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- <text id=93TT1223>
- <title>
- Mar. 22, 1993: Peddling Power For Profit
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 39
- Peddling Power For Profit
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Big names and political connections prove a bankable asset for
- a growing Washington investment firm
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN GREENWALD--With reporting by Adam Zagorin/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The revolving door between Washington and Wall Street is
- nothing new. Cold war mandarins, such as Averell Harriman and
- Robert Lovett, shuttled back to their banks between stints of
- public service, and more recently such former officials as Peter
- Peterson, William Simon and Paul Volcker have become renowned
- in the investment world. But all these men were financiers by
- trade and training. Now a fledgling but fast-growing investment
- group has discovered that global dealmaking these days is as
- much about cashing in on connections as it is about cash
- calculations. Rather than seeking big names with proven
- financial acumen, it is hiring high-profile power players who
- are better known for their policy expertise and political clout.
- And unlike other investment banks, it is based in Washington.
- </p>
- <p> The Carlyle Group scored its biggest political coup last
- week, when it signed James Baker as a partner. Baker is no
- banker, but as a former Secretary of State and George Bush's
- veteran campaign handler, his Washington and worldwide
- connections are unsurpassed. The same is true of the firm's
- chairman, Frank Carlucci, a former diplomat who was Ronald
- Reagan's Defense Secretary. When teamed with managing director
- Richard Darman, who as Bush's former Budget Director brings
- financial as well as political expertise, the group seems like
- a Republican Administration in exile. And its members hope to
- lure in another noted nonbanker, Colin Powell, when he steps
- down this fall as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
- </p>
- <p> Baker was brought into the firm by its founding partner
- and top-ranking Democrat, David Rubenstein, a former domestic
- adviser to President Jimmy Carter. He met Baker after the
- election through their mutual friend Robert Strauss, the
- wheeling-dealing Democrat who had just finished serving as
- Bush's Ambassador to Moscow. "Here I was with a man who helped
- throw me and other Democrats out of office 12 years ago,"
- recalls Rubenstein of his first meeting with Baker in the White
- House. "And we had been brought together by a prominent Democrat
- fresh from duty in a Republican Administration. It's truly a
- tale of the way things work in today's Washington."
- </p>
- <p> As a fixture in Washington for more than a decade, Baker
- hardly lacked opportunities, including a lucrative offer to
- write his memoirs and a chance to run a foundation that Rice
- University wants to name for him in Texas. But after three years
- as America's jet-lagged senior diplomat and three months on the
- campaign trail managing Bush's failed re-election drive, Baker
- wanted to spend more time at home.
- </p>
- <p> So far the Washingtonians have proved adept at the money
- game. Starting with $5 million in capital in 1987, the company
- has parlayed that stake into control of 10 companies in 35
- countries with about $5 billion in revenues a year. The firm's
- holdings range from Caterair, America's biggest airline catering
- concern, to a book distributor and the former aircraft division
- of military contractor LTV. According to Rubenstein, the firm's
- well-heeled investors have raked in returns of up to 46% a year.
- </p>
- <p> Carlyle's success illustrates the value of good
- connections and powerful names when making deals these days. "We
- certainly don't look at ourselves as a refuge for former
- government employees," says Carlucci, who joined Carlyle in 1989
- and sits on the board of a staggering 32 companies and nonprofit
- organizations. "But I'd be a fool to deny that having a number
- of high-profile officeholders does provide Carlyle with certain
- advantages." Explains Samuel Hayes, a Harvard Business School
- professor: "The Carlyle Group has gone after former government
- officials whom top businessmen love to be seen with. Finding
- potential companies to acquire can be very tough, unless you've
- got some big names on your staff to help you get through the
- door."
- </p>
- <p> Prominent former custodians of public trust can also help
- defuse image problems that threaten to snarl deals. For example,
- Carlyle became the adviser to Saudi Prince al-Waleed bin Talal
- in his $590 million investment in Citicorp in 1991. The firm
- subsequently teamed with France's state-owned Thomson-CSF to
- outbid U.S. defense giants for the missile and aircraft
- divisions of LTV last year. Such global connections can be
- controversial. "The one significant problem for Carlyle is that
- they've been on the foreign side of controversial transactions,"
- says a Washington lobbyist and rival dealmaker. But Carlyle has
- the political savvy to play different sides. When the Bush
- Administration overturned the French deal in order to keep LTV
- out of the hands of foreign interests, Carlyle teamed with
- Northrop to acquire LTV's aircraft operations.
- </p>
- <p> For now, Carlyle plans to advance full throttle on both
- the domestic and foreign fronts. Baker's greatest value could
- lie in his international connections: while he cannot legally
- exploit his contacts in official Washington for at least a year,
- he faces no such restrictions abroad.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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