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Worldcom Case

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Daniels Fund Ethics Initiative University of New Mexico http://danielsethics.mgt.unm.edu

WorldCom’s Bankruptcy Crisis
INTRODUCTION The story of WorldCom began in 1983 when businessmen Murray Waldron and William Rector sketched out a plan to create a long-distance telephone service provider on a napkin in a coffee shop in Hattiesburg, Miss. Their new company, Long Distance Discount Service (LDDS), began operating as a long distance reseller in 1984. Early investor Bernard Ebbers was named CEO the following year. Through acquisitions and mergers, LDDS grew quickly over the next 15 years. The company changed its name to WorldCom, achieved a worldwide presence, acquired telecommunications giant MCI, and eventually expanded beyond long distance service to offer the whole range of telecommunications services. WorldCom became the second-largest long-distance telephone company in America, and the firm seemed poised to become one of the largest telecommunications corporations in the world. Instead, it became the largest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history at the time and another name on a long list of those disgraced by the accounting scandals of the early 21st century. ACCOUNTING FRAUD AND ITS CONSEQUENCES Unfortunately for thousands of employees and shareholders, WorldCom used questionable accounting practices and improperly recorded $3.8 billion in capital expenditures, which boosted cash flows and profit over all four quarters in 2001 as well as the first quarter of 2002. This disguised the firm’s actual net losses for the five quarters because capital expenditures can be deducted over a longer period of time, whereas expenses must be subtracted from revenue immediately. WorldCom also spread out expenses by reducing the book value of assets from acquired companies and simultaneously increasing the value of goodwill. The company also ignored or undervalued accounts receivable owed to the acquired companies. These accounting practices made it appear as if WorldCom’s financial situation was improving every quarter. As long as WorldCom continued to acquire new companies, accountants could adjust the values of assets and expenses. Internal investigations uncovered questionable accounting practices stretching as far back as 1999. Investors, unaware of the alleged fraud, continued to purchase the company’s stock, which pushed the stock’s price to $64 per share. Even before the improper accounting practices were disclosed, however, WorldCom was already in financial turmoil. Declining rates and revenues and an ambitious acquisition spree had pushed the company deeper in debt. The company also used the rising value of their stock to finance the purchase of other companies. However, it was the acquisition of these companies, especially MCI Communications, that made WorldCom stock so desirable to investors. In addition, WorldCom’s CEO Bernard Ebbers received a controversial $408 million loan from the company’s board of directors to cover margin calls on loans that were secured by company stock.
This material was developed under the direction of O.C. Ferrell and Linda Ferrell and updated by Harper Baird. It is provided for the Daniels Fund Ethics Initiative at the University of New Mexico and is intended for classroom discussion rather than to illustrate effective or ineffective handling of administrative, ethical, or legal decisions by management. Users of this material are prohibited from claiming this material as their own, emailing it to others, or placing it on the Internet. Please call O.C. Ferrell at 505-277-3468 for more information. (2011)

2 The board loaned Ebbers the money at rate below the national average and below their rate of return. In July 2001, WorldCom signed a credit agreement with multiple banks to borrow up to $2.65 billion and repay it within a year. According to the banks, WorldCom tapped the entire amount six weeks before the accounting irregularities were disclosed. The banks contend that if they had known WorldCom’s true financial picture, they would not have extended the financing without demanding additional collateral. On June 28, 2002, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) directed WorldCom to disclose the facts underlying the events described in a June 25 press release regarding the company’s intention to restate its 2001 and first quarter 2002 financial statements. The resulting document explained that CFO Scott Sullivan had prepared the financial statements for 2001 and the first quarter of 2002. WorldCom’s audit committee and Arthur Andersen, the firm’s outside auditor, had held a meeting on February 6, 2002, to discuss the audit for year ending in December 31, 2001. Arthur Andersen had assessed WorldCom's accounting practices to determine whether there were adequate controls to prevent material errors in the financial statements. Andersen attested that WorldCom's processes for line cost accruals and for capitalization of assets in property and equipment accounts were effective. In response to specific questions by the committee, Andersen had also indicated that its auditors had no disagreements with management and that it was comfortable with the accounting positions taken by WorldCom. WorldCom admitted to violating generally accepted accounting practices (GAAP), and adjusted their earnings by $11 billion dollars for 1999-2002. Looking at all of WorldCom’s financial activities for the period, experts estimate the total value of the accounting fraud at $79.5 billion. WORLDCOM FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY WorldCom did not have the cash needed to pay $7.7 billion in debt, and therefore, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on July 21, 2002. In its bankruptcy filing, the firm listed $107 billion in assets and $41 billion in debt. WorldCom’s bankruptcy filing allowed it to pay current employees, continue service to customers, retain possession of assets, and gain a little breathing room to reorganize. However, the telecom giant lost credibility along with the business of many large corporate and government clients, organizations that typically do not do business with companies in Chapter 11 proceedings. In 2001 WorldCom created a separate “tracking” stock for its declining MCI consumer long-distance business in the hopes of isolating MCI from WorldCom’s Internet and international operations, which were seemingly stronger. WorldCom announced the elimination of the MCI tracking stock and suspended its dividend in May 2002 in the hopes of saving $284 million a year. The actual savings were just $71 million. The S&P 500 reduced WorldCom’s long-term and short-term corporate credit rating to “junk” status on May 10, 2002, and NASDAQ de-listed WorldCom’s stock on June 28, 2002, when the price dropped to $0.09. In March 2003, WorldCom announced that it would write down close to $80 billion in goodwill, write off $45 billion of goodwill as impaired, and adjust $39.2 billion of plant, property, and equipment accounts and $5.6 billion of other intangible assets to a value of about $10 billion. These

