Wall Street Journal is Honored With Two Pulitzer Prizes: For Reporting On Stock Options Backdating and On China


NEW YORK, April 16, 2007 (PRIME NEWSWIRE) -- The staff of The Wall Street Journal was honored with two Pulitzer Prizes today, the Public Service Gold Medal for uncovering the improper backdating by companies of executive stock options and the International award for reporting on China. The awards were announced by Columbia University and the Pulitzer Prize Board.

"These Pulitzer Prizes underscore our commitment to bring readers a unique perspective on news, providing the insight and analysis they demand," said Paul E. Steiger, managing editor of The Wall Street Journal. "Our teams of editors and reporters have worked painstakingly this year to unravel the complicated schemes that corporate executives use to backdate potentially lucrative stock options and defraud shareholders and to illuminate and demystify the Chinese business juggernaut."

These awards represent the 15th and 16th Pulitzer Prizes the Journal's news department has received under Paul Steiger, who became managing editor in 1991 and reaches the mandatory retirement age this year. The Wall Street Journal has received 33 Pulitzers to date.

"It's fitting that the Journal should be recognized for breaking the biggest business story of the year, using proprietary algorithms to uncover suspicious timing of stock options, and for putting in full context the enormous growth of China's economy," said L. Gordon Crovitz, executive vice president of Dow Jones & Company and publisher of The Wall Street Journal. "The Journal is the leading business publication and these two awards demonstrate our continued dedication to bring high-quality news reporting to our readers worldwide."

About the Journal's Backdating of Options Reporting

Nearly 140 companies are under federal investigation in the scandal triggered by the Journal's series. At least 70 top executives have lost their jobs and ten former executives are facing federal or state criminal charges.

The Journal's reporting on backdating of options has already earned six awards.

To identify which companies were backdating options, Journal reporters developed their own statistical-modeling technique and then used it to find likely perpetrators of massive and long-hidden abuses. At the core of the effort were custom-built probability algorithms designed to assess the odds that an executive's pattern of richly timed options resulted merely from chance. In one case, the odds were 300 billion to one.

Journal reporter Charles Forelle, who was a math major at Yale, wrote a computer program called a "Monte Carlo simulation," a statistical technique that calculates odds by repeating a test billions of times to identify which companies were most likely to have been backdating their options. The number-crunching was so intensive that the reporters commandeered two powerful servers at Dow Jones & Company's corporate offices in Princeton, N.J., in order to run the program for a week. The Journal's reporting team also examined thousands of corporate filings and conducted numerous interviews.

Circumstantial evidence of backdating had been described before in two academic papers, but the papers relied on broad statistics and didn't name any individual companies. A Securities and Exchange Commission probe of the matter involving only a few small companies had been largely ignored. That changed on March 18, 2006, when the Journal published in its Weekend Edition, "The Perfect Payday" by reporters Charles Forelle and James Bandler. The page-one story identified six companies that had option dates so improbably favorable that only backdating could plausibly explain the pattern.

Besides Messrs Bandler and Forelle, the reporting team on the Journal's first Pulitzer for Public Service included Mark Maremont and Steve Stecklow.

About the Journal's China Reporting

The Journal's coverage in 2006 of China's rapid economic growth focused on the dislocations brought on by government policies and institutions that have not kept pace with development. A series of articles by the Journal's nine China-based correspondents and five researchers explored these topics, bringing to light often complex and long-lasting tensions. Factories pump poisons into China's air and waterways, maiming villagers and sending once plentiful wildlife into extinction. Workers mine coal and build skyscrapers for little pay, and often at great peril. And a central government, overwhelmed by rocketing growth and impotent to slow it, takes to spying on its own local governments via satellite to see where development is defying Central Party edict. What they find is that the defiance is nationwide.

The following reporters who worked on this coverage were James T. Areddy, Andrew Browne, Jason Dean, Gordon Fairclough, Mei Fong, Shai Oster and Jane Spencer.

About the Pulitzer Prizes

More than 2,400 entries are submitted each year in the Pulitzer Prize competitions, and only 21 awards are normally given. The awards are the culmination of a year-long process that begins early in the year with the appointment of 102 distinguished judges who serve on 20 separate juries and are asked to make three nominations in each of the 21 categories.

The Pulitzer Prize winning stories can be viewed for free at http://www.wsj.com/free

About The Wall Street Journal

The Wall Street Journal, the flagship publication of Dow Jones & Company (NYSE:DJ) (www.dowjones.com), is the world's leading business publication. Founded in 1889, The Wall Street Journal has a print and online circulation of nearly 2.1 million, reaching the nation's top business and political leaders, as well as investors across the country. Holding 31 Pulitzer Prizes for outstanding journalism, The Wall Street Journal provides readers with trusted information and knowledge to make better decisions. The Wall Street Journal print franchise has more than 600 journalists world-wide, part of the Dow Jones network of nearly 1,800 business and financial news staff. Other publications that are part of The Wall Street Journal franchise, with total circulation of 2.6 million, include The Wall Street Journal Asia, The Wall Street Journal Europe and The Wall Street Journal Online at WSJ.com, the largest paid subscription news site on the Web. In 2006, the Journal was ranked No. 1 in BtoB's Media Power 50 for the seventh consecutive year.

The Wall Street Journal logo is available at http://www.primezone.com/newsroom/prs/?pkgid=2641



            

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