Paul Krugman: Enron's Second Coming?
It's déjà vu all over again:
Enron’s Second Coming?, by Paul Krugman, Commentary, NY Times: In May 2005 NYSE Magazine featured ... a glowing profile of Angelo Mozilo, the chairman and C.E.O. of Countrywide Financial... The article portrayed Mr. Mozilo as a heckuva guy — a man from a humble background determined to help other people, especially members of minority groups, achieve the American dream of homeownership.
The article didn’t mention one of Mr. Mozilo’s other distinguishing characteristics... Last year Mr. Mozilo was paid $142 million, making him the seventh-highest-paid chief executive in America.
These days, of course, Mr. Mozilo doesn’t look like such a wonderful guy, after all. Instead, he’s starting to bring back memories of other people who used to be praised not just as great businessmen but as great human beings — people like Enron’s Ken Lay and WorldCom’s Bernie Ebbers.
So far, nobody has accused Mr. Mozilo of breaking the law. Still, what we’re learning from the housing mess is that the crisis of corporate governance, which made headlines in the early years of this decade, never went away.
At this point it appears that Mr. Mozilo achieved the rare feat of victimizing three distinct groups. First were the borrowers. ...Countrywide often led customers to “high-cost and sometimes unfavorable loans” that, among other things, generated “outsize fees to company affiliates providing services on the loans.”
Then there are the investors who bought those Countrywide mortgages directly or indirectly, in the form of financial instruments... You can’t especially single out Countrywide for the failure of investors to realize how much risk they were taking on... But Countrywide made more questionable loans than anyone else — and its post bubble behavior does stand out. ...
Last but not least, since it may be the key to the whole story, is the victimization of Countrywide’s own stockholders. Last year Mr. Mozilo’s huge compensation drew a protest from a group of shareholders... But the worst was yet to come.
In late 2006, ... Mr. Mozilo was selling. Between November 2006 and August 2007 — that is, during the months before investors fully realized the extent to which his company would be hurt by the subprime mortgage crisis — he unloaded $138 million worth of Countrywide’s stock. ...
[H]ow can it be that so soon after Enron, WorldCom and other scandals rocked the business world, we’re once again hearing about executives cashing in just before their companies are revealed as less successful than advertised? The answer, of course, is that we never dealt properly with those scandals.
Here’s what I wrote back in May 2003:
Last summer it seemed, briefly, as if the torrent of scandals ... would bring about a public backlash against corporate malfeasance. But then the topic largely vanished from the news, driven out by reports about Iraq’s nuclear weapons program and all that. And after the midterm elections, which put apologists for corporate insiders back in control of all the relevant Congressional committees, we might as well have had the sirens sound the all-clear.
Sure enough, C.E.O. paychecks, which came partway back to earth in 2002, more than doubled between 2003 and 2006. And with those huge paychecks came renewed incentives for malfeasance. Once again, executives could become richer than Croesus by creating the illusion of success, even for a little while.
There is one big difference this time: the number of victims — misled borrowers, homeowners whose neighborhoods are being destroyed by foreclosures, investors who thought they were buying safe assets — is even larger.
Posted by Mark Thoma on Monday, October 1, 2007 at 12:33 AM in Economics, Housing, Regulation |
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