Enron Fallout Spreading to Include Merrill, Solly Smith Barney, J.P. Morgan Chase, Sources Say

Apr 5, 2002 12:00 PM


         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines  

The Enron probe is widening. According to lawyers for Enron shareholders say that they intend to expand their lawsuits to include other big Wall Street firms, such Merrill Lynch, Salomon Smith Barney’s parent company, Citigroup, and JP Morgan Chase. The suit, which has class-action status, will be amended to include those firms on April 8th, sources say.

The firms declined to comment on the case.

According to a Houston attorney familiar with the Enron case, the suit will allege that Merrill promoted sales of Enron stock as the company was misstating its income and debt. But to win, Enron shareholders’ lawyers will have to prove that Merrill knew about the fraudulent bookkeeping and deliberately mislead them. For example, the suit also alleges that Smith Barney’s parent, Citigroup, acquired detailed knowledge and insight of Enron's finances as lenders and vendors of financial services. .

Plaintiffs will have to show there was a direct pipeline between Merrill, Citigroup and other firms that shareholders relied on, the attorney says.

The suit comes on the heels of UBS PaineWebber being sued by two clients of Chung Wu, the broker who was fired by the firm after e-mailing clients advising them to sell their Enron shares.

Industry attorneys, as well as brokers nationally, have predicted that the Enron collapse is going to hit many Wall Street wirehouses in a variety of ways—and Merrill and Smith Barney appear to be the latest companies to be whacked. Enron had many ties to Wall Street. Many firms underwrote Enron share offering, sold Enron debt or marketed Enron limited partnerships. Nearly every analyst on the Street had a buy on Enron shares at one time or another.


Acceptable Use Policy
blog comments powered by Disqus

Current Issue

Registered Rep Cover

Dear Management, Thanks For Nothing.

By Christina Mucciolo
December 1, 2008

In our 18th annual Broker Report Card survey, wirehouse FAs say they are fed up with management ruining their excellent franchises and platforms. Will the great advisor diaspora begin?



browse back issues


Featured Book

Cannon’s Concepts For Professionals: A Complete Library of Essential Financial Concepts 

This reference book was updated for 2008 and now contains over 900 pages of information on essential financial concepts and wealth management strategies for your work with wealthy clients. The book not only contains brief summaries of each topic, but it also contains many useful diagrams and charts that can be used with clients when explaining difficult financial concepts. The information in this book meets current FINRA/NASD guidelines....

Bookstore

Affluent handbook Live Long Live Rich
Mastering High Net Worth Wealth Management team assessment
Back to Top