3 figures joined a growing list of similar write-offs and write-downs as companies in the telecommunications, Internet, and high-tech industries admitted they overpaid for acquisitions during the tech boom of the 1990s. A detailed timeline of the events surrounding WorldCom’s bankruptcy is contained in the appendix to this case. WHO IS TO BLAME? Naturally, no one stepped forward to shoulder the blame for WorldCom’s accounting scandal, not its auditors, executives, board of directors, or analysts. As the primary outside auditor, Arthur Andersen (also under fire for alleged mismanagement of many other large scandal-plagued audits) was accused of failing to uncover the accounting irregularities. In its defense, Andersen claimed it could not have known about the improper accounting because former CFO Scott Sullivan never informed Andersen’s auditors about the firm’s questionable accounting practices. However, in WorldCom’s statement to the SEC, the company claimed that Andersen did know about the accounting practices, had no disagreement with management, and that WorldCom had taken no accounting positions with which Andersen was not comfortable. Most people, including John Sidgmore, who replaced Bernard Ebbers as CEO for a time, blamed WorldCom’s management for the company’s woes. An initial observation by the independent investigator appointed by the bankruptcy court raised a “cause for substantial concern” regarding the board of directors and the independent auditors of WorldCom. The board has been accused of lax oversight. In particular, the board’s compensation committee has been attacked for approving Bernard Ebber’s generous compensation package. Several former finance and accounting executives pleaded guilty to securities-fraud charges, claiming they were directed by top managers to cover up WorldCom’s worsening financial situation. In 2004, former WorldCom CEO Scott Sullivan, who worked above many of these employees, pleaded guilty to criminal charges. Because of a plea bargain, Sullivan was sentenced to only five years in prison in exchanged for testifying against Bernard Ebbers. Bernard Ebbers stated that he did nothing fraudulent and had nothing to hide. WorldCom’s lawyers have indicated that Ebbers did not know of the money shifted into the capital expenditure accounts. However, the Wall Street Journal reported that an internal WorldCom report identified an email and a voice mail that suggested otherwise. In 2004, Ebbers was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud, one count of securities fraud, and seven counts of fraud related to false filings with the SEC. Ebbers was found guilty of all charges and sentenced to 25 years in prison. He is currently serving his sentence in Louisiana and cannot be considered for parole until 2028 (when he will be 85 years old). Additionally, Jack Grubman, a Wall Street analyst specializing in the telecommunications industry and who rated WorldCom stock highly, admitted he did so for too long. Grubman knew WorldCom CEO Bernard Ebbers socially and even provided WorldCom executives with special opportunities on investments. However, he insisted that he was unaware of the company’s true financial

