Op/Ed - USATODAY.com
Lessons from Enron fade
Op/Ed - USATODAY.com
Thurs Dec 02
A series of accounting scandals followed at firms ranging from telecom giant WorldCom to outpatient hospital chain HealthSouth. More recently, whole industries - among them the stock brokerages and mutual fund companies - have admitted to cheating investors. Just last October, three insurance executives pleaded guilty in a massive bid-rigging scheme.
Yet in the face of these ongoing and newly emerging scandals, some business groups are pushing for a rollback in reforms passed in the wake of Enron. These efforts threaten the growing sense among investors that companies are beginning to play by rules that help them and not corporate insiders.
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Among their tactics:
•Running to Congress. Mutual fund companies quietly inserted language into the recently passed spending law that is designed to slow the SEC's efforts to create more accountability from mutual fund boards. Earlier in the year, high-tech companies added language to a House bill that would have blocked a plan to require greater disclosure of stock-options grants. The measure died in the Senate.
•Fighting SEC rules. Business groups have managed to delay for months an SEC rule giving shareholders limited rights to name corporate directors if the existing board is unresponsive to their demands. The move is arguably the agency's single most important corporate-governance measure.
•Battling pension funds. Business groups have been fighting a pitched battle with state employee pension funds that have used their large blocks of stocks to lobby for corporate reforms. Such pressure resulted in the ouster Thursday of Sean Harrigan, president of California's largest pension fund and one of the nations' most vocal and powerful reform advocates.
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