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Leveraged buyouts were a phenomenon that got going in the 1980s. A leveraged buyout
(LBO) is a transaction in which a financial sponsor buys a company primarily with
debt effectively buying the target company with the target's own cash and financial
ability to service the debt. As described in Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall
of RJR Nabisco at pages 140-141 :
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George Roberts and Henry Kravis, Christmas 1995. Roberts
and Kravis were significant donors to the Republican Party. (Photo courtesy Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co.) |
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In 1982 an investment group headed by William Simon, a former treasury
secretary, took private a Cincinnati company, Gibson Greetings, for $80 million, using
only a million dollars of its own money. When Simon took Gibson public 18 months later,
it sold for $290 million. Simons $330,000 investment was suddenly worth $66
million in cash and securities
By 1985, just two years after Gibson Greetings,
there were 18 separate LBOs valued at $1 billion or more. In the five years
before Ross Johnson [RJR Nabisco Chairman and CEO] decided to pursue his buyout, LBO
activity totaled $181.9 billion, compared to $11 billion in the six years before that.
"A number of factors combined to fan the frenzy. The Internal Revenue
Code, by making interest but not dividends deductible from taxable income, in effect
subsidized the trend. That got LBOs off the ground. What made them soar were junk
bonds.
"Of the money raised for any LBO, about 60 percent, the secured debt,
comes in the form of loans from commercial banks. Only about 10 percent comes from
the buyer itself. For years, the remaining 30 percent the meat in the sandwich
came from a handful of major insurance companies whose commitments sometimes
took months to obtain. Then, in the mid-eighties, Drexel Burnham began using high-risk
junk bonds to replace the insurance company funds. The firms bond
czar, Michael Milken, had proven his ability to raise enormous amounts of these securities
on a moments notice for hostile takeovers. Pumped into buyouts, Milkens
junk bonds became a high-octane fuel that transformed the LBO industry from a Volkswagen
Beetle into a monstrous drag racer belching smoke and fire.
"Thanks to junk bonds, LBO buyers, once thought too slow to compete in
a takeover battle, were able to mount split-second tender offers of their own for
the first time.
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Lou Gerstner, former Chairman of RJR Nabisco, giving
the Commencement Speech at Brown University in 1997 at the same time that John Birkelund
was a Brown Trustee and Brown was an investor in Dillons private prison company,
Cornell Corrections. (Photo courtesy Brown University) |
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In a highly leveraged company, the equity owner does not really have control. Its
the bondholder or creditor who can put the company in default. With the dirty tricks
available from covert "economic hit" teams combined with a creditor's ability
to throw a company in default, who needs to be a visible owner? Unmentioned was the
ease and elegance with which junk bonds made it possible to take over companies with
narco dollars and other forms of hot money financed by powerful partners hidden behind
mountains of debt.
There emerged a growing number of attractive business savvy investment firms vying
to be the owners of record for a growing number of companies taken private in leveraged
buyouts. This included Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. (KKR), the LBO firm that took
over RJR Nabisco in 1989 in one of the most visible takeovers of the decade, documented
by Barbarians at the Gate. Dillon Read represented the RJR Nabisco board
on the transaction. While the bidding war between KKR and the management group led
by Ross Johnson teamed with Shearson Lehman escalated, I remember being dumbfounded
as to why anyone thought that RJR Nabisco could service the proposed amounts of debt.
In later years as I read reports that the debt was being serviced, I wondered what
magic tricks KKR had that we mere mortals were missing. In reading Barbarians at the
Gate, it turns out they managed to win despite not having the highest bid on all bidding
rounds. One wonders the extent to which the bidding process was reengineered to ensure
a KKR win and the media manipulated to make it look like the board had reasons to
favor KKR over management other than the real reasons.
Years later, reading between the lines of the European Union lawsuit, it struck
me that perhaps KKR had simply sheltered one of the worlds premier money laundering
networks and, behind the veil of a private company, taken this network to a whole
new level. In that same period, they recruited Lou Gerstner from American Express
to run the more aggressive, more leveraged RJR. The lawsuits filed by the European
Union against RJR allege that top management, including during the time Gerstner led
the company as CEO, directed RJRs illegal activities. When the European Union
said highest corporate level and officers and directors, that
meant Lou Gerstner and through Gerstner and the board, the controlling shareholder,
KKR.
Successful at RJR, Gerstner left to revitalize IBM and was then knighted by Queen
Elizabeth. After retiring from IBM, Gerstner was chosen to chair the Carlyle Group
in Washington in late 2002. The European Unions lawsuit highlights Gerstners
deeper qualifications to revitalize IBM, one of the most powerful military and intelligence
contractors, and to lead an LBO firm like Carlyle that built its business on military
and intelligence contractors and the intelligence to which such contractors are privy.[25]
Henry Kravis and George Roberts were two of the founders of KKR. Kravis father
successful in the Oklahoma oil and gas business was reported to be a
friend of the Bush family and had many close ties with Wall Street. Henry Kravis and
his San Francisco cousin and partner, George Roberts were said to be generous supporters
of the Bush campaign.
It was inconceivable to me that KKR could have won the RJR Nabisco bidding war despite
lower bids without Vice President George H. W. Bush in the White House (having just
won the election) and/or Nick Brady at Treasury exercising their invisible hand. Bushs
White House counsel, Harvard educated C. Boyden Gray (now partner at Wilmer Cutler)
was heir to one of the many North Carolina RJR fortunes. When the bidding team led
by Ross Johnson, then CEO of RJR Nabisco lost to KKR, I wondered, did Nick finally
get Ross Johnson back for diluting Dillon Reads RJR lead underwriting business
after the merger with Nabisco in 1985?
When Nick Brady first got to Treasury, he was apparently slow to staff and organize
his public affairs office. Before leaving Wall Street in April of 1989 to join the
Bush Administration, I used to get calls from reporters looking for basic background,
including his bio. One reporter asked me if I thought Brady was tough enough to survive
in Washingtons treacherous waters. I responded that, Yes, Brady did have
a genteel manner. However, the world was littered with the bodies of the men and women
who had underestimated Nick Brady.
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