1 / 13

The Rise and Fall of WorldCom (Now owned by Verizon)

The Rise and Fall of WorldCom (Now owned by Verizon). One (of many) Accounting Frauds Leading to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act By John P. Meyer (JFZ edited). Overview of WorldCom. WorldCom was the darling of Wall Street and the Telecom Industry of the 1990’s

edan
Télécharger la présentation

The Rise and Fall of WorldCom (Now owned by Verizon)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Rise and Fall of WorldCom (Now owned by Verizon) One (of many) Accounting Frauds Leading to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act By John P. Meyer (JFZ edited)

  2. Overview of WorldCom • WorldCom was the darling of Wall Street and the Telecom Industry of the 1990’s • Grew rapidly through acquisitions and from increased demand for telecom services • High stock price was a powerful currency to make acquisitions • WorldCom was a casualty of the Dotcom Bubble Burst of 2000 • Mgmt resorted to acct fraud to meet financial targets • Mgmt Motive to Manipulate Earnings (see text – pg 19)

  3. Overview of WorldCom Key Events • 1996: Acquired MFS Communications (internet backbone) • 1998: Acquired MCI (more than twice it’s size) • 2000: Failed merger with Sprint (would have been the largest merger in history) • 2000: Dotcom Bubble Burst (rapid decline in telecom stock values) • 2000-02: WorldCom loans $400M to CEO (Ebbers) • 2002: Accounting Fraud uncovered • 2002: Filed for Bankruptcy Protection • 2004: Emerged from Bankruptcy as MCI (changed name) • 2005: Verizon agrees to acquire the company for $6.75B (plus assumption of $6B of Debt)

  4. Financial Overview of WorldCom

  5. Nature of the Accounting Fraud

  6. Impact of the Fraud Shareholders $180 Billion of shareholder value lost (based on peak stock price) Debt & Preferred Stock holders $37.5 Billion of debt and preferred stockholder value lost Company $750 Million settlement paid to SEC Employees 57,000 employees lost jobs * Also, current and former employees lost most of their retirement savings (invested in WorldCom stock)

  7. Impact of the Fraud Executives and Accounting Staff 6 individuals convicted of fraud / conspiracy / false filings Ebbers – CEO 25 years in prison Sullivan – CFO 5 years in prison Myers – Controller 1 year in prison Yates – Dir of Acctg 1 year in prison Vinson – Acctg Dept 5 months in prison Manager 5 months house arrest Normand –Acctg Dept 3 years probation Manager Above 6 individuals agreed to pay a total of $34M to settle securities class action case.

  8. Impact of the Fraud Independent Auditor Arthur Andersen agreed to pay $65M to settle securities class action case. Insurance Companies Agreed to pay $36M to settle claims against WorldCom directors and officers.

  9. How It Happened WorldCom Environment: Substantial Problems with the Company’s Internal Controls • WorldCom was dominated by Ebbers and Sullivan, with virtually no checks and constraints placed on their actions. • Significant pressure to “meet the numbers”. • Lack of courage of employees to communicate the fraudulent activates – believed it would have cost them their jobs. • A financial system in which controls were extremely deficient. • The BOD and Audit Committee did not appear to have had an adequate understanding of the company and culture. • Inadequate audits by independent auditors. ___________ Source: Report of Investigation by the Special Investigative Committee of the Board of Directors of WorldCom, Inc.

  10. Why ‘good’ managers make bad ethical choices (Source: Saul W. Gellerman) Rationalizations To Justify Questionable Conduct (One part of the “Fraud Triangle”) • Belief that the activity is not “really” illegal. • Belief that it is in the individual’s or corporation’s best interest. • Belief that it will never be found out or it will correct itself in the future. • Belief that the company will condone actions that are taken in its interest and will even protect the managers responsible.

  11. Why ‘good’ managers make bad ethical choices (Saul W. Gellerman) Conclusion A good way to avoid management oversights is to subject the control mechanisms themselves to periodic surprise audits… • The point is to make sure that internal audits and controls are functioning as planned. • It is a case of “inspecting the inspectors” and taking the necessary steps to keep the controls working efficiently. It is up to Top Management to send a clear & pragmatic message to all employees that good ethics is still the foundation of good business

  12. Key Take Aways • History repeats itself. • Be aware of your environment. • If it seems too good to be true, it probably is. • No job is worth breaking the law or committing unethical acts for. • Your personal integrity is your most important asset – you own it and control it. • “Trust, but Verify”.

  13. References • First Interim Report of Dick Thornburgh, Bankruptcy Court Examiner – United States Bankruptcy Court Southern District of New York – re. WorldCom, Inc. (November 4, 2002) • Report of Investigation by the Special Investigative Committee of the Board of Directors of WorldCom, Inc. (March 31, 2003) • Second Interim Report of Dick Thornburg, Bankruptcy Court Examiner (June 9, 2003 • Why ‘good’ managers make bad ethical choices by Saul W. Gellerman– Harvard Business Review (July – August 1986) • Order to Commit Fraud, A Staffer Balked, Then Caved by Susan Pulliam – Wall Street Journal (June 23, 2003) • Ebbers Is Convicted in Massive Fraud by Almar Latour, Shawn Young and Li Yuan – WSJ (March 16, 2005) • At Center of Fraud, WorldCom Official Sees Life Unravel by Susan Pulliam – WSJ (March 24, 2005) • WorldCom’s Myers Gets One-Year Prison Term by Shawn Young – WSJ (August 10, 2005) • WorldCom’s Sullivan Gets Five Years in Jail by Dionne Searcey and Shawn Young – WSJ (August 11,2005) • Settlements – WorldCom Securities Litigation – www.worldcomlitigation.com

More Related