The financial reporting and disclosure problems at Enron, as well as the high market valuations for its stock raise troubling questions about the functioning of capital market intermediaries, regulators and governance experts whose are supposed to ensure the effective functioning of the stock market. This paper examines the functions of key capital market intermediaries and analyzes how their own governance and incentive problems may have contributed to Enron's rise and fall. We conclude by proposing system modifications to resolve the observed problems.
What do we know after Enron\u27s implosion that we did not know before it? The conventional wisdom i...
The Enron collapse has many facets. It is particularly rich in financial reporting and disclosure is...
The catastrophe caused by the failure of Enron could not compare with the damage this company would ...
This Article addresses the implications that the Enron collapse holds out for the self-regulatory sy...
The market capitalization of Enron Corporation declined by $63 billion in the one-year period betwee...
Analysis of the corporate governance crisis that manifested itself in the United States at the turn ...
This paper assesses the efforts to “clean up” financial markets and corporate governance practices i...
This paper chronicles the rise and fall of Enron, Inc., the once powerful energy firm based in Houst...
This report briefly examines the accounting system that failed to provide a clear picture of the fir...
On 16th April, 2002, the authors gave oral evidence to the House of Commons Treasury Committee Inqui...
The main point of this Article is that the demand-side of U.S. capital markets is not functioning ...
Between January 1997 and June 2002, approximately 10% of all listed companies in the United States a...
How did Enron, a firm worth $60 billion, collapse over the discovery of a billion or so in hidden de...
Debacles of historic dimensions tend to produce an excess of explanations. So has it been with Enron...
The corporate collapses of recent times, culminating with massive collapses such as those of Enron i...
What do we know after Enron\u27s implosion that we did not know before it? The conventional wisdom i...
The Enron collapse has many facets. It is particularly rich in financial reporting and disclosure is...
The catastrophe caused by the failure of Enron could not compare with the damage this company would ...
This Article addresses the implications that the Enron collapse holds out for the self-regulatory sy...
The market capitalization of Enron Corporation declined by $63 billion in the one-year period betwee...
Analysis of the corporate governance crisis that manifested itself in the United States at the turn ...
This paper assesses the efforts to “clean up” financial markets and corporate governance practices i...
This paper chronicles the rise and fall of Enron, Inc., the once powerful energy firm based in Houst...
This report briefly examines the accounting system that failed to provide a clear picture of the fir...
On 16th April, 2002, the authors gave oral evidence to the House of Commons Treasury Committee Inqui...
The main point of this Article is that the demand-side of U.S. capital markets is not functioning ...
Between January 1997 and June 2002, approximately 10% of all listed companies in the United States a...
How did Enron, a firm worth $60 billion, collapse over the discovery of a billion or so in hidden de...
Debacles of historic dimensions tend to produce an excess of explanations. So has it been with Enron...
The corporate collapses of recent times, culminating with massive collapses such as those of Enron i...
What do we know after Enron\u27s implosion that we did not know before it? The conventional wisdom i...
The Enron collapse has many facets. It is particularly rich in financial reporting and disclosure is...
The catastrophe caused by the failure of Enron could not compare with the damage this company would ...