WorldCom, one
of the country's largest companies with over 20 million customers
and 80,000 employees, has filed for bankruptcy. It is the largest
bankruptcy in United States history. Millions of people, whether
long distance customer, internet user, investor, or employee, are
affected by the bankruptcy of WorldCom.
SaveOnPhone,
a telecommunications resource used by over one million people and
numerous media outlets during the past four years, has created this
site to help explain the complexities of the WorldCom situation.
Hopefully, this site will answer the many e-mails we receive from
people trying to understand what is going on and how this will affect
the long distance market and WorldCom investors. We have also provided
a chronology of the events and archived articles on the scandal.
If you have a questions, comments, editorials or news tips please
contact us at Editor@WorldComNews.com
. We would especially like to hear from WorldCom customers and past
or present employees.
Simply put, you've been WorldConned.
The site has a very
good resource page, and I ain't just saying that
because they say something nice about me.
Tuesday August 13, 2002 @ 7:53 AM EDT
That mansion former WorldCom CFO Scott Sullivan is
building could
be snatched away from him. Why? "Until the home
is completed and occupied, Sullivan wouldn't qualify
for a homestead-exemption claim. Under Florida law,
it allows residents to keep their home assets safe from
creditors, for example, should they file for bankruptcy
protection, officials say," USA Today reports. Sullivan
has not, to anyone's knowledge, filed for personal bankruptcy
protection.
Own a piece of history. Former WorldCom CEO Bernie
Ebbers is trying
to sell his Canadian ranch. One of his neighbors
is looking to pick up the 500,000-acre property.
WorldCom CEO John Sidgmore welcomes CRO Greg Rayburn
and CFO John Dubel to the jungle:
-----Original Message-----
From: John Sidgmore
Sent: 13 August 2002 05:48
Subject: A Message from John
To all WorldCom Employees,
The process of Chapter 11 protection is as new to me
as it is to you. And, as you know, the recent troubling
events have left us without either a Chief Financial
Officer or an executive with bankruptcy reorganization
expertise. We, therefore, have sought leaders in both
fields to guide us through this period of WorldCom's
restructuring.
I would like to introduce to you Greg Rayburn and John
Dubel, and ask you to join me in welcoming them to the
company. Greg is our Chief Restructuring Officer and
John is our Chief Financial Officer. They are both principals
of AlixPartners, one of the world's premier corporate
restructuring firms. Both report directly to me. We
believe we can navigate this crisis in WorldCom's history
together -- helping us emerge as one of the preeminent
telecommunications companies in the world.
Their appointments are yet another important step in
moving WorldCom forward, distancing us from the troubling
events of our past. They are two of the most highly
qualified and experienced restructuring executives available
- you deserve the best and we brought them to you, to
us, WorldCom.
Some of you have already met them and have started working
together, and I believe you would agree with me that
their contributions are already making a positive difference.
For background, Greg joined AlixPartners in August 2000.
Most recently he acted as both CEO and CRO in the successful
restructuring of Sunterra Corporation. Prior to that,
he was president and co-founder of The Capstone Group,
a private investment partnership. Greg is a CPA and
a Certified Fraud Examiner. He belongs to the Turnaround
Management Association, the American Institute of Public
Accountants, and the American Bankruptcy Institute.
Prior to joining AlixPartners in 2002, John Dubel ran
his own turnaround firm. During that time he served
as CRO and COO at CellNet Data Systems, Inc. John is
a Certified Insolvency and Reorganization Accountant,
a past board member and officer of the Association of
Insolvency and Restructuring Advisers, and a member
of the Turnaround Management Association and the American
Bankruptcy Institute.
Greg, John and their firm have demonstrated financial
acumen and a reputation for building consensus and achieving
results, while operating with the highest ethical standards
- something I strive to restore to WorldCom as a company.
I know I can count on all of you to give Greg, John
and their staff from AlixPartners your full cooperation
in our company-wide effort to emerge from Chapter 11
as quickly as possible and as a strong and effective
competitor, while continuing to provide our customers
with great service.
