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- BUSINESS, Page 50They Own the Place
-
-
- Employee-stock plans come of age as morale boosters and takeover
- tools
-
- By Frederick Ungeheuer
-
- In thousands of American companies large and small, the
- employees are starting to act as if they own the place. Well,
- they're entitled, because they do. Meet the new breed of
- hard-driving capitalist: the employee stockholder. At Oregon
- Steel Mills in Portland, the chairman's secretary has earned
- $500,000 in company stock, and a few of her colleagues have
- become paper millionaires. At Quad/Graphics, a Wisconsin
- printing company, the average five-year employee owns shares
- worth $250,000. In Avis car-rental offices across the U.S.,
- employees are touting their stake in the company with lapel
- buttons that put a new twist on their old "We Try Harder"
- slogan: OWNERS TRY HARDER.
-
- The Employee Stock Ownership Plan, or ESOP, has rapidly
- come of age. Ten million U.S. workers, about one-fourth of all
- corporate employees, are enrolled in an ESOP, up from 3
- million only a decade ago. More than 9,800 companies in the U.S.
- offer such programs, including 1,500 in which employees own the
- majority of the stock. By giving workers a stake in the
- company's success, enthusiasts say, the programs boost morale
- and productivity. But the popularity of ESOPs, which were
- initially created in the 1950s, has been fueled in the 1980s by
- an unintended and somewhat controversial application: as a
- double-edged tool useful for both financing corporate takeovers
- and staving them off.
-
- Thanks to hefty tax breaks that the Government allows for
- ESOPs, investors who launch a takeover can reduce their
- borrowing costs if they set aside part of the stock for
- employees. At the same time, corporations seeking to repel
- raiders can use an ESOP as a way to put a chunk of the company
- into relatively friendly hands. "Every corporate treasurer is
- looking at it," says Paul Mazzilli, a principal at the Morgan
- Stanley investment firm. In recent months, three major
- corporations -- J.C. Penney, Ralston Purina and Texaco -- spent
- a total of $1.75 billion on ESOPs to shore up their takeover
- defenses. Procter & Gamble announced plans in January to spend
- $1 billion to boost its ESOP from 14% of outstanding shares to
- 20%, partly to ward off raiders.
-
- The most hotly contested use of an ESOP is at Polaroid,
- which has put 14% of the company's stock into employees' hands
- as a maneuver in its bitter six-month battle against a takeover
- bid by Shamrock Holdings, owned by the Roy Disney family.
- Because Massachusetts-based Polaroid is incorporated in
- Delaware, where an anti-takeover law requires that bidders must
- get 85% ownership of a target company to gain control, the ESOP
- is leaving Shamrock with almost no room to maneuver. When a
- Delaware court rejected Shamrock's challenge of the ESOP,
- Polaroid's workers "jumped up and down with joy," said Nicholas
- Pasquarosa, chairman of the employee committee. "We have
- developed loyalties here the way you do in a family." Shamrock
- is appealing the decision.
-
- Pioneered in the 1950s by Louis Kelso, a San Francisco
- lawyer and economist, ESOPs were slow to catch on. But Kelso
- eventually created a fertile financial climate for his idea by
- enlisting the support of Russell Long, the populist Democrat
- from Louisiana. Before retiring from the Senate Finance
- Committee in 1986, Long initiated more than 20 bills to
- encourage creation of ESOPs.
-
- One tax incentive allows a company sponsoring an ESOP to
- deduct not only the interest on the loan to buy stock for the
- plan but also the principal. Another tax break gives banks and
- other lenders a 50% deduction on their income from ESOP loans,
- which enables them to charge lower interest rates to companies
- that borrow for such programs. "These are the kinds of tax
- incentives that corporate owners dream of," says ESOP expert
- Joseph Blasi of California Polytechnic State University in San
- Luis Obispo.
-
- Because Kelso's method of paying for the stock-purchase
- plans was to borrow against corporate assets, ESOPs also gave
- rise to the leveraged buyout. But Kelso never intended his
- technique to be used for buyouts that would put all of a
- company's stock in the hands of a few investors and top
- managers. "That is a perversion of my idea," says Kelso, now 74.
- "Instead of making economic power more democratic, they make it
- more plutocratic."
-
- This was not the case at Avis, which in late 1987 was
- bought by its workers for $1.75 billion. For Avis employees, who
- borrowed all the money for the deal, the ESOP ended ten
- tumultuous years in which the company had five corporate owners.
- "We needed stability, once and for all," says Chairman Joe
- Vittoria, 53, who has worked in the industry since 1961.
-
- In the Avis program, the company's 24 million shares are
- held in a trust and gradually released to employees as the debt
- is paid off over a 17-year period. Vittoria reserved 13% of the
- stock for key managers, "the 132 people I cannot afford to
- lose," who initially got at least 294 shares each. The other
- 12,300 employees were given a first-time allocation of two
- shares for every $1,000 in salary. Since each share is worth
- about $5 and the average Avis employee earns about $20,000 a
- year, this amounted to $200 or so. But the 1988 allocation will
- be seven shares, which are growing in value, per $1,000 in
- salary.
-
- "Over time they'll be able to watch the value of that stock
- jump," says Avis Treasurer Gerald Kennell. One catch: employees
- must stay at least five years before they can cash their shares.
-
- The ESOP program has boosted the company's performance, in
- part because managers have put their employees' new motivation
- to good use. Avis has also found that its customers support
- employee ownership, which the company touts in its ads. One TV
- spot shows a satisfied customer pointing to an Avis rental clerk
- and saying, "I know the owner."
-
- If a company thrives, ESOP participants can grow a nest egg
- far beyond the means of most wage earners. At Quad/Graphics,
- which prints hundreds of catalogs and magazines, including a
- regional edition of TIME, the value of ESOP shares has risen
- from 6 cents in 1975 to $5 currently. The company's 3,500
- workers own 18% of its stock, with the prospect of eventually
- acquiring an additional 12%. In the case of Stone Construction
- Equipment, a small firm in Honeoye, N.Y., company heir Alan
- Stone no longer wanted to run the operation, so he sold it two
- years ago to his 200 employees for $4.5 million. Since then,
- annual revenues have jumped from $12 million to $30 million. The
- company's shares are scheduled to be distributed to employees
- within ten years.
-
- For all their promise, ESOPs can mean sacrifices for
- workers. In many instances, employees accept wage concessions
- in return for their stock. The United Steelworkers of America
- has saved dozens of failing mills in such wage-for-stock
- trade-offs. In distressed industries faced with low-wage foreign
- competition, says James Smith, a U.S.W. staffer in Pittsburgh,
- "one of the ways American workers can compete is by having some
- investment income along with a lower labor income." But an ESOP
- is no guarantee that a company will thrive. Despite its stock
- plan, New Jersey's Hyatt Clark Industries, a ball-bearing maker,
- collapsed in 1987 because of poor labor relations.
-
- The ESOP surge has raised some eyebrows in Congress. For
- one thing, ESOPs were never intended as a way for corporate
- managers to entrench themselves against takeover bids or for
- corporate raiders to enrich themselves. For another, the cost
- of providing the tax breaks is running as high as $3 billion a
- year at a time when deficit cutting is urgent.
-
- But for now the ESOP may be politically secure. Few
- legislators can be expected to go along with reducing an
- incentive that in most cases is likely to boost the spirits and
- competitiveness of America's workers.
-
-