year, ServiceNow is pretty remarkable about
embracing the latest AI developments and building
them into products for their customers. AI agents are the next phase of this.
So what are AI agents? AI agents can think, learn, solve problems, and make decisions
autonomously. They work on behalf of your teams, elevating their productivity and potential.
And while you get incredible productivity enhancements, you also get to
stay in full control. Yep. With ServiceNow, AI agents proactively solve challenges from IT to
HR, customer service, software development, you name it. These agents collaborate, they learn from
each other, and they continuously improve, handling the busy work across your business
so that your teams can actually focus on what truly matters.
Ultimately, ServiceNow and agentic AI is the way to deploy AI across every corner of your enterprise. They boost productivity for employees, enrich customer experiences,
and make work better for everyone. Yep. So learn how you can put AI agents to work for your people
by clicking the link in the show notes or going to servicenow.com
slash AI dash agents. After this episode, join the Slack. 13,000 smart, curious, thoughtful,
well-researched people are in there and we'll be discussing this episode. Without further ado,
David, take us in. Listeners, this is not investment advice. David and I may hold
investments in the companies we discuss, although I don't think you can invest in any of these companies anymore.
Oh, I've got a fun little thing that I'll bring up right at the end of the episode about
investing in Enron that blew my mind when I learned this.
All right, all right. The show is for informational and entertainment purposes only.
David, over to you.
I feel like we also need a disclaimer that this is not accounting advice.
This is not accounting advice. This is not accounting advice. This is going to be fun because this is such history now, Enron, and there are many
really good books out there. So you read The Smartest Guys in the Room, right?
By Bethany McLean, yep.
And I read Conspiracy of Fools by Kurt Eichenwald, both of which I think are really
good. Conspiracy of Fools is great. It is a very, very well
researched history of Enron. And I thought a good place to start is right at the end of the prologue
of Conspiracy of Fools. Kurt Eichenwald writes this, and I just thought it was so perfect to
frame the Enron story and the FTX story today. He says, this then is more than the tale of one company's fall from
grace. It is at its base, the story of a wrenching period of economic and political tumult as
revealed through a single corporate scandal. It is a portrait of an America in upheaval at the
turn of the 21st century, a country torn between its worship of fast money and its zeal
for truth, between greed and high-mindedness, between Wall Street and Main Street. Ultimately,
it is the story of the untold damage wreaked by a nation's folly, a folly that in time we are all
but certain to see again. It's so literary. My God, those words. After trying to consume an insane amount of Enron
stuff over the last couple of weeks, the thing that occurs to me is this is something that can
only occur to this height in a bull market, where there's so much capital saturating so
many opportunities that people are willing to go way out on the risk curve looking for returns,
where there's so much FOMO playing into it that they sort of
have to pile into these low disclosure, super risky type of assets because everything else is
already at all-time highs and crazy multiples. And of course, it's the people's fault driving
the car that gets us here, but the environment around the car on the road is definitely
facilitating it.
Well, the investor community, as we saw happen over the last couple years here, just loses all incentive and desire to ask questions.
Yeah.
That is what happened 20 plus years ago. So how did we get there then?
And where did Enron come from? Where did Enron come from? We start in the
1970s in the United States, where a series, for those of you who know your American and indeed
world history, a series of oil crises and energy crises shock the nation and the world. First, in 1973, when OPEC, the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries, starts an oil embargo on the U.S. and other Western nations, and the price of
energy triples. Think about this. We're talking about the impact of the Russia-Ukraine war on prices in Europe. This was way worse. The
consequences of that were that the stock market crashed immediately. The economy entered a huge
recession. I mean, this was the end. This was the slamming of the door on the post-World War II
American economic growth miracle. This killed it. And when we've talked about this on the show a few times, the 1970s were brutal. We talk about interest rates going so high. It was because of this,
this first oil shock in 1973 and the second in 1979. Unemployment hits 10%. CPI and inflation
is above 5% for pretty much the entire decade. It hits a high of 12.4% in 1980.
And then famously, when Paul Volcker takes over as chairman of the Fed in 1979.
Brings the hammer down.
He brings the hammer down. I didn't realize how high this was. He raised the Fed funds rate.
That was at zero a year ago.
That was at zero a year ago, and that everybody's freaking out because it's at at what, like three and a half now or something like that. People think it might
go to four or five. That's crazy and that's tanking the economy. Do you know how high Volcker
raised it in the early 1980s? 10%? Above 19%. Whoa, I assume it had to be because I had always
heard that mortgages hit 18. So I always assumed that the mortgages had to be higher than the Fed funds rate. Yeah, I don't think it was above 19%
for long. But when it was, I mean, that's like the base lowest interest rate possible. So mortgages
must have been in the 20s at that point in time. Wow, crazy. My God. And that finally did break
the back of inflation. But the cost was immense. Doing this research really helped me understand more about the 80s. You know, in the go-go rates from the Volcker era would have led to
unbelievably low multiples on any asset you could buy. So of course, you've got tons of room to run
on investing at bargain basement prices for things that are going to go up.
Yep. Now, what was it that precipitated all this? Like I said, it was the energy crises,
oil shocks and the energy shocks. So starting in the mid-70s, and it takes really 15, 20 years for all this legislation to
wind through the government, the US government starts deregulating the energy markets in the US.
So if you go back to our episodes on Rockefeller and Standard Oil, the initial energy markets in
the US were monopolies. It was Standard Oil, right? energy markets in the U.S. were monopolies. It was Standard Oil,
right? And then when the government brought the hammer down on Standard Oil and the energy
monopolies, everything got regulated. And utilities, energy producers, all became regulated
government entities where prices of energy were set by the government.
And when you say regulated, there's different flavors of this. There's something where the government could actually own the utility and you pay the
government for the services. But there's also sort of a middle ground where something is so
important to the public that price controls are put into place or the free market is not allowed
to reign free. The government would do something like grant an exclusive monopoly to a certain
company and say, but the prices have to be here, or but you can't make that much margin on it.
You know, this makes sense, especially in the post-World War II American economy and way of life.
Power is critically important. Electricity, gasoline for homes, for businesses, for
commuting, for factories. All this stuff
takes power. You want stability and low prices. But then after the 70s, of course, this all gets
shook up. So in 1978, Jimmy Carter signs the National Energy Act, which starts to open back up
parts of the energy economy in the US to free market competition. And the first big area
of the energy industry that deregulates is the natural gas industry. So enter one Kenneth Lee
Lay. Lay, like our first protagonist of this season, Sam Walton. Lay was born in rural Missouri in 1942 after
Walton. His father was a Baptist preacher who ran a general store out in the Missouri countryside.
That ended up failing, and Lay grew up very, very poor, but his family believed in education. And
when his older sister graduated high school, his family wanted her to go to college. So they moved the whole family to Columbia, Missouri.
Wow. It's like literally the same story. That's crazy.
Literally, it's the same story. So that she could live at home, which was the only way they could
afford for her to attend to go to the University of Missouri at Columbia. Very, very lovely place,
which we have now been to multiple times for a capital camp.
So she goes to the University of Missouri. Ken would follow in her footsteps, also go to the
University of Missouri, where he would discover a lifelong passion for economics. He's a star
student in the economics department. He graduates. He goes on to work in the oil industry after he graduates
on the nights and weekends while he's working in the industry. He completes a PhD in economics.
And then one day he gets a call in the mid-1970s from his old advisor from Missouri, his old
professor, who just got nominated to the Federal Power Commission, right as all of this deregulation is starting to percolate its way through the government.
And so he calls up Lay and says, come join me here in DC and help me work through all this with the
government and the industry. So Lay ends up serving as the Deputy Undersecretary of Energy
in the Department of the Interior, Right as these oil shocks are happening and
deregulation is starting to be talked about, after a few years, he goes back into industry
at Florida Gas, a pipeline company in Florida, as the president and number two operator within
the company. So far in this guy's career, he sounds like the real deal.
He totally is. PhD, economist, civil servant, working in the government, getting DC exposure,
going into industry to actually get some operating experience.
Grew up in a hard era and sort of like had to fight his way through adversity.
Yep. He's never deployed for combat, but during Vietnam, he ends up going into the Navy.
He becomes like a naval intelligence
officer. By all outward appearances, he seems like a real good guy at this point in time. He
marries his college sweetheart, you know, true American story. So late 70s, early 80s, he's the
number two executive at this natural gas pipeline company in Florida. And in 1982, his former boss had moved
over to the big leagues in the energy industry. He'd gone to a company called Transco Energy,
based in Houston, Texas, which is...
Silicon Valley of the oil and gas sector. The Silicon Valley of the oil and gas
sector, the New York City to the financial industry of the oil and gas sector. Everything.
If you want to be in energy in America, you want to be in Texas, either in Dallas or Houston,
but I think at this point in time, Houston, probably Houston. Yep. So Lay is now in the big time. And as is fitting for now being in the big
time of the era, he leaves his wife behind in Florida and moves to Houston with his new wife,
who was his secretary at Florida Gas. Unfortunately, classic for this story.
Classic. This is not the last time we're going to hear something to this effect in people's
personal lives in the Enron story. So right as he arrives in Houston at Transco, two things are
happening. One, as I've been talking about all along here, deregulation is finally percolating
through to industry. Carter signed the Energy Act. It's in full swing. But two, surprisingly
here in 1982, energy prices fall for the first time in a decade. So as a result, right after
Lay shows up, Transco runs into a problem. It's contracted to buy a whole bunch of oil and gas
assets from various producers, various drillers around Texas and
around the country. And those contracts have Transco buying the assets at an ever-increasing
price because the prices of oil and gas have only been going up for the last decade.
But market prices have just fallen. So they're really kind of in the lurch here. People think
that Transco might go under. Lay, remember, he's a PhD economist,
and he's really quite brilliant. He comes up with an idea based on all of the economic theory that
he knows. He's like, what if we set up a trading market for this oil and gas that we're contracted
to buy, and especially in natural gas, which is now deregulated enough that I think we can do this.
And rather than us as the pipeline company buying all of this gas from the producers,
we'll just operate the pipelines in the middle and we'll make this market. And we'll let the
end consumers of the gas, the factories, the utilities, consumers aren't buying this directly, but the utility companies are,
we'll let them, through us, trade with the producers and we can create a spot market for energy. This becomes a huge success. This is like a massive, massive innovation.
And so Transco is doing this.
Transco is doing this. So Lay, he becomes like a total industry legend.
He pioneers this.
So before Transco and Lay, the whole idea of any form of trading or financialization
of energy, of oil and gas, didn't really exist because it was all regulated by the
government before then.
Right.
Not to mention, securitization wasn't a trend even in finance yet.
Today, you can securitization wasn't a trend even in finance yet. Today,
you can securitize anything. We had, of course, in 2008, everyone became familiar with the term mortgage-backed securities. But securitization in the 80s and 90s became all the rage in finance
to basically get anything off your books. You could increase the velocity at which a financial
company could operate by packaging up risk and selling it to someone else so that you could
make new loans off your
books or something like that. And of course, this was going to come to energy at some point, but
it's important to remember that securitization is still a reasonably new concept, even on Wall
Street. Yep. So two things. One, this is not yet securitization of energy assets. This is simply just making a market for the first time between
producers and consumers of the energy where they can buy and sell on the spot market.
At a real-time appropriate price.
Real-time price. Today, I need energy. I'm going to look at the market that Transco is now making.
I am going to buy as a consumer of energy at today's market price.
Whereas in the past, it was all long-term contracts that the pipelines had entered into
with the producers and then the consumers of the energy would buy it from the pipelines.
I see.
Okay.
So we're like crawl, walk, run here.
Crawl, walk, run.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is crawling.
But as I said, this is Lay.
This is Lay's baby. Literally, this is the opening of the floodgates. Crawl Wogrun. He knew that the deregulation was now at the right point. It had trickled out into industry enough
that this is possible. So he really was the perfect person to do this.
So on the back of that, in June of 1984, Lay, remember he's number two at Transco. He gets
poached by another big Houston energy company, Houston Natural Gas, to come over as the CEO,
the number one. He's made it to the top. He's made his mark.
He is the big shot at this point in Houston. Yeah, they were a big publicly traded energy company
in Houston. Probably, I want to say like a billion, billion and a half market cap,
call it public company. So definitely a great promotion for him, a job to sort of move
up in the ranks by joining this other company. But it's not like he's sort of on top of the world
yet at this point. He's got bigger competitors that he is dealing with. He does for the moment.
So then the very next year in 1985, he gets a call from the CEO of one of the larger competitors, a company called Internorth,
which was not based in Houston, but rather based in Omaha, Nebraska. You know, a few companies
based in Omaha, Nebraska. Small head office based in Omaha. Exactly. Small head office.
Despite being based in Omaha, though, Internorth, at this point in time, no Berkshire Hathaway involvement, is the largest pipeline company in America. And they were relatively conservative, kind of old school. In many ways, as we'll see, sort of parochial Nebraska company, despite having the largest pipeline in the country. And they were being pursued by the corporate raider. It's so funny how everything
is coming together here in the acquired season. The famed 1980s corporate raider,
Erwin Jacobs. But not that Erwin Jacobs. I was going to say, I remember reading this and looking
it up and being like, okay, good. It's not our Qualcomm Erwin. I first heard about this other
bizarro Erwin Jacobs when doing the research for the Qualcomm episode because every time I type it into Google,
I would occasionally get hits
for some other famous business person
that clearly was not the hero Erwin Jacobs,
but the anti-hero Erwin Jacobs.
So 1980s corporate raider Erwin Jacobs
is pursuing InterNorth
and the CEO of InterNorth wants to merge with HNG
as almost like a kind of poison
pill to make the combined company too big for Jacobs or any other reader to pursue.
So they negotiate a deal. InterNorth ends up buying HNG for $2.3 billion, which was a 40%
premium to the stock price. Which is big. I mean, usually the floor of what a board will accept is something around 20%, but a 40% premium, they paid a pretty penny to go buy Ken Lay's HNG here.
It wasn't quite the case of Minnow swallowing the whale. They were closer in size than the
Cap Cities ABC deal, but definitely InterNorth was the bigger company, but it was clear that
Lay and the HNG guys were going to be running the show from then
on. Yeah, I think that Bethany McLean sort of puts it in this way where it's almost like Inner
North got hoodwinked, where they knew they were paying a lot, but they knew it was important to
get. But then once they started looking at the deal with a couple of months of retrospect,
they were like, wait a minute, we gave HNG a lot of board seats and their executives
are having a lot of influence on the combined company. And wait a minute, we just gave away
the company. Yes. And specifically, this culture clash manifests in the question of where the
headquarters for this new company is going to be. The old Internorth management team
and board members, they of course want to keep the company in Omaha. And all the board members
are sort of politically connected in Omaha. They're like, we don't want this company moving
to the big city of Houston, taking all these jobs out of Omaha. It's important that the company
stays here. And Lay, of course, he's very political. He's very diplomatic. He's sort of
willing to say the right things to appease the board, but he has no interest in moving to Omaha. He's in the big
city in Houston. He's a player in the industry. He's now a Texas oil man. He wants to stay in
Houston. Yeah. And to be super clear here, Inner North had a ridiculously valuable hard asset.
This is now quoting from Bethany's book, among its 20,000 miles of pipeline
was a genuine prize, Northern Natural, the major north-south line feeding gas from Texas into Iowa,
Minnesota, and much of the rest of the Midwest. So this is sort of the first example of someone
in Enron land getting the better part of an economic deal, even though on the other side of the deal, there's a real hard asset that has quantifiable value for end users, for customers.
Yeah.
Eventually, as we'll see, they give up on even caring about that.
Yes.
So, like we're saying, this culture clash between the two companies manifests itself in the headquarters location.
So what do they do?
They do what any management team and company would do when you're trying to justify your decision to the board.
They hire McKinsey and company.
I mean, you can't make this stuff up.
You totally can't make this up.
This becomes completely freaking key to the story.
Like, no headquarters study, no Enron. Because the desk on which this assignment
lands is a young, hotshot, superstar junior partner at McKinsey in the Houston office,
one Jeffrey Skilling, who had joined McKinsey after Harvard Business School, where he was a Baker
Scholar, top 5% of the class. And famously, I think he had quite the reputation there.
I think he was happy to broadcast this story. He got in because the dean of Harvard Business School
interviewed him on a trip to Houston. I think Skilling was working in Houston at the time he'd graduated from SMU. And the dean interviewed him and asked him if he was smart. And Skilling
replied to the dean, I'm effing smart. And he didn't say it in exactly those words.
It's a family-friendly podcast. You know, we're not Jeff Skilling.
Although we will actually say the words of some profanity that Skilling utters later because it is absolutely key to
the story. Skilling shows up in Omaha to present to the board his findings, which is that obviously
the company should be in Houston. Even all the political wrangling aside, it makes sense that
the largest pipeline company in the world at that point in time should be based in Houston,
not in Omaha. And we should be clear here, there's this interesting thing going on at the time with natural gas where it's sort of perceived as
the good guy. And you're already starting to see this American ire toward the dirty big oil and
coal and natural gas, which is, of course, a previously thought to be useless byproduct of
extracting crude oil. You know, you can make gasoline out of it. You can make all this great natural gas, which is, of course, a previously thought to be useless byproduct of extracting
crude oil. You know, you can make gasoline out of it. You can make all this great stuff out of crude
oil. And then there's this natural gas, which didn't have great use cases until lots of scientific
discoveries and reasons why we all use it to heat our homes now, or many people use it to heat their
homes. But it was viewed as this sort of like next great frontier of pseudo clean energy.
And so it was a place where a lot of people in the energy business wanted to be going.
Yes.
Oh, such a good point.
I'm glad you paused here and we should discuss a little bit.
Natural gas had lots of things going for it.
One was sort of the environmental, you know, cleaner than oil, you know, all that.
Two was that certainly it was the first part of the energy
industry to be deregulated enough that you could do interesting things with it. But three, I think
probably the biggest tailwind in its favor in America was, you know, you said oil had started
to develop this sort of dirty connotation. I think a lot of that was because of OPEC and the
oil embargoes. Like, here's this
foreign oil that America is dependent on. I mean, even to this day, like, you know, how much are
politicians campaigning on reduce our dependence on foreign oil, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
you know? Yeah, all goes back to the 1970s. Yeah. Yeah, it's interesting how natural gas was the
sort of electric power of its day in terms of perception.
It was the Tesla of the 1980s.
Not to mention, there's all these just phenomenal other knock-on effects to it.
You can pipeline it.
You move it all over the place.
You can store it really easily.
So you can store lots of energy in a super dense way in case you don't need it in one
place, but you do need it in another.
It has these great sort of natural properties that make it not only really useful for the end consumer, but as this deregulation is coming in,
it makes it a great asset to use in your free market enterprise.
Okay. So back to this fateful HNG Inner North board meeting in Omaha in, I think this is now 1985 or 1986. Skilling,
the Hotshot McKinsey consultant, is sitting there in the waiting room, getting ready to go present
to management and the board when the prior CEO, the number one member, Lay is number two after
the merger, walks out and informs Skilling that he's going to keep on going
because he has just been fired by the board and Lay has engineered the coup that Lay is
now the CEO of the company.
So they don't really have much time for the headquarters discussion in this board meeting.
And what time they do have, the board is like, no, obviously we're keeping it in Omaha.
And Lay's the consummate politician.
He knows better than to press his luck.
He just got what he wanted. He's not going to fight with his new board at this board
meeting. To the very end for Ken Lay, I don't think he ever said anything in a public or pseudo
public context that was confrontational or pissed anybody off. To the very bitter end. So the
headquarters move does not happen at that meeting. It does happen shortly
thereafter, but this is where Skilling and Lay meet for the first time. And Lay comes out in his
very, you know, sort of politician manner after the board meeting is over. He apologizes to Skilling
for all the drama. He says, you know, look, I've read your work on the study. You really did an
excellent, excellent job. Like I would love to keep the relationship going with you and McKinsey.
