"I think that the failures of Enron and WorldCom and other companies are partially failures of investors to recognize companies that are selling for a thousand times nothing, but chances are they may be worth only that"
About this Quote
The intent is quietly prosecutorial. Levitt, as a regulator and former SEC chair, isn’t letting corporate management take the whole fall. Enron and WorldCom were frauds, but he’s widening the blame to the ecosystem that rewarded them: analysts who smoothed numbers, institutions that chased quarterly juice, retail investors seduced by “new economy” narratives, and auditors who treated skepticism as bad for business. “Partially failures of investors” is a polite phrasing that still hits hard: democracy in markets means complicity is broadly distributed.
The subtext is a warning about incentive structures. If the market will pay venture-capital prices for mature-company opacity, executives will learn to manufacture opacity. Levitt is also defending the unfashionable idea that accounting and disclosure aren’t bureaucratic nuisances; they’re the only brakes on collective delusion. The line arrives in the Enron-era reckoning, when “trust the market” suddenly sounded like a punchline and the cost of believing in “nothing” got tallied in pensions.
Quote Details
| Topic | Investment |
|---|---|
| Source | Unverified source: Salon: Investors of the world, unite! (Arthur Levitt, 2002)
Evidence:
The investors have fled the market. Instead of buying stocks at a thousand times nothing, they’ve gotten out of the market and those stocks that were selling at a thousand times nothing are now selling for nothing. That, I think, is good. The market is reaching a level it probably always should h... |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Levitt, Arthur. (2026, February 20). I think that the failures of Enron and WorldCom and other companies are partially failures of investors to recognize companies that are selling for a thousand times nothing, but chances are they may be worth only that. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-think-that-the-failures-of-enron-and-worldcom-138522/
Chicago Style
Levitt, Arthur. "I think that the failures of Enron and WorldCom and other companies are partially failures of investors to recognize companies that are selling for a thousand times nothing, but chances are they may be worth only that." FixQuotes. February 20, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-think-that-the-failures-of-enron-and-worldcom-138522/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I think that the failures of Enron and WorldCom and other companies are partially failures of investors to recognize companies that are selling for a thousand times nothing, but chances are they may be worth only that." FixQuotes, 20 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-think-that-the-failures-of-enron-and-worldcom-138522/. Accessed 25 Feb. 2026.