4 condition. Grubman was later fired by Salomon Smith Barney because of accusations that he hyped telecommunications stocks, including Global Crossing and WorldCom, even after it became public that the stocks were poor investments. He was also fined $15 million by the SEC and banned from participating in securities exchanges in the future because of his conflicts of interest. Investors also won several class action lawsuits against the financial industry for activities related to the fall of WorldCom. These settlements included $1.64 billion from Citigroup for purchasers of WorldCom securities and $2 billion from JPMorgan Chase to for selling $5 billion in WorldCom bonds. Arthur Andersen paid $65 million to investors to cover its liability in the collapse of WorldCom. Several executives including Sullivan and Ebbers also agreed to turn over substantial portions of their personal funds to employees and investors. REORGANIZATION AND ACQUISTION WorldCom took many steps toward reorganization, including securing $1.1 billion in loans and appointing Michael Capellas as chairman and CEO. WorldCom also tried to restore confidence in the company, including replacing the board members who failed to prevent the accounting scandal, firing many managers, reorganizing its finance and accounting functions, and making other changes designed to help correct past problems and prevent them from reoccurring. Additionally, the audit department staff is was increased and reported directly to the audit committee of the company’s new board. “We are working to create a new WorldCom,” John Sidgmore said. “We have developed and implemented new systems, policies, and procedures.” In 2003, the company renamed itself MCI and emerged from bankruptcy proceedings in 2004. However, this reorganization was not enough to restore consumer and investor confidence, and Verizon Communications acquired MCI in December 2005. The WorldCom accounting fraud changed the entire telecommunications industry. As part of their overvaluing strategy, WorldCom had also overestimated the rate of growth in Internet usage, and these estimates became the basis for many decisions made throughout the industry. AT&T, WorldCom/MCI’s largest competitor, was also acquired. Over 300,000 telecommunications workers lost their jobs as the telecommunications struggled to stabilize. Many people have blamed the rising number of telecommunication company failures and scandals on neophytes who had no experience in the telecommunication industry. They tried to transform their startups into gigantic full-service providers like AT&T, but in an increasingly competitive industry, it was difficult for so many large companies could survive. QUESTIONS 1. 2. 3. What are some things that could have been done by WorldCom executives to prevent the accounting scandal? How could corporate ethics have played a part in this failure? What penalties have WorldCom executives paid for their part in the fiasco? Do you think these penalties are sufficient?