We're going to have a lot of work to do at this combined company. I want you to be our McKinsey
partner back in Houston. Who's going to lead a whole bunch of strategic initiatives for us.
Yes. So it begins.
And so it begins. So Lay's now settled in. He's in charge, he's the chairman, he's the CEO, and he decides that he wants to get a new name for this company, you know, HNG InterNorth. It sounds too old and, you know, it's all these like completely meaningless prefixes
and suffixes like co and corp and inter and it's like an office space intertech. They're all named
something like that. Yes. Well, maybe this is the beginning of the modern era of that because they
go and they hire very expensive naming and branding consultants. The logo would actually come a little later, but including a few years later, Paul Rand would design the Enron logo. This would be the last
logo that the legendary Paul Rand designed before he died. He, of course, designed the IBM logo,
the Next logo, the UPS logo, maybe. And he very much has his style. You think the IBM logo,
or if you know the next logo, Steve Jobs is next, the Enron logo. They're all kind of in the same
style. ABC, Yale Press, Westinghouse. Oh, Westinghouse. My grandfather worked for Westinghouse.
Really? Yeah. Legendary. Enron would be the last logo he designed before he died. Oof, what a legacy.
So the naming consultants, separate from Paul, they come up with a brilliant new idea for the
company. They want to name it Enteron. Almost, almost.
Lay loves it. The board loves it. Lay loves it. Everybody's so excited, they announce the name. And the name comes from, it's a portmanteau, N-E-N for energy, T-E-R as a nod to internorth, get that legacy back in there,
and then on at the end because it sounds cool and modern. Enteron. So they announce it. They
didn't check though in the dictionary because enteron is actually a medical term.
It is a word.
It is a medical term.
It comes from a Greek word. And it means the intestinal digestive tract of a living creature and is particularly used for embryos.
So, like, the digestive tract of embryos is an enteron.
So, they kind of get pilloried in the press for this. Lay, he's so concerned about
appearances. He goes nuts. Lay never loses his cool, as we'll see throughout this story. He
loses his cool here. It goes completely ballistic. Yelling at the naming consultants, everybody
demands that they do another study, change it. And so they come back and they're like, what if we just get rid of the ter and we shorten it to Enron? Which Lay probably loves because
he's like, yeah, I hate those guys. Those are the old guys. Get rid of them. So he ends up getting
exactly what he wants. Headquarters moves to Houston. He's the CEO and chairman. Enron,
future-looking. It's his baby. It's a refounding, you know, new story,
new era for the energy industry. Yep. So that's sort of the end of chapter one.
You get this merger. They're real pipeline companies. They've got hard assets. They have
sort of a new corporate culture with a new leader, and they're delivering real value to customers.
Yep. And they're running the proto-trading
playbook that Lay pioneered back in his early days. And pretty quickly after this,
they actually face their first trading scandal. Did you read about this?
I did. It's such a predecessor. It's such an obvious personality flaw of Ken Lay's to look
the other way. And it's amazing that it happened,
what, 10 years before the big scandal. So two traders at the New Enron, who are actually based
in New York, they start embezzling money from the company. They're filing fake trades, they're
filing fake tax returns, they're creating false bank accounts. They have a false bank account famously, I think, in the name of Mr.
M. Yass, which clearly this will give you a window into the sophomoric nature of traders
and trading cultures. Just write that out and figure it out for yourself.
So the company picks up on this. It comes to Lay's attention. And everybody recommends,
the company's auditors at Arthur Anderson recommended the board.
The premier accounting firm of the day.
Premier, big five accounting firm at the time.
They recommend that Lay and the company should fire these guys.
Obviously, they're stealing from the company.
They're falsifying trades.
And Lay's like, well, you know, these guys, it's really bad.
It's bad what they did.
We should censor them for sure.
You know, we should set up some controls,
make sure this doesn't happen again.
But they're really good traders.
You know, they've really made a lot of money for the firm.
I don't think we should fire them.
You know, that feels like a big step.
And everybody's like, uh, okay.
They were funneling money to their own bank accounts.
Yeah.
But Lee lets it slide, and he is immediately rewarded for his faith in them and his decision here.
Almost immediately, they do what any sophomoric people in a situation like that would do who just got away with one.
They go way risk on. So they go on tilt and they
rack up within the next few months, almost a billion dollars, one B, that's a B, a billion
dollars. This is in the late 80s of trading losses, which that would be enough to bring
down the whole firm at the get-go. Well, and you got to think the enterprise value of the
combined company, I don't have it in front of me,
but you had a, I don't know,
five-ish billion dollar company
by a two and a half-ish billion dollar company.
And so, you know, whole enterprise value of the firm
can't be more than $10 billion.
And these two bozos just racked up a billion dollars
in trading losses.
This time, Lei does fire them.
And fortunately for young Enron and for Lay, but unfortunately
for the rest of the world, this happens early enough in the quarter that the trading floor
is able to dig out enough of these losses that they don't have to report the whole billion-dollar
loss come earnings time and only end up reporting, I think, less than $100 million of losses.
So the company miraculously survives. So you would think that
Lay would learn his lesson here. But no, this is Kenneth Lay we're dealing with.
And let's for a moment say, why are there traders? That's sort of an interesting
thing that's happening here. I thought this was a pipeline company. I thought this was a logistics
company that moved natural gas from one place to another and charged customers for the services
associated with that. Well, the traders
originally are there to your point to sort of help match supply to demand. You know, it's not like
everybody just got a computer in front of them where they can automatically be buying the right
products to fit their needs at the right price at this moment in time. You sort of need to interface
with people and those people can quote spreads wherever they want.
They can say, I got a seller for this price, and you're the buyer, and I'm sort of sensing that you'll buy for that price.
Okay, I'll match make supply to demand.
I'll quote a spread where I think I can make the most possible money on this trade, and we'll go with that.
And so this is the beginning of them being both a logistics energy transportation company and also a financial organization of
sorts, a trading desk. Yes, a trading desk, a proto-financial institution for the energy
industry. Yep. So speaking of, back to Houston and the promised McKinsey strategic engagement, it's happening. Jeff Skilling is lead hotshot partner
to develop a strategic plan for this very thing, the new finance and trading operations of Enron.
And one day, Skilling has a absolutely brilliant idea, brilliant by his own estimation, and he proclaims it to everybody
how brilliant it is. What if Enron goes one step further from Lay's kind of original innovation of
creating a spot market for energy? And rather than just being sort of the facilitator of the market,
being the pipeline in the middle, what if Enron started
acting even more like an investment bank in this industry? And the phrase that he uses for this
idea is Enron becoming a, quote, bank for gas. And the idea is that they can go to oil and gas
producers, to drillers, and they can buy up a lot of the future production that's going to
come out of their wells, kind of almost like the old companies used to do. But rather than Enron
then being the customer for what's going to come out of those wells, they repackage everything here.
This is the securitization that you were talking about a minute ago, Ben, they repackage all of these future
energy commodities, they slice it and dice it, and then they resell it to buyers, to consumers of
energy on kind of whatever timeline and term length they wanted. So we've gone now the industry from
the pipelines, buy the assets from the producers, buy the energy commodities from the producers,
and then sell them to customers. Lay's innovation is like create a market
where you let the producers and the customers
trade directly today.
In real time spot markets where everyone is subject to,
I don't know what tomorrow's price is gonna be,
I'll quote it to you tomorrow.
So you have inherent risk
that tomorrow's price could be higher.
So sorry, but that is what it is.
Yep, so Skilling's innovation here is, let's turn this into a full-fledged kind of financial
derivatives market and let buyers and sellers write contracts and buy contracts for any amount
of this commodity in the future at a set price. So true futures contracts. And the most sort of early legitimate use case for this
is imagine you are a local utility who's trying to provide natural gas to your town. And, you know,
you've been using this great spot market that Enron stood up to figure out, you know, what's
the price going to be tomorrow? You're pretty worried about it skyrocketing in the event of
some unknown black swan event or something like that. So wouldn't it be nice, you're pretty worried about it skyrocketing in the event of some unknown
black swan event or something like that. So wouldn't it be nice if you could hedge your
exposure to that risk by also negotiating a futures contract where you say, well, let me
lock in a certain rate. And yeah, I know it's going to be more expensive than it is now,
but at least nothing bad can happen. And then I can sort of be predictable in the way that I'm
thinking about what my spend is going to be over the next three months. So that's like a super legitimate use case of one of these
futures contracts that they could trade using Enron. You can imagine all sorts of utility here.
Yep. So Enron does it. They pioneer this market that would come to be known, and I think it
assumes still a very, very large part of the energy market today called energy derivatives. Skilling and Enron,
invent it and pioneer it. And at this point, the energy is the underlying asset. The derivative
itself is not particularly interesting other than its own utility for if you are actually
buying or selling the underlying asset. That's like an important thing to note. Everyone will lose their heads later and get excited about the derivative on its own. They
don't care what it's a derivative of. It's a tradable thing that numbers go up, numbers go
down. It reminds me a lot of some of crypto over the last year. It's like trading Dogecoin.
Right. Does anybody even know what this coin is or is supposed to do? Does anybody care? No, but I can speculate on it. And so there is a very interesting, almost innocent,
early beginning of why you would offer energy derivatives that completely falls apart over time
as everyone loses their head. And Skilling's still outside, right, when he pitches this idea.
He's still at McKinsey at this point. Yes, for the moment. And so in this next thing, they realize this is a new concept they need to bring
to the market. How are they going to bootstrap up this new derivatives market? Well, they kind of
need the producers to get on board. They need to get the supply, the raw supply that they can then
financialize, securitize, turn into these derivatives. And the way that they can
really convince producers to want to do this is if they fund them. So just like an investment bank,
they now start going out and doing these development deals and co-development deals
with drillers saying, hey, we'll fund you. We will finance your exploration, your drilling.
And as part of financing that, Enron is going to lock
up the rights to then securitize the future production out of your assets. Which again,
on its own, not a malicious strategy. Think about our Qualcomm episode. Hey, Sony, will you spin up
a new venture that we'll co-invest in to make flip phones that use CDMA so we can prove to everyone
else in the market that CDMA is viable technology.
We'll invest in it.
You just have to provide these strategic assets.
You can own half of it, blah, blah, blah.
It is a common way to bootstrap an ecosystem
to use your dollars to incentivize other participants
to bring a thing into your ecosystem.
And honestly, if the story were to stop there,
this probably would be a great company. Bringing huge innovation to a commodity market. Yeah, probably this market should work this way. It should be financialized and securitized. Energy assets are commodities. Yep. Unfortunately, that is not where the story ends. Far, far, far from it. So 1990, now we're a couple years into the Lay-Enron era. And Lay and the
vice chairman of the company, a guy named Rich Kinder, who later would leave Enron before all
the dirt hits the fan and start Kinder Morgan. You can think of Rich Kinder for now as the hard
assets guy. He's the guy that really understands the intrinsic value of delivering hydrocarbons through a pipe to customers and trying to build a company that is just executing really well on doing that.
Yes.
So the two of them, they work on convincing Skilling.
They think this is a big idea and and come over and join Enron as the full-time CEO of this new
gas bank that they're going to call the Enron Finance Division. And a very telling move tells
you a lot about what you need to know about Jeff Skilling as a person. They're talking about this,
they're negotiating. He decides he wants to take them up on the offer. He's going to leave McKinsey.
He calls them up to do the final negotiations of the terms of his offer. He calls them up on the offer. He's going to leave McKenzie. He calls them up to do the final
negotiations of the terms of his offer. He calls them up from the hospital where he is with his
wife while his wife is in labor with their, I think, second child. That tells you where his
priorities lie. Obviously, that marriage does not last too much longer. I love that he's obviously there. Yeah, obviously. Obviously. So Skilling
comes in, he takes over Enron Finance, starts this new division. It is worth pointing out the
thing that he made a necessary condition in order for him to join and do this. Do you know what that
thing is? Oh, I don't. It was that Jeff Skilling insisted that in order to join Enron and start this new division,
Ken Lay and the board had to agree to use mark-to-market accounting.
I did not realize that Skilling was looking that far ahead and made it a condition of his joining.
This shows how unbelievably savvy he is. He sort of realized he couldn't build the business.
He is effing smart according. Yeah
Yeah
He could not build the business that he wanted to without doing this
He literally called it and this is in the smartest guys in the room a lay my body across the tracks issue
About joining the company. I wonder if he talked about it from the delivery room
Awful
All right. So what is marked market accounting accounting it's worth because we'll get into
this a bunch but let's understand it conceptually yeah it ends up taking a while for enron to be
able to implement this that we'll get into but go for it so normally if you're in the business
of delivering gas to customers who will pay for it you account for the cost that it takes to
physically move the gas when you deliver it at the time you're delivering it and the cash that
your customers pay you, that's your revenue. And you recognize that when they pay you. But imagine
you're in a different business like trading stocks. You probably should be accounting for
the market value of everything you buy and sell, whether or not you have actually sold it. Like if
you bought Tesla at $20 a share and it's now worth $200 a share, you should reflect that you have actually sold it. Like if you bought Tesla at $20 a share, and it's now worth $200
a share, you should reflect that you have a gain, albeit an unrealized one. This is mark-to-market
accounting. And famously, all VCs do this, right? You talk about marks, you know, of your portfolio.
Right. Company raise an up round from a third party who's setting a new price.
That is what the market is saying this asset is worth.
And you get to account for that value, even though you haven't actually received the cash.
You know, just because you haven't sold your Tesla shares, it doesn't mean that you don't
have an unrealized gain. Or just because the VC hasn't realized the liquidity event from that
company, it doesn't mean that the company is not worth more. So Skilling obviously really wanted
this mark-to-market treatment. And while you can
imagine that it's probably easy to abuse mark-to-market accounting rules, it is probably
okay if you can avoid the temptation. But it is worth pointing out that Enron, when they did adopt
this, became the very first non-financial company to use this method. Yeah. Well, oh boy, we're going to talk
quite a bit more about mark-to-market accounting in a minute, but let's just say the potential for
a litany of abuse is high, very, very high, especially for what is an operating company,
not actually a financial firm. Yeah. Mark-to-market accounting to me is the epitome of with great
power comes great responsibility because it really does open up this question of like,
okay, well, what is the market price and how do you discover the true market price of something?
When someone's not paying you for it and giving you the cash, doesn't it seem a little squishy
to say what the thing is actually worth? Oh, put a pin in that. We're going to come back to that. So Skilling, I guess, after this lay his body on the tracks
moment in the delivery room at the hospital, he comes in, he joins Enron running the new Enron
finance division where he's CEO of the division. He gets a big equity stake in the company tied
to the performance of his division. I think a lot as we go through this
story about incentives and the behavior that they drive. So he models this division just like
an investment bank. He starts building out big trading floors in the Enron office in Houston.
He wants to have this be just like Wall Street here in Houston, brings on traitor-type folks. Most famously,
he's a side character here, mostly because nobody could ever actually figure out from the outside
what this guy actually did at Enron. But this guy named Lou Pye, who already was at Enron,
but this guy... I can't even hear his name without chuckling.
Oh my God. If you've watched the the movie of the smartest guys in the room,
it's a really good movie,
the movie version of the book.
It's so mid 2000s.
Like they use all this weird B-roll footage.
So Lou, like I said,
nobody could ever actually figure out
from the outside what he does at Enron.
But one thing that he becomes really known for
is his love of strippers.
And not just conceptually, he would eventually leave his wife and marry a stripper.
Yes. In the movie, I think they literally say he was obsessed with strippers. He'd like bring
them to the office. He'd leave for hours at a time.
He would every single day after work, go to the strip club. He knew like all the
strip clubs around Houston.
So during the movie, they're showing all this B-roll footage. Like this is a documentary
about an accounting fraud. And all of a sudden out of nowhere, there's all this B-roll footage. Like this is a documentary about an accounting fraud.
And all of a sudden, out of nowhere, there's all this B-roll footage of strip clubs.
Don't watch this movie with your kids.
Yeah.
And like super explicit B-roll footage of strip clubs.
You're like, whoa, where did that come from?
It was super explicit.
And it's not like this was actually footage of Lou in the strip club.
It's B-roll footage of strip clubs.
Lou Pye. I think the thing that he did, just to clarify it a little bit, is he basically
herded the traders. Think about traders in the 80s. They hired these people who,
one of the quotes is, if I was on my way to the bathroom and someone said that I could double
my pay by stepping on someone's throat, I would
absolutely step on his throat. That's the type of people that they're hiring to make money both for
Enron and for themselves. And Lou Pye is sort of the cowboy who's sort of like hurting them all.
So Lou, the other reason we bring him up, I guess because of his obsession with strippers. You know,
Ben, you said he leaves his wife that he's been with for 20 years.
He runs off with a stripper.
Because of that, he gets divorced from his wife.
He ends up leaving Enron well before the fall.
And he sells his stock to finance the divorce for a quarter billion dollars.
He makes $250 million.
He sold his stock at the top, I don't think, with any notion of what was about to happen.
No, he had to finance the divorce.
Crazy.
So he ends up becoming the second largest landholder in Colorado.
He's still like a multi-hundred millionaire to this day.
Crazy.
Other than a few people who go on to build real value after this by creating real businesses,
he's the one who economically benefited the most of any of the Enron people.
Unbelievable.
And he stayed out of jail.
So the big hire that Skilling makes as he's setting up this division is one Andrew Fastow,
a former banker from Continental Illinois Bank, where he worked in Chicago and he was part of
the structured financing division at Continental Illinois.
Continental Illinois had the inglorious honor of becoming the largest bank failure in history until Washington Mutual during the financial crisis. This is the sort of cloth that Fastow
is cut from when Skilling is recruiting him to come in and run structured finance at Enron.
He talks with him, he hears about his experience, and he's like,
you, sir, are the man for the job. And you look at Andy Fastow and you hear him talk
and you kind of want to trust him. He's the picture of a polished, thoughtful finance executive
who's thought this through, who has all the I's dotted and the T's crossed. He's good looking. He's the picture of the successful
80s confident businessman, but with no slime on him. When you hear Skilling talk, you're like,
I don't know. I'm not sure this guy has my best interest at heart. The thing with Fastow is you
actually do think he has your best interest at heart. He's like the American psycho guy. He's
like a banker. Yes. He is a banker, except he just comes from the bank that was the largest bank failure in history.
So he comes in and Skilling sets him to work doing structured financing. The primary thing
that they're doing is they're packaging up these financing deals that Enron had started doing for
the producers, for the drillers. Remember, they're trying to kickstart the market, bootstrap supply
for this derivatives market. So they're doing all these financings for drillers out there, for oil producers. They don't really want those assets
on the Enron books. And so they devise this scheme that they become acquainted with through
Arthur Anderson, through the accountants and auditors, of using special purpose entities
to package up these investments that they're making in producers
and get them off of the Enron books. And it turns out, they learn through doing this,
that at the time, if you set up a separate legal entity from the company, a special purpose entity,
this is different than a special purpose vehicle that you know people use for investing in startups today is this a special purpose entity if you set this up as long as at least three percent
three one two three percent of the capital in that entity comes from outside investors
you can still have the company itself own 97 percent of the economics of that entity, and you can remove it from your consolidated
accounting books. You can just wipe it out of your accounting, say this is now owned and controlled
by an independent third-party entity, and the test for it being independent is that 3%, a minimum of 3% of the capital comes from outside
sources. We live in a system that enabled this fraud. I want to keep reiterating that over and
over and over again. Until Sarbanes-Oxley passed in 2002, because of this scandal and some other
scandals, but largely because of Enron, we just existed in a system where all of this scandal and some other scandals, but largely because of Enron,
we just existed in a system where all of this was exploitable and just waiting for someone who
did not have the scruples to just finally come in and exploit all these loopholes.
Totally. There were no lids on the cookie jars.
There were no lids.
No lids.
And you might ask, this doesn't seem like that big a deal.