I know how hard we are all fighting to keep WorldCom
thriving. Lately, it seems that with every turn we face
a new challenge - but, our new management team and I
are doing our best to restore WorldCom to the world
class company we have all fought to create.
Thank you again for your continued dedication, hard
work and support.
John Sidgmore
----
WorldCom, Inc. Corporate Employee Communications
Monday August 12, 2002 @ 2:59 PM EDT
An update on my rumor item about
Skytel from earlier this morning. A few sources
are now indicating that Skytel management will buyout
the company from WorldCom and spin it off as separate,
venture-backed entity. Skytel
is WorldCom's paging unit and is classified as a wireless
asset, which were already up for sale. The company was
launched thirty years and after various acquisitions
and asset sales became a wholly-owned subsidiary of
WorldCom in October 1999. As I mentioned earlier, former
Skytel CEO John Stupka, who was working at WorldCom
corporate as Sr. VP of the wireless unit, resigned from
WorldCom last week. However, Stupka told The Clarion-Ledger
that he would be taking some time off before pursuing
life in the academic arena. But Skytel sources say that
since WorldCom's original accounting problem disclosure,
former Skytel executives were being shuttled back from
WorldCom corporate to the paging company, which was
essentially up for sale already. Air2Lan Chairman
and CEO Jai P. Bhagat is rumored to be involved
in the Skytel spin-off. Baghat was the Vice-Chairman
and CEO of Skytel before the WorldCom merger. Whatever
happens, it appears some big changes are imminent at
Skytel.
Monday August 12, 2002 @ 2:03 PM EDT
Dow Jones Newswire columnist Michael Rapoport emailed
me this afternoon after reading
my little rant about why WorldCom's stock is worthless.
Rapoport pointed me towards a July
22 column he wrote on the subject(Note: If the
link doesn't work, you'll need a WSJ.com account or
you may be able to find it on Quicken.com, which carries
some DJ content). But under fair usage, I'll excerpt
a few key points Rapoport makes:
"WorldCom's bankruptcy filing, the biggest in U.S.
history, means that its common stock will almost certainly
be declared worthless once the company reorganizes.
But that seems to cut no ice with wild-eyed stock investors.
They've bid WorldCom stock up post-bankruptcy the same
way they've done with a number of other stocks the past
few years, as detailed in this column, including Enron
Corp. (ENRNQ), Fruit of the Loom Ltd. and Planet Hollywood
International Inc.""Here's the rationale, one more time: When a company
files for bankruptcy, the people with claims against
the company get their money back in a very specific
order, prescribed by law. First come the lenders who
have provided the company with the debtor-in-possession
financing it needs to keep operating. Then come the
lenders and bondholders with claims secured by the company's
assets. The comes unsecured lenders and bondholders,
and suppliers and vendors to whom the company owes money.In this system, common shareholders get treated like
the bankruptcy-court equivalent of pond scum. They get
paid dead last, only after everyone else has had their
claims satisfied. And because money is in short supply
for any bankrupt company - if it weren't, the company
probably wouldn't need to file for bankruptcy in the
first place - what this means in practice is that there's
almost never any money left by the time shareholders
get their turn. When a company comes out of Chapter
11, its common stock is typically cancelled, to be replaced
by new equity on which the old shareholders have no
claim."
The article gets VERY specific about the true value
of WorldCom's assets as compared to its debt, and what
the actual shareholder value for WorldCom was as of
March 31, 2002. We all know what's happened since then.
Rapoport ends his column on this note:
"Think of it as the greater-fool theory in practice:
Some investors buying in to WorldCom understand the
bankruptcy process full well, and they know further
that many investors DON'T understand it. They figure
they'll buy the stock and unload it for a quick profit
on some poor sucker who doesn't understand how bankruptcy
works, and who actually thinks he's making a killing
by buying WorldCom at 14 cents a share.Resist the temptation, folks. Understand what's going
on; don't let the vultures take advantage of you, and
don't be a vulture yourself. And if you buy WorldCom
stock, you're doing it at your own (very great) risk."