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Sources for 2011 Update: “The 10 largest U.S. bankruptcies: WorldCom,” Fortune, http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2009/fortune/0905/gallery.largest_bankruptcies.fortune/3.html (accessed January 11, 2011). Dennis Moberg and Edward Romar, “WorldCom,” Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, 2003, http://www.scu.edu/ethics/dialogue/candc/cases/worldcom.html (accessed January 11, 2011). “Edward J. Romar and Martin Calkins, “WorldCom Case Study Update 2006,” Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, 2006, http://www.scu.edu/ethics/dialogue/candc/cases/worldcom-update.html (accessed January 11, 2011). “WorldCom Company Timeline,” Washington Post, March 15, 2005, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A491562002Jun26.html (accessed January 13, 2011). “Worldcom's Ebbers enters prison,” BBC News, September 26, 2006, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/5380458.stm (accessed January 11, 2011). Sources for Previous Editions: “02 CV 8083 (JSR) Complaint (Securities Fraud),” Securities and Exchange Commission, Oct. 31, 2002, www.sec.gov/litigation/complaints/comp17783.ht.m “Accounting Fraud,” WorldCom News, http://Worldcomnews.com/accountingfraud.html (accessed Apr. 3, 2003). Andrew Backover, “Overseer Confident WorldCom Will Come Back,” USA Today, Dec. 31, 2002, p. 8A. “Bankruptcy,” WorldCom News, http://WorldComnews.com/bankruptcy.html (accessed Apr. 3, 2003). Rebecca Blumenstein and Ken Brown. “Scrapped WorldCom Merger Sparked Sprint Tax Shelter,” Yahoo! News, Feb. 27, 2003, http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/dowjones/20030207/bs_dowjones/200302070218000057. “Capellas Close to Leading WorldCom,” CNN/Money, Nov. 13, 2002, http://cnnmoney.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&expire=&urlID=4597701&fb. “Corporate Scandals: WorldCom,” MSNBC, http://www.msnbc.com/news/corpscandal_front.asp?odm=C2ORB (accessed Apr. 4, 2003). Nora Devine, “WorldCom to Write Off $45B Goodwill, Adjust Intangibles,” Dow Jones Newswires, Mar. 13, 2003, http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/dowjones/20030313/bs_dowjones/200303131736001097. “Ebbers Reportedly Knew of Fraud,” MSNBC, Mar. 12, 2003, http://www.msnbc.com/news/884175.asp. “Effect on Consumer,” WorldCom News, http://Worldcomnews.com/effectonconsumer.html (accessed Apr. 3, 2003). “Effect on Investors,” WorldCom News, http://Worldcomnews.com/effectoninvestors.html (accessed Apr. 3, 2003). Janet Elliott, “AG Would Have More Investigative Power -- Bill Focuses on Integrity in Business,” Houston Chronicle, Mar. 11, 2003, http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/metropolitan/1812842. “Enron & WorldCom Scandals Inspire Movie and National Ethics Scholarship For Students,” Yahoo! News, Mar. 12, 2003, http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/030312/daw022_1.html. “Former WorldCom CEO, CFO Take the Fifth,” eWeek, Jul. 8, 2002, http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,3959,362703,00.asp. Charles Gasparino, “Grubman Informed Weill of AT&T Meetings,” Wall Street Journal, Nov. 15, 2002, pp. C1, C13. “Investment and Litigation,” WorldCom News, http://Worldcomnews.com/investmentandlitigation.html (accessed Apr. 3, 2003). Carrie Johnson, “More Guilty Pleas from WorldCom Managers,” Washington Post, Oct. 11, 2002, http://nl12.newsbank.com/nlsearch/we/Archives?p_action=list&p_topdoc=126. “Judge Outlines Budget Plan for WorldCom,” Yahoo! News, Mar. 6, 2003, http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=509&ncid=509&e=41&u=/ap/20030306/ap_on_bi_ge/worldcom_budget_1. Gina Keating, “U. of Calif. Files $353 Million WorldCom Lawsuit,” Yahoo! News, Feb. 13, 2003, http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20030213/tc_nm/telecoms_worldcom_lawsuit_dc_1. Peter Kennedy, “WorldCom puts Ebbers' B.C. Ranch up for Sale,” Globe and Mail, Jan. 28, 2003, p. B5, http://www.globeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/PEstory/TGAM/20030128/RANCH/Headlines/headdex/headdexBusiness_te mp/52/52/58. Stephanie Kirchgaessner, “WorldCom Mulls Further $16Bn Write-off,” Yahoo! News, Jan. 30, 2003, http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=1106&ncid=1106&e=5&u=/ft/20030130/bs_ft/1042491347715. Matt Krantz, “Capitalizing on the Oldest Trick in Book: How WorldCom, and Others, Fudged Results,” USA Today, Jun. 27, 2002, http://www.usatoday.com/tech/techinvestor/2002/06/27/worldcom-whatdo.htm. Adam Lahinsky, “WorldCom: Picking Up the Pieces,” Business 2.0, May 2, 2002, http://www.business2.com/articles/web/print/0,1650,40140,FF.html. Joseph McCafferty, “Scott Sullivan,” CFO Magazine, Sep. 1998, http://www.findarticles.com/cf_0/m3870/n9_v14/21119225/print.jhtml. Jack McCarthy, “WorldCom Woes,” InfoWorld, Aug. 2, 2002, http://www.infoworld.com/article/02/08/02/020805cttelco_1.html. Stephanie Mehata, “Birds of a Feather,” Fortune, Oct., 2002, http://www.business2.com/articles/mag/print/0,1643,43957,00.html. Adrian Michaels, “SEC Extends Charges against WorldCom,” Financial Times, Nov. 6, 2002, http://news.ft.com/servlet/ContentServer?pagename=Synd/StoryFT/FTFull&artid=10358730. Amanda Ripley, “The Night Detective,” Time, Dec. 22, 2002, http://www.time.com/time/personoftheyear/2002/poycooper.html. Simon Romero, “WorldCom to Write Down $79.8 Billion of Good Will,” NYTimes, Mar. 14, 2003, http://www.nytimes.com/2003/03/14/technology/14TELE.html. Mathew Secker, “WorldCom. (Company Operations),” Telecommunications, Mar. 2001, http://www.mobilepaymentforum.org/pdfs/TelecommunicationsIntlEd.pdf. Ben Silverman, “Worldcom Waits for Blame Game,” New York Post, Mar. 10, 2003, http://www.nypost.com/business/70283.htm. Christopher Stern, “6 Resign From WorldCom Board,” Washington Post, Dec. 18, 2002, p. E04, http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wpdyn?pagename=article&node=&contentId=A3966-2002Dec17¬Found=true. Christopher Stern, “Cost-Cutting WorldCom Considers More Layoffs,” Washington Post, Feb. 2, 2003, p. A02, http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&node=&contentId=A16324-2003Feb2¬Found=true. David Teather, “Former WorldCom Controller Admits Fraudulent Entries,” The Guardian, Sep. 27, 2002. David Teather, “To Ebber’s Wedding, on Expenses,” The Guardian, Aug. 30, 2002.