Imagine these things are like hugely loss-making,
but you're trying to go tell equity investors,
people who own the Enron stock, how great your company is.
It would be great if all their losses weren't showing up
in your financial statements.
Enron doesn't care about the quality of the assets or projects
that it's investing in with these producers. It just wants to lock up the contracts for what someone would project the
future oil and gas that's going to come out of these wells. Enron doesn't actually care if they're
well run or they're going to make money or the valuations make sense. They just want to lock up
the deals. So they do a lot of really bad deals. Yep. Massive incentive misalignment. And you said
we weren't going to
get into market-to-market accounting yet, but I have to introduce. Okay, so I'm Enron. I make a
crap investment in your oil production project. And I say, I want you to exclusively trade the
financial derivatives around all the natural gas flowing out of your production facility through Enron.
And you say, okay. And I say, how much do you think is going to eventually flow out of that?
And you tell me a number and I say, well, if I take the most aggressive possible circumstance
for what the price of that could be over time and the amount of volume that that could produce over
time, and I take the most aggressive possible stance on the amount of interesting financial instruments
that I could make out of that. I think you and I can agree that this deal that we're signing is a
ludicrously valuable deal for me and Ron. The right to generate all this revenue from trading
the assets that come out of your production facility, let's write this down. Let's paper this. The discounted future cash flows of all of the money that I'm going to make
from your production facility, that's really big. What you're telling me, these numbers that you put
on paper that maybe I encouraged you to make them higher. Right. That's really great. I don't care
about my equity investment in your thing. We're going to put that off into a special purpose
entity. We're never going to talk about it again. I don't really care if that goes zero.
But hey, I use mark-to-market accounting. So because I just signed this deal where all of
the future cash flows of this thing are looking really good, I'm going to recognize that as
revenue today. And I know I'm not getting any cash today, but my income statement,
yep, you better bet that I am generating a ton of income from this deal that
we just signed. Okay, so there's a bunch of both story and explanation we got to talk about here.
So we've talked a bunch about mark-to-market accounting. Despite Skilling apparently laying
himself on the tracks about this being non-negotiable about coming in, it wasn't like
Enron could just say and Skilling could just say, oh, we're doing mark-to-market accounting. They
had to make the case to Arthur Anderson, to the auditors, that Anderson could get comfortable with them doing this.
Anderson says, like, I don't know.
This is really out there, like very borderline that you guys could use mark-to-market accounting as an operating oil and gas company.
I don't know that we feel comfortable with this unless the SEC signs off on it. And so Skilling is like, great, let's take this to the SEC. So Anderson takes it
to the SEC. The SEC rejects it. They come back to Skilling and they're like, as expected, the SEC
is like, this is crazy. You can't do this. Skilling's like, I want to go talk to the SEC.
And he's a ludicrously compelling character character there is an intellectual purity about him where he can create an argument that sounds really really
compelling this has worked for him many times in his life so he's like sure i'll just go explain
to the sec they'll get it and he spins this story that amazingly the sec somehow becomes convinced
that this is a good idea and they sign off on it.
I think this is really an interesting point in the story. This is the only instance
where you have someone who is complicit in allowing Enron to run the playbook that they did
who doesn't have a conflict of interest. Anderson Tax was getting paid tons of fees. The lawyers who signed off on
lots of stuff over the years were getting paid tons of fees. All the employees had all this
stock. They were incentivized for it to go up. Yeah, this is the one really puzzling one.
This is one where the person whose job it is at the SEC to approve this or not approve it,
they don't have a vested interest. Here's probably also a good point to bring up the Arthur Anderson conflict.
It's not just that Enron is a big audit client for them.
At this point in time, pre-Sarbanes-Oxley and pre-the fall of Arthur Anderson,
all the accounting firms had attached consulting arms under the same roof.
So Anderson had Anderson Consulting, which would go on to become Accenture
after the demise of Anderson.
This is nuts. I don't think I'd really grasp this.
The conflict here is immense.
This whole thing took down Arthur Anderson.
And what they did for the consulting arm was they rebranded it Accenture and spun it out into its own thing.
And at this point in time, all the senior partners at the firm, like it's one in the same.
They're all making money from these engagements.
Enron became Anderson's biggest client in the world.
They were making $50 million a year from Enron, half of which was audit and tax fees and half
of which was consulting fees.
At any point in time, Enron could just maybe be hard for them to switch their auditors,
but they could switch their consultants at the drop of a hat. There were huge incentives for Anderson to let them get away with
what they wanted to keep the client happy. It was their biggest client in the world.
There were no lids in the cookie jars.
Okay. So miraculously for the evil guys at Enron, this gets through the SEC. Now,
we've explained a little bit thus far about how good mark-to-market
accounting can be for Enron. It's so much better than that. Better. Better for running a pump and
dump. This is where the whole thing comes together in just like an unbelievable way.
The parallels to crypto, they're crazy. Once they implement mark-to-market accounting,
Ben, you explained a little bit the deals there a minute ago. You do a deal with a producer and you say, hey, whether or not you're going to be able to
execute on these plans, let's pump up these projections, make them look as big as possible.
And then I and Ron will recognize as revenue today, my projected cash flows based on this
Excel spreadsheet for the next 20 years. The SEC allowed them to go out to 20 years
that they could collapse into today revenue. So 20 years of future cash flows, I'm going to
recognize that as revenue today with no expenses associated with it. Here's why you could argue
it's sort of fair, because there's at least 20 years of future cash flows baked into the stock price of any asset. So, you know, if I'm
buying a stock and holding it on my books in the enterprise value of that stock, I am accounting for
20 plus years in the future of the cash flows that come out of it then.
And, you know, one other, you know, maybe sliver of a justification. In our world,
talking about this sounds utterly insane like
you know you're talking about like startups new projects who knows if these things are going to
work tech startups or whatnot this is a different world in oil and gas you can be pretty sure if you
have a site a geologic site that you've done enough exploration on the site you've decided
you're going to build a well you can be pretty sure you're going to get assets out of that site. Exactly how much and on what schedule, you don't know, but you're going
to get useful commodity stuff and there's going to be a market for that commodity. You will make
money out of this site. How much money, that is up for debate. And what the price of the commodities
will be over the 20 years, that also fluctuates. That's up for debate,
but it's not like you're not going to get anything out of this.
Yep. Okay, so that's part one of why mark-to-market accounting is just this bonanza
for Enron, but it's double that. Remember these special purpose entities that Skilling and Fastow
are now setting up, and they're offloading, they're selling, quote unquote, selling these assets that
Enron doesn't really want on his books. They're selling off to these special purpose entities.
Because those are also transactions, Enron now gets to book those essentially phony sales
as revenue. So they're double dipping. They do a deal with a developer. They recognize
as revenue 20 years of forecasted cash flows out of that asset. Oh, just from their equity value
in the project. Then a week later, they turn around and they sell that project,
their equity in that project to a phony special purpose entity for some astronomical price. And then they recognize
that value from the transaction as revenue, even though they own 90% of the entity that
they just sold it to. Crazy. And all the while, no cash has actually changed hands.
Totally. This is like the ultimate Ponzi scheme. It's wild. It's totally wild. So all of that is bad enough. Let's make it even worse.
If you are trying to create as beautiful and amazing a income statement as possible,
obviously, mark-to-market accounting is great for all the reasons we just discussed.
And investors will love it. You can inflate your revenues hugely, etc., etc.
There's one problem. And that problem is that it's all one time. This is the opposite of ARR. There is
no recurring revenue here. You are taking all the future income revenue cash flow. You're collapsing
it to a single moment in time. So whatever deals you do in one year, you're starting from zero the
next year. You get no future benefit on your income statement from those deals. You're squeezing
every amount of possible upside out of the future and into today.
And so you're just constantly making it harder on yourself to achieve anything in the future
because you've already recognized it all. And basically, if you don't do more different deals
next year, it doesn't matter how good every contract you've already signed is and how
amazing all those projects are doing. You have an actual zero in your revenue category without doing more deals. Totally. And so like any house of cards
here, this all looks great, but there's literally no way that this doesn't all blow up. It's all
just completely inflated. Once they start down this path, there's no scenario where this ends
well. It's just a question of how long the fuse is until the bomb blows up.
Yeah, you're borrowing on the future in such a big way. everybody's incentivized to pump the numbers. The producers are incentivized to pump the numbers to get more money. Enron's incentivized to pump the numbers to book more revenue, even though they're
paying for the deals. And then the bigger the deal price, the bigger the dollar value that they
offload it for to the special purpose entities that they book the revenue again. Yep. And the
most devilishly difficult thing about all this is once the train gets set in motion
and you start putting up these numbers and you start reporting them in your financial statements,
you massively catch the attention of investors and you then have to keep it going because people
start to invest, your stock starts to go up because no one's seen an income statement like
this. This is crazy. This is the future. There's lots of reasons to believe that it's going to be
nuts. And you start believing the numbers, you start convincing other people to believe the
numbers, and then you got to move mountains every quarter to make the numbers keep going up.
So this whole devilish flywheel really gets put in place by 1996. It's really humming.
And they would have a five-year run from 1996 to 2001, during which revenues grew 7.5x during those
five years. They went from $13.3 billion in 1996 to over $100 billion in the year 2000. And every year during that period from 96 through 2001,
the company would go bankrupt at the end of 2001.
Which were the six years that they were Fortune's most innovative company.
Yes. Fortune magazine, remember, this is going to come back up with the particular publication,
names them America's most innovative company. And in the year 2000,
also names them America's most innovative company. And in the year 2000 also names them America's
best managed company. Oh, unbelievable. So, um, back to the mid nineties on the back of all of
these huge wins, this transformation of the company, skilling gets promoted from just being
head of the Enron finance division to president and COO of the entire company. Number two behind Lay,
who's still the chairman and CEO, but he basically just takes on a kind of elder statesman role.
He's out there schmoozing politicos. He becomes super close with the Bush family,
super, super close. And Fastow, he gets quite the meteoric rise out of this. He goes from being like a jack-of-all-trades,
kind of like mid-level executive in the finance division, to the CFO of the entire company.
And structured finance kind of becomes its own division. They start relying on it as a
profit center, not just like a CFO to manage the finances of the business, but they're like,
can you come up with new financial
products to generate revenue on your own? So when Skilling gets elevated to number two and
fast out to CFO of the company, they start articulating as the company strategy that
the finance department is going to go from being this shared resource cost center to a profit
generating division of the company.
The fact that this didn't raise like massive alarm bells throughout the entire investor
community is just crazy. Well, the thing I want to continue to harp on is it would have if the
incentives weren't so dramatically misaligned. Everyone benefited from this thing going up.
The ratings agencies benefited from this thing going up. The ratings agencies benefited from this thing going up.
Everybody who ever bought Enron stock saw it going up, so they wanted to continue to see it
going up. These deals, Enron's flying around doing deals. You know who they need for deals?
Investment bankers. And you know what investment bankers also have? Analysts. And you know what
those analysts are going to say? Buy. It is just like the whole world was making so much money, at least on paper, from this
happening that why would you ever want it to stop happening?
And like we've been saying, they need to keep doing bigger and bigger deals.
So what does Enron do?
They start heavily investing in their international division.
They've like saturated the US with all the
producers in the US. They're like, we can go out to other countries, both developed and developing
countries. And especially in developing countries, we can do these massive, massive production deals
that just fuel all of this. So they go to famously India, Brazil, Argentina,
and they finance these multi-billion dollar energy projects. India is the worst of them.
This power plant that they finance, this LNG, liquefied natural gas power plant,
on the coast of India that they finance, but multi-billion dollars. India doesn't have the
technology, the grid, the demand anyway
to actually use this. The project just becomes this smoking crater on the Indian coastline.
I think it's still never opened. The half-completed building is still just sitting there.
At various points in time, I think they have technically turned it on,
but not actually. Yeah, it's still just sitting there. But Enron books billions of dollars of revenue,
and then they offload the assets, everything we've talked about. It's just this metastasizing
cancer on the world. Yeah. The one thing that is credible about what they're claiming is
the key thing to develop a society is widely available energy. So there is this notion of like, okay, if the way to accelerate a country
that is becoming,
I don't know if developed country
is the correct parlance anymore,
but an economy that has high employment,
high quality of life,
a good mix between information work
and physical work,
making real things in the real world,
growing GDP rapidly, becoming a player
on the world stage, whatever you want to call it. Every single thing requires massive amounts of
energy as a precondition. One major reason why the US got to be such an incredible superpower
is we burned tons of fossil fuels over the last 80 years in order to accomplish all the things
that we have today and achieve the quality of life that most people in the U.S. have today. So there is a real well-founded argument to be
made that it is both good for these countries to come in and do this, and they'll need it anyway,
so there's a huge market opportunity that we're sort of pulling forward to now by creating a ton
of energy capacity there. Oh, you can really see how
the insidious political tendrils of this company. Politically, this looks fantastic. Enron is
financing the energy development of India, Brazil, Argentina, like, you know, blah, blah, blah. And
the politicians love this. Here's this, you know this innovative American company. Man. So as this gets bigger and bigger and bigger,
remember the key on the back end to making this work are these special purpose entities.
Now, you only need to come up with 3% outside capital, but Enron starts doing so many deals
that are so big and they're allloading so many assets, it actually
becomes kind of a problem finding enough suckers to pony up even 3% of the capital needed to be
offloading these assets. And by the way, we should say, how does Enron have the capital? Because
they're not generating a lot of cash flow. It's worth knowing that on their earnings calls,
they are releasing a profit and loss statement
and then like a little few weeks later coming out with a balance sheet and a cash flow statement
so you say well how are they financing 97 of these projects well first of all a lot of times they're
doing co-development deals so they're like getting a government to pony up a bunch of cash and enron
ponies up a bunch of their sort of like development resources and people, which by the way, they're terrible at because actually what they've become good at
is a financial derivatives trading firm and not actually having the human power to go and execute
on building these really complex projects. But they are getting cash from somewhere.
Where are they getting it from? Investors, the American public. So as their stock starts to run,
they do more and more issuances of new stock at these new stratospheric prices to bring cash in the door, since the operations are not actually producing a lot of real cash. So the flywheel
sort of looks like pump the stock, issue more equity, take the cash from that new public fundraise that you've just done and shaken
the American public, the tree of the American public, take that cash and use that as the sort
of 97% that you need to stuff into a special purpose entity to go and finance a project.
It's actually not that. It's used that cash to finance these crappy development deals they're
doing all over the world. On the back end, there's actually no cash because Enron is the buyer and the seller.
They're just taking it off the books. They're not actually buying anything. There's no cash
changing hands. And so you really start to wonder, I don't think this was the plan the whole time.
I think it was the fact that once you started needing to show growth and you've already pulled forward all the revenue out
of next year into last year, then you got to do something and you have to get infinitely creative
in your way to show income on the income statement. And so you start spinning up all
these divisions to do crazy stuff. So like we're saying that dynamic gets to the point where it's
so big, they can't find enough suckers to even do 3% of the equity and capital in these crappy deals that, again, signing up other entities to do this, what if
they had their own fund? A captive fund, part of the Enron family, but was separate, was independent,
that could put up this 3% of the equity needed for every deal. God, we could call this episode
arm's length, but not really. So they go to Anderson
and they're like, well, what if we do this? And what if Andy, what if Fastow sets up this fund
and is the general partner in it? And we only use it for stuff that helps Enron. And like, yes,
he's the CFO of Enron. He'll also be the general partner of this fund that's going to do deals
with Enron, but it's only deals that are going to be good for Enron. And Anderson's like, uh, that seems really bad. You should probably go to the board
and get sign off on this very, very obvious conflict of interest. Yeah. So they do, they
take this to the board and they present it. Pastow presents it to the board as like,
I'm willing to fall on this sword to do this for you guys. I'm taking one for the team, guys.
Never mind the fact that he has full private equity economics on this deal. I don't know if
it's 2 in 20 or whatever it is, but there's management fees, there's carry. He is the
general partner of a private equity fund that is only getting good deals because you know that he's
going to screw Enron to get the private equity fund to
get great terms on these deals. So he's pitching the board. He's pitching the board. The board is
like, great. Thanks for taking one for the team, Andy. This is going to be great for Enron. Really
appreciate your hard work. You know, basically a bunch of attaboys and slaps on the back.
So yeah, as you mentioned, this is a private equity fund that he gets 2% management fees, 20% of the profits, ends up across a series of funds being
hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars that he's managing. I think fund one was small-ish,
but fund two is $200 million. Yeah, we'll get into what it is exactly in a minute here.
The management fees of a fund, in theory, are supposed to support
the cost of running the fund, you know, like headcount salaries, rent, office space,
all the resources you need. He's the CFO of Enron. Everybody who works on the fund
is an Enron employee. Enron is paying the salaries of everybody. The office is Enron.
There's no headcount. There's no funds. All the Bloomberg
terminals, all the legal, all the accounting. He's pulling someone off their day job every
time they need to negotiate a deal between his fund and Enron and saying, okay, you wear the
Enron hat on this time and negotiate against me and I'll wear the private equity hat.
And they're calling that arm's length. So all the management fees, there's no expenses.
They're just straight flowing to him. The real kicker, you were joking about this before the
episode, and that should have told everybody where his real incentive lies. He decides to name
the suite of funds LJM Capital. What does LJM stand for? It stands for Leah, Jeffrey, and Matthew,
which are the names of his wife and kids. So there is no question who is benefiting from what is going on here, and it's not Enron.
Unbelievable.
And there's the squirreliest, most circuitous route to trying to find disclosures on this.
Whenever it's convenient to say so, there are claims that the board was fully on board
with this.
Whenever you're looking for the smoking gun, it's really difficult to find anyone's signatures or discussion of this in the board minutes. It's especially
difficult to find Jeff Skilling's signature on anything, even though the whole agreement was
Skilling will sign off as the final approver on, I think, deals, but definitely Fastow's
compensation from this. There are documents that surface that have a variety of signatures on them, but not skillings. He very intentionally was like, I'm not actually going to
sign off on this, but it's kind of good for Enron that it happens. So I'm going to let it keep
happening. Well, it is good because these funds, this vehicle, everything that Fastow is now
running can put up the 3% capital for this special purpose entity. So they
don't need to involve any outside people in all of this. Not to mention, all the people investing
capital are these big banks. And so it further entrenches major financial institutions, Merrill
Lynch, JP Morgan, all these big people that Enron wants to continue to have incentivized for their success further in owning
assets that are associated with Enron. Yes. So everybody in Enron is so hyped up about this
that in 1999, Fastow starts a campaign within Enron with Lay and Skilling and the PR people
in Enron to get himself nominated for the CFO of the year in the CFO Magazine annual rankings of CFO.
He ends up not winning, but he does get a special award from CFO Magazine for CFO excellence in the
category of capital structure management. So they do, over a few years, tons, tons of these deals.
And two things are always true about the deals. One, Fastow is finding a way for Fastow
to benefit and get rich. You know, LJM, we know who number one is here. Two, Enron also benefits
because it's now just turbocharging this whole flywheel and getting the bad stuff off the balance
sheets and booking revenues associated with these deals. Eventually, Enron also makes Fastow the head of CorpDev. So he is now the head on all
sides of the transactions. He's the CFO. He is the head of corporate development who would be the
person charged with negotiating the Enron side of the table against the outside investors, the LJM.
But he runs everything. It's so, so wild wild at the time that they do end up actually disclosing
this which i don't want to flash too far forward but it's worth showing this detail they do sort
of disclose it they say oh there exists an entity that's managed by a member of the management team
that does deals with fenron it It's like one sentence. And then
when the shit really hits the fan, they say, oh, well, a previously disclosed entity did deals
this quarter, but that's been previously disclosed. There ends up being like a billion dollar loss or
some crazy, don't quote me on that, but some massive, massive loss. And they're like, oh,
we disclosed this whole thing before. And it all ties back to this one sentence where they're just saying a member of the management team has a related
entity that does transactions with Enron. So this is where everything starts to unravel.