I agree one-hundred percent with Rapoport's assessment
of the situation. Folks, I'm not trying to fool you
on this issue, I'm trying to protect you. If you're
a WorldCom common shareholder who bought in before June
25 (or around that date) it's time to move on. You will
not be able to recover any value from the stock. Join
a class action lawsuit, write your elected leaders,
do whatever. But don't sit around thinking you'll be
able to get your money back by holding onto the stock
and one-day selling it. It's not going to happen. Just
some friendly advice.
Monday August 12, 2002 @ 11:10 AM EDT
Rumor: There's a buzz around Skytel, WorldCom's
paging unit. A tipster says there is an all-hands meeting
scheduled at the company tomorrow, possibly to inform
employees about its sale. Former Skytel President and
CEO John Stupka resigned
from his post WorldCom last week. Stupka's departure
was unexpected because after the accounting scandal
hit, according to insiders, Stupka was put back in charge
of Skytel to prep it for a sale. Skytel is part of WorldCom's
wireless business and the company has said for months
that it would sell off its wireless assets. One Skytel-er
speculated that Stupka's departure from WorldCom was
to avoid conflict of interest in the Skytel sale, which
could mean a management-led buyout of the unit. Stupka
is widely regarded as one of the better executives at
WorldCom, at least that's what I've heard. He appears
to be respected by the honest, hard-working folks at
the company. It will be interesting to see if Skytel
has been sold or spun off. While insiders say Skytel
is actually a profitable unit, industry executives I
polled a few weeks ago expressed no interest in the
company. Skytel's main assets appear to be government
contracts.
Monday August 12, 2002 @ 4:20 AM EDT
WorldCom COO Ron Beaumont addressed some of the company's
employees last Wednesday, one day before the company
announced an additional $3.5 billion in fuzzy math.
A WorldCom employee who was present took notes and was
kind enough to share them with me. You can read
what Beaumont had to say in this week's version
of Dotcom Scoop's Rumor Mongering newsletter. Shareholders
take note; Beaumont told WorldCom employees that the
stock is worthless. Beaumont also said that there would
be more layoffs and the company's future would involve
a name change and, get this, an IPO down the road. I
never give advice to investors, it's none of my business
what you do with your money, but the people who don't
want to face reality, or don't want to understand why
WorldCom stock is worthless, don't waste your time pontificating
on the matter. The stock is worthless. Sidgmore and
Beaumont have both told employees this. It's on the
pink sheets for the love of dog. Don't look at other
companies that went bankrupt as examples of how a company
can reemerge with common shareholders retaining some
value. Every bankruptcy case is different, and with
WorldCom's debt and continuing accounting revelations,
if you're holding stock, you're holding a worthless
piece of paper that is being manipulated by people who
want to make a quick buck. That's my take on it. If
you want though, read what the idiots
on the WorldCom message board on Yahoo have to say.
WorldCom is alternately part of a vast-right wing conspiracy,
the Jews attempt to takeover the world (yeah, I'm helping
my tribesman do that) and some sort of Confederate revival.
It's actually hilarious reading when you realize when
these people are talking about the company in terms
of the stock, shareholder value, etc., it is akin to
having a conversation about a defunct baseball team's
performance. For a quicker read, check out the prevailing
sentiment about me among AT&T shareholders.
WorldCom creditors want to review
the company's books prior to 1999. "People close
to WorldCom said the company has no plans to actively
look back beyond 1999 but will "follow up on credible
complaints" if any surface for earlier years. In a statement
last week, WorldCom said it will continue to announce
accounting errors in previous financial statements "if
it discovers additional accounting issues." An internal
investigation into WorldCom's accounting irregularities
is also continuing and is being led by William McLucas,"
Dow Jones Newswires report.
Analysts, bankers and homeless people agree; WorldCom's
latest disclosure could be the
final nail in the company's coffin. "Several
bankers, analysts and lawyers said they are not yet
writing WorldCom's obituary -- although they are keeping
their pens handy," Reuters reports.
Ah, accounting babble here. WorldCom's
use of cookie jar reserves isn't good. Microsoft,
Sunbeam and Xerox are just three companies who have
gotten in trouble for it.
