home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=89TT0012>
- <link 93HT0836>
- <link 90TT0524>
- <title>
- Jan. 02, 1989: Let's Make A Deal
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Jan. 02, 1989 Planet Of The Year:Endangered Earth
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 84
- Let's Make a Deal
- </hdr><body>
- <p>For a guilty plea and $650 million, Drexel hopes to get a clean
- slate
- </p>
- <p> Christmas was just around the corner, but the videotaped
- tidings that Frederick Joseph handed out to the TV networks last
- Wednesday evening were not exactly festive. Looking tired and
- tense, the silver-haired chief executive officer of Drexel
- Burnham Lambert discussed the settlement that Drexel had
- reached that day with federal prosecutors to end the largest
- probe ever of a U.S. securities firm. Declaring that the
- long-awaited agreement "makes sense from a business and human
- point of view," Joseph, 51, tried to be upbeat. The deal, he
- said, would leave the firm "in a very strong financial position,
- and allows us to refocus our energies on running the business
- successfully."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, the agreement was a stunning about-face by the most
- influential, go-go investment-banking house of the 1980s. After
- maintaining for two years that Drexel had done nothing wrong,
- a shaken board of directors voted 16 to 6 to accept the stiff
- terms proposed by Rudolph Giuliani, U.S. Attorney for the
- Southern District of New York. The deal calls for Drexel to
- plead guilty to six felony counts involving mail, wire and
- securities fraud and to pay a record $650 million in penalties.
- Some $300 million of the fine would go to the Government, which
- has spent an estimated $10 million prosecuting the case so far,
- and $350 million would be set aside to compensate the victims of
- Drexel's wrongdoing.
- </p>
- <p> In return, Giuliani agreed to drop his stated plan to bring
- racketeering charges that could have crippled Drexel, the fifth
- largest U.S. securities firm. Before the deal can be completed,
- however, Giuliani stipulated, a 184-page civil complaint that
- the Securities and Exchange Commission brought against Drexel in
- September must be settled by Jan. 10. The SEC could conceivably
- ask for a larger pool of money to compensate alleged victims,
- who range from ordinary stockholders to Drexel's clients. Even
- so, Giuliani declared Drexel's fines and concessions
- "appropriate punishment." He added, "You do not put corporations
- in prison."
- </p>
- <p> But Giuliani is expected to try to put at least one Drexel
- employee behind bars. In perhaps its most humiliating cave-in,
- Drexel agreed to cooperate with the Government investigation of
- Michael Milken, the financial wizard who created the market for
- high-yielding junk bonds (total now held: $180 billion) and who
- remains the ultimate target of Giuliani's probe. Milken, who was
- not represented in the settlement talks, is expected to be
- indicted in Manhattan sometime in January.
- </p>
- <p> A senior officer at Drexel, Milken was the chief architect
- of the firm's rise from a lackluster, second-tier brokerage
- into a feared and envied powerhouse. By developing the use of
- junk bonds to stake such corporate raiders as Saul Steinberg and
- T. Boone Pickens, Milken presided over the radical reshaping of
- American industry in the past ten years. Along the way, dozens
- of Drexel executives became multimillionaires.
- </p>
- <p> But Drexel's very success led to its comeuppance. As in a
- Greek tragedy, the company seemed to suffer from an
- overabundance of hubris that concealed a fatal flaw. In
- Drexel's case, it was Milken's growing appetite for power and
- control. The turning point came in November 1986 when Ivan
- Boesky, a notorious Wall Street speculator, pleaded guilty to
- a single count of securities fraud and agreed to pay $100
- million to settle SEC charges that he had used insider
- information to buy and sell stock. Boesky, who is serving a
- three-year term in a minimum-security prison in Lompoc, Calif.,
- agreed to identify others who had joined his schemes. The trail
- led to Drexel and its wunderkind, who allegedly used a complex
- network of contacts to manipulate securities prices.
- </p>
- <p> During the nearly two years that the Government spent
- preparing its case, Drexel defiantly declared its innocence and
- launched a major advertising campaign extolling the civic
- virtues of its junk bonds. Joseph claims that the two-year
- federal probe cost Drexel $1.5 billion in lost revenues and an
- additional $175 million in legal and advertising fees. Since
- November, the firm has bargained for an agreement that, as
- chairman Robert Linton put it, "would not make us look like a
- bunch of thieves."
- </p>
- <p> Negotiations appeared to collapse last Monday, when Drexel's
- board of directors voted against a settlement. Joseph boasted
- that his staff had sifted through 1.5 million Drexel documents
- without finding any incriminating evidence. A former lightweight
- boxing champion at Harvard, Joseph insisted that the best
- defense against a heavy punch is "to come back at your opponent
- smiling."