Investors in the media start asking around about this. By this point in time, we're now in-
Early 2001.
Yeah. Lay has now stepped back to just be chairman.
Skilling has been promoted to be CEO of the whole company.
Fastow is still CFO plus head of corp dev plus running these LJM funds, unrelated funds.
People are starting to ask around about what's going on at Enron.
And people assume when this disclosure comes out that it's Skilling who's running these funds.
And they're like, oh my God, is the CEO doing this?
And so I think it's the Wall Street Journal calls up Enron PR and they're like, yo, what's up here?
And then Enron PR is like, oh, no, no, no.
It's not Skilling.
Don't worry.
It's Fastow.
Just immediately threw him under the bus. Throw him under the bus.
Everybody hated Fastow in the company, apparently.
Especially late in the game here, because people could figure out that he was getting rich
on these LJM structures. He actually had LJM3 was in the works to be a billion dollar fund.
And if that came together, he was just going to peace out and go do that.
You just can't make this stuff up. So as that all starts happening, Fastow and
Skilling and the company eventually decide, all right, Andy, you've really taken one for the team
here. You can either stay at Enron, be the CFO and head of corp dev, or you can go run these funds.
You can no longer do both. People are asking too many questions. And so Fastow, he asked for some time the weekend to
go think about it, talk to his wife. He comes back to Skilling and he's like, I'm loyal to Enron.
I'm staying here. I'm going to give up. I'm going to sell off my interest.
Sell my interest. I'm going to get all my economics out of the interest while they're
at an all-time high. Here's what he does. Back before the funds, when they were just doing kind of one-off deals, Fastow had a direct
report in the finance organization, a guy named Michael Copper. And he and Copper came to a
understanding. A lot of understandings around this company. And here's this giant cookie jar
of all these deals that Enron's doing, and there's no lid on it. And they could kind of work together
to skim a few chocolate chips out of the on it. And they could kind of work together to
skim a few chocolate chips out of the cookie jar. And so they were in cahoots together.
And they had done a transaction together where, again, before the funds, one of the investors
that had come in on one of the projects was CalPERS, the big California state employee
pension retirement fund. They had done one of
these offloading projects with Enron. This is with Enron Energy Services. This was the $130 million
deal. Jedi? Yeah. Do you know, speaking of FTX, who the other big investor was along with CalPERS?
Oh, I don't know. I didn't see this. You cannot make this stuff up. The Ontario Teachers Pension Plan.
Oh, I think I did see that.
Who are also, of course, big investors in FTX, right?
Yes.
So this particular entity was called the JEDI entity that CalPERS and the Ontario Teachers Fund had invested in.
And Enron and Fasto wanted to do an even bigger deal with them. And Kalpers said,
okay, we're interested in a bigger deal, but we want to get our capital out of Jedi One,
get that capital out and put even more capital into Jedi Two. And so Fastow's like, aha,
I see an opportunity to enrich myself. So he drafts Copper into service here and they create an entity called chuko short for chewbacca
and sticking with the star wars theme here remember this has all got to be fully independent
but fastow and copper both work at enron and why did fastow target copper as his accomplice here. Copper was gay. And this is the 1990s in America. Gay marriage is not legal.
In Texas.
I don't know if it was legal anywhere. Certainly it was not legal in Texas,
and it was not legal federally in America at the time. So Copper's domestic partner,
a guy named Bill Dodson, he's not legally married to Copper. And he's not part of Enron.
So they set up Dodson as the outside investor in Chuko to buy out the Jedi assets from Calpers.
And then Fastow and Copper create a secret spreadsheet. This is the beginning of their
sort of nefarious deals together. When the second set of books starts being created, that is a dangerous time.
Yes. So on Copper's home laptop, they have this secret spreadsheet where they're keeping track
of all the deals where they use Dodson as the front for anytime they need to offload from the
offload. They use this deal to enrich themselves. God.
Unbelievable.
How did any of these guys plead not guilty?
Unbelievable. And so Copper starts cutting checks from all the money they're making,
that Dodson is making. Copper starts cutting checks to Leah Fastow, Andy's wife. And so that's how they spread the money around.
Unbelievable.
So now, flash forward, back to when Andy is once again
taking one for the team and selling off his general partner membership in the LJM funds.
Who does he sell it to? He sells them to Copper. Wow. And they use the same scheme for Andy,
of course, to still stay involved and be getting at least a 50-50, if not more,
share of everything. And this is like, you know, when he's fallen to his knees and told Skilling,
you're the only girl at the dance. You're the only one for me. I'm foregoing this whole grand idea I had around all these economics from the LJM partnerships. Not so much.
All right, listeners, our next sponsor is a new friend of the show, Huntress.
Huntress is one of the fastest growing and most loved cybersecurity companies today.
It's purpose built for small to midsize businesses and provides enterprise grade security with the technology, services and expertise needed to protect you.
They offer a revolutionary approach to manage cybersecurity that isn't only about tech,
it's about real people providing real defense around the clock. So how does it work? Well,
you probably already know this, but it has become pretty trivial for an entry-level hacker to buy
access and data about compromised businesses. This means cybercriminal activity towards small
and medium businesses is at an all-time high.
So Huntress created a full managed security platform for their customers to guard from these threats.
This includes endpoint detection and response, identity threat detection and response, security awareness training,
and a revolutionary security information and event management product that actually just got launched.
Essentially, it is the full suite of great software that you need to secure your business,
plus 24-7 monitoring by an elite team of human threat hunters in a security operations center to stop attacks that really software-only solutions could sometimes miss. Huntress is
democratizing security, particularly cybersecurity, by taking security
techniques that were historically only available to large enterprises and bringing them to businesses
with as few as 10, 100, or 1,000 employees at price points that make sense for them.
In fact, it's pretty wild. There are over 125,000 businesses now using Huntress,
and they rave about it from the hilltops. They were voted
by customers in the G2 rankings as the industry leader in endpoint detection and response for the
eighth consecutive season and the industry leader in managed detection and response again this
summer. Yep. So if you want cutting-edge cybersecurity solutions backed by a 24-7 team
of experts who monitor, investigate, and respond to
threats with unmatched precision, head on over to huntress.com slash acquired or click the link
in the show notes. Our huge thanks to Huntress. It's probably worth flashing back to like the
1997 time frame to start talking about what was happening outside the office of the CFO at Enron
because they're
going nuts. They've realized that they've accounted for all the future points on the board last year,
and so they got to do a whole bunch of stuff to show a bunch of growth, because boy is the stock
pumping, and boy does the stock need to pump in order for them to continue all these new equity
issuances to give them the cash to do all this wild stuff. So they've got
the pipelines. They're not particularly interested in that very old business that's kind of hard to
fake or tinker with or innovate on top of. And so they're like, okay, the trading business,
you know, sometimes we take big losses, but sometimes wild speculation can give us really
big profits,
or at least paper profits.
So let's trade more stuff.
So they get into the electricity business.
So this, for the first time, they move beyond natural gas.
Of course, they find out that trading power is hard because unlike gigantic pipelines
and tanks where you can store natural gas, you can't store electrons.
Famously,
batteries are very inefficient. So it's not like you can charge up batteries and store all the electrons there for a while until you need them somewhere else. You basically need to be producing
the electrons at the exact same rate that you are consuming them. So that makes an electricity market
interesting, but much harder than what they were doing in natural gas.
They also expand into water, especially internationally.
That's also very hard because all water droplets are not created equal.
There's different impurities, different salinities that you have to treat.
Of course, in the US, there's also no federal order requiring those who own water pipes
to let anyone move stuff around inside of them the way that you have in natural gas and electricity. You know, these people who own the water pipes own the water pipes to let anyone move stuff around inside of them the way that you have in natural gas and
electricity. You know, these people who own the water pipes own the water pipes. And if they want
to tell you, you can't put your stuff in here and you can't make money off our asset, they're allowed
to do that. So what else happens? They spin up trading teams for pulp and paper, weather derivatives,
freight, metals trading, until they finally stumble on the thing that is really going to make them money.
Bandwidth.
Fiber optic network.
Internet bandwidth.
Enron, the tech company.
Enron, the tech company.
The stock goes nuts when this gets announced.
One quick note that we would be remiss if not talking about on this episode with regard to the power trading that they get into,
the electricity trading, they become a key player in the total disaster that is the California
blackouts. It's hard to know if they caused it or if they just profited from it.
They certainly profited and they might have helped cause it.
Yes. So what happened here? So this is worth talking about. So the California power markets
were being deregulated, much like the natural gas markets, but not fully. The Enron traders,
who are these pure capitalists, they're these pure sort of like, if there's a dollar on the table,
it is my ethical responsibility to go take it, no matter what the impacts are,
because I have an intellectual purity to...
I don't think there's a lot of intellectual justification going on. More visceral.
No, I think there is. I think it's a deeply philosophical thing where people believe that
free markets are virtuous. And the only sort of virtuous thing to do is to have everything be a
completely deregulated open free market and lay the rules
of the game out clearly and then play the game however the rules say that you can play them.
Yes, I think there's two classes. I think the skillings and like the Kenneth Lays of the world
fit that bill. I think a lot of the actual day-to-day traders are more just like
red meat, you know, like trader make money guys. Yeah. So what
happened here? Well, the state of California decided that they didn't want to go full free
market. So they put in lots of safety measures that ended up being the opposite of that. Because
usually when you add a new sort of mechanism into a free market, it can be played in a variety of
different ways. So on the one hand, it seems reasonable to have controls in place. On the other hand, it entered a lot of new rules onto the
playing field for these traders to exploit. So people would run experiments to test if they were
exploitable, they would see the results, and then they would go hard, and they would be rewarded for
going hard. And so you know a company is not on the right side of history when memos start circulating on the floor with names like Death Star, Fatboy, Get Shorty, and Ricochet.
These are various trading strategies in the California energy market.
Yeah, just four of the trading strategies, but it's worth articulating some of the crazy stuff they did. So what is Death Star? Well, it was this experiment where Enron went into the market and filed an imaginary
transmission schedule in order to get paid to alleviate congestion that didn't really exist.
So this sort of like, can we spike something to watch the impact on something else and then make money from a contract
on the impact of it somewhere else or fat boy was a scheme where enron would submit a schedule to
the marketplace reflecting demand that wasn't actually there and then watching what sort of
happened when that demand tried to be fulfilled and there was nowhere to put it so then there
was a big extra amount of electricity being produced somewhere. They could profit from that. Get shorty, selling power that Enron
didn't actually have for use as reserves with the expectation that Enron would never actually
be called upon to supply the power, or it could just buy it later at a lower price.
Or the worst of them all, Ricochet, where Enron would work with someone who's generating power
in California, a utility.
Oh, is this where they have them shut it down for maintenance?
No, this was where they would export it out of the state, and they had control over the transmission line, so they could do that. And then when California realized, oh crap,
we need energy, then they would have a contract in place where Enron would get paid to bring it
back in at much, much higher prices, which the
industry would start calling this megawatt laundering, because that's really what it was.
And I think what they would do as part of it, too, is call up generation plants where they
had relationships and encourage them to shut down for maintenance at specific points in time when
they knew it would cause blackouts and spike the price. And it's exactly what it did. So,
I mean, I am confident that
people died from this. This is one of those things where like, if you're randomly depriving
huge swaths of California from power, hospitals, schools, people's homes, it's not fun and games.
I mean, it is profiting from terrible, harmful activities to people. And this has such far
reaching impact. I mean, this was one of, if not the major reason that California Governor Gray Davis gets recalled, and then Arnold Schwarzenegger gets elected governor. This was the of one corner of Enron. Another corner of Enron is this thing, En we're a pure marketplace, then we're a financial derivatives, then they got mark-to-market accounting and started doing all
the international development. They started doing power. Well, Enron Energy Services is this thing
that Skilling really wants to sell this story about how it's taking off. And so let me just
read this passage from the smartest guys in the room because I think this probably articulates
the insidiousness
of the Enron culture better than anything else. So analysts come to Houston. They tour the sixth
floor of the EES war room. There, they beheld the very picture of a sophisticated booming business,
a big open room, bustling with people, all busy working the telephones, hunched over computer
terminals, seemingly cutting deals and trading energy. Giant plasma screens displayed electronic maps, which could show sites of EES's many contracts
and prospects. Commodity prices danced across an electronic ticker. It was impressive, recalls John
Olson, who at the time covered the company for Merrill Lynch. It was a veritable beehive of
activity. It was also a veritable sham. The war room had been rapidly fitted out
explicitly to impress the analysts. Though EES was just then gearing up, Skilling and Pye had
staged it all to convince the visitors that things were really hopping. On the day the analysts
arrived, the room was filled with Enron employees. Many of them, though, did not work on the sixth
floor at all. They were secretaries, EES staff from other locations,
non-EES employees who had been drafted for the occasion, coached on the importance of appearing busy. One, an administrative assistant named Kim Garcia, recalls being told to bring her personal
photos to make it look as if she actually worked at the desk where she was sitting.
She spent most of the time talking to her girlfriends on the phone. After getting the
all-clear signal, Garcia packed up her belongings and returned to her real desk on the ninth floor. The analysts had no clue they'd
been hoodwinked. Oh my god, this is like a classic boiler room ruse. This is great. Unbelievable.
And that was 97. That was four years before the fall they were pulling crap like that.
Should we talk about the broadband services and internet division?
Absolutely. And we're on the internet company suddenly, magically. I mean, this company started
by merging two pipelines, and here they are, the seventh most valuable company in the world,
because they're somehow the company that's going to capitalize on this new internet thing.
Did you read about how they did a deal with Blockbuster?
Yes. This is the best i mean this is
like truly you can't make this stuff up this is like tailor-made for acquired before the
blockbuster netflix thing and before blockbuster even considered streaming they offered a video
on demand product that was provided by enron's fiber Somehow Enron was doing the servers and digital delivery.
And this was video on demand being like, if you were like a cable or satellite subscriber
on your cable box, you could get video on demand, right? Like this wasn't the internet. This isn't
internet streaming. This is like on demand, but via the cable infrastructure, right?
I think that's right. I think they only had bad movies.
I don't think they were able to lock up good ones.
I don't think, however they ended up delivering it,
I don't think the consumer demand was really there.
The service never launched.
But of course, with Enron's mark to market,
they booked over $100 million in revenue on day one for it.
And then they offloaded the project
to a special purpose entity.
110 million.
Even better, David. So they offloaded it to a
special purpose entity. At some point, they tore up the contract. I don't know if it was Enron or
Blockbuster, but they basically said, this deal sucks. No one wants this. So you know what they
did? They created an even bigger impact to revenue in the positive direction, like more than $100
million because a new thing had happened. It's not a contract, it's the lack of a contract.
So now they have the ability to do deals with everyone. They're not locked into an exclusive
deal with Blockbuster. So that creates a huge amount of future value for Enron, the company,
their shareholders. And so they literally recognized revenue even bigger than the
Blockbuster deal after the lack of Blockbuster deal.
Oh, I didn't see that. That's amazing.
It is wicked stuff. I mean, this is where you're just like, you guys are criminals.
Okay, so before we come back to the wheels starting to fall apart in 2001, there's one more piece of the intervening go-go years we should talk about. You want to talk about Enron Online?
Yes. So, of course, we were referring to the bandwidth trading, which also is much more
difficult than trading natural gas. I mean, like, how exactly is that all going to work,
trading available bandwidth, especially when there's this, like, massive last mile problem
to everyone's homes? And if someone needs more bandwidth in one place
than another, how's that going to work? Are you just physically going to widen the wires?
Or I think people just didn't really understand these concepts yet. And so there's lots of
excitement around what Enron's doing in trading bandwidth, around being an internet company,
but they actually do launch an internet product. Now, the internet product is really just to advantage
their in-house business. And this one to me seems like it's probably not fraud. It's just an example
of like evil, but beneficial for shareholders business strategy. In November of 99, they
launched something called Enron Online. And what this is, is it allows all of
Enron's counterparties to trade with them electronically. So they stand up an exchange,
like an exchange you can access through a web browser, much like FTX, but Enron itself
is the counterparty to every trade. They don't even pretend that they're not on the other side
of most transactions. Oh my god. I didn't make the FTX Alameda connection in this. This is too good.
It is just the craziest thing where they're just like, yep, we're the counterparty to every single
trade here, so we're going to generate a little bit of spread on the exchange, and we're probably
going to get beneficial pricing being the counterparty because we have the most information
in the market for everything that's being traded on here because it is our marketplace and we're
going to use that information. It's a pretty savvy data advantage. Now, unfortunately, what they do
with that data advantage is they do manipulate markets. And that, I believe, leads to some part
of the downfall case against them where they are controlling commodity prices and stuff like
that. But that I thought in 99, that early is a pretty savvy way to use the internet for evil.
You know, a really funny thing, maybe we'll talk about this more in playbook,
is at the same time, this is, I think, really best reflected in both
Skilling and Fastow. They were all so smart and yet also so stupid. The combination of
brilliance and stupidity in one person and one group of people is really something.
It's almost like it was smart, but it was cognitive dissonance where they just thought
the rug was infinitely large that
they could just keep sweeping stuff under it and that at some point it would never become an issue
for them and in skilling you watch some of his testimony because everyone else pleaded the fifth
skilling stood trial and tried to defend himself he really does look like a man who thought he did nothing wrong. It's crazy to me how Skilling, I mean, I think he really was delusional
that there was so much innovation here
that he thought it was okay.
I don't know.
There are examples of where you could draw
a different conclusion,
but you're right.
They were smart.
And I don't know that they were also stupid.
I think they also just had
a lot of cognitive dissonance that it somehow wouldn't all come tumbling down.
I've actually been thinking about this recently, both in the context of FTX and just generally also being a new parent makes you as your success in the world. But there's a certain
point, I think, where like increased intelligence either is neutral or negative to your ultimate
happiness. And I think it's cases like this, like Enron, like FTX, like there's no question that
SBF, you know, and a lot of the people involved in FTX and Alameda were brilliant,
but like they're too smart.
They end up hurting themselves, and the Enron case is the same thing.
And is it the smarts or is it the cockiness?
Because clearly what was happening here is they just thought no one would ever catch them.
I think that is really what started to come out.
I mean, Fastow went five years without having to disclose
how much compensation he was getting from the LJM partnerships. He just
thought, I'll just keep self-dealing. But you're right about skilling. It's a little more than
that with skilling. He's the only one who doesn't end up pleading the fifth. He defends himself to
the end. Which he later says was stupid, by the way. He's like, I should have listened to my
counsel just like everyone else's counsel. And this is the smart stupid thing. I think maybe
it's that he just completely fell in love with his own ideas. Because he's always talking about how brilliant he is, how eff, rumored. I don't think this was in the court documents, but lots of substantiation around the rumor. He managed to convince Lay that he should get $20 million in cash if he was not
made CEO of Enron by the end of 2000. Like, what? I mean, this guy is so good at convincing people
to do stuff. He convinced the SEC that mark-to-market accounting would be a good thing.
Right? It's like, oh, if you fire me, you have to pay me $20 million unless you want to make me CEO
of the company. And the only negotiating position that he had was, otherwise, I'll just quit and
you'll be screwed without me. I'll just quit right now. And Laid signed that deal. They needed him
around so bad. Oh, well, speaking of skilling quitting, let's move the story towards that, shall we?
Yeah. So the first cracks in the armor start in September of 2000. So the stock is still
on its way up and hasn't peaked yet. But you have a short seller named Jim Chanos,
who for the first time is starting to make noise around just the most basic fundamentals here. Hey, I'm reading your
quarterly reports and they're completely imparsable. You're technically disclosing
a bunch of stuff. I have no idea what you're disclosing. Can you help me understand the
business? How do you make money? And you then start to have reporters getting involved because
reporters love getting tips from short sellers because short sellers have a massive financial
incentive to go and investigate and figure out what companies are going to fail. And that's a really good where
there's smoke, there's fire for reporters. So, you know, reporters start getting involved.
