Значение слова "ENRON" найдено в 2 источниках

ENRON

найдено в "Crosswordopener"

• ___ Broadband Services and Blockbuster have struck a deal to deliver movies on demand

• ___ Field (Astros stadium)

• ___ Field (former name of Minute Maid Park)

• ___: The Smartest Guys in the Room (2006 documentary)

• 'Crooked E' company

• Conspiracy of Fools corporation

• Conspiracy of Fools topic

• Kenny Boy\'s company

• The Smartest Guys in the Room company

• The Smartest Guys in the Room subject

• 2000s Houston-based scandal subject

• 2000s scandal subject

• 2000s symbol of corporate financial misconduct

• 2000s symbol of corporate misconduct

• 2001 bankruptcy filer

• 2001 filer for Chapter 11 bankruptcy

• 2001 headline maker

• 2002 financial scandal company

• 2002 financial scandal subject

• 2002 headline company

• 2005 documentary subtitled The Smartest Guys in the Room

• Arthur Andersen's undoing

• Astros Field, formerly ___ Field

• Astros' Field

• Bad company?

• Bankrupt company in 2001 news

• Bankrupt company in 2002 headlines

• Bankrupt company with a tilted E logo

• Bankrupt energy company

• Bankrupt energy giant

• Bankrupt power broker

• Big name in corporate iniquity

• Big name in corporate malfeasance

• Big name in corporate scandal

• Business in a 2002 scandal

• Center of a 2002 scandal

• Collapsed company chronicled in the 2005 documentary subtitled The Smartest Guys in the Room

• Collapsed company of 2001

• Company at the center of a recent scandal

• Company Dick Cheney might be in trouble for meeting with

• Company for which Arthur Andersen once consulted

• Company in 2002 headlines

• Company in 2002 news

• Company in a 2001 scandal

• Company in a 2001-'02 scandal

• Company in a recent scandal

• Company in the news, 2001

• Company in the news, December 2001

• Company infamous for shredding

• Company infamous for shredding documents

• Company involved in a 2002 scandal

• Company involved in an accounting scandal

• Company notoriously affiliated with the Arthur Andersen accounting firm

• Company of Kenny Boy

• Company that formerly had the naming rights to what is now Minute Maid Park

• Company that had a 64-page Code of Ethics

• Company that ironically had a crooked E in its logo

• Company that was the subject of The Smartest Guys in the Room

• Company that went bankrupt in '01

• Company whose reputation was shredded

• Company with a spectacular 2001 bankruptcy

• Congress held hearings on its collapse

• Corporate crime name

• Corporate has-been

• Corporate miscreant

• Corporation in 2001 headlines

• Corporation in a 2002 scandal

• Corporation in the 2001 news

• Corporation involved in a 2002 scandal

• Corporation of a 2001 scandal

• Corporation run by a Lay man?

• Corporation that gave a bad account of itself

• Corporation that gave a bad account of themselves?

• Crooked crooked-E company

• December 2001 bankruptcy filer

• Documentary subtitled The Smartest Guys in the Room

• Embattled company

• Embattled energy company

• Embattled power broker

• Energy company known for, well, everything but providing energy

• Energy company that filed for bankruptcy in 2001

• Energy company whose bankrupcy took down the Arthur Andersen accounting firm

• Energy firm in 2001 headlines

• Energy giant that filed for bankruptcy in 2001

• Energy giant that went bankrupt in 2001

• Epitome of corporate corruption

• Failed energy company

• Failed energy company Paul Krugman once advised

• Former ballfield name

• Former company that prompted the Sarbanes-Oxley Act

• Fortune magazine named it America's Most Innovative Company from 1996 to 2000

• Fortune magazine's Most Innovative Company, 1996-2001

• Houston has-been

• Houston-based company at center of a 2001 scandal

• Houston-based scandal subject

• Houston's ___ Field

• Ill-fated Houston company

• Infamous bankruptcy filer of 2001

• Infamous energy company

• Infamous Houston company

• It was once voted America's Most Innovative Company by Fortune magazine

• Its bankruptcy made big news

• Its troubles inspired the Sarbanes-Oxley Act

• Jeffrey Skilling's former company

• Ken Lay ran it

• Ken Lay's company

• Ken Lay's former company

• Ken Lay's workplace

• Kenneth Lay's company

• Lay area?

• Lay concern?

• Lay-led company, once

• Lumpany in cast near's yews

• Minute Maid Park, formerly ___ Field

• Minute Maid Park's former sponsor

• Name in 2001 bankruptcy news

• Name in a 2001 accounting scandal

• Name in a 2002 scandal

• Name of a new baseball Field

• Name synonymous with corporate malfeasance

• Noted 2001 bankruptcy

• Noted bankruptcy of 2001

• Noted declarer of bankruptcy in 2001

• Notorious bankruptcy filer of 2001

• Publisher of cooked books?

• Scandal subject of 2002

• Scandal-laden company

• Scandal-plagued company

• Scandal-plagued energy giant

• Scandal-plagued giant

• Scandalized corporation

• Scandalous company

• Scandalous company of 2002

• Shredder in 2002 news

• Shredder in recent news

• Skilling's former company

• Subject of the 2005 bestseller Conspiracy of Fools

• Subject of the 2005 book Conspiracy of Fools

• Subject of the book Power Failure

• Subject of the books Anatomy of Greed and Power Failure

• Subject of the documentary The Smartest Guys in the Room

• Super-scandal of 2001-02

• Texas-based scandal subject

• Their commercials ended with the question, Why ask why?

• Their wok got stomped

• Topic of the 2005 expos

• Where Skilling made a killing


найдено в "Investment dictionary"
Enron: translation

A U.S. energy-trading and utilities company that housed one of the biggest accounting frauds in history. Enron's executives employed accounting practices that falsely inflated the company's revenues, which, at the height of the scandal, made the firm become the seventh largest corporation in the United States. Once the fraud came to light, the company quickly unraveled and filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Dec. 2, 2001.

Enron shares traded as high as $85 before the fraud was discovered, but plummeted to $0.30 in the sell-off after the fraud was revealed. Shareholders received company payouts as compensation for their losses, but former company executives also settled to pay shareholders out of their own pockets. Enron was the first big-name account scandal, but it was soon followed by the uncovering of frauds at other companies such as WorldCom and Tyco International, and has become a symbol of modern corporate crime.


T: 287