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Steven Titch, “Deconstructing WorldCom: A Revealing Autopsy of the 1998 Mega-Merger,” America’s Network, May 1, 2001, http://www.findarticles.com/cf_0/m0DUJ/6_105/74651470/print.jhtml. Lingling Wei, “More WorldCom Restatements?” Wall Street Journal, Nov. 4, 2002, http://www.msnbc.com/news/83048.asp. “WorldCom Announces Its Post-Restructuring Management Plan,” WorldCom, press release, Sep. 10, 2002, http://www1.worldcom.com/infodesk/news/news2.xml?newsid=4392&mode=long&lang=e. “Who Is to Blame?” WorldCom News, http://Worldcomnews.com/whoistoblame.html (accessed Apr. 3, 2003). “WorldCom Finances,” WorldCom News, http://Worldcomnews.com/worldcomfinances.html (accessed Apr. 3, 2003). “WorldCom Issues July and August 2002 Operating Results,” WorldCom, press release, Oct. 22, 2002, http://www.worldcom.com/global/about/news/news2.xml?newsid=4870&mode=long&lang=en&width=530&root=global/about. “WorldCom’s Latest Development,” CNN/Money, Nov. 11, 2002, http://www.cnnmoney.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&expire=urlID=4580252&fb. “WorldCom Milestones,” Washington Post, Aug. 9, 2002, www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A49156-2002Jun26?language=printer. “WorldCom Report Suggests Ebbers Knew of Accounting Fraud,” Quicken Brokerage, Mar. 12, 2003, http://www.quicken.com/investments/news_center/story/?story=NewsStory/dowJones/20030312/ON200303120406000594.va r&column=P0DFP. “WorldCom Report Suggests Ebbers Knew of Fraud,” Forbes, Mar. 12, 2003, http://www.forbes.com/technology/newswire/2003/03/12/rtr904375.html. “WorldCom Revised Statement Pursuant to Section 21 (a)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,” Securities and Exchange Commission, Jul. 8, 2002, http://www.sec.gov/news/extra/wcresponserv.htm. “WorldCom, SEC to Settle Charges,” CNN, Nov. 5, 2002, http://www.cnn.com/2002/BUSINESS/11/05/worldcom.reut/index.html. “WorldCom to Cut 2,000 Jobs,” CNN, Sep. 16, 2002, http://www.cnn.com/2002/BUSINESS/09/16/worldcom/index.html.

7 APPENDIX: WORLDCOM BANKRUPTCY TIMELINE Early 2001 July 2001 Feb. 6, 2002 WorldCom shows signs of financial troubles: rates and revenues decline and debt rises. WorldCom receives $2.65 billion in loans from 26 banks to be repaid by the end of 2001. Arthur Andersen, LLP, and WorldCom’s audit team meet to discuss the 2001 audit. Everything is deemed correct and Andersen gives its approval.

Mar. 11, 2002 The U.S. Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) requests more information concerning accounting procedures and loans to officers. Apr. 30, 2002 Bernard Ebbers resigns as CEO of WorldCom and is replaced by vice chairman John Sidgmore. Jun. 25, 2002 CFO Scott Sullivan is fired after improper accounting of $3.8 billion in expenses covering up a net loss for 2001 and the first quarter of 2002 is discovered. Jun. 28, 2002 WorldCom fires 17,000 employees to cut costs. Jul. 8, 2002 Jul. 21, 2002 Aug. 9, 2002 John Sidgmore testifies before a Congressional Committee to explain how internal investigations uncovered the accounting problems. WorldCom files for reorganization under Chapter 11 Bankruptcy, an action that affects only the firm’s U.S. operations, not its overseas subsidiaries. Continued internal investigations uncover an additional $3.8 billion in improperly reported earnings for 1999, 2000, 2001, and the first quarter of 2002, bringing the total amount of accounting errors to more than $7.6 billion.

Aug. 13, 2002 WorldCom names Greg Rayburn as chief restructuring officer and John Dubel as chief financial officer to lead the company through the reorganization process. Sep. 10, 2002 WorldCom formally announces it is seeking a permanent chief executive officer. Oct. 1, 2002 The U.S. Bankruptcy Court approves WorldCom’s request to pay full severance and benefits to former employees, which had been limited under the company’s Chapter 11 filing.

Oct. 15, 2002 The U.S. Bankruptcy Court approves up to $1.1 billion in debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing for WorldCom while it undergoes reorganization. Nov. 8, 2002 WorldCom files additional bankruptcy petitions for 43 of its subsidiaries.

Nov. 15, 2002 Michael D. Capellas, former president of Hewlett-Packard Company, is named chairman and CEO.

8 Mar. 14, 2003 WorldCom announces that it will take one-time $79.8 billion write-off. Apr. 15, 2003 WorldCom unveils reorganization plan that would eliminate most of its debt, rename the company MCI, and relocate its headquarters from Clinton, Miss., to Ashburn, Va. Apr. 22, 2003 Former CFO, Scott D. Sullivan, pleads not guilty today to securities and bank fraud. May 19, 2003 WorldCom agrees to pay investors $500 million to settle civil fraud charges. Jul. 7, 2003 Jul. 31, 2003 Aug. 6, 2003 A federal judge approves a $750 million settlement between WorldCom and federal regulators. The General Services Administration notifies WorldCom that it is ineligible to win new federal contracts until it improves accounting controls. A bankruptcy judge approves a $750 million settlement of civil fraud charges made by the Securities and Exchange Commission on WorldCom investors' behalf.

