COVER STORY
The Betrayed Investor Americans bought into the idea that stocks could only make them richer. Then the market bubble burst -- and then came Enron
COVER IMAGE: The Betrayed Investor
CHART: The Road to Disillusionment
TABLE: The New Investor Class
TABLE: Poll: They're Fed Up (extended)
TABLE: The Fallout
TABLE: Post-Enron Reforms: What's Real and What's Not
The Accountant Who Lost Faith--and Money
The Attorney Who Stopped Opening Her Statements
The Couple That Switched to a Savings Account
The Retiree Who Washed His Hands of Wall Street
COMMENTARY: A New Economy Needs a New Morality
COMMENTARY: Congress Will Huff and Puff and...Do Little
ONLINE EXTRA: Q&A: Paul O'Neill on the Enron Cleanup
ONLINE EXTRA: Q&A: Harvey Pitt Details the SEC's Progress
ONLINE EXTRA: Q&A: Morgan Stanley's Byron Wien on Valuations
INTERNATIONAL -- ASIAN COVER STORY
China's Power Shift The leadership is about to change--and a new generation is waiting to make its move
UP FRONT
Talk Show
Now, PwC Is in Hot H2 O
Suddenly, Fiorina's Odds Look Better
Solid Gold for Fashion, Eh?
So Your Lie May Always Be True
In Europe, No Frills Means No Airbus
In the Trade War Trenches: Women
READERS REPORT
The Right Way to Spot a Recession
How Can the Government Head Off Another Enron?
Politicians, Beware of Fickle Public Opinion
Putting an End to the Numbers Game
A Black Eye for Accountants That Won't Go Away Soon
A Cure for U.S. Health Care
CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS
"The Fine Print" (BusinessWeek Investor, Feb. 4, 2002)
BOOKS
How the Tech Boom Went Bust
Race Matters
Four's a Crowd
LETTER FROM CALIFORNIA
A Lush Valley Struggles to Breathe
TECHNOLOGY & YOU
Stamp Out Smutty Spammers
ECONOMIC VIEWPOINT
The State of the Union: Bush Mostly Got It Right
ECONOMIC TRENDS
Climbing out of the Job Pool
When Cities Are Too Small
Steel Tariffs: For and Against
BUSINESS OUTLOOK
U.S.: A Slump and a Recovery in Internet Time
Mexico: Bracing for a Wave of Foreign Investment
NEWS: ANALYSIS & COMMENTARY
M&A: Companies Shopped--Now They've Dropped
Skilling on the Skillet
Enron's Fish Story
Behind Tyco's Accounting Alchemy
Global Crossing: How to Leave Your Investors Fuming
Real Assets May Not Be Enough to Save Calpine
Toys: War of the Whirls
IN BUSINESS THIS WEEK
Peter Dolan: Anyone Got a Tranquilizer?
Exonerating the Explorer
Loud Trumpets for Visual Studio.net
Labor Skies May Clear at United
DuPont Removes Its Nylons
Backpedaling at Moody's
Et Cetera...
More with Less
WASHINGTON OUTLOOK
Global Crossing: Where's the Outrage on Capitol Hill?
Enron and the Clintonites
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
In Europe, the Search Is On for Other Enrons Enronitis is driving the Continent's investors to demand that companies clean up their balance sheets. This may force a huge telecom write-off
3G: A Wireless Gamble That Didn't Pay Off
INTERNATIONAL OUTLOOK
Venezuela: How Long Can Chávez Stand the Heat?
British Airways Retrenches
Prime Minister in Trouble?
CORPORATE SCOREBOARD
Profits: This Is So Not the '90s
Why the Bounceback Won't Be Quick
SCOREBOARD: Fourth Quarter & Full Year 2001 Corporate Profits (.pdf)
Interactive Scoreboard: Fourth Quarter & Full Year 2001 Corporate Profits
MANAGEMENT
At Enron, "The Environment Was Ripe for Abuse"
SOCIAL ISSUES
The Time Bomb in the Workforce: Illiteracy
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Computer Associates: A Long Climb out of a Deep Rut
WORKPLACE
The Software Says You're Just Average
SPORTS BUSINESS
Going for Gold on the Cheap
DEVELOPMENTS TO WATCH
Soon, an Ointment That Works Like Viagra?
