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Enron Corp. - University of California | Office of The President

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<strong>Enron</strong> executives and senior CS First Boston bankers at a meeting in 7/01, when <strong>Enron</strong>'s stock<br />

was in the $40s, according to one person who was present. "'<strong>The</strong>y (the CSFB bankers) said: "If<br />

this thing hits the $20s, you better run for the hills." <strong>The</strong>re was no question that they knew<br />

exactly what lay inside the structures, when the triggers went <strong>of</strong>f – everything. You could almost<br />

say they knew more about the company than people in <strong>Enron</strong> did.'"<br />

710. In a 6/01 meeting between an <strong>Enron</strong> manager and two CS First Boston managing<br />

directors, the CS First Boston people made statements showing they had knowledge about the<br />

nature and extent <strong>of</strong> <strong>Enron</strong>'s <strong>of</strong>f-balance sheet-exposure. During discussions about structuring<br />

an <strong>of</strong>f-balance-sheet partnership, the CS First Boston people commented to the <strong>Enron</strong> manager,<br />

"How can you guys keep doing this?" referring to <strong>Enron</strong>'s repeated statements to the market that its<br />

stock was undervalued. <strong>The</strong> CS First Boston people said that even at $40 per share, <strong>Enron</strong>'s stock<br />

was still overvalued in their view and added, and "Do employees actually believe it's worth what<br />

management is saying?"<br />

711. At the time, <strong>Enron</strong>'s stock was trading at around $48.50. <strong>The</strong> CS First Boston people<br />

said that "you guys are at a critical price point right now" and referenced the Raptor deal and<br />

said that if <strong>Enron</strong>'s stock continued to fall, that would cause Raptor to unwind and the debt<br />

balance to come due. <strong>The</strong> CS First Boston people asked the <strong>Enron</strong> manager, "Do you know how<br />

much <strong>of</strong>f-balance sheet debt you [<strong>Enron</strong>] have?" When the <strong>Enron</strong> executive said he thought it was<br />

around one to two billion dollars, the CS First Boston people said, "Try eight to 12 billion." <strong>The</strong>y<br />

added that if <strong>Enron</strong>'s stock hits $20 a share, things are going to come falling down and "you guys<br />

are gonna be fucked."<br />

712. CS First Boston also actively participated in the <strong>Enron</strong> fraudulent scheme by helping<br />

it structure and finance the critical LJM2 SPE. In this regard, CS First Boston, or senior executives<br />

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