Stock Crash of the ENRON Corporation

844 Words2 Pages

STOCK CRASH OF THE ENRON CORPORATION

STOCK CRASH OF THE ENRON CORPORATION

The main factor as to why Enron Corporation saw drastic drop in its stock price was due to the company’s announcement on November 8, 2001 of its restatement of its financial results for the years 1997-2000. The announcement sparked the SEC to announce that they would be conducting an informal inquiry into the company’s dealings. After the SEC’s announcement wary stockholders began attempting to dump their stocks by cashing them in and trading or selling them. As shareholders tried to cash in their holdings they were surprised to find that their shares were either worthless or only worth pennies on the dollar and that they had been duped by the company and its corporate officers. The topics I will discuss which directly influenced the drastic drop in Enron’s stock are:

- Company Background

- Types of fraud and key persons involved

- Results of Enron’s downfall

Background

Enron was a very successful energy company originally established in 1985 in Omaha, Nebraska. With the company’s success and growth it saw a need for a bigger market and soon moved the company headquarters to Houston, Texas. With this move the company became a multibillion dollar company publicly traded on the stock market. At the time Enron employed in excess of 20,000 people and saw an annual gross income of over $100 billion. The company also diversified and went from just dealing with natural gas to also dealing with electricity, paper and communications. With its rapid success Enron was named America's Most Innovative Company in 2000 by Fortune. As with many corporations, the increase in Enron’s wealth also led to an increase in its greed and corruption.

T...

... middle of paper ...

...have been duped out of millions upon millions of dollars. The Enron case will remain in our minds for many generations and years to come as a classic example of greed gone horribly wrong. Enron will also forever be a reminder of the long term effects of such unregulated corruption on not only the individual investor and his/her family but also the American economy as a whole.

References

Warren, C.S, Reeve, J.M., & Duchac, J. (2014). Financial accounting (13th ed.).

Florence, KY: Cengage Learning. ISBN: 978-1-133-60761-8

Sherwood, C. (2012, June 08). About Enron. eHow.

Retrieved from http://www.ehow.com/about_4614281_enron-forensic-accounting.html

Seabury, C. (2011, December 05). The Fall Of A Wall Street Darling. Investopedia.

Retrieved from http://www.investopedia.com/articles/stocks/09/enron-collapse.asp

Open Document