What's behind Those Nightmare Headaches
A Chemical's Sweet Tooth for Pollutants
Coral Reefs in the Danger Zone
SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Moving More Juice through the Wires
BUSINESSWEEK LIFESTYLE
Living It Up in Death Valley
Canada's Palatial Railroad Hotels
Sailing America First
On the Road with Rover
Weekend Escapes: Use the Web
The Travel Agent in Your PC
BUSINESSWEEK INVESTOR
Commentary: The Dirty Little Secret of Mutual Funds
THE BARKER PORTFOLIO
The High Cost of Kozlowski's Keep
INSIDE WALL STREET
A Real Estate Magnet
Who Will Bet on WMS Industries?
Bio-Reference Labs Is in the Pink
FIGURES OF THE WEEK
Figures of the Week (.pdf)
EDITORIALS
The Wrath of the Investor Class
INTERNATIONAL -- READERS REPORT
Rethinking the State's Role in European Business
Playing Fast and Loose at Enron
INTERNATIONAL -- ASIAN BUSINESS
Taiwan's Next Hot Chip Niche
For Asian Airlines, Small Is Beautiful
INTERNATIONAL -- EUROPEAN BUSINESS
Sputtering Profits for Europe's Carmakers
Will Adidas Play Better in Peoria? The German company's CEO, Herbert Hainer, is going all out to boost sales in the U.S.
Commentary: Germany Inc.: Time to Pull the Plug The country's industry leaders should drop their efforts at propping up Leo Kirch's tottering media empire
INTERNATIONAL -- THE MIDDLE EAST
Bush's Tough Talk on Iran Could Backfire
INTERNATIONAL -- FINANCE
The Toughest Job in Japan
The Yakuza : Bad Debts, Bad Men
Investors Return to Russia with Love, Again Attracted by the country's soaring stock market, domestic and international investors are flocking to new issues that are far from risk-free
INTERNATIONAL -- INT'L FIGURES OF THE WEEK
International Figures of the Week (.pdf)
INTERNATIONAL -- EDITORIALS
China's Emerging Leaders
Online Highlights
from this issue
Magazine Forums
North American and European Cover Photo-Illustration by James Porto
Asian Cover Photograph by Robert Pratta/Reuters
RECENT ISSUES
Harvard
IBM's New Boss
Search Previous Issues
Subscribe to BW Magazine
Investors' Wrath
After Enron, their indignation is spurring Congress to enact necessary reforms, says BW's Bruce Nussbaum
Heading Back Up
Worries about corporate accounting are yielding to investor optimism over the economy as the Dow nears 10,000, says BW's Gene Marcial
Consumer Momentum
Retail sales substantiate the strength of consumer confidence, says BW's Jim Cooper. And that bodes well for recovery
Euro Enrons?
A fresh look at the books is raising some big accounting questions at European companies, as Enron's shadow spreads, says BW's Bob Dowling
"Pay to Play"
Brokers often take a fee to put a mutual fund on a short list they recommend to clients. BW's Lewis Braham says disclosure is needed
SPECIAL REPORTS
Best Global Brands
These 100 brands are among the world's most recognized—and most valuable
Best Places to Launch a Career
We canvassed career-services directors, employers, and students to rank the best companies for recent graduates
BusinessWeek 50
Our picks of the top-performing companies from the S&P 500. Plus, regional rankings for Asia and Europe:
Asia's BusinessWeek 50
Europe's BusinessWeek 50
Customer Service Champs
Companies that excel at pleasing customers, based on J.D. Power & Associates customer satisfaction data and our own reader survey
Hot Growth 100
From young, upstart companies to those that have been around for centuries: Plus, regional rankings of top-performing small businesses in Asia and Europe:
Asia's Hot Growth 100
Europe's Hot Growth 100
Info Tech 100
Emerging-market cellular players, wireless phone and gear makers, and Web giants are this year's stars
World's Most Innovative Companies
Nurturing, creative cultures allow these companies to wow customers with innovative products and services
More Special Reports