- </p>
- <p> But the blows kept furiously raining down, and Joseph's
- smile began to fade. When the board voted that Monday, Giuliani
- had already turned three close Milken associates into Government
- witnesses by granting them immunity from prosecution. The
- knockout power of an indictment under the 1970 Racketeer
- Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act was also greatly
- feared. Charges under RICO, developed to prosecute the Mafia
- and other organized criminals, would allow Giuliani to tie up
- much of Drexel's $2.3 billion of capital -- including the
- fortunes of the firm's 1,700 employee stockholders -- throughout
- a lengthy trial.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, a fierce struggle raged inside the firm. On one
- side stood Milken's supporters, many of them younger executives
- who worked in the Beverly Hills office where Milken has been
- based since 1978. The leading loyalists included Leon Black,
- Drexel's mergers-and-acquisitions chief who works in New York,
- and Peter Ackerman, Milken's top assistant. Arguing that the
- California group was responsible for 90% of Drexel's profits
- over the past decade, both threatened to leave the company if it
- reached a settlement that might harm Milken's defense. They were
- opposed by older executives, mostly in Manhattan, who feared
- losing the firm's accumulated net worth if RICO charges were
- brought.
- </p>
- <p> The hawks on the board held sway over the doves until
- Giuliani gave an ultimatum. Following the directors' rejection
- of a settlement on Dec. 19, Giuliani phoned Joseph the next day
- and promised that unless the board swiftly came to terms, the
- firm would be indicted at 4 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 21. That took
- some of the remaining fight out of Joseph, who had taken to
- sporting a lapel button emblazoned with the word STRESS. After
- holding late-night talks between Giuliani and Drexel attorneys
- in which the proposed criminal penalty was pared from $700
- million to $650 million, Joseph called the board back into
- session at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday. By 4:30 p.m., the board agreed
- to Giuliani's terms.
- </p>
- <p> The Government consented to limit the plea agreement to less
- severe and fewer offenses than those detailed in the SEC case
- against the investment house, which described a pervasive
- pattern of illicit practices in Drexel's junk-bond department.
- As in the SEC case, the criminal charges focused on dealings
- with Boesky from 1984 to 1986. Included in the SEC litany of
- complaints were insider trading, "parking" stocks to conceal
- their true ownership, and schemes to gouge Drexel's own
- customers.
- </p>
- <p> If the criminal agreement had been broader, Drexel might
- never have agreed to it out of fear that the guilty pleas would
- have given Drexel's alleged victims a better chance of winning
- lawsuits against the firm. Even now, the $350 million that the
- Government plans to set aside to meet damage claims may barely
- cover the awards that could arise from the 13 class-action
- suits already lodged against the company.
- </p>
- <p> For Giuliani, the Drexel settlement was the most heralded
- part of a dramatic three-way sweep. Hours before the deal was
- announced, a federal grand jury in Manhattan indicted Paul
- Bilzerian, 38, a raider who won control of the Singer Co. in a
- $1 billion buyout last February. If convicted of fraud,
- conspiracy and other charges that arose from earlier takeover
- tries, Bilzerian would face a maximum of 60 years in prison and
- at least $3 million in fines. On the same day, testimony began
- in the Manhattan trial of GAF Corp., a chemical and
- building-products company, which is charged with inflating the
- price of Union Carbide stock that it sold after failing to
- acquire Carbide in 1986.
- </p>
- <p> But the Government's big prize was Drexel, which must now
- face life as a confessed felon. Said Congressman Edward Markey, a
- Massachusetts Democrat who heads a House subcommittee that
- covers finance: "We now know that the single most financially
- successful Wall Street firm of the 1980s in large measure built
- its fortune on the foundation of criminality."
- </p>
- <p> Such broadsides will die down, but it may take Drexel a long
- time to restore its prestige and competitive position. The
- firm's share of new junk-bond issues has slipped from nearly
- 80% in the mid-1980s to some 25% today. That puts Drexel barely
- ahead of Goldman, Sachs and Morgan Stanley, its main rivals.
- Drexel may suffer a brain drain as well, losing not only Milken
- but also his loyalists. Moreover, Milken is so much the
- mastermind that clients may balk at trusting his understudies
- who remain.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Drexel still displays its characteristic moxie. The firm
- is handling a $3.5 billion junk-bond offering as part of the $25
- billion leveraged buyout of RJR Nabisco. For its share in
- financing history's largest takeover, Drexel expects to take in
- $229 million before expenses. Many clients still profess their
- allegiance. Says raider and oilman Pickens, who relied on
- Drexel's financing clout to make bids for Gulf Corp. and
- Phillips Petroleum: "I have the highest regard for Fred Joseph."
- </p>
- <p> To help burnish its image, Drexel has been courting Howard
- Baker, the former Senator and White House chief of staff, as a
- possible new chairman or CEO. Joseph may step aside after the
- settlement is complete. Without a forceful new leader of
- unquestioned integrity, the company is in danger of losing
- morale and momentum -- and something else as well. Mike Milken
- engendered an innovative spirit at Drexel. If the company is to
- thrive once again, it must somehow preserve that spirit while at
- the same time escaping the darker side of his legacy.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-