| Company type | Private |
|---|---|
| Industry | |
| Founded | 1913; 112 years ago (1913) |
| Founder | Arthur E. Andersen |
| Defunct | August 31, 2002 (2002-08-31) (CPA licenses surrendered) |
| Fate | Dissolved after theEnron scandal |
| Successor | |
| Headquarters | Chicago, Illinois ,U.S. |
| Revenue | US$9.3 billion (2002) |
Number of employees | 28,000 (2002) |
| Website | andersen.com at theWayback Machine (archived 2001-06-10) |
Arthur Andersen LLP was an American accounting firm based inChicago that providedauditing,tax advising,consulting and otherprofessional services to large corporations. By 2001, it had become one of the world's largestmultinational corporations and was one of the"Big Five" accounting firms (along withDeloitte,Ernst & Young,KPMG andPricewaterhouseCoopers). The firm collapsed by mid-2002, as details of its questionable accounting practices for energy companyEnron and telecommunications companyWorldCom were revealed amid the two high-profile bankruptcies. The scandals were a factor in the enactment of theSarbanes–Oxley Act of 2002.


Born on May 30, 1885, inPlano, Illinois, and orphaned at the age of 16,Arthur E. Andersen began working as a mail boy by day and attended school at night, eventually being hired as the assistant to thecomptroller ofAllis-Chalmers in Chicago. In 1908, after attending courses at night while working full-time, he graduated from theKellogg School of Management atNorthwestern University with a bachelor's degree in business. That same year, at age 23, he became the youngestCertified Public Accountant in Illinois.[1]
In 1913, Andersen and Clarence DeLany founded an accounting firm as Andersen, DeLany & Co.[1] The firm changed its name to Arthur Andersen & Co. in 1918, as DeLany resigned from the firm. Arthur Andersen's first client was theJoseph Schlitz Brewing Company ofMilwaukee, a company where Andersen had worked as a controller.[2] In 1915, due to his many contacts there, the Milwaukee office was opened as the firm's second office.[1]
Andersen believed education was the basis upon which the new profession ofaccounting should be developed. He created the profession's first centralized training program and believed in training during normal working hours. In 1927, he was elected to the board of trustees of Northwestern University and served as its president from 1930 to 1932. He was also chairman of the board of CPA examiners of Illinois.[1]
Andersen, who headed the firm until his death in 1947, was a zealous supporter of high standards in the accounting industry. A stickler for honesty, he argued that accountants' responsibility was to investors, not their clients' management. This gave rise to the uniform look of all the so-called "Arthur Androids", as employees referred to themselves, the intent being to provide the same service the same way to all customers in all locations. For many years, Andersen's motto was "Think straight, talk straight"—an axiom passed on from his mother.[3] During the early years, it is reputed that Andersen was approached by an executive from a local rail utility to sign off on accounts containing flawed accounting, or else face the loss of a major client. Andersen refused in no uncertain terms, replying that there was "not enough money in the city of Chicago" to make him do it. The railroad fired Andersen, only to go bankrupt a few months later.[4]
Arthur Andersen & Co. also led the way in a number of areas of accounting standards. Being among the first to identify a possible sub-prime bust, Arthur Andersen dissociated itself from a number of clients in the 1970s.[5]
Arthur Andersen & Co. struggled to balance the need to maintain its faithfulness to accounting standards with its clients' desire to maximize profits, particularly in the era of quarterly earnings reports. The firm has been alleged to have been involved in the fraudulent accounting and auditing ofSunbeam Products,Waste Management,Asia Pulp & Paper,[6] theBaptist Foundation of Arizona,WorldCom, as well asEnron, among others.[7][8]
The consulting wing of the firm became increasingly important during the 1970s and 1980s, growing at a much faster rate than the more established accounting, auditing, and tax practice. In a further effort to take advantage ofeconomies of scale,Price Waterhouse and Arthur Andersen discussed a merger in 1989[9] but the negotiations failed, mainly because of conflicts of interest such as Andersen's strong commercial links withIBM and PW's audit of IBM, as well as the two firms' radically different cultures. It was said by those involved with the failed merger that at the end of the discussion, the partners at the table realized they had different views of business, and the potential merger was scrapped.[10]
In 1989, Arthur Andersen andAndersen Consulting became separate units ofAndersen Worldwide Société Coopérative. The two businesses spent most of the 1990s in a bitter dispute. Andersen Consulting saw a huge surge in profits during the decade. The consultants, however, continued to resent transfer payments they were required to make to Arthur Andersen. In August 2000, at the conclusion ofInternational Chamber of Commerce arbitration of the dispute, the arbitrators granted Andersen Consulting its independence from Arthur Andersen, but awarded $1.2 billion in past payments (held inescrow pending the ruling) to Arthur Andersen, and declared that Andersen Consulting could no longer use the Andersen name.[11][12] As a result, Andersen Consulting changed its name toAccenture on January 1, 2001, and Arthur Andersen, having the right to the Andersen Consulting name, rebranded itself to "Andersen".[13]
Four hours after the arbitrator made his ruling, Arthur Andersen CEOJim Wadia resigned. Industry analysts and business school professors alike viewed the event as a complete victory for Andersen Consulting.[14] Wadia would provide insight on his resignation years later at a Harvard Business school case activity about the split. It turned out that the Arthur Andersen board passed a resolution saying he had to resign if he did not get at least an incremental $4 billion (either through negotiation or via the arbitrator decision) for the consulting practice to split off, hence his quick resignation once the decision was announced.[15]
