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- <text id=89TT3098>
- <link 90TT0824>
- <link 90TT0203>
- <title>
- Nov. 27, 1989: The Anatomy Of A Deal
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 27, 1989 Art And Money
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ART, Page 66
- The Anatomy of a Deal
- </hdr><body>
- <p>How Alan Bond bought a $53.9 million painting, with more than
- a little help
- </p>
- <p>By Robert Hughes
- </p>
- <p> In late 1987 the name of Alan Bond was riding very high in
- America, and in Australia he was a hero. "Bondy," as his
- country called him, was the prime mover in the syndicate that
- funded the design, construction and testing of Australia II, the
- 12-meter sloop with the controversial winged keel that swept to
- victory over the U.S. defender off Newport in 1983, leaving, for
- the first time in yachting history, an empty plinth in the New
- York Yacht Club where the America's Cup used to stand.
- </p>
- <p> A high school dropout who emigrated from England as a boy,
- Bond had come up the hard way, fueled by an insatiable drive to
- acquire, combine, take over. At 49 he was one of the richest men
- in Australia. He controlled an empire of assets under the
- umbrella of his holding company, Bond Corporation Holdings Ltd.:
- television stations, retailing, minerals and breweries around
- the world. He had even figured out a way of selling nonalcoholic
- beer to Muslims in the Middle East. Everything about him was on
- a large scale -- his ambitions, his capacity for risk, his
- appetite for publicity. Also, he had some Australian paintings.
- But he did not own an art collection that would cut ice outside
- his home city of Perth.
- </p>
- <p> Like many another entrepreneur, Bond had never given much
- thought to art until he got rich. "This Pie-casso, now," he
- asked an Australian museum man over dinner in Sydney in the
- early 1980s, "is he worth having?" But a major impressionist
- collection was what Bond hankered after. He knew this could not
- possibly come cheap. He didn't care. He was, in short, a
- dealer's dream: Billionaris ignorans, a species now almost
- extinct in the U.S. but preserved (along with other ancient
- life-forms) in the Antipodes.
- </p>
- <p> Above all, he wanted a Van Gogh. In 1987 he was the
- underbidder on Sunflowers, which fetched a record $39.9 million
- at Christie's in London. Then, as underbidder again, he just
- missed The Bridge at Trinquetaille, which sold for $20.2
- million, also at Christie's, a few months later. So when he
- learned that Irises was coming up at Sotheby's in New York City
- in November of the same year, he decided to go the limit.
- </p>
- <p> Irises was owned by John Whitney Payson, who had lent it to
- a small university museum in Maine. But with the news of
- Sunflowers' sale for $39.9 million -- and with little tax relief
- in sight if he gave it to a museum -- he decided to sell it
- through Sotheby's, which cautiously predicted a price between
- $20 million and $40 million and went to tell Bond the glad news.
- Sotheby's did not need to cast a delicate fly over Bond and
- strip it softly in. The fish was already halfway over the
- gunwale and champing eagerly at the gas tank.
- </p>
- <p> Bond arranged with the financial services division of
- Sotheby's for an open-ended bridging loan of half the hammer
- price, whatever that would be. The other half he borrowed from
- an Australian bank.
- </p>
- <p> On the night of the auction, an agent for Bond in New York
- City placed his bids by telephone. Irises, according to
- observers, quite quickly went up to $40 million. After a slight
- lull, the contest resumed between two telephones, whose
- disembodied bids were relayed to auctioneer John Marion. Moments
- later, Irises was hammered down to an anonymous bidder at $49
- million -- $53.9 million counting the 10% buyer's commission.
- The name of the underbidder on the other phone has never been
- divulged. A year went by before it was announced that Bond was
- the new owner of Irises.
- </p>
- <p> Irises, it seemed at the time, was the picture that saved
- the art market after Black Monday -- Oct. 19, 1987 -- when Wall
- Street plunged 508 points. Actually, the market was running
- quite high between the crash and the sale of Irises, but the
- painting was greeted as a talisman. Bond beefed up the security
- arrangements on the top floor of his headquarters in Perth to
- fortress strength and unveiled his acquisition -- the only Van
- Gogh in Australia -- to the press. "This isn't just a great
- painting!" he exulted to the cameras. "It's the greatest
- painting in the world."
- </p>
- <p> But if the art market was going like the Wabash Cannon
- Ball through 1988 and 1989, Bond's own finances were not. His
- bid for Irises had been part of a consistent pattern: paying far
- too much for investments even though they were, as assets,
- sound. In 1987 he paid more than $700 million for Kerry Packer's
- TV stations in Australia. In the financial year ending last
- June, Bond's media firm posted a $34 million loss. Also in 1987,
- Bond paid more than $1 billion for the U.S. brewery G. Heileman,
- whose 1989 resale value is about half that.
- </p>
- <p> By the end of 1988, Bond was trying to shift more than $9
- billion in debt. When payment on Sotheby's bridging loan of $27
- million fell due, he could not meet it, and Sotheby's rolled it
- over for another year.
- </p>
- <p> The auction house had no choice. It had punctually paid
- John Payson the full sale amount, $49 million, and now the
- exposure of the buyer's inability to pay for the painting would
- have been horrendous. Although the firm could have repossessed
- Irises and put it on the block again, such a move would almost
- certainly have been a disaster. It might have brought $30
- million, maybe $35 million, according to informed sources -- a
- fire sale. And the results for the art market if the World's
- Most Expensive Picture lost a third of its value in a year did
- not bear thinking about. "The last thing in the world we want,"
- a senior Sotheby's executive remarked to Edmund Capon, director
- of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, "is for that f------
- picture to come back on the market."
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, rumors about Bond's delay in paying up were
- spreading through financial circles. Last January an Australian
- finance company approached an auction house in London with the
- utterly novel idea of packaging an option on Irises, in the
- event that Dallhold Investments -- the holding company through
- which Bond owned the picture -- defaulted. The auction house
- rejected this proposal. In late 1988 Bond himself reportedly
- tried to pass off Irises to the New York megadeveloper Donald
- Trump as partial payment on a $180 million deal for the St.
- Moritz Hotel. Trump, no collector, said the painting was worth
- only $30 million and turned him down.
- </p>
- <p> Early in 1989 Bond arranged to send the Van Gogh and five
- minor impressionist paintings he owned, packaged as "Irises and
- Five Masterpieces," on a tour of Australian museums, finishing
- at the Art Gallery of Western Australia in Perth. Irises was set
- in a double