WorldCom's immediate future is hold. Until
the company's finances are completely combed over,
creditors will just have to wait and the company probably
won't be able to sell any assets. "Even if WorldCom's
creditors asked the bankruptcy judge overseeing WorldCom's
case to sell key assets or liquidate the company, it
would be almost impossible to find buyers until the
company can promise there will be no more major accounting
surprises," Christopher Stern of The Washington
Post writes.
Did
Bernie know? Scott Waller of The Clarion-Ledger
suggests that Bernie Ebbers may have a defense, but
Scott Sullivan is, how do you say, screwed.
Friday August 9, 2002 @ 2:00 AM EDT
On Thursday, WorldCom disclosed that the company had
an additional $3.3 billion in improperly reported earnings.
The biggest accounting scandal in the history of corporate
America just grew by almost 100 percent. Coverage from
around the world, including an exclusive look at WorldCom
CEO John Sidgmore's email to employees, follows.
EXCLUSIVE: Following Thursday's news that WorldCom
had additional accounting problems, WorldCom CEO John
Sidgmore sent off a late night missive to the company's
employees. Obtained exclusive by Dotcom Scoop, here
is the email:
-----Original Message-----
From: John Sidgmore
Sent: Friday, August 09, 2002 12:44 AM
Subject: A Message from the CEO
A Message from the CEO
Today we disclosed that our internal financial review
uncovered an additional $3.3 billion in improperly reported
earnings before interest, taxes and depreciation and
amortization (EBITDA) from 1999, 2000, 2001 and the
first quarter of 2002. In light of this announcement,
we will restate our 2000 financial statements in addition
to our previous intention to restate 2001 and first
quarter 2002.
This discovery is very disappointing to me -- as I’m
sure it is to you. And it is quite possible that as
our investigation continues we will find other questionable
entries. The important thing to remember is that we
are committed to getting to the bottom of any irregularities
and disclosing them promptly so that everyone can be
confident in our numbers as we work to restore the company’s
credibility. We will be open and forthright, and we
will operate the company at the highest standards of
integrity.
You have my pledge that the senior management team and
I are doing everything we can to make WorldCom the kind
of company you can be proud of again. With your continued
hard work and support we will achieve this goal.
As I alerted you when we filed for bankruptcy protection,
I need your help. Your continued dedication is critical
to maintaining customer confidence. This restatement
in no way affects our ability to provide great services
to customers -- we are simply correcting misstatements
from the past. It has no impact on the company’s cash
position. Please help us reinforce the message that
WorldCom is capable of and dedicated to serving customers
with outstanding quality.
Yesterday we had our first meeting with our Official
Committee of Unsecured Creditors. We expressed our clear
intention to work to continue the quality of our service
to customers along with a commitment to working with
them for a consensual reorganization plan. This was
a very productive meeting and an important first step
in the reorganization process.
This is a very trying time. Many of us have spent years,
or even all of our careers dedicated to bringing competition,
choice and innovation to the telecommunications market
and we are justifiably proud of our accomplishments.
The criticism of the company coming from all quarters
is painful, but those of us that worked honestly to
build our company have nothing to be ashamed of.
I know that no one of us is immune to the way WorldCom
has been dragged through the mud on television, newspapers
and even the distinguished halls of Congress. Although
the effects can be disheartening, I hope you will join
me in not letting the public criticism reflect on your
professional integrity and focus. We cannot change the
past, but together we can affect the course of WorldCom's
future.
Thank you for your continued support and dedication.
John Sidgmore
----
WorldCom, Inc. Corporate Employee Communications
Coverage of the new accounting problems follows:
"WorldCom Inc. (WCOEQ, news, msgs), already facing civil
charges for accounting fraud, said it would expand its
planned financial restatement to $7.2 billion as a result
of additional accounting irregularities, Friday's Wall
Street Journal reported. The telecommunications giant,
which previously planned to restate $3.85 billion for
last year and part of this year, disclosed that an internal
review of its accounting produced additional improperly
booked items. The Clinton, Miss., company, which had
warned its revision would grow, says it will have to
revise its financials for the year 2000, in addition
to the planned restatements for 2001 and the first quarter
of 2002.