And the big question is sort of like, how does Enron make money? And as people start digging
in with Skilling and with Lay and with Fastow and granting interviews and doing this sort of stuff,
nobody can figure it out. No one can figure it out. And you get conflicting statements.
Like you hear Skilling say,
it couldn't be more obvious.
You just need to dig and understand our business.
We're very clear.
We're very communicative.
We're not hiding anything.
And then two sentences later,
you hear something like,
well, we don't want to tell our competitors
how we make money.
So of course, we're not going to share details like that.
And you're like, sorry, what?
The cognitive dissonance is just...
Crazy. Yep. So one of the reporters that Chanos, I don't know, one of or the only reporter that he goes to is Bethany McLean. At Fortune. At Fortune, the same publication that names Enron the most
innovative and best managed company in America. Amazing. Yes. So she publishes on March
5th, 2001, an article entitled, is Enron overpriced? Which is wonderfully innocuous. Oh,
it's merely a price issue. It's not that bad of an article from Enron's perspective. Like the
biggest question it raises is not one of fraud. Is this exactly what you said, Ben? It's like
Enron is a black box. Nobody can figure out what's going on here. But there's no accusations
of fraud or anything wrong going on, etc. There have been some other articles, but this is the
first big article kind of questioning what's going on at Enron. The subhead is, it's in a
bunch of complex businesses. Its financial statements are nearly impenetrable.
So why is Enron trading at such a high multiple? That is the most innocuous and reasonable question
to ask. Because when you go and compare it, you actually do industry comparables. Before the fall,
the stock's trading at an all-time high. Everything seems up and to the right. In fact,
just in that January, January of of 01 they've rebranded
from the world's leading energy company to the world's leading company that's literally the
subhead the tagline for the company oh can we talk about the um company slogan that they used
in their commercials which was ask why that's literally the company's logo and then when people
ask them why of like about how their financials, they can't tell you. There was discussion of whether they should be the world's coolest
company. But literally the only reason they didn't do that is because it didn't translate well.
So they just went with the world's leading company. There is video footage of Jeff Skilling
unveiling the new slogan at a shareholder meeting and everyone clapping. It's like the world's
leading company. That's not a mission. What do we do? I want to be the world's leading podcast.
What do you think? But that's actually a thing. I guess that is the thing.
Anyway, so the financials, it's worth highlighting. A good time to pick is maybe March of 2000.
It was trading at 55x trailing earnings, which if you look at, you think it's an energy company,
you comp it against Duke Energy, which is a reasonable competitor it's two and a half times the multiple you're like hmm okay well
maybe it's more than an energy company maybe i'm missing something here it's an internet company
yeah but you're like okay well maybe it's like a trading firm then maybe it's like a goldman sachs
well goldman sachs is only trading at this point at 17 times earnings so why is enron trading at
55 times earnings you're like wait a minute then times earnings? And you're like, wait a minute.
Then you start digging in and you're like, well, when I can see Goldman Sachs's earnings,
I can sort of tie it out to the rest of the financial statements and see earnings eventually
showing up as cash. But this is a company that's trading two and a half to three times higher than
any reasonable comp. And if you actually start digging in and looking at their free cash flow
or looking at
any return on investment metric that you decide to pick, it's terrible. There's no cash and there's
really no return on invested capital ever showing up. And sometimes their return on invested capital
is actually less than their cost of capital. So when you look at the cash of this business, it's awful.
Yes, indeed it is.
And the first part, the high multiple, is Enron overpriced question. That's a reasonable
conversation to have. And this is a good thing that friend of the show, Andrew Marks, pointed
out. When you see terrible returns on invested capital and you see no free cash flow showing up
ever or poor free cash flow dynamics,
that's probably when there's fraud.
If there's very high revenue growth, very high reported earnings and profit on the income
statement, and there is low return on invested capital and poor free cash flow dynamics,
probably your radar screen should be going off.
Yep. And this, of course, is a thing that short sellers pay a lot of attention to. They look for
companies that have all of those metrics that we just described trending in exactly those directions
because that's probably where there's a big accounting issue that's about to happen.
And the big cognitive dissonance, I think, is the reported profits versus the cash flow. Because
you think about startups, right? Lots of startups,
for instance, can be reporting high revenue growth, but be burning lots of cash as they're
investing in growth and operations and whatnot. In Enron's case, and in the case of a lot of frauds,
they're reporting high revenue growth and high profits on the income statement,
but also burning cash. Yep. So people are starting to figure this out. Short sellers, journalists, and eventually,
finally, finally, some analysts managed to shake loose of the my job is to say Enron is awesome
thing. And they start to ask hard questions on earnings calls. Because for the longest time,
it has been that you were rewarded for saying Enron's great because the stock would go up,
and then you would look like a genius.
And anytime anybody said Enron wasn't great,
either they were proven wrong by the stock price
or they would get slapped at work
because they're saying,
hey, this is a huge client of ours.
We do lots of business with them
because Enron did lots of business with everybody.
Kept everybody on the payroll.
So are you talking about the April 17th, 2001 earnings call?
I am.
Where one Richard Grubman of Highfields Capital,
which is actually a hedge fund and had a short position on Enron,
asks Skilling, I think this is Skilling's first earnings call
as actual CEO number one of the company.
Oh, man.
It does not go well spoiler alert because he's been running the big profit center forever in trading and he's
been trying to masquerade the business and same with ken lay as we're still a logistics company
but they obfuscated the crap out of their segments and their financial reporting so you can't tell
that all the money is actually being made by trading money being made quote unquote all the income being generated on the income statement comes from trading which you kind of can't tell that all the money is actually being made by trading money being made quote unquote all the uh income being generated on the income statement comes from trading which you kind of
can't tell anyway so now he finally steps into the ceo role and is responsible for these earnings
calls and here's the question tell me if you think this is like overly combative or merits a like
nuclear level response grubbin asks why and, unlike 99% of other companies out there, when they report
earnings, why do they only report an income statement and they don't report their balance
sheet or cash flow statement? And those things only get reported, Ben, like you said earlier in
the episode, weeks or months later in the SEC official 10Q and 10K filings. Why don't you
report it all at once like everybody else? And I think his SEC official, you know, 10Q and 10K filings, why don't you report
it all at once like everybody else? And I think his literal words, he says,
you seem to be the only financial institution incapable of producing a balance sheet
with earnings. Okay, so maybe like a little flip. Yes.
Skilling responds by, I forget how he starts the answer. He says something like,
thank you very much for the question or something like that.
Yes.
Here's what he says.
He says, well, first of all, thank you very much.
We, uh, asshole.
And everybody in the room on the call starts looking around and they're like, did the CEO, what just happened? Of the
seventh largest company in the world, just call an analyst an asshole on an earnings call? Yes,
yes, indeed. That is exactly what happened. He does apologize. He says, I'm sorry. I've been
at a real sort of lack of sleep. He's been making noise internally to Ken Lay, even only a few months on the job of saying,
I'm not having fun in this job.
Of course, Ken Lay is sort of parroting back to him in private clothes to our rooms like,
this was supposed to be fun.
I thought this was something you wanted.
I thought you knew how hard this was.
And Skilling isn't thriving as a CEO.
So Skilling starts spiraling.
More bad news starts coming out.
This is after this when news and speculation about the California power market manipulation
starts coming out.
And PG&E files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in April of 2001, too.
Yep.
So things are starting to go bad.
The tech bubble is starting to burst.
That's affecting the market.
The Enron stock starts falling from
the all-time high in the fall of the previous year, just above $90 a share, falls down into
the 40s. So pretty bad. It's lost over half its value. And just to make an FTX comparison here,
I mean, lots of the time you get away with poor accounting and lots of leeway from
investors in a bull market. And then when the bubble pops
in the equities market, like the dot-com bubble happened, or January of 2022 happened in tech
stocks, and you start to see the tide go out, combined with other potentially attractive,
lower-risk places to put capital, you start sort of scrutinizing things that were
really high risk places to put capital or things that were at high multiples or things that weren't
quite connected to intrinsic value, like crypto, like a lot of people are looking at crypto saying,
why am I investing in this again? And so you start to have in these two things are a little
bit different, like the prices of crypto falls. So it causes margin calls for crypto hedge funds,
which then sort of unravels the whole beast. But it's the same dynamic of the tide going out,
which I think is a Howard Marks quote, right? Of course, guest of the show and dad of Andrew.
Or Buffett. I don't know which one got it from the other.
Yeah. When the tide goes out, you see who's swimming without their swimming trunks on.
But it's so true that that's when the stuff actually gets scrutinized. Everybody was just making money all the way up. And so now that there's real shakiness in the
equities market in 2001 from the dot-com bubble bursting, everyone's re-examining everything they
assumed to be true before. And it's feeling much more reasonable to ask questions like,
hey, can you produce a balance sheet? So what happens next? Nobody inside or outside the company could predict. Within a couple months, by August of 2001, Skilling had just taken over at the beginning of the year as CEO of the company. In the beginning of August, Skilling goes to Lay, who's still the chairman of the board, and says, I'm quitting. I'm resigning. I'm out. I can't handle this.
And he cites personal reasons. I don't want to blame this on my family, so I can't,
in the press release, say that I want to spend more time with my family, even though I do.
All you can say is personal reasons, and I'm out just because... My mental health is falling apart. I can't take it.
I want to spend time teaching. I want to do philanthropic efforts. This isn't what I wanted.
This isn't fun. Blah, blah, blah.
In Conspiracy of Fools, and it sounds like it was the same in Smartest Guys in the Room, I want to do philanthropic efforts. This isn't what I wanted. This isn't fun, blah, blah, blah.
In Conspiracy of Fools, and it sounds like it was the same in Smartest Guys in the Room,
it is sort of painted as like, yeah, he really was having a mental breakdown and that was the motivation here. You have to ask though, the tide is going out. Skilling is, as much as
anybody, everybody's to blame here.
Certainly Lay's to blame, Fastow's to blame, but I think you could argue Skilling is the most to
blame. Skilling was the architect of the demise. Lay, you could make an argument, was out to lunch
the whole time. He was a key enabler at the very least. And Fastow certainly was evil, but was acting on direction from Skilling.
Yeah. Sometimes. Other times he saw a cash grab opportunity for himself.
Well, he was embezzling for himself, but in terms of damage to the company and perpetuating this
house of cards, Skilling was the architect of the house of cards. So you got to ask,
does he see that the tide's going out in the
market? This house is going to collapse. I need to get out now. And he starts selling stock as
he's leaving. And then after he leaves, he sells a lot of Enron stock. And all the executives were
at this point. Ken Lay had been on a selling plan for the last couple of years. Oh, we need to talk about how Ken Lay was selling.
Ken Lay was so overleveraged. He had received advice from his money manager saying,
you really should diversify. All of your wealth is tied up in Enron stock. It's all you've had
since 1986, and it's really run. And so what he does, and it's so confusing because he's savvy.
I don't know why he does this instead of diversifying
he like claims he's diversifying but what he's actually doing is doubling down so instead of
selling his enron stock he starts taking margin loans against his enron stock and using that to
invest in other things now enron stock starts collapsing he starts getting margin called and so
he's then needing to sell enron stock in order to service the debt that he
used to invest in these other projects. This is my own speculation. This is not alluded to in,
certainly not in Conspiracy of Fools. But when I took a step back and looked at what was going on
here, you know, Lay is not a bozo. He may have been out to lunch, but he knew what was going on
here for sure. And like, he was probably just as evil as any of them. And may have been out to lunch, but he knew what was going on here for sure.
And he was probably just as evil as any of them. And when we say out to lunch, physically,
what was he doing? He was taking one of the Enron corporate jets around, sometimes to vacation with his family, sometimes to pick his daughter up from France, but often to DC to hobnob.
Yeah. With the Bush family and other people in the Bush administration, and even in between the
two Bush administrations with the Clinton administration. He gave a bunch of money there,
too, and did meetings with Clinton administration officials. So I think what might have been going
on here, yes, Ken had most of his net worth in Enron stock, and then he started doing margin
loans against that stock with banks. And then we'd get the margin calls and he would have
to repay them. But the way he repaid them was he took cash loans from Enron. So Enron loaned him
cash. What a merry-go-round. And Ken backed his collateral for that cash that he ended up then
repaying the loans to Enron with was the Enron stock that he
originally had taken the margin loans against. So he got the cash out of Enron, used it to repay
the loans that he had gotten the money from the banks, right? And then the repayment mechanism
of all this is Ken's equity goes back to the company. So nowhere do sales show up. Nowhere does it show up to any
publicly available information that Ken Lay is selling his Enron shares. It just looks like
there's anti-dilution happening at the company. The company's repurchasing shares.
So I think you could make an argument, and this is all circumstantial, that this is like totally
nefarious, a way to get money out without alerting the market that the chairman is selling.
I think you nailed it.
I think there's another thing that's in the smartest guys in the room where they reference
the fact that I don't think for his particular sales, they classified under some weird thing
where they didn't have to disclose it till after the fiscal year rather than in quarter.
And so he was able to sell an enormous amount before having to report it. Yeah, all told, I think Lay sells about $300 million worth of Enron stock via these
transactions. Skilling sells about $200 million. And Fastow and a bunch of the other executives
sell a whole bunch too. And Fastow actually makes $60 million from the LJM partnerships,
from fees, carry, and selling partnership interest. So he actually makes more from the LJMs than I think he does in total comp at Enron ever.
Which the board never knew. And then as everything is really starting to devolve, and we'll get into that now, at one point, the board corners Fastow and they ask him, how much money have you made from these partnerships?
And he tells them and they immediately fire him.
So, and here's the one twinge of a smoking gun on skilling of why he was quitting.
That a Wall Street Journal reporter sort of unearthed in a conversation with him.
It's a pseudo-innocuous conversation.
It's like this kind of, I'm leaving for personal reasons,
blah, blah, blah. And he drops one line and he goes, and watching the stock price fall is just so depressing. I probably wouldn't have quit if not for that. And then the reporter goes,
wait, what? That doesn't sound like a personal reason. That sounds like a business reason.
That's when they can really take that ball and run with it and realize all the layers of what's going on here. A big one was, and this is a thing that got way reformed after Enron,
all communication from the company to employees, to investors, and between the board and executives
to set their compensation is about the stock price. Yeah. They're always saying, buy the stock.
Yes. Not about any intrinsic
characteristics. The company's not giving guidance on just, hey, here's what we think
revenue is going to be. And they're not telling employees what you should tell employees, which is,
I don't really know if this will go up or down, but here's the direction I think the intrinsic,
measurable parts of the business are going to go. What Enron is telling everyone is,
I think the stock will go up. What Ken Lay, what Skilling are telling people is,
stock should be 125.
What's it doing down at 40?
This is terrible.
These videos you can find of Lay at employee all hands,
where he gets a question card of,
should employees invest in Enron stock in their 401ks?
And this is the same time that Lay is doing these
structured transactions we were talking about to offload his Enron stock. Selling his shares.
And he says, I think you should put all of your 401k in Enron stock. And I don't see any reason
why the stock shouldn't be two or three X what it is now next year. Oh, it's just brutal. It's
brutal. Now, when you comp all these executives
and incentivize their bonuses against the stock price rather than against again things in the
company's control like its revenues like its performance and you tie it all to stock performance
then it incentivizes everyone to do these crazy things of pump the stock so they get their bonuses. Okay, so Skilling surprise resigns.
Lay comes back in into the operator seat as CEO. And he surprise resigns same day with no transition.
Yeah, no transition. He's just like, I'm out. Gone. So Lay comes back in and two things happen.
One, he asks Fastow, the CFO, he's trying to get a handle on, you know, like what's going on here.
You know, again, he's been out to lunch for years at this point, both metaphorically and
literally speaking. And he asked Fastow to say like, okay, what's the current debt obligations
of Enron? Like, I know what's on our balance sheet, but like, let's add up all the obligations
we have with all these special purpose entities that we've done. Fastow's like, uh, I don't know. Let me go work on that and I'll come back to you.
And the answer was literally that they didn't know because they did not keep this stuff in
a centralized location. They signed all this paper through all these different entities
and there was not a central ledger anywhere with who owes what to who.
So he comes back to Lay and the board and says,
our actual obligations are $34 billion, which the debt on the balance sheet was $12.8 billion.
So everybody is shocked. It's becoming clear this is a major liquidity existential crisis
for the company. And the company has no cash flow. So it's like,
oh, well, maybe we can service that debt with next quarter's cash. No, no, no, no, no. There
is no cash coming in the door. So then right around the same time, a VP in CorpDev named
Sharon Watkins writes first an anonymous memo, and then she puts her name on it and asks for a
private meeting with Ken Lay about this memo that she writes where she's trying to be a whistleblower here. She's like, look, what's going on has reached
such a crazy pitch and all these LJM transactions that are happening and everything finance is doing
and all these off books entities. She writes in the memo, quote, I am incredibly nervous
that we will implode in a wave of accounting scandals.
And Leigh meets with her, reads the memo, but just like back in the day with the rogue traders,
he doesn't do anything.
No need for confrontation. I don't think we should do anything about this.
No need for action. This is August 2001. Think about that. We are now mere days away from September 11th. September 11th happens.
Terrible, obviously awful, but in a crazy way, this was a reprieve for Enron. It took everybody's
eye off the ball of the investor community and the press of how bad things were getting at Enron.
It also gave them cover to say, geez, every stock's down right now.
Right. And they
needed this because partially due to the events of September 11th, but this was a ticking time
bomb was going to happen anyway. The morning of September 12th, the next day when the financial
markets reopen, Enron's commercial paper, their overnight loans, don't turn over. There's no
buyers for the overnight Enron commercial paper,
which quick primer, we won't get into too many details here because frankly, I don't understand
all of them, but for treasury and corporate finance, most large companies and especially
trading operations, they have what's called overnight commercial paper, which are very,
very short-term loans that they use to finance the daily cash obligations of the
company, like paying payroll, paying vendors, that kind of stuff.
Right. If you think about what's a company like Microsoft have 70,000 employees, and you think
about how much money they need every two weeks to pay all those people, well, they don't just keep
an enormous part of their treasury in cash to pull that off. They effectively have a margin loan
against their treasury that they use that actually finances the sort of short-term cash flow needs of the company.
And this is super standard. Every large public company does this. And it is shocking if your
paper doesn't what's called turnover, which is get repurchased, you know, every day.
Right. And like if Microsoft asks me, can you loan me some money for the next 24 hours? I promise I'll give it back to you with this tiny
amount of interest. And actually, if you're open to it, would you be game to keep agreeing to do
that every day for the next five years? Every day they come to me every day, I'm going to be like,
sure. On September 12th, Enron's commercial paper doesn't turn over. Nobody's there to buy it. Now,
if this were not September 12th, 2001, that would have been game over for Enron, like right there.
That would have been the end.
But everybody's a little distracted.
Because they generate cash flow in no other way, so there's no other way to tap any cash.
Everybody's a little distracted.
They're able to pull through for at least another couple of weeks.
Later, though, by kind of early October, everybody's recovered enough, you know, in the rest of the financial community from September 11th that they resume the questioning of Enron.
The Wall Street Journal starts running stories about LJM and speculating on how much they think Fastow might have pulled out of these entities and earned for himself at the expense of the company, Arthur Anderson starts
getting real nervous about their role in enabling all of this. And then... Arthur Anderson sort of
premeditates, there might be an investigation at some point, and we are not allowed to destroy
the evidence once there's been an investigation notified to us. So maybe let's get ahead of it,
and let's shred more documents
than we've ever shredded in the entire history of the firm
before we get served something by an attorney.
So Arthur Anderson Legal on October 12th
sends an email to the Houston office.
God, this email.
Literally directing them in writing in an email
to start destroying any and all non-finalized documents
that are related to Enron, either digital or physical, quote, in accordance with the firm's
document retention policy. They've never sent anything like this or done anything like this
for any other client. And then they follow it up with a second sentence that says,
just so that we're in accordance with the policy.
