In case you missed it . . .

Holmes.jpgWith the Super Bowl and all, it was easy to miss, but the PGA Tour’s newest millionaire is J.B. Holmes, a 23-year-old Tour rookie who makes long John Daly look short in comparison. Playing in just his fourth tournament since winning the PGA Tour School tournament last fall, Holmes won the FBR Open in Scottsdale by seven strokes on Sunday.
Through the first four Tour tournaments this season, Holmes leads the Tour with 72% (128 out of 168) of his drives finishing over 300 yards. On the par five 15th on Sunday afternoon, Holmes reached the green easily in two with a 263-yard 4-iron shot over water, then sank a 15-foot putt for an eagle to go to 20 under.
A 263-yard 4-iron over water? On the back nine of the final day of a tournament while trying to win for the first time on the Tour?
Keep an eye on this guy.

What? A business scandal in The Woodlands?

cbi.gifThe Woodlands is a dynamic suburban community on Houston’s far northside, but it’s not the type of place that one normally associates with business scandals.
However, late last week, it appears that The Woodlands had its own real business scandal. The revelations began unfolding on Thursday when Chicago Bridge & Iron — the Netherlands-based engineering company that maintains its worldwide administrative office in The Woodlands — filed an 8-K (i.e., the regulatory filing that advices the investing public of significant corporate events) that contained this agreement, under which CBI controller Tommy C. Rhodes will be paid a $1.8 million ìstay bonusî so long as he remains with the company until the end of June. However, the more interesting part of the deal is that Rhodes must ìwithdraw and dismiss or close any and all complaints he previously has filed against the company.î This follows an earlier 8-K from the company on October 31, 2005 that disclosed that a senior member of CB&Iís accounting department had alleged accounting improprieties and that, as a result, third quarter 2005 numbers would be delayed.
All of that was followed on Friday with this announcement in which the company disclosed the termination of Gerald M. Glenn as Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Robert B. Jordan as Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer. Then, on Saturday, the Chronicle reported that Messrs. Glenn and Jordan’s attorney was already taking the approach that a good offense is the best defense, asserting that the executives “are being targeted by a results-oriented process where the reputations of honest men have been unfairly called into question. These men are not going to hand over their good names for the sake of a misguided, biased and incomplete review.”
Meanwhile, the company announced that “all previous earnings guidance issued by the company for 2005 is no longer operative. When given, the guidance will be subject to closing the books of the company for 2005 and completion of the audit committee’s previously announced ongoing investigation.”
Not exactly Enronesque, but pretty juicy nonetheless for The Woodlands.

Week Two Lay-Skilling trial schedule

Koenig4.jpgken rice5.jpgAfter a slumbering close to Week One of the criminal trial of former key Enron executives Ken Lay and Jeff Skilling, the prosecution will almost certainly attempt to pick up the pace of the trial this week.
The prosecution will probably complete direct examination this morning of its first witness, former Enron investor relations chief Mark Koenig. Inasmuch as cross-examination of Koenig will likely take at least as long as direct (over two days), the prosecution’s second witness — former Enron Broadband co-CEO Ken Rice — will probably not take the stand until Wednesday afternoon, at the earliest.
If you have been following the Enron cases, then you will remember Rice. He was on the witness stand when the prosecution’s case began unraveling in the Enron Broadband trial last year. As noted at the time here, Rice testified falsely on direct examination during the Broadband trial about what he had seen at an analyst conference. After the Broadband defense team impeached Rice with his false testimony, the prosecution attempted to rehabilitate Rice’s false testimony by putting former Enron video consultant Beth Stier on the stand, a move that backfired when Stier testified to the prosecution’s intimidation tactics. Thus, in a case that looked like a layup for the prosecution at the outset, Rice and Stier’s testimony began a downward spiral in the prosecution’s case that ultimately resulted in a disastrous mix of acquittals and no verdicts on the charges in the Broadband case.
By the way, a little reported fact about Rice is that he entered into his plea deal with the Enron Task Force after the Task Force had discovered that he sold a substantial amount of Enron stock under rather suspicious circumstances. Shortly before Skilling announced his resignation as Enron CEO in August, 2001, Rice met with Skilling. After that meeting and before Skilling’s resignation announcement, Rice unloaded a boatload of his Enron stock. Thus, regardless of what other crimes that Rice contends on the stand that he and others committed at Enron, it’s pretty clear that he was guilty of illegal insider trading.

AIG deal near

AIG25.jpgAs discussed in more detail here earlier, the settlement between American International Group and regulators over business fraud charges may be consummated as early as later this week, according to this Wall Street Journal ($) article (NY Times article here).
The expected amount of the regulatory extortion, er, I mean, “settlement”: $1.6 billion.
9 Feb. 2006 Update: It’s a done deal. NY Times article on the settlement is here.