The new charges effectively would wipe out WorldCom's
profits for all of 2000, just as the prior ones erased
earnings for 2001. The new information also raises questions
about whether the bulk of the company's profits during
the end of the telecom boom were generated through accounting
gimmicks."
WorldCom's
press release on the matter - - Dow
Jones Newswire - - Reuters
- - Agence
France-Presse - - Washington
Post - - Baltimore
Sun - - The
Guardian - - Associated
Press - - Newsday
- - CNN/Money
- - Voice
Of America - - USA
Today - - Clarion-Ledger
The lawyer for former WorldCom CEO Bernie Ebbers says
his
client is not to blame for any of this. "I'm
certain of this. When the investigation is done, there
will not be a shred of credible evidence that Bernie
Ebbers had a thing to do with those (accounting) decisions,"
Ebbers' lawyer told CNBC. Cough, bullshit.
Thursday August 8, 2002 @ 4:53 PM EDT
A quick note about my
article from this morning: the BellSouth region
refers to a geographic area and has nothing to do with
the company BellSouth. The region usually refers to
the dominant local telco.
Thursday August 8, 2002 @ 3:15 PM EDT
Here we go again... CNBC is reporting that WorldCom
has another $2 billion in accounting errors. "CNBC
said WorldCom had used an accounting trick in which
most of the $2 billion was reversed from reserves for
bad debts into operating income. It said the additional
fraud was found by WorldCom's auditors poring over its
financial statements in 1999," Reuters reports.
MSNBC also
has a report. "The fraud in 2000 is said by people
familiar with the matter to differ from the techniques
used in 2001 and 2002. In this case, CFO Scott Sullivan
is believed to have used a variety of methods to bolster
operating income, the chief one in this case being the
reversal of reserves for bad debts into operating income,"
MSNBC reports. CNBC's David Faber broke this story,
and the original June 25 bad accounting story. One wonders
what CNBC would be like if they did this type of reporting
all the time. Maybe, gasp, they'd be trustworthy!?
Surprise, surprise. More
crooks at WorldCom. Executives in the South were
riping off customers and the company itself by inflating
revenues for the purpose of garnering commissions and
then crediting customers back when the commission department
wasn't looking. Note to John Sidgmore; if you're serious
about cleaning up WorldCom, you better start by investigating
every single executive in the company and start taking
the whistleblowers seriously. (Ed. note: I wrote
this story)
WorldCom examiner Richard Thornburgh says he'll go
where the evidence leads him. Dude, do I need to
create some crop circles outside of Jackson, MS for
you?
President Bush was in Mississippi yesterday looking
for votes and telling people that WorldCom won't be
repeated. Meanwhile, Vice-President Dick Cheney
was
heckled in San Francisco and still won't answer
questions related to his former company Halliburton.
The latest White House tactic is to blame Clinton for
the crappy economy. Yeah, I don't see any rich white
dudes suffering, just a few them in handcuffs.
Wednesday August 7, 2002 @ 12:10 PM EDT
ExWorldCom
5100 has launched. "The exWorldCom5100 group is
composed former WorldCom employees with a common goal
of seeking full payment of severance pay and benefits
based on the WorldCom Severance Plan. WorldCom filed
for bankruptcy on July 21, 2002 and has not paid the
former employees their severance or communicated any
information about the timing of the payment, or the
status of the health care benefits," the website states.
The ExWorldCom 5100 group is for the 5,100 WorldCom
employees terminated on June 28, 2002.
Responding to a USA
Today article which hinted said that creditors want
to ouse WorldCom CEO John Sidgmore, the company issued
a tearse
statement to Dow Jones Newswires. "Our management
team is not focused on unfounded speculation and is
instead focused on reorganizing the company," a
spokesperson said.
Want to cover WorldCom for The Associated Press? "The
Associated Press in Jackson, Mississippi is looking
for an aggressive reporter versatile enough to cover
a business beat as well as write general news. While
covering WorldCom and the largest Chapter 11 bankruptcy
in U.S. history is the big story, other responsibilities
include high tech Gulf Coast military shipbuilding,
energy and nuclear issues, manufacturing, casinos, as
well as agriculture. We are a small but feisty bureau
in a story-rich state, so ideal candidate will have
a commitment to also writing non-business news when
time allows," a job
posting on JounralismJobs.com states. Thanks to
Frank for the link, but I am not qualified for this
job. It sounds like an interesting post though.