Yes, the policy. This is the policy.
This is a regularly scheduled. Of course, I'm just reminding you to do the regularly scheduled policy, which this email may set the policy, but, you know, do what the policy says.
So the Houston office of Arthur Anderson, they go on for weeks, like the volume of evidence destroyed here,
tens of thousands of emails deleted. That's like the easy to get your mind around.
The amount of physical documents that they shred, they cannot physically shred the paper fast
enough. They're shredding one ton of paper every single day. That's the maximum capacity.
This goes on for weeks.
Dozens of tons of paper that they shred of documents related to Enron.
My God, if they weren't guilty before, they sure look guilty of something bad now.
And I think, you might know more than I do here, but I think Arthur Anderson went under
not because they were found guilty of anything, but because when this all started playing
out and they went in the news as being Enron's auditors for all this document destruction
for being really sloppy, they were complicit and sloppy.
Enron needed to do a handful of restatements that were just straight up Arthur Anderson's fault. I think their customers all just left. And so Arthur Anderson basically ran out of business. any, certainly no criminal actions for its direct role within Enron, I don't believe,
but they do face criminal action from the Department of Justice and the SEC over destroying
of documents. And as a result of that, the SEC in 2002, middle of 2002, revokes Anderson's CPA
license. So literally bars them from...
Oh, I didn't realize that. Okay.
They had already started to lose tons of clients because, shocker, Anderson was also the auditor
of WorldCom, which would be an even bigger bankruptcy that would happen shortly after Enron.
So they'd already started to lose clients, and then the SEC revokes their license,
and that's the end of the firm. It's done. It's over. They employed 85,000 people. Gone.
And it really was the most reputable firm in the world.
And it was destroyed. It's over.
But back to Enron.
So it was October 12th that Anderson starts shredding.
On October 16th, Ben, like you were saying, Enron reports earnings.
They announce $638 million of losses for the first time on their
income statement. And they say they have to do a restatement of shareholder equity and restate
$1.2 billion worth of shareholder equity related to improper accounting of off-books entities.
And this is the Raptors, right?
I think this is the Raptors. It may have been some others too. I love that it's is the Raptors, right? I think this is the Raptors. It may have been
some others too. I love that it's called the Raptors. Okay, this is fast out. There's four
entities, Raptor 1, 2, 3, and 4. They also have other names for some reason. They're like referred
to in multiple ways, but they're off balance sheet vehicles that Enron's basically using to hide
large debt loads they're carrying and huge losses.
In fact, I think the Raptors start co-signing deals, or at least sort of co-mingling,
so that if one can't pay something off, then the other one's on the hook for it.
Well, I think the Raptors are also like, what's the right word?
Apothesis?
Is that like the biggest, most grandest example of Enron's just like awfulness in accounting?
The Raptors, I believe, were hedges, intended to be hedges on some of Enron's investments.
But the actual mechanism and the underlying collateral that they used for the hedge was Enron stock itself.
So they became this like massively toxic, like they didn't actually hedge anything. And all it did was double the exposure to like a broad-based stock market hit.
It kind of feels like even if Enron hadn't started falling apart before September 11th,
September 11th would have been the trigger because they had all this correlated risk.
So as soon as their stock stopped going up for any reason, then the whole thing would crumble.
And indeed, that is what happens.
So October 22nd, the SEC announces that they are launching an inquiry into Enron's accounting.
The next day, the 23rd, is when the board calls in Fastow and demands to know how much money he's made in the LGM funds.
They find out they fire him. They instate the former company treasurer, Jeff McMahon,
who had been the treasurer, but then Fastow had ousted him because he wasn't loyal enough to
Fastow. He comes back into the finance department, this time as the CFO. McMahon learns that not only
did Fastow not know how much debt Enron as an organization had, he also didn't know how much debt Enron as an organization had. He also didn't know how much cash they had.
And he also didn't know the maturity schedule of the debt. So he didn't know,
and thus nobody in finance knew the company didn't know when they had to repay the debt.
Which to me, this is the biggest example of they thought the rug that they were sweeping stuff
under was infinitely large because they had no plan to service any of this debt or track
any of it. There was no plan. They just somehow never thought they would need to or it would
catch up to them. I don't know. Well, I guess to what you've been saying the whole episode,
which is true, if the markets had always been good and the stock price had always gone up,
they always could have just issued more equity to cover any cash needs that they had.
Right. But obviously, that's not going to happen now.
So it takes McMahon and his new team a couple of days to pull all that together. When they do,
they figure out the company is basically already insolvent. So they need emergency financing.
So they do the only thing that they can do, which is they pull down all the revolving credit lines they have with all of their banks.
These are outstanding revolving lines that look kind of like credit cards,
so revolving lines of credit with banks.
They actually went and asked the banks, hey, can we get new debt lines with you? And every single one said no. And so they pulled the credit lines, which the banks have no option. It's
already negotiated and signed.
Enron drew down the credit lines.
Yes. So Enron draws down those credit lines
and then they issue a press release that they've done this in order to A, assure shareholders that
they're under great financial footing because now they have all this cash and B, show the bank's
support and that they stand behind Enron. You're like, no, no, no, no, no. They had no choice.
The banks are fighting them tooth and nail on all this. Yeah. So after they do that, the credit agencies immediately downgrade Enron's credit rating.
Finally.
It's shocking that they hadn't until then.
Moody's.
They've been complicit the whole time.
And just shows you just how much of a racket this thing is.
No one has been actually underwriting this company to decide if they're credit worthy or not.
So at this point, it's obvious even to
the most fervent believers or head in the sand people at the company, you can make your argument
of which category each of the executives and the board stood in with that, but it's obvious
and runs in a death spiral. So two things happen. One, Ken Lay starts calling around to all of his
political connections in the bush administration
basically with his handout looking for a bailout kind of like um you know what would happen in uh
in 2008 in the financial crisis the bush administration does not give enron a bailout
so there's no dice there once that becomes clear he does the only next thing that is even any remote possible chance of saving the company, which is he reaches out to the CEO of Enron's largest competitor, Dinergy, and tries to broker a deal.
He also tried to line up a bunch of private equity. He was going to go for a take private. They called Warren Buffett. Buffett was completely uninterested. They called 10 other. They're looking for capital sources. Anybody that's got cash or the ability to take us private, let's do it. And no bites.
So let's try and get acquired. So they go to the kind of crosstown rivals in Houston,
Dynagy, who got no press and no fanfare over the last several years, but they're kind of the same
thing. I think they're pipeline and trading. In Conspiracy of Fools, I don't know
if this is in Smartest Guys in the Room, there's quotes from Enron people talking about Dynagy as
the Burger King to Enron's McDonald's. And they're trading in a much lower multiple. They have no
big story. So here's what happens. They strike a super fast 11th hour deal to save Enron, prevent it from filing from bankruptcy.
Dynagy is going to acquire Enron for $8 billion, an all stock deal, no cash.
But Enron, of course, needs more cash to survive until the deal can close and Dynagy can complete
its due diligence. So Dynergy lends one and a half
billion dollars to Enron in cash to help Enron through the liquidity crisis. And the loan is
secured by Enron's core original pipeline assets. So back to the inner north days, like those
valuable actual operating pipelines, the only thing that is like actually tangible in the company.
And I think JP Morgan comes into the deal too. And so JP Morgan mandates that, but they also
mandate that all future Enron investment banking business will be handled by JP Morgan over the
next 18 months. There's an internal memo at JP Morgan that's like, these guys are going to need
a lot of investment banking help, and we're going to mandate that we get those fees.
So the deal gets signed, it gets announced to the market on November 9th, 2001. In the intervening
period, while all the documents are being prepared and Dinergy is doing its due diligence on the deal. It comes out. Remember
Chuco that we were talking about a while back? The Chewbacca, the Andy Fastow and Michael Copper
total front to buy out the toxic waste that they thought they'd sealed up?
Well, right at this time, Anderson, who's now fearing for its own skin, they're looking back through all this because
everything's going on and they discover about Copper and Dodson and this crazy domestic
partnership front. They're not married, so technically Dodson isn't a spouse. And they say,
this is no good. We can't count that. It's not independent. We're going to have to restate everything,
all the assets associated with Chuko and Jedi. It's like restating years worth of versions.
All the way back to 1997, we're going to have to reconsolidate all of those assets and liabilities
back onto Enron's balance sheet, undo the mark-to-market accounting on the revenue side, this comes out during that
period. So there's a further sort of equivalent of run on the bank with Enron. Liquidity dries
up even more. It blows through the $1.5 billion that Dinergy lent it and is out of money again.
I can't let you get away with this, the run on the bank thing. The context you use it is
totally fair. In the context that the Enron executives were using it in this period, it was a completely
unfair analogy. They were like, oh, it was merely a run on the bank. If people hadn't gotten spooked
from those darn journalists and the short sellers writing that story, we would have been fine.
And no, runs on the bank are an issue when the bank is being irresponsible. You can't say,
oh, it's just a run on the bank, because if the bank is runnable, there's a problem. And specifically, I think where all
that money goes and the run on the bank nature of this is, remember, Enron's an active trader
in the market. Well, none of their counterparties are willing to trade with them anymore without
cash guarantees backing up the trade. So they use up all the liquidity, basically cash guaranteeing all the
trade settlements that they're doing. So at the end of the month, on November 28th, 2001,
Dynagy walks away from the deal. The deal's canceled. The news of this hits the press
at 1030 AM, I assume central time on november 28th amazingly this is just like
an amazing coincidence who knows you know uh i'm sure nothing was told or confidential information
shared or pre-planned at 10 20 a.m 10 minutes before the news comes out, Ken Lay's wife sells 500,000 shares of Enron stock that the
Ken and whatever her name is, that the Lay family foundation held.
Unbelievable.
You cannot make this stuff up. Once the news comes out, everybody knows Enron is bankrupt.
The stock crashes down to 61 cents a share when it becomes obvious.
Down from $82 a share earlier that year and 90 the year before.
Okay, so 61 cents. Keep that in mind. That is what the stock is trading at.
By the way, that Ken Lay thing, the Lay Family Foundation made some money on the way out. Do
you know about the other $60 million thing? Ooh, I'm not sure I do. As a part of the Dynagy term sheet, upon completion of the deal,
Ken Lay just got $60 million in cash as like a bonus.
It was that golden parachute.
Yeah, because he was going to leave as part of the deal.
Exactly.
And there was such a revolt among employees who were all like actively losing their life
savings in retirement or like, hell no.
And so he ended up realizing the optics were bad enough that he actually put that into the company. It ended up not mattering
anyway because the Dynergy deal didn't happen. But yeah, crazy. Okay, so it's clear Enron is
going to file for bankruptcy in the coming days. Stock goes down to 61 cents. On December 2nd, indeed, just a few days later, Enron files
for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. At the time, the largest bankruptcy in US history, Ben, as you said at the
top of the show. It would not be for long, though, because six months later, WorldCom would be larger.
And since then, there have actually been five Chapter 11 bankruptcies that are larger.
Isn't that crazy? That that this was the largest at the
time 20 years ago, but now you've got Lehman, Washington Mutual, WorldCom, GM, much bigger
bankruptcies than Enron since? I think Lehman is the largest, right?
Lehman is the largest. It's the only one in the high hundreds of billions, whereas Enron
had 63 billion in assets before filing. So Enron is over, literally, given the colorful, is that the right word?
Evil?
I think we need to say evil cast of characters here.
Everything goes just about as you could predict.
The Justice Department begins a criminal investigation.
Just about everybody except Skilling starts running left and right trying to cop a plea
deal. It is worth before getting into the sentencing and trials, like what is bankruptcy? just about everybody except skilling starts running left and right trying to cop a plea deal
it is worth before getting into the sentencing and trials like what is bankruptcy and what happens in
their bankruptcy proceedings so i decided this was the time to learn the difference between chapter
7 and chapter 11 bankruptcy because i never actually thought about it before it's pretty
interesting both of them are options that you have when a business can no longer pay its creditors. Chapter seven is when you just want to liquidate, cease operations. You turn it over to a
trustee and say, we are done forever. Chapter 11 is this like interesting temporary thing where
you are saying, we would like to reorganize. The debtor stays in control. So by debtor,
it's like corporation, the company that owes the money to all the creditors stays in control. So by debtor, it's like corporation. The company that owes the money to all the creditors stays in control.
And the court, a judge, and the debtor basically need to come up with a reorganization plan
and agree on that.
And then there's execution of the plan.
And I think the creditors, the people who the company owes money to, also have to agree.
So what happens is John Ray gets brought in as
the chief administrative officer who is currently serving the same role over at FTX. And he comes in
to basically be the administrator while it's in chapter 11 to come up with a deal. Interestingly
enough, there was actually a person who was hired before him, Stephen Cooper, and he came up with
a plan and got everyone together in the court to generate 17 cents on the dollar. Well, Cooper
worked for a consulting firm that managed to get 60 million out before the board realized that he
was not the most economical choice for the creditors. So they fired him and brought in Ray,
who I think was like a board member.
They kind of redo the board during chapter 11 also. And Ray came in and he basically figured
out a way to get twice as much out to creditors. So creditors love John Ray. He was able to get
$13 billion out to creditors, which is about $0.36 on the dollar, much better than the $0.17
that Stephen Cooper, that his plan called for.
But I was reading an article in 2007. It had still not yet been fully sorted out by 2007.
So six years afterwards.
Ah, yes. So I think what you're referring to with the cents on the dollar is dollars to
the creditors, to Enron's debt holders, not to equity holders, not to people who held the stock.
Correct. Oh yeah, equity holders are wiped.
Aha. Oh, hang on.
We got to get to the end of the episode.
All right, all right.
Remember the 61 cents a share.
So one thing though that you did just jog my memory on
that we missed in the notes,
I swear it wasn't intentional,
but we don't want to bury it too far in the footnotes
like Enron here. I do have an obligation to bring up. You mentioned the board and that reminded me,
we got a little bit of a knock against HBS and Harvard Business School earlier with
skilling and being such an illustrious alumni here. We would be remiss, I would be remiss if
I didn't also knock my own business school alma mater, the Stanford
Business School. Your comment about the board reminded me, do you know who folks listening,
I'm sure very, very few of you know this, but the chair of the audit committee of Enron's board
during all the years that all this was going on, was the dean of Stanford Business School,
who was an accounting professor. Kind of hard to argue that he shouldn't have known better.
Kind of hard to argue. A little aside here. Do you know what John Ray did before coming into Enron?
It's been an important focus of two episodes on Acquired.
Ooh, I would guess Blockbuster, but that can't be right
because they hadn't gone bankrupt yet.
Yeah, it's not Blockbuster.
I'll give you another hint.
After bankruptcy,
after John Ray restructured
and it came out of Chapter 11,
it was sold to Berkshire Hathaway.
Shoot, I should know, but I don't.
Fruit of the loom.
Fruit of the loom!
Yes, Brooks!
Yes.
So John Ray, a sort of unexpected acquired superhero.
Wow. That's awesome. We got to have him on the show. He's a little busy right now.
He is a little busy charging $1,400 an hour for his services.
Wow. Worth it if he can get a good outcome for the creditors.
Yep. So the path from 61 cents a share.
Yeah. Well, the Justice Department opens up a case. Everybody starts trying to cut plea deals.
One of the Enron senior executives who we haven't talked about on this episode, Cliff Baxter,
sadly commits suicide.
Really sad. He actually had left Enron a good bit before this, sometime in the last year,
but felt so sort of depressed and responsible. And I think
his note was about not being able to spend time with any of the people that were a part of his
community after losing so much for so many people. Totally. Ken Lay and Skilling, even though
Skilling's quit months before, obviously he's implicated in all this. They lawyer up and fight,
which practically they have to because, like we said,
everybody else starts trying to cut plea deals. Why would the feds cut plea deals with people?
It's because they want to get the people at the top and get them to testify against them. So
lay and skilling, no, kind of there's no way out for them.
It's how you get a mob boss. It's like the classic playbook.
Totally. So I think Copper,
Michael Copper, I think is the first person to cut a deal. He rats out Fastow and testifies against him. Fastow initially also tries to fight and lawyer up Blake, Lay, and Skilling,
but the feds ultimately end up getting him to cave when they bust his wife, Leah, for tax evasion for
everything that she was involved in. Oh yeah, she also worked at the
company. She was an assistant treasurer at Enron too. Fastow ends up doing six years in prison.
Leah does one year. And we should say Fastow, basically he admitted fault and then would
double down on it. Anytime he's asked for the rest of time in prison, out of prison, he's like,
oh yeah, what we did was illegal. What we did was completely wrong. I feel terrible for the people. You can actually hire Fastow as a speaker now
to come and talk about corporate responsibility and corporate culture, which is nuts. We'll
include a link in the show notes to book him if you would like to have him at your event.
News eventually comes out through all of this about lays close ties with the bush family and everybody
in the bush political cabinet in the white house so president bush this is george w bush the son
at this point he calls a press conference and claims in this press conference that like hey
i barely know this guy you know he uh you know he was like he donated to some of my campaigns, but I can't really remember his name.
He would earlier in the press refer to him as Kenny Boy, my friend.
Obviously, that was completely wrong. The Bush family was very close. So close, in fact,
that when W was inaugurated president, George H.W. and Barbara Bush traveled from Houston to Washington for the inauguration with
lay on the Enron corporate jet. What? Really? Nobody comes out looking good here. We talked
about how Arthur Anderson, they're dead, they're over. And then the culmination, you know, politically and in terms of kind of the impact on
the economy and the markets from all this is pretty shockingly quickly. I didn't realize
how fast this happened. July 30th, 2002. So just a, you know, what's that, six plus months after the Enron bankruptcy, President Bush signs into law
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act that was pushed very quickly and almost unanimously through both
houses of Congress. I just looked this up. It's crazy. It was approved in the House,
423 in favor, three opposed, eight abstaining, and the Senate was 99 to one. Sarbanes-Oxley, like everyone lined up
for this. Could you imagine anything today getting those kind of votes? Yeah. And lots of people can
be mad about Sarbanes-Oxley because it makes IPOing and being a public company really hard.
And so that actually kicked off stay private longer, or you could argue that it was a huge
impact in the early 2010s of companies
staying private forever. So what was in Sarbanes-Oxley is pretty interesting. It's the
kitchen sink. It is like, what did Enron do wrong? And they just piece by piece went and figured out
a way to put a lid on the cookie jar. So the biggest thing is top management, the CEO has to
certify the accuracy of financial information.
Yeah, both the CEO and the CFO. Yep. So like huge personal responsibility, more severe penalties for fraud, new restrictions
around tampering with or destroying evidence. They make that a felony. They also require outside
auditors to be more independent. So every tax firm has to spin off their consulting practice. You can no longer house both under the same house.
They increase the required disclosures to be a public company.
Including you have to disclose all your off-balance sheet entities.
And so there's a very interesting question, I think, around Sarbanes-Oxley is like,
did it work? We just went through another bull run. And so the question after Sarbanes-Oxley came out is really around,
we won't know if this works or not until the next market craziness. And so I think there's
this pretty interesting thing around the result of Sarbanes-Oxley being stay private longer that
it's much more likely that fraud now happens in the private market than the public market.
And that is basically what we saw with Theranos, with FTX.
So much in crypto. Yeah, super, super interesting. Did you see this in the research? I found this
from Googling. One of the provisions of Sarbanes-Axley was actually used in prosecuting
capital rioters for the January 6th riots. Yep. Really interesting. And what clause was that?
Oh, it was that? That was...
Oh, it was that you can't impede an official proceeding.
And that's the like,
Arthur Anderson can't destroy evidence thing.
They were basically like,
the rioters are impeding an official vote counting proceeding.
Yeah, something like that.
But yeah, it was back in the news recently.
Fascinating.
So as with all huge mega scandal trials like this, like we said, all the underlings,
even all the way up to fast out cop plea deals, the actual case that the government wants is to
go against lay and skilling, go against the top. Yes. Every single one of them all the way down
cut plea deal. So Ken Rice, who led broadband, did the plea deal, got a 27 month sentence.
