Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Enron Corporation accounting fraud and collapse (2001)
Enron Corporation, once the seventh-largest company in the United States, collapsed into bankruptcy on 2 December 2001 after executives used Special Purpose Entities — named Raptor, JEDI, Chewco, LJM1, and LJM2 — to hide more than $30 billion in debt off the balance sheet. CEO Jeffrey Skilling and Chairman Kenneth Lay promoted a fraudulent mark-to-market accounting regime that allowed Enron to book speculative future profits as current income. Stock peaked at $90.75 in August 2000; within 16 months the company was worthless. More than 4,000 employees lost jobs and pensions. The fraud was confirmed by congressional investigations, SEC findings, and criminal convictions.