Aug. 12, 2003 WorldCom appoints former AT&T Corp. executive Richard R. Roscitt as its new president and chief operating officer. Aug. 27, 2003 Oklahoma Attorney General W.A. Drew Edmondson files criminal charges against WorldCom Inc. and six former executives, including Ebbers. Sep. 3, 2003 Sep. 9, 2003 Ebbers pleads not guilty. Two groups of creditors abandon their legal challenge to the WorldCom’s reorganization plan in return for a combined payout of more than $400 million.

Sep. 15, 2003 WorldCom’s auditors testify in U.S. Bankruptcy Court that the company's books remain a tangled mess. Oct. 31, 2003 U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Arthur J. Gonzalez approves WorldCom’s reorganization plan. Dec. 22, 2003 Federal prosecutors say they intend to show that former CFO Scott Sullivan was involved in 13 kinds of accounting fraud in addition to financial wrongdoing Jan. 7, 2004 The government lifts the suspension that prevented WorldCom from receiving new federal contracts.

Apr. 20, 2004 MCI officially emerges from bankruptcy, 21 months after filing the largest Chapter 11 case in history. May 10, 2004 MCI says it will eliminate 7,500 jobs (15 percent of its workforce). Jan. 8, 2005 The lead plaintiff in the WorldCom class-action suit announces a $54 million settlement covering 10 former WorldCom directors (part of the settlement is later rejected by a federal judge).

9 Jan. 25, 2005 Bernard Ebbers’ trial begins. Feb. 14, 2005 Verizon Communications Inc. announces a $6.75 billion deal to buy MCI Inc. Mar. 15, 2005 Former WorldCom CEO Bernard J. Ebbers is found guilty of conspiracy, securities fraud, and making false filings with regulators. He is sentenced to 25 years in prison. Aug. 11, 2005 Former CFO Scott Sullivan is sentenced to five years in prison.

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...a- i) According to SCON 6 article 25, assets are probable future economic benefits obtained or controlled by a particular entity as a result of past transactions or events. Assets has three characteristics: it embodies a probable future benefit that involves a capacity or in combination with other assets, to contribute directly or indirectly to future net cash inflows, a particular entity can obtain the benefit and control others’ access to it and the transaction or other event giving rise to the entity’s right to or control of the benefit has already occurred. Future economic benefit is the essence of an asset (paragraphs 27–31). An asset has the capacity to serve the entity by being exchanged for something else of value to the entity, by being used to produce something of value to the entity, or by being used to settle its liabilities. Expenses are outflows or other using up of assets or incurrence of liabilities (or a combination of both) from delivering or producing goods, rendering services, or carrying out other activities that constitute the entity’s ongoing major or central operations. Expenses are actual or expected cash outflows that have occurred of will occur as a result of the entity’s central operations. Cost of the goods sold, interest, rent, salaries, depreciation may be given as examples. ii) Costs should be expensed when they have expired or used up and when they have no future economic value. They should be capitalized as assets when costs have not expired...

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Worldcom Case

...1. What are the pressures that lead executives and managers to “cook the books”? There were many pressures that lead managers at World Com to “cook the books”. They all stemmed for the need to reach their goal to be the No. 1 stock on Wall Street, even while the company wasn’t doing very well. Being No. 1 on Wall Street meant they focused on revenue growth which would increase their company’s market value. World Com started facing struggles as, “Industry conditions began to deteriorate in 2000 due to heightened competition, overcapacity, and reduced demand for telecommunications services]”. This forced World Com to reduce prices in order to match their compeititors affecting the E/R ratio. Ebbers pressured senior staff to improve its performance or they would lose everything. The CFO, Sullivan, formulated a plan to use accounting entries to achieve targeted performance and persuaded and coaxed many others to go along with the plan in order to stay on top. 2. What is the boundary between earnings smoothing or earning management and fraudulent reporting? The boundary between earnings management and fraudulent reporting can overlap at times. Earning management is defined as the use of accounting techniques to produce financial reports that may paint an overly positive picture of a company's business activities and financial position. Earnings management takes advantage of how accounting rules can be applied and are legitimately flexible when companies can incur expenses...