Rex Shelby was charged with fraud, conspiracy,
money laundering. I think the deal was if you plead guilty to one count of insider trading, you get two years of probation. So there was a handful of those like wrist slap ones
to get Ken Lay and Skilling. Yeah, the quid pro quo one on the deals were all
testify against Lay and Skilling. And Fastow, you know, with six years.
Given all that he did, that was very light it feels weird
to sort of judge whether a criminal penalty is harsh or not like acquire doesn't quite feel like
the right forum for that because it's i don't know without me saying whether i think this is
too harsh or not harsh enough because i'm not well just like this is not financial advice we
are also not lawyers right but it's interesting to me that six years is an amount of time for which you can kind
of go back to your life afterwards.
Like if you think back to what you were doing six years ago, it's sort of the same chapter
of life.
Like if you have young kids, they're older, but they're still not out of the house.
If you were mid-career, you come out, you're still mid-career.
You were in jail for six years, so that's going to mess with your career.
But it's different than like a 25-year sentence or something like that where you come out, you're still mid-career. You were in jail for six years, so that's going to mess with your career. But it's different than like a 25-year sentence or something like that,
where you're like, you're an entirely different human at an entirely different phase of the human
existence when you come out. So it takes a very long time for the government to build up
all their case against lay and skilling. It's not until 2005 that it finally comes to a trial, and then the trial takes a year and a half to finish.
So in May 2006, which is interesting, both Conspiracy of Fools and Smartest Guys in the Room came out before the trials even started.
I think they felt like, we just gotta publish, even though the story's not over.
Yep. And the movie did, too.
That's right, the movie did too. That's right. The movie did too. So May 2006, a jury
finally convicts Skilling of 19 out of 28 counts of wire fraud and securities fraud.
And Lay gets convicted on six counts of securities fraud. A short while later on July 5th, 2006,
before the sentencing happens, Lay is found dead at his vacation home in Colorado
of a massive heart attack. It's interesting. I looked around. I never found any speculation on
that. There's lots of speculation. The cover of the New York Post had some joke about, like,
there's a photograph of Ken Lay's casket, and it was like, check if he's in there.
Yeah, right. I think there's a website like kenlaylives.com or.org or something that popped up. There's a lot of that. Oh, interesting,
whether he actually died or not. I was thinking whether it was suicide or he actually had a heart
attack or, you know, who knows? Yep. Anyway, he's dead. The verdict against him is vacated.
Which is crazy. Not only did he not get sentenced, it means that whatever money he had did not get seized.
Oh, interesting. And he made potentially hundreds of millions of dollars.
Oh, there's no way he died of natural causes then.
Yeah. I think him not getting sentenced saved...
His wife and family?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Speculation. And I'd welcome any, i don't know anything there i'd welcome any
thoughts people have i tried to find it and it was hard to find information but in particular
because it's just hard to figure out through all the stock sales over the years plus all the
borrowing that he did what his personal balance sheet would have looked like at this point in his
life anyway well and here's the crazy thing too like despite all of this despite all of this, despite all of this, when he dies, guess who comes to his funeral?
George W. Bush.
Not W, but HW.
HW. Wow. Because he was closer with HW.
Yeah. Un-freaking-believable.
The preacher at the funeral, I mean, there's a lot of people who were,
he's a very God-fearing man who were a part of his community, a part of his church, and
felt very strongly that like this is a good person and everyone who's coming after him is wrong.
Get this. Here's some excerpts from the obituary published in the Houston Chronicle when he dies.
Quote, Ken spent 64 years on earth doing God's work, helping others with love. Ken's life exemplified Galatians 5.22, but the fruit of the spirit is
love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.
It sounds like the list of values Enron had in the lobby.
Yeah, totally. Can you believe that? That's not like what was printed in the
church memorial. That was published in the Houston Chronicle. The ironic thing about the God's work
quote is Jeff Skilling said about two years before Enron's collapse that he felt Enron was doing
God's work. Yeah, right. He also threw out, I mean, I have like a whole list of Skilling quotes
here. The one says, what's the difference between California and the Titanic?
At least when the Titanic went down, the lights were on.
The preamble to that, if you watch the quote where he says it,
I can't remember what the venue is.
He even says in the preamble, he's like, I probably shouldn't say this,
but he's the CEO of the sixth or seventh largest company in the world.
And he's saying this stuff. Oh my
God, this person. So on October 23rd, 2006, Skilling is sentenced to 24 years in prison.
I'm shocked it was only 24. He appeals, and get this, so he's fighting to the bitter end.
The appeal ends up going all the way up to the US Supreme Court, where I don't know what the
right legal term is, but they end up sending it back down to a lower court for resentencing to
redo the sentencing. The sentence gets reduced to 14 years. Skilling ends up serving 12 in total
and is released from federal custody in February 2019. So he is back out there
on the streets, apparently trying to do deals, it was reported, but I don't think very successfully.
And in 2020, Jeff Skilling founded a new energy trading company based in Texas called Veld LLC, rumored to be working on the venture with LuPi.
Oh, I didn't see that. Oh, that's amazing. Oh my God.
Unbelievable.
Listeners, we already cut some LuPi stuff from this episode because I was just like,
no, we can't talk about this guy anymore. But that we got to leave in.
Unbelievable. And the website was up
and now it's down and no one's returned any press requests for comment on it. And the rumors were
like two, two and a half years ago at this point. So maybe it actually didn't end up happening.
Who knows? Well, Lou still got some money because he did settle with the government for, I think,
$31 million, but he still had plenty of other cash to live on.
Two fun little coda moments before we wrap up the story, just to put a bow on things fully before we
move into analysis. One, we've talked about Omaha. We've talked about Berkshire Hathaway
a lot on this episode, but until this moment, there has been no connection. Warren Buffett,
Charlie Munger, Berkshire Hathaway, zero involvement with any of Enron or any of Enron's
predecessor companies. However, if you remember from the Dynagy aborted transaction. The assets that secured the $1.5 billion were the pipelines. The original
InterNorth Omaha-based company pipeline. Well, when the deal falls apart and Enron burns through
the cash, Dynergy seizes the pipelines. They operate them for like a short while,
but they're like, we don't really want these. We should sell these.
I don't know where this is going,
but this is exactly the type of thing that Berkshire should pick up.
Who ends up buying the pipelines but Berkshire Hathaway Energy.
Wow.
All comes full circle and the company comes home to Omaha, to Warren Buffett's warm embrace.
It could not be more perfect.
It could not be more perfect.
So in the end, I guess InterNorth did have the last laugh.
The great city of Omaha wins in the end.
Crazy.
Okay, one more.
I kept harping on the 61 cents earlier
and it took, you know, Ben,
you read an article that is of 2007. Things were still going on with the carcass of Enron.
Well, let me tell you what happens in September of 2008, of all times, September of 2008, the post-bankruptcy shell corporation of Enron
finally finishes. They'd already disposed of all the assets, sold them off. They finally finish
settling all the lawsuits that were involved, that it was pursuing. It was pursuing various
lawsuits of other parties involved to try and recover some funds for equity shareholders who
lost all their money.
99% sure it was equity shareholders at this point in time, because I think the creditors had all already settled years before. Well, the biggest opportunity to recover dollars for shareholders,
they determined over the years, was to sue the banks that participated in all the shenanigans with Enron. And of course, banks have a lot of
money. Well, in September 2008, the whole suite of settlements with a whole variety of banks,
JP Morgan, Citigroup, various others, come in for a total of $7.2 billion coming into this rotting carcass of Enron, which results in a distribution
of $6.79 to every common shareholder. What? So if you had bought Enron equity in those days
between the collapsing of the Dinergy merger and the bankruptcy, if you had bought for 61 cents,
you would have had over a 10x return
if you were willing to hang on for seven years. David Rosenthal, you've outdone yourself.
Oh my God. Imagine that in 2001, 2002. You know what we should go in and buy?
Some Enron stock. I think we should find a way to buy some FTX equity right now.
Oh my God. It's kind of incredible that there was enough
to pay off any equity holders that it wouldn't all just go to creditors. So wait, how is it that
any remaining dollars that could go to anyone wouldn't have just gone to creditors? I don't
know for sure, but I suspect what happened was the bankruptcy had been exited. I don't know for sure,
but I'm speculating. Bankruptcy had been exited and the credit't know for sure, but I'm speculating.
Bankruptcy had been exited and the creditors had said like, okay, we're good.
Right. We've got all we think we're going to get.
We've got all we think we're going to get. The cookie jar is closed.
There's so many cookie jars in this episode.
The piggy bank is empty. Piggy bank. Yeah, not a cookie jar. Piggy bank. Isn't that unbelievable? A 10x
investment to literally buy the dip in Enron. Oh, wow, wow, wow, wow, wow.
Crazy. And then it ends up back in Omaha with Berkshire Hathaway. Like, it's just so good.
We want to thank our longtime friend of the show, Vanta, the leading trust management platform.
Vanta, of course, automates your security reviews and compliance efforts.
So frameworks like SOC 2, ISO 27001, GDPR, and HIPAA compliance and monitoring,
Vanta takes care of these otherwise incredibly time and resource draining efforts for your organization and makes them fast and simple.
Yeah, Vanta is the perfect example of the quote that we talk about all the time here on Acquired. Jeff Bezos, his idea that a company should only focus on what actually makes your beer
taste better, i.e. spend your time and resources only on what's actually going to move the
needle for your product and your customers and outsource everything else that doesn't.
Every company needs compliance and trust with their vendors and customers.
It plays a major role in enabling revenue because customers and partners demand it,
but yet it adds zero flavor to your actual product.
Vanta takes care of all of it for you.
No more spreadsheets, no fragmented tools,
no manual reviews to cobble together
your security and compliance requirements.
It is one single software pane of glass
that connects to all of your services via APIs
and eliminates countless hours of work
for your organization.
There are now AI capabilities to make this even more powerful, and they even integrate with over 300 external
tools. Plus, they let customers build private integrations with their internal systems.
And perhaps most importantly, your security reviews are now real-time instead of static,
so you can monitor and share with your customers and partners to give them added confidence.
So whether you're a startup or a large enterprise and your company is ready to automate compliance
and streamline security reviews like Vanta's 7,000 customers around the globe, and go back
to making your beer taste better, head on over to vanta.com slash acquired and just
tell them that Ben and David sent you.
And thanks to friend of the show, Christina, Vanta's CEO, all acquired listeners get $1,000
of free credit. Vanta's CEO, all acquired listeners get $1,000 of free credit.
Vanta.com slash acquired. All right, so I have two little sort of codas too before we get into
analysis. Oh, this is a four-coda episode. Just two people, so I think it's interesting. One is
one of the best traders from Enron. I meant that in the very best possible way. Yes. John Arnold
went on to start the firm
Centaurus, which is one of the highest performing hedge funds ever. So that's sort of like, I don't
know that it's necessarily like he went on to solve world peace or anything, but like a person
went on to build something successful after Enron, which is worth calling out. Yeah. I had no idea
about this person. I didn't know about this fund. Apparently,
he was like a super, super young hotshot trader at Enron. Yeah, he's still only in his 40s today.
Yeah, he got the largest cash bonus that Enron ever gave to anybody who wasn't a senior executive
of, I think, $8 million. Wow. Shortly before the blow up. He was never accused of any wrongdoing.
He was a trader and supposedly wasdoing. He was, you know,
a trader and supposedly was there. Everything he did was above board. But then I think he took that
money, used it as the seed money to start the firm. And then it ended up becoming one of the
most successful funds of the past 20 years. Wow. Speaking of a seed to sort of start a firm. We didn't talk a lot in this episode about Richard Kinder. And we
didn't because while he was as hard driving as the rest of the Enron execs, he was probably the most
ethical and the most honest about what really provided value to customers.
Well, he was a pipeline guy, right?
He was a pipeline guy. Yeah. A lot of people, I think, including himself, thought he was in line to be the CEO. And he was sort of
Ken Lay's right-hand man for a while. Upon his exit, when he's finally decided like the direction
this is going is really just not for me. This is going in a very skilling direction. There was sort
of a sweetheart deal done for him to get a set of assets that he would use to be the sort of
foundation for what would become Kinder
Morgan. It was an energy pipeline. And today, Kinder Morgan is a $40 billion company. And Kinder
is a billionaire. He's worth like $8 billion. You know, he's really good at running and managing a
pipeline business. And when he saw that that wasn't the focus at Enron anymore, he got out
and started his own pipeline business.
And David, do you know what other asset was bought from Enron to become someone else's something business?
Well, I know UBS, where my first job was out of college,
bought the trading assets out of Enron.
Oh, did they?
Yeah, and I think they only lasted like six months or a year
and then it all kind of disintegrated.
But obviously that's not what you're talking about.
No.
GE bought the wind business from Enron,
and I believe even today is sort of the cornerstone of their wind energy business.
And then the last thing is I'm pretty sure Chevron bought the building.
Yes, I think that's one of the big oil companies bought the building.
All right, so let's dive into analysis. Do you want to start with power?
Yes, power. This will be an interesting one. Okay, so this is normally where we talk about
what gives a company the ability to be more profitable than their closest competitor.
And it feels silly to even ask the question on this episode
because this episode makes so clear the difference
between a corporation and a business.
And I always thought about this
on the other side of the spectrum.
Like, well, a startup is a company,
but it's not a business yet.
It's not a machine that you can put money into
and it burns capital.
There's not a business. It's a group machine that you can put money into and it burns capital. There's not a business.
It's a group of people working on a project, but a seed stage startup is not a business.
At some point, you look at an Apple, a company can become both a company and a business. The
company owns the business. The business operates. The company is the structure around it. And Enron
makes so clear that even long after you're a startup, it is possible to have all
the window dressing around a business, but not a business itself.
They are undoubtedly a company, a corporation, lots of structure, lots of people, lots of
activities, lots of reporting.
But what is the actual business inside of Enron?
And of course, this is what every reporter was trying to figure out as the stock was
falling. The question is, if you strip away all the terrible structure, and you strip away all the self-dealing, and you strip away all the overvalued stock, where are the biggest pieces inside the company that are real businesses, generate real value for customers, and the ability to capture some of that value by the company.
I suspect the trading business was pretty profitable or had the capability to be pretty
profitable. I've thought about this a little bit and we talked about it in the earlier part of the
episode where when they have first Lay and his original companies and then skilling and lay together with creating the
energy derivatives market, I think there's value to doing that. And had the company stopped there
and just been a trading participant in the energy derivatives market, yes, there would have been
value there. I think they probably would have ended up like one of the Wall Street banks where,
you know, like, look, some banks are stronger than others.
The league tables change.
It's kind of a commodity.
Like, nobody dominates the industry.
There's no, like, monopoly bank, but there's an oligopoly.
And they all do pretty well.
And I think Enron probably would have ended up like that in the trading business.
I don't know that there's any real specific power in the way
that Hamilton talks about it, where you can literally earn better returns than your competitors,
but I think they would have been part of that oligopical mix, so to speak.
And the argument that they could have actually done better is, I think that Enron Online was
a real way that they could have gotten real market power. I'm trying to think what that is.
It's probably cornered
resource. They would have had better access to information about the market than anyone else.
It's almost like the Citadel's business. Yeah, Citadel's or FTX and Alameda right before it all
went wrong. But Citadel is a good example. Yeah, that they would have the most real-time
market information at a given point. And there's an open question of like, would people have in the long run continued to trade
with them as both the exchange and the primary counterparty or the exclusive counterparty?
They may have had to over time pick whether they want to be a trading partner or own the
exchange itself to have that access to information.
But that would be a way that they could have
sort of generated alpha
on top of the rest
of their competitors,
that they could have been
more profitable than other people
who are offering
energy trading marketplaces
or other derivatives marketplaces.
You also have to imagine
the pipeline business
was probably profitable.
That's interesting
because that's just a pure monopoly.
Yeah, that's a cordoned resource for sure.
Yeah.
You don't build two pipelines between two locations.
It just doesn't make a lot of sense.
It's a big waste of resources.
It's like a highway.
You collect the toll on the highway because that's the highway.
So in that case, they're sort of competing against
other forms of powering the location that that pipeline dumps out into.
So it's the Midwest using coal instead of using this natural gas. So there isn't like a direct competitor to their pipeline business
in all likelihood. But by their very physical and geographic nature, pipelines are limited markets.
Yes. You may have a monopoly over the market you're in, but your market is limited to
the physical geographic reaches of
the pipeline. Right. It's a pretty interesting question because when you analyze Enron through,
and even if you had tried to analyze Enron in 99 through a Hamilton-Helmer lens,
you probably would have had a hard time coming up with power, which should have led you to the
answer that this thing is at least overvalued.
Something's going on here.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, they don't have a Google on their hands where it's like this just cash gusher
that is unbelievably defensible, high margin, durable.
It's almost like the company had a lot of things going for it.
They had the charisma and the money raising ability, and they were making a lot of money for a lot of people, so everyone was incented.
But the business didn't have a lot of things going for it.
I think you put it so well a minute ago of like,
this story illustrates the difference between a company and a business.
The company did really, really, really great for a really long time. The business, other than the underlying pipeline and then maybe the trading operations, but the business did not exist at the scale of the company for many years.
Fascinating.
Totally fascinating.
Playbook?
Well, if you want to cook your books, here are three easy steps to success.
That is unfortunately the playbook. The question is probably how did Enron manage to accomplish
what they accomplished? Because no doubt they accomplished something that is hard to do.
I think that's actually an interesting framing is they managed to achieve something that to date no other humans
had been able to do, which is convince the world that something with very little enterprise value
actually had a huge amount of enterprise value. And show it in accounting statements.
In many, many cases, accounting statements that were legal, there's lots of things that they did
that were illegal that they got prosecuted for. But there's a lot of things they did that were surprisingly legal.
These 3% partnerships and a lot of that stuff. I don't know. I'm conflicted about this. On the
one hand, I'm sort of loathe to promote anything from Andy Fastow, just given the story we just
told. On the other hand, he did his time. He served a sentence. He's remorseful in making
amends. But I think if you look at what's been reported about what he says publicly and what
he says in all of his speaking engagements that he does, this is his message, right? Of like,
yeah, there was like illegal stuff that happened. But most of what happened, most of the con that
happened was through legal means.
And we were just like really, really good at finding and exploiting
legal means through which to perpetrate fraud.
And that's wrong.
Right.
Isn't that crazy?
Right.
Yeah.
So, okay.
Bunch of playbook items using off-balance sheet partnerships to conceal billions of
losses and lots of debt.
To my knowledge, Sarbanes-Oxley makes this impossible now. The next one I had is more of
an observation. And it's something that I was talking about last time I was in San Francisco
and we got together with our friends at Vouch. I was talking with one of the Vouch co-founders
about this, the idea of correlated risk. And of course, it's huge in their business since they're
in the insurance business. And it's funny because this was before FTX happened.
And we were sort of talking about the fact that a lot of the times people assume when they have
like three or four layers of coverage, they're like, well, I'm covered. I'm like really secure
because there's a lot of nets below me. But you have to be really good at figuring out,
well, are
those actually four layers or is that one layer that looks like four?
Because oftentimes when something starts to tank, everything around it starts to tank
too.
And so when you tie everything to this share price and you tie everything to collateralizing
it with your own stock, or in the FTX case, if you collateralize against the FTT token, which is
very, very correlated to your company's enterprise value and future prospects, you end up in this
correlated risk territory. And I think so many times we're bad at seeing or don't want to see
correlated risk when everything is going up. And we view things as having sort of more protection
more safety net more separation than they do but when you do have a bunch of risks that are all
correlated together they fall apart so fast they unwind in a big hurry yeah totally agree i have a
corollary playbook theme for me coming out of this episode to that correlated risk playbook theme.
What's that?
Which I was thinking about through doing the research.
I've kind of always had this as like a part of my financial philosophy.