Wednesday August 7, 2002 @ 11:09 AM EDT
Two quick notes... The first being that this weblog
is updated as news warrants. There are only so many
WorldCom related articles each day and while many articles
mention WorldCom with regards to corporate scandals,
accounting problems, etc., they don't warrant a look
if you're looking for good information on the company.
Also, many articles cover the same ground, such as yesterday's
news about Digex cutting 200 jobs. No use in linking
a dozen articles that contain the same information.
Second, a note to my fellow journalists with a story
idea... I've been getting a lot of emails from common
shareholders asking for a thorough explanation as to
why their stock is worthless. Many articles quote experts
and such, and Sidgmore told employees in a July 22 memo
the following, "Unfortunately, it is highly unlikely
that investors will receive any value for their WorldCom
Group or MCI Group stock." Nonetheless, common shareholders
would definitely benefit from a plain English article
telling them exactly why their stock has no value and
won't have value in the future.
WorldCom CEO John Sidgmore has the fun
task of meeting with creditors today. "Creditors,
particularly bank lenders holding a $2.7 billion unsecured
loan, have been pushing for Sidgmore's removal, arguing
WorldCom needs leadership not tainted by the company's
accounting scandal. Sidgmore is expected to tell creditors
that he is best placed for the job. WorldCom board members
say he is safe as long as there are no more irregularities,"
USA Today reports.
Two WorldCom executives have
left the company. John Stupka, senior vice president
in charge of the company's wireless division and former
chief executive officer of SkyTel, and P. Brooks Warren,
a long-time vice president in charge of facilities,
have left, according to Robert Schoenberger of The Clarion-Ledger.
It's part of the on-going restructuring. Stupka, I had
been told weeks ago, was being sent back to SkyTel to
prep it for sale. Although he says in the article that
the company is valuable (because of its government contracts
I presume), not many companies are looking to add a
paging unit to their holdings.
What the hell was he thinking!? Salomon Bros. analyst/crook
Jack Grubman donated
$100,000 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee
two days before the WorldCom scandal was announced.
It was the Committee's largest donation ever. The check
was received on the same day Grubman was subpoenaed
by the House Financial Services Committee.
Tuesday August 6, 2002 @ 12:01 PM EDT
Attention Silicon Valley corporate criminals, there
is now a
FBI tipline so people can rat you out. "The FBI,
along with the Northern California divisions of the
U.S. attorney's office and the Securities and Exchange
Commission, hope providing more opportunities to tip
investigators will flush out insiders with information
about corporate crimes, including insider stock trading,
embezzlement and false financial reports," The San
Francisco Chronicle reports.
WorldCom owes Indian telecom VSNL $60
million to $90 million. "As a result, the volume
of call traffic from the United States to India was
much higher than vice-versa. This meant that at the
end of each month, WorldCom always owed VSNL for the
big difference in call settlement charges, or payments
made for terminating a call on another carrier's network,"
Reuters reports.
Monday August 5, 2002 @ 3:01 AM EDT
Not much WorldCom news over the weekend, thankfully.
There were no
secrets at WorldCom. Remember that shareholder lawsuit
mentioned during the House Financial Services Committe
hearings? Beatrice E. Garcia from the Miami Herald digs
deep into the suit and finds that shareholders were
contending last year that the company was lying abouts
its revenues, keeping items on the books for way too
long and overbilling customers. And of course, Ebbers,
Sullivan and Myers knew all of this.
There goes WorldCom's
wireless customers. Another story about how WorldCom
Wireless customers are getting kicked back to the companies
which actually provide them service.
InfoWorld talks to Ask Jeeves Vice President of I.T.
Dayne Sampson to see how he's handling
the stress of being a WorldCom customer. "We are
in daily contact with our WorldCom team and they have
been extremely proactive in helping us and keeping us
up-to-date on what's going on. And we've done due diligence
... so any financial issue that WorldCom has, if it
starts to impact technology operations, we're in a position
to make changes," Sampson says.
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