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Worldcom Case

...Financial Reporting I Isgandar ALizada March 14, 2016 1. Conceptual Framework is a practical tool for describing objectives and concepts for general purpose in financial reporting. It has several functions. First, based on consistent concepts, assistance for the board to develop IFRS standards. Second, in absence of IFRS standards, helps to develop accounting policies. Moreover, help others to understand the standards. Providing complete, clear and updated set of concepts is its main objective. From perspective of completeness, in our case, because company officials didn’t record operations properly for the sake of playing with ratios. Also, playing with their assets-expenses statements they simply couldn’t keep it long and auditors could catch because it was not clear how this company made profits but others had great loses. Last but not the least, all the financial statements should be organized in time bases and should be updated day-to-day activities. As wrong statements by officials on purpose made it not comparable to previous years. 2. Company officials who are in charge of judgments in financial documents, are decision free and can finalize their thought in different ways. As humans we are keen to make mistakes unintentionally. Nevertheless, some people misuse their power, intentionally. By preparing ratios before the financial reports was not usual and by playing in entries they “successfully” showed that unless other companies, they didn’t face decline in the market...

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Worldcom

...WorldCom is one of the biggest scandals that happen in the world, especially in the United States of America. WorldCom merged with MCI in 1997 for US$37 billion to form MCI WorldCom. Later on WorldCom wanted to merge with Sprint Corporation in 1999 becoming a $129 billion merge, but before the two companies finalized the US department of Justice and the European Union stepped in and didn’t want this to happen, for this merge had the possibility of creating a monopoly. Bernard Ebbers was the CEO of WorldCom at the time, he became very wealth with WorldCom common stock. Without the merge of Sprint, WorldCom Stock started to decrease over time, and the banks were pressuring Ebbers and he had to cover margin calls on his WorldCom stock that was used to finance other business like (timber, yachting.) From 1999 through 2002 Scott Sullivan (CFO), David Myers (Controller) and Buford Yates (Director of General Accounting) were using shady accounting methods to show the company profitability and financial growth when company was losing shares. The company was capitalizing there expenses when they should have been expensing them, making the balance sheet look better than what it really is. The second issue for the company was making fake accounting entries to make them look like they generated revenues from corporate unallocated revenue accounts. WorldCom had approximately $3.8 billion in fraud of June 2002. For unethical practices WorldCom was capitalizing their products when they...

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Examaning a Business Failure

...Organizational Leadership LDR 531 Group Number: SC09MBA10 G. Edward McCullough, M.A. March 25, 2010 Examining a Business Failure: WorldCom Why do businesses fail? Most business corporations experience company failure because of their lack of organizational leadership and unethical practices, which can consist of fraud, conspiracy, falsifying documents, and embezzlement. An example of a business failure is most recognized by the WorldCom (2002) bankruptcy scandal. Many organizational behavior (OB) theories as it relates to leadership, management, and organizational structure can give in site to explain the company’s failure. Most blame for the WorldCom scandal was placed in its founder and CEO Bernard Ebbers due to his unruly managerial functions (planning, organizing, leading and controlling) that he practiced during his time at WorldCom. WorldCom was known as a telecommunication giant, established from nothing in 1983 to become the biggest accounting scandal in United States (U.S.) history in 2002. According to Jones Jonesington (2007) says, “In 1998, the telecommunications industry began to slow down and WorldCom’s stock was declining which gave CEO Bernard Ebbers increased pressure from banks to cover margin calls on his WorldCom stock that was used to finance his other businesses endeavors (timber, yachting etc.).”(Jonesington, J., 2007) WorldCom took another big hit in 2000 when it was forced to abandon its merger with Sprint, says Jonesington. (Jonesington, J., 2007) ...

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Worldcom Case Analysis

...Shiqi Wang ACCT 4456 Professor Steve Jensen September 22, 2015 WorldCom Case Analysis According to the section 301.4 of Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, each audit committee shall establish procedures for complaints regarding accounting, internal accounting control, and auditing matters, and the anonymous complaints regarding questionable accounting or auditing matters. However, in this case, the WorldCom Company did not have the procedures for anonymous complaints, so Cynthia Cooper decided to go over Sullivan’s head and reported her findings to the audit committee. This was a huge gamble for her and was risking her career. Section 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 requires the disclosure of the code of ethics for senior financial officers. The commission shall issue rule to adopt a code of ethics, and if not, reasons must be disclosed. Also, section 406 defines “code of ethics” and requires the commission to disclose its changes of the code of ethics. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act was developed after a series of financial fraud events to prevent fraud incidences. In my opinion, Sarbanes-Oxley Act has an effect in preventing fraud incidences from occurring. First, it gains people’s awareness of ethical issues and consequences they will face in a company when they are in an ethical dilemma. Thus, the act provides a guide for the direction of managers’ behavior. Second, not only in the WorldCom case, but also in other financial fraud events that occurred during 2001 and 2002,...