But then like the whole FTX thing and everything is made me think about it even more.
For me, not investment advice and lots of very reasonable smart people make different decisions.
But there's actually some academic literature out there about this.
I've decided the correct amount of financial leverage
to have on financial assets is zero.
The optimal amount of leverage is zero.
So you don't want to carry a mortgage if it were up to you?
Well, I view mortgages differently.
Because it's secured?
Because it's secured by physical property.
Which can change in value the same way
that a stock can change in value.
Totally. So that is definitely a contradiction to the philosophy. I do have a
mortgage, but when it comes to leverage in a, other than a residential mortgage, leverage in
a financial sense, like trading with leverage specifically, you're always taking a very large
risk. Even if you think the risk is very small
Once you start trading with leverage you invert the magical property of venture capital
Which is the most you can lose is your money and the most you can make is infinite
Yep, once you start using leverage that flips that is how you get game over or at least it equalizes
At least it equalizes. Yeah, or there's the like black swan idea that most of
the worst things to ever happen never happened before. So they're impossible to predict. I mean,
I often think about the fact that like, even if you correctly timed it coming out of the oil
crises to put a bunch of money in the stock market, and even if you were able to ride the
dot-coms all the way up, and even if you managed to sell before March of 2000, and then there was a big
crash and you decided to put money back in, you would have completely gotten washed out by 9-11.
Like you would not have forecasted the intense macroeconomic change that that would have brought
because there was no ability to predict it. And so there's like so many factors to these things.
This is my lecture to myself on macro forecasting of there's
the like you have to be right twice when you're timing the market when you're coming in and when
you're coming out but often there's like a a third thing that no one could ever predict that you also
have to be right about oh pandemic yeah well there's a point that i made earlier i think it's
worth trying to put in tighter words which is Enron's fatal flaw is that they borrowed from the future until there was no future
left to borrow from.
They squeezed everything by doing mark-to-market accounting out of the next 20 years in any
given deal that they did.
And then they got into a bunch of markets and they
recognized all the potential upside from every deal in every single one of those markets around
the world in every category today. And so what that leads to is, shouldn't that be like one of
the most valuable companies in the world? If you're going to recognize across geographies,
across a bunch of markets, across the the next 20 years all the upside of that
as revenue today like and then you apply some dcf model to that well yeah that's why they were the
seventh most valuable company in the world because on paper that's what they were doing and so what
you're basically doing is you're sort of double dcfing the value which it took me a while to
figure out like what's going on here.
But when you're discounting the future cash flows of something to the present and then
recognizing the value today, they were doing that first as revenue. But then when people
were trying to apply a multiple to the business, they were doing another, let's look at the next
20 plus years of this business exercise again on top of it. So it was like an N squared
situation. Well, then you throw the special purpose entities into the mix where they're
recognizing revenue on the way out too. Yeah. They were triple multiplying it. It's crazy.
And so it's like an exercise of the most path dependent spreadsheet of all time that there was
like zero resiliency in the price of the business because
it contemplated the assumptions that were baked into the price were that everything would go right
in every situation and every asset every deal that they did would be the most valuable it could
possibly be and that they would continue to be able to do this number of deals in more geographies and more
markets for the next 20 years. And I think pretty quickly, you actually run out of value to be
created in the world. At some point, you're like, you can't have a valuation that big because
there's not that much value to be created. And I don't think they quite bumped up against that,
but that's sort of the biggest constraint that you hit when you're doing goofy spreadsheeting
this way. And then of course, there was accounting, there's always fraud on top of it. So like that
was going to kill the whole thing. But assuming that that wasn't the case, and that what's the
actual issue with mark to market accounting in the situations they were doing mark to market
accounting, and then applying a more than sector multiple on the business, that is the big issue.
Yep. Okay, I got one more.
Yeah.
Which is in many ways one of the most obvious smack you in the head playbook themes from this episode, which is the old Charlie Munger quote, show me the incentives, I'll show you the behavior.
This is such a clear illustration of incentives and behavior. We could say a bunch of trade
obvious things about it, but what I wanted to talk about for a second here, it well-researched, you know,
660 pages of just like very detailed, very well-written thriller style. Great book,
highly recommend it. My biggest criticism of it though, is that it makes Fastow out to be
the primary villain. No doubt he was a huge villain, incredibly unethical, and on the surface,
the worst of the bunch. He was helping Enron perpetuate this incredible fraud,
and he was directly embezzling and stealing money through all the crazy partnerships and
the copper deals and all that stuff. That's really bad. And Eichenwald makes him out as such to be the primary villain.
And it's not that he goes easy on Leia and Skilling. They come out looking bad too, but in many ways, not as bad as Fastow. But then I was thinking about it. I don't know if it was in
the movie, Smartest Guys in the Room, but Sharon Watkins, the whistleblower, she gets asked at one
point, what do you think of this? It might
have been later. This might have been an interview later. Do you think Fastow was really the worst
person here? And she was like, no, it's not just that Fastow was bad. Everybody was complicit.
And she didn't say this explicitly, but I thought about it and I was like, Fastow stole about 40 to
60 million out of Enron directly, right? And Lay and Skilling didn't
do that. But they made hundreds of millions of dollars on the equity. They didn't need to steal
the money. Fastow was doing it without board approval. Those guys were doing it with board
approval. With board approval. They made more from the fraud. They were more incentivized in
perpetuating the music going than fastow was to like directly steal
right so in my mind that actually makes them worse like i said it's not like i i still feel
a little bit icky about like promoting what fastow is saying now but i think my conclusion at the end
of this is lay and skilling truly were the worst and the government was right to cut
plea deals with everybody else to really go after them i mean in a skilling like way you just laid
that out in a logical path that's hard to argue with maybe i'm the worst then
i think i'm not gonna argue with that it's an interesting line of thinking what was your
impression i didn't read the smartest guys in the room book. How does
that paint the situation?
There's nothing conflicting in the smartest guys in the room. I think this book definitely
makes Skilling out to be the bad guy and Ken Lay out to be kind of out to lunch. And he's also
kind of a sympathetic figure for the first half of his career because he's like this PhD economist,
civil servant, does all the right things. Whereas Skilling, nobody thinks that a management consultant is doing God's work.
And so Skilling is this perfectly formed character of HBS gone McKinsey, gone energy executive,
gone fraudster, where it is the most classic path of corporate
villain you can imagine and i think that's the case that the book makes too and all this is so
narrative driven like we're sitting here we've never met any of these people we've read books
about them we've read i don't know 30 or 40 articles listen to some podcasts talk to some
people who were like around the energy industry around this kind of time. So, but we've never met any of these people and we are telling a story of a story.
And it is worth saying, like, especially now that we're doing some character assassinations,
which normally we try not to do on Acquired, we are so far from the primary source here
that this is like some kind of weird sport pontification that I think we should stop.
I totally agree with you. And I'm glad we don't do this on Acquired normally because this is not what the show is about. But I think it's
okay in this case. We're talking about Enron here. Yeah. And we're trying to contextualize
everything that's going on specifically with FTX, but in what feels like a lot of increase in
fraudulent activity recently. Yep. Actually, speaking of FTX, did you know if FTX's 50 largest creditors
sum to 3.1 billion? Let's contextualize the numbers. That's what we know today. These numbers
are changing in real time. The whole was probably something about 10 billion. The equity investors
are probably wiped out to the tune of two-ish billion. At least that's the right order of
magnitude. And like Enron left behind a trillion dollars of claims to 30,000
creditors. Citigroup alone had 5 billion in claims. They're one of five or six big investment
banks that work with them. Yeah, there were a million and a half shareholders. I think people
forget the Enron scale. FTX is really bad. This is like a terrible bunch of illegal stuff that happened,
unethical stuff that happened. But the scale of Enron, I think because it happened 20 years ago,
people sort of forget how big it was. I think also on that point, on a reflective note,
studying the Enron history, it's crazy seeing the length of time that it took for everything to come out.
Yeah.
And for everything to be resolved.
So that's a good reminder for now and for FTX.
We're not even in inning one yet of figuring out what happened here.
Like, you know, it was years and years before all this stuff came out in the Enron case.
Yep.
So true.
I have one more observation to make, and then I'm curious to talk Sarbanes-Oxley with you.
So the last observation, I first had it reading the book, and then I tried to search for any
counterexamples in a bunch of articles and couldn't find any. I don't think there's a
single interaction between Enron and a human, like mostly employees, where the human didn't
make out versus the company like a bandit. Every single time there was any sort of
confrontation, and this is probably like the legacy of Ken Lay. This is his non-confrontational
thing. Every single person that walked away from Enron walked away with some kind of incredible
golden parachute or amazing sweetheart deal on an asset that they bought from the company,
or sign this paper and stay quiet and here's a bunch of money, or here's a bunch of stock. And every person just pulled one over on the company and its shareholders over and over and
over again. And I don't think the company ever had a hard line with anyone. I mean, you look at
a person we didn't even talk about is Rebecca Mark, who ran all the international stuff,
who ran Azurix, the international water project that both failed but was also never set up to succeed.
So it's hard to really blame her.
She lost billions of dollars, though.
Billions.
Yep.
And she sold about $83 million of stock.
She actually got out early enough, and she was sort of cast out by the male executives at the top
in a way where she was actually never accused of any wrongdoing
and never really a part of the prosecution of any of these things. But you know, she was a part of the gang of people who
were, well, at least she massively benefited to the tune of $83 million from something that only
ever hurt shareholders. Like no one was sitting around creating any shareholder value. And so
every deal cut with every employee ever who was leaving or staying just bribed them all.
Yeah.
All right, let's talk Sarbanes-Oxley. So did it work or did it just force fraudsters and malfeasance into the private markets?
Malfeasance to exist in the private markets or like international pseudo domestic markets
wherever crypto exists?
Because like crypto impacts the US even for companies that aren't domiciled here. So we've done a lot of things to push companies either away
from going public or away from doing business in the country, still totally affects Americans
and Canadian teachers. FTX being prime example there.
Yeah. This isn't a direct answer to your question, but one thing that I thought about through this whole process about Sarbanes-Oxley and the consequence of stay private longer and whatnot, no doubt Sarbanes-Oxley raised the cost and complexity of being a public company.
No doubt.
I think, though, probably not as much as the stay private longer proponents were saying.
And this might be related to what you're saying.
I suspect, again, to the incentives and behaviors, a lot of the companies that stayed private longer weren't doing so for the stated reason that it was too hard and too onerous to be a
public company, but they were doing it because there was too much benefit and money to be made
by staying private, whether that was secondary sales, whether that was being able to prop up your
company better than your business was performing, just the general opacity that the private markets afforded. Even thinking about
companies like Uber, the king, the granddaddy of all of the stay private longer. Yeah, I think
that's fair. I also think, what else was Congress going to do? I mean, it's not like they can go
create Bahamanian laws. They can make it harder to invest in offshore entities, but I'm not sure that that's
necessarily good. That might be a baby bathwater situation. You also can make it harder to be a
private company, but we don't want that either. We want to encourage new business creation. We want
to encourage a period before companies go public where they can have looser relationships with
their private shareholders and communicate information in a less standard way because
they're tiny companies. I think that makes a lot of sense. There's always a signal
noise thing where you want to make sure that your legislation is directed at quashing only the
signal that you want without having the blast radius. Which I think with those statements,
Sarbanes actually probably has accomplished its goals pretty well, which is protect the broader American public
and investing public as shareholders
in public companies from fraud.
Yep, totally agree.
All right, well, we have this section
that we've done in the past
called value creation and value capture.
Normally we talk about, do they create a lot of value?
And if so, do they capture a lot of it?
The classic example is Google creates a lot of value and captures a lot of it. And Wikipedia creates tons of value, captures very
little of it. So where does Enron fall into this? Well, they managed to create very little value
and they captured far more value than they created by an order of a hundred to a thousand.
So it's probably the first time that we've ever on this show seen someone capture
more value than they created. Yeah, gosh. By a lot. By a lot. Pretty fascinating.
I don't know enough about the energy industry to say whether the innovations in financialization, securitization, creating energy derivatives, whether the existence
of all that and Enron and its principles being highly responsible for creating them, whether
that generated enough value to offset the massive value destruction of Enron the company.
Maybe. I just, I'm not equipped to say. I don't know. That actually is how I want
to close the episode instead of grading. Cause like, what are we going to do? Give it an F.
And the other thing that we've done recently is talk about sort of like forward-looking narratives,
but that doesn't exist here either. I think an interesting way to close is by describing what
were the activities that they did that were like a legitimate, interesting business value creative
for customers and what was the illegitimate stuff they did. And I think it kind of does end at like pipelines were good for customers and the creation of a market.
And let's be generous, both the market to buy natural gas at a real time price and also the
ability to use a derivatives market to hedge those prices so businesses could do forecasting. I think that's probably where the line ends on good-for-the-world things. And then once you get
into... Oh, but what about that Blockbuster video on demand deal?
I think as soon as the business became the derivatives trading as an end, rather than as
a means of hedging or as a means of cash flow stabilization and price predictability. I think
that's sort of where basically everything after that was bad. No argument from me there. Makes
sense to me. All right. Well, I know we're four hours in, but you want to do some carve-outs?
Yeah, we haven't done carve-outs in a while. We haven't. We had some lined up for the Qualcomm
episode, but we literally got yanked offstage. We got offstage two hours, 29 minutes and 30 seconds into the episode.
Two and a half hour slot that we had.
Okay, so I have one that I was prepared to give because it's great.
But I have one that's too related to this episode to not do.
Oh, I'm in the same boat.
I think we can each do two.
You know, why not?
So the one that's related to this episode is something that I unfortunately never got
a chance to see because it has been over for eight years. But there was a limited run Broadway play called Enron the Musical. And we will put a link in the show notes to the trailer for Enron the Musical. It is spectacular.
Oh my god. There is a moment where there's someone dancing with literal raptors. There is projections of stock market tickers and traders.
The whole thing is, it's an exaggeration.
Oh, and the cast of characters, you could just have so much fun.
It's perfect.
It is perfect.
And do you watch Billions?
I'm sad to admit, you know me, I don't really watch TV shows.
Yeah.
Well, you would like Billions.
I spend my time playing video games. At least you would really like the first two seasons of Billions. The guy who plays Ari Spiros, who works for the SEC, is in Enron the Musical.
Oh, that's great. So did it run on Broadway? Is this a legit-
I think so. Yeah. Let me see if I can pull it up.
Yeah, it's on broadway.com slash shows slash and run.
Amazing.
Amazing.
So that's my first one.
That's so great.
My second one is a Disney Plus show called Andor.
It is probably the best thing to happen to the Star Wars franchise since Rogue One.
Oh, wow.
It is extremely tightly linked to Rogue One. Oh, wow. It is extremely tightly linked to Rogue One
and the direction, cinematography,
writing, pacing, dialogue, character development,
it is all just exceptional.
Better than The Mandalorian for sure.
It's the best Star Wars Disney Plus thing.
Oh, that's great.
Because the Star Wars franchise has really,
at least in my view, taken a big downhill turn.
Yeah, it ain't what Bob Iger originally intended.
No. Speaking of...
Speaking of...
Man, we got to figure out something to do on Acquired.
What are we going to do? Disney Plus Plus?
Like, what's the...
Disney Plus Plus.
We should do an Iger Plus episode.
But honestly, we've told most of the story.
So those are my two.
Go watch Andor, whether or not you like Star Wars.
I think that's actually the important thing, is whether or not you like Star Wars, this is good. And a lot of
other things relied on fan service. Yes, that was the problem. That threw out sort of like
nonsensical stuff, but had enough callbacks where you're like, okay, cool. It's cool to see that
character again. Yeah. That was my biggest beef with episode nine yeah all right well no holy wars here no holy wars
what are your car bots uh my car bots okay so the one that i thought of was only very very
quasi related to the episode but as you were saying you're uh one of your codas and one of
my codas the berkshire hathaway and fruited loom and brooks so i've now completely worn through two pairs of Brooks ghosts since our episode with Jim
and having Brooks unacquired. They're fantastic. I love them. But now as a parent, I do far less
actual running than I used to and a lot more walking of the stroller. And the ghosts were,
they were great as walking shoes, but like they're running shoes,
you know, Brooks is a running company. I found out, so I was in the market, I completely destroyed my second pair of ghosts. I was in the market for a new pair of shoes. And I was like, should I just
bite the bullet and admit what I am and get walking shoes instead of running shoes? And I was
like, oh, that probably means I can't go with Brooks. I'll have to find something else. But it turns out, I was so
pleasantly surprised, Brooks makes a walking shoe called the Addiction. The Brooks Addiction. I got
a pair before our trip to Portugal for Breakpoint. I love these shoes.
Are they just like really cushy? What's good about a walking shoe?
Maximum support. You know how like a running shoe running shoe like it's the soles are very flexible they offer it in velcro
like for when you're 70 they do they actually do they actually do i have not yet made the jump to
get the uh velcro maybe if we have another kid then i'll just be like fine give me the velcro
i mean my daughter's shoes are velcro so why shouldn't mine be? Lean on into it, David.
Lean into it. But I got to say, these shoes rock and they don't look like old man shoes. They look
like Brooks running shoes.
I bet the Velcro ones do though.
The Velcro ones totally do. They are so good. And I now realize the difference between walking
and running shoes. Running shoes, the sole is very flexible. It's like they've got these different
cushioned parts of the sole based on where your foot strikes walking shoes one big old slab of like incredibly supportive
it's so good i'm so old i love it wait i gotta interject another car about then i'm wearing and
this is going to be i'm going to start a holy war since this is not brooks I'm wearing Hoka slides right now. They're my indoor shoes.
Oh, nice.
The floors of my house are like really hardwood.
And so I was like, my feet hurt from standing on hardwood barefoot for too long.
And I was like, I got to do some form of like indoor shoes.
So I'm wearing these Hoka slides.
They're very easy to get on and off.
They're very cushy.
I highly recommend them for anybody who's considering indoor shoes as a part of your easing into old age.
You're on a slippery slope.
Before you know it,
you're going to be on the Velcro walkers with just me.
All right.
So that's carve out number one of mine.
It's the Aura Lux, by the way.
O-R-A-L-U-X-E.
Nice, nice.
My other carve out is our good buddy,
an acquired Bessie,ason calacanis jcal on the tim ferris show ah it's one of the most recent episodes really good i'd known i think
we'd talked about in some of our episodes with jcal that he and tim are buddies they're like
actually really close longtime friends and um jcal just went on Tim's show and it's really good.
That's cool. Well, with that, after you finish this episode, come discuss it with the 13,000 other smart, kind, thoughtful people I'm generally very appreciative of for being in the acquired
Slack with us. I've asked a few questions recently around just like, hi, I'm a total
novice on investing in corporate debt. How does one do
that? How should one think about that? Is this an interesting time to do that? And I got like
a thousand interesting responses. So thanks to everyone who's just being a part of the community.
If you want to get acquired merch, we now have two new shirts. In addition to this sweet
ACQ shirt that I am wearing, you can get a market size unconstrained shirt in two different variations
with the original AWS logo inspired design. You can also get a there is always room at the top
benchmark inspired shirt at acquired.fm store. You can view my Photoshop capabilities on full
display there.
So good.
I'm so glad.
We've been teasing this for months.
I'm so glad we finally made it happen.
I know.
I feel like this is our, it's on The Office, right?
Where it's the Wayne Gretzky quote, right?
And it's like, is it the skate where the puck is going or whatever it is? And it's like Wayne Gretzky.
Wayne Gretzky, Michael Spott.
Michael Scott.
Yeah.
So we're like, market size unconstrained
jeff bezos acquired yes indeed we've also had some great lp shows recently which you can get
i think all the episodes we've recorded are public we're going to be recording a couple more in the
next week that we're very excited about and you can can find episodes of the LP show publicly available in the podcast player of your choice
by just searching Acquired LP Show.
And with that, listeners, we'll see you next time.
We'll see you next time. Got the truth now.