Enron Mail

From:eric.thode@enron.com
To:mark.frevert@enron.com, greg.whalley@enron.com, david.delainey@enron.com,john.lavorato@enron.com, mark.haedicke@enron.com, richard.sanders@enron.com
Subject:DJ Enron, Powerex Investigated For Alberta Price Fixing
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Date:Tue, 21 Nov 2000 06:53:00 -0800 (PST)

Here is the Dow Jones article...

---------------------- Forwarded by Eric Thode/Corp/Enron on 11/21/2000 02:54
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From: Ann M Schmidt 11/21/2000 02:35 PM


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Subject: DJ Enron, Powerex Investigated For Alberta Price Fixing

=DJ Enron, Powerex Investigated For Alberta Price Fixing
11/21/0 15:31 (New York)



By Cheryl Devoe Kim
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

TORONTO (Dow Jones)--Canada's Competition Bureau raided the offices of Enron
Canada Corp. in Calgary and Powerex Corp. in Vancouver earlier this year as
part of an investigation into suspected electricity price fixing by the two
companies, according to documents obtained by Dow Jones Newswires.
Bureau investigator David Bloom alleges in an application for a warrant he
used to gain access to the offices that in the summer of 1999, Powerex and
Enron were coordinating bid restatements and inflating the price each received
for electricity as they traded on the Power Pool of Alberta.
The investigation hasn't yet produced any charges against either of the
companies, according to Enron. The Competition Bureau declined to comment on
the status of the case.
Both Enron Corp. (ENE), which owns Enron Canada, and Powerex, a unit of
provincially owned British Columbia Hydro & Power Authority (X.BCH), deny
breaking any rules or laws.
From Powerex's point of view, Albertans are looking for someone to blame for
high power prices, which have become a political issue in the province.
"They just find it easy to blame us for what are pretty fundamental market
design flaws," Powerex president and chief executive Ken Peterson told Dow
Jones Newswires in an interview.
Deregulation Spurs Search For Someone To Blame
The search for someone to blame has repeated itself across every
deregulating
market Enron has participated in, Enron Corp. spokesman Mark Palmer said.
"Almost every time that either power markets or natural gas markets or even
oil markets or gasoline markets have experienced any kind of price volatility,
there have been investigations done," Palmer said.
Enron has been scrutinized before as part of wider energy markets
investigations, he said, but never found to be breaking the rules. This is the
first such investigation into Powerex's actions, Peterson said.
The Competition Bureau, based in Ottawa, won't say whether the investigaion
is ongoing, citing disclosure rules under the Competition Act.
The companies themselves said they're not sure of the investigation's
status.
Their seized files were returned several months ago, but Powerex hasn't heard
from the Bureau since then. Enron did receive a call from the Bureau last week
with a question, according to Enron Corp. spokesman Eric Thode.
The investigation began when the Power Pool of Alberta's system controllers
noticed the clearing price for a megawatt of electricity was topping C$100
with
unusual frequency.
The Pool's price is set by participants submitting bids to buy or sell power
for the following day. Until Oct. 19, 1999, a bidder could restate the amount
of power in a bid or offer an unlimited number of times, until 20 minutes
before the hour of transmission. The price paid for every megawatt of power
needed by the Pool in a given hour is set by the most expensive unit needed to
meet demand.
Alleged Bid Rigging Methods Detailed
According to the Competition Bureau search warrant application, Powerex and
Enron were rigging their bids in the following manner:
Powerex would lower the volume of an existing offer. As little as two
minutes
later, Enron would increase its offer for the same period by the same volume,
but at a "significantly higher price," according to the warrant application.
Sometimes, Enron would increase its offer even before Powerex had dropped its
offer.
Power Pool market analyst Owen Craig, who once worked in Enron Canada's gas
trading group, found that "as a result of restatements, involving mostly
Powerex and Enron," the Pool price was raised once to C$200/MWh, four times to
between C$354.29 and C$499.93, three times to between C$500 and C$541.63, and
10 times to between C$801.02 and C$998.
Based on the restatement patterns, Craig, and then the Bureau's Bloom,
concluded that no new energy was being offered to the Pool. They believed the
power was just being transferred from Powerex to Enron and then offered at the
higher price, according to the warrant application. By cutting the volume
offered by Powerex, the more expensive power offered by Enron would likely be
needed, and every participant would get the higher price.
Powerex's Peterson doesn't take issue with the trade history as detailed by
the Bureau, but denies that the company's traders were doing anything wrong or
that the two companies had some sort of arrangement.
"And we're adamant about that," Peterson said. "There was no deal with
Enron.
There was no expectation about what their behavior would lead to in terms of a
change in prices or anything like that."
Powerex traders were merely locking in their price, cutting the company's
risk, which Enron agreed to take on by buying the power at a fixed price,
Peterson said.
"Whenever Enron's offer of high-priced energy was declined, within moments
of
Enron being advised by the Pool that their energy would not be required,
Powerex would restate an identical volume of energy back into its lower priced
unit," according to the warrant application.
Peterson's response: "We're operating in a very tight market there and we
felt an obligation to make sure the power got delivered into Alberta."
Enron also denies it broke any Power Pool rules or Canadian laws.
"It boils down to we were offered power at a price lower than we thought we
could sell it at," Enron's Thode said. "And that's what Enron and every other
company does that's in the business of trading."
The May 25 search warrant covers the companies' actions between June 1,
1999,
and Oct. 19, 1999. On Oct. 20, 1999, the Pool changed its restatement rules,
essentially closing the loophole, though it did so without ever making public
its investigation into Powerex and Enron.
Power Pool spokesman Wayne St. Amour declined to discuss details of the
investigation.
"Market surveillance is in place to, among other things, protect the
interests and activities of market participants," he said.
Those convicted under Canadian law for bid-rigging can be fined an amount at
the court's discretion and/or jailed up to five years. A conviction wouldn't
likely affect Powerex's ability to trade in the U.S., Peterson said. In Canada
"there would have to have some follow-on action by the Alberta parties to
inhibit that. And so far, they still like to get our power."
Companies Concerned About Reputations
The bigger problem, Peterson said, is what the case will do to the Powerex
reputation.
"Essentially both companies are concerned about it because we have a lot at
stake from a reputational point of view," Peterson said. "Both companies, I
believe, conduct themselves in the highest possible standard. But these are
difficult times in the business with prices going crazy in Alberta and
California and people looking for somebody to blame. There's always a
possibility of collateral damage when politics gets involved."
Powerex parent company BC Hydro is also suspected by the Power Pool of
Alberta of unfairly providing access to transmission through British Columbia,
linking Washington with Alberta, as detailed in an Oct. 13 Power Pool market
surveillance report. Again, no charges have been laid.

Company Web sites: http://www.powerex.com, http://www.enron.com

-By Cheryl Kim, Dow Jones Newswires; 416-306-2017; cheryl.kim@dowjon