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...BKAL3063 Integrated Case Study Group I A141 30 September 2014 Group Members: 1. Rose Atikahanum Binti Abdul Rahman 216666 2. Nor Amira Zuriyanti Binti Khalid 216410 3. Nurulnabila Binti Mohd Sanusi 216516 4. Peggy Liaw Wan Gene 216388 5. Willson Wong 216381 1.0 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY WorldCom was a telecommunications company and formerly known as Long Distance Discount Services (LDDS). The company was handled by Bernard J. (Bernie) Ebbers, one of the original nine investors, and managed to gain profit within one year of management. In order to maintain 42% of Expense-to-Revenue Ratio, David Myers (controller) asked Timothy Schneberger (director of international fixed costs) to adjust $370 million into accruals account. Sullivan (CFO) asked Myers and Yates (director of accounting department) to order managers in the company’s general accounting department to capitalize $771 million of expenses into an asset account. In 2000, Yates told Vinson and Troy Normand (manager in general accounting) that Myers and Sullivan wanted them to release $828 million of line accruals into the income statement. Besides that, the internal audit was primarily exist to measure business unit performance and enforce spending controls, whereas the external auditors, Arthur Andersen, was an independent auditors which performed the financial audits to access the reliability and integrity of the publicly reported financial information. Cynthia Cooper, the head of internal audit, had brought an issue...

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...[pic] WorldCom Case Study FINC 621, Summer 2015 by Hailun Cao Mohammed Altuwaijri Papamagatte Diagne Qian Dou David Ballantine Yanchao Wu Strategic Analysis – Hailun Cao Bernie Ebbers, the chief executive officer, focused on acquisition business strategy. Major Acquisitions includes Advanced Telecommunications Corporation, IDB Communications group, Metromedia Communications Corporation and Resurgens, and Williams Telecommunications group (WilTel). All these firms perform different characteristics in the telecommunications industry. WorldCom faced some issues and WorldCom tried to manage these issues through the expansion business strategy. From the view of risk control, WorldCom met and solved challenges in the following aspects. Firstly, because of the increasing competition, increasing commoditization and low switching costs of long distance service, the long distance calls dropped obviously and long distance firms faced huge pressures under this circumstance. Therefore, WorldCom made acquisition of MCI in 1997. WorldCom made this decision through three main reasons. At first, since WorldCom was the No. 4 long distance provider and MCI was the No.2 long distance provider, the combination of the two firms could occupy 25% share in the U.S. long distance market. This situation consolidated WorldCom’s competiveness in such a depressing environment and decreased the risk in the long distance service market. In addition...

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Worldcom Case Study

...WorldCom Case Study The problems with WorldCom are the lack of internal control, disordered corporate culture, management failure and the fraud accounting practices. In this case, the EBITDA has been largely exaggerated. A $3.8 billion EBITDA overstatement became WorldCom’s accounting shame. For companies, EBITDA is a way to measure the results of operations excluding the effect of interest, corporate income taxes, depreciation and amortization of long-term assets. It provides a way to compare operating income among companies. Factoring out interest cost, taxes, depreciation and amortization can make unprofitable companies as WorldCom look like to be profitable. In my view, when using EBITDA as a valuation tool, one should not use it alone. A close look at the historical net income, the information derived from the cash flow statement and the balance sheet is also very important. The failure of management and leadership was another crucial factor leading to the bankruptcy of WorldCom. First, the corporate culture enabled management to run an unchecked organization, allowing them to use tricky accounting to manipulate the numbers to meet their expectations. Bernie Ebbers (CEO) used the aggressive acquisitions to boost earnings, which were hastily done with overvaluing the acquired company. The improper valuation increased the company’s debt and decreased the revenue. Further, Ebbers borrowed millions of dollars from WorldCom as a personal loan and used his stock as collateral...

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Worldcom Case Study

...Answer no 1 (a): How senior managers at WorldCom managed earnings: Senior manager of WorldCom (CFO, Scott Sullivan) has cooked up the earnings of the company by violating the two basic rule of accounting i.e. accrual and capitalization. They overstate the company pre-tax income by releasing the accrual balance to the income statement and by capitalizing the operating expenses in the books (Dick Thornburgh, 2004). As per the GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles), a company should required to follow matching concept between revenue and expense for any accounting period. In year 1999 to 2000, the senior manager managed the earning by manipulating accounting entry of expense accrual i.e. they reverse the accrual to reduce the expense line in the income statement. Hence the accrual left in books was much lesser than as compare to the actual payment required to make in future (Hans-Ulrich Westhausen, 2010). In 2001 when only few accrual left to release, senior managers start disguising operating expenses as capital expenditure to avoid revealing of the losses of the company. As per GAAP, operating expense should booked entirely in the year to which it relate to while capital expenditure get capitalized and booked in expense head over the period in the form of depreciation. CFO, Scott Sullivan ordered the seniors to reclassify the operating expense to capitalize head so that they can be book in expense head over the period of time. Pressures led senior managers to manage...

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