Am I a fool? I don't think I'm a fool. But I think I sure was fooled.
Kenneth Lay
There are no accounting issues, no trading issues, no reserve issues, no previously unknown problem issues.
We don't break the law.
I take full responsibility for what happened at Enron. But saying that, I know in my mind that I did nothing criminal.
The last thing I would have ever expected to happen to me in my life would be that, in fact, I would be accused of doing something wrong and maybe even something criminal.
Any slots at the senior level, including CEO or other slots, will be filled internally.
I mean, our primary businesses in wholesale pipelines, utilities, retail, were all doing extremely well.
When there's uncertainty they always think there's another shoe to fall. There is no other shoe to fall.
The transmission systems are still regulated.
Our liquidity is fine. As a matter of fact, it's better than fine. It's strong.
We use competitive markets to arrange for delivery of our food supply.
We've tried to get as much supply into California as we can.
In the case of Enron, we balance our positions all the time.
They can't do without electricity. They can do with less electricity.
The problems in California have been that it's been very difficult to site and build new power plants.
I don't think I'm a criminal, number one.
We need someone who is a strong representative of our value system.
There are absolutely no problems that had anything to do with Jeff's departure.
Jeff knew full well what he was walking away from. Again, he needed to deal with this right away.
Investors don't like uncertainty.
I have to take responsibility for anything that happened within its businesses.
But I can't take responsibility for criminal conduct of somebody inside the company.
But the most important thing is, Enron did not cause the California crisis.
But certainly I didn't know he was doing anything that was criminal.
Trillions of dollars every day are being exchanged around the world in all of the financial markets.
Today, there are also buyers and sellers of all these energy commodities, just like there are buyers and sellers of food commodities and many other commodities.
Well, rates would go up whether you deregulate or not, and of course, the rates that are going up right now on the electricity side are still within the regulated framework.
You'll have lower prices under deregulation than you will through regulation.
We see ourselves as first helping to open up markets to competition.
You'd rather have a surplus versus a shortage in your position.
I've been a strong financial and political supporter of, first, President Bush Sr. when he was running for president, and even when he ran for president a time or two and failed.
I have faith in the market when we get the rules right.
But indeed a market like California is not good for Enron.
Every market is in transition.