Accounts vary on why the split occurred—executives on both sides of the split cite greed and arrogance on the part of the other side. The executives on the Andersen Consulting side maintained it was abreach of contract when Arthur Andersen created a second consulting group, AABC (Arthur Andersen Business Consulting) which competed directly with Andersen Consulting in the marketplace.[16]
Following the2001 scandal in which energy giantEnron was found to have fraudulently reported $100 billion in revenue through institutional and systematicaccounting fraud, leading to its bankruptcy – the largest corporate bankruptcy in American history at the time – Andersen's performance and alleged complicity as an auditor came under intense scrutiny.Sherron Watkins, the Enron whistleblower who had previously been an Andersen auditor before becoming Enron's Vice President of Corporate Development, also implicated Andersen while testifying to Congress.[17]
The Powers Committee (appointed by Enron's board to look into the firm's accounting in October 2001) came to the following assessment: "The evidence available to us suggests that Andersen did not fulfill its professional responsibilities in connection with its audits of Enron's financial statements, or its obligation to bring to the attention of Enron's Board (or the Audit and Compliance Committee) concerns about Enron's internal contracts over the related-party transactions".[18]
On June 15, 2002, Andersen was convicted ofobstruction of justice for shredding documents related to its audit of Enron. Although theSupreme Courtreversed the firm's conviction, the impact of the scandal combined with the findings of criminal complicity ultimately destroyed the firm.Nancy Temple (in the firm's legal department) andDavid Duncan (lead partner for the Enron account) were cited as the responsible managers in the scandal because they ordered subordinates to shred relevant documents.[19]
Because theU.S. Securities and Exchange Commission does not accept audits from convicted felons, the firm agreed to surrender its CPA licenses and its right to practice before the SEC on August 31, 2002—effectively putting the firm out of business. It had already started winding down its American operations after the indictment, and many of its accountants joined other firms. The firm sold the majority of its American operations to other accounting firms such asKPMG,[20]Ernst & Young,[21]Deloitte & Touche[22] andGrant Thornton International.[23] At this time, Arthur Andersen had lost most of its business and two-thirds of its 28,000 employees.[24]
The indictment also put a spotlight on the firm's faulty audits of other companies, most notablyWaste Management,Sunbeam Products, theBaptist Foundation of Arizona andWorldCom.[25]
On May 31, 2005, inArthur Andersen LLP v. United States, the Supreme Court unanimously reversed Andersen's conviction because of errors in the trial judge's jury instructions. The Supreme Court held that the instructions were too vague to allow a jury to find that obstruction of justice had occurred. The court found that the instructions were worded in such a way that Andersen could have been convicted without any proof that the firm knew it had broken the law or that there had been a link to any official proceeding that prohibited the destruction of documents. The opinion, written by Chief JusticeWilliam Rehnquist, also expressed skepticism of the government's concept of "corrupt persuasion"—persuading someone to engage in an act with an improper purpose without knowing that the act is unlawful.[26]
The firm collapsed by mid-2002, as details of its questionable accounting practices for energy companyEnron and telecommunications companyWorldcom were revealed amid the two high-profile bankruptcies. The scandals were a factor in the enactment of theSarbanes–Oxley Act of 2002 to increase oversight and protectwhistleblowers.[27] After the collapse, some parts of the company continue to exist: the company's consulting services were split out before the collapse and continue today asAccenture andProtiviti, while some of the former partners formed a new firm in 2002 focused on tax services, now calledAndersen Tax.[24]
The 2005 Supreme Court ruling theoretically left Andersen free to resume operations. However,CNN reported that by then, Andersen was "nearly defunct," with about 200 employees remaining from a high of 28,000 in 2002.[28] Following the ruling, William Mateja, a former counsel to the US Attorney General who had supervised the Andersen appeal, toldNPR that he did not believe the government would seek a retrial because, "there's nothing left of Arthur Andersen, and to spend the taxpayers' money on another prosecution would be just—defy common sense." Echoing this,United States Chamber of Commerce vice president Stephen Bokat pronounced Andersen "dead," and said that "there is no putting the company back together."[29] In his post-mortem of the Enron scandal,Conspiracy of Fools, journalistKurt Eichenwald argued that even if Andersen had escaped the Enron scandal, it would have likely been brought down by the massive accounting fraud atWorldCom. The WorldCom fraud came to light just days after Andersen was convicted of wrongdoing at Enron.[30]
As a result, Andersen has never returned as a viable business on even a limited scale. Ownership of the partnership has been ceded to four limited liability companies named Omega Management I through IV.[31]
Arthur Andersen LLP operated the Q Center conference center inSt. Charles, Illinois, until day-to-day management was turned over toDolce Hotels and Resorts in 2014, but Andersen retains ownership.[32] In 2018, that relationship ended, and day-to-day management returned to the Q Center. The Q Center is currently used for training, primarily for internal Accenture personnel, and other large-scale companies.[33]
In 2014, Wealth Tax and Advisory Services (WTAS), a tax and consulting firm started by several former Andersen partners, changed its name toAndersen Tax after acquiring the rights to the Andersen name. It rebranded its year-old international arm, WTAS Global, as Andersen Global.[34]
Many offices were acquired by other consulting firms as described above. Some partners formed new companies such as:
A tax consultancy founded by Arthur Andersen alumni is suing another, larger offshoot of the storied Chicago accounting firm, accusing it of poaching a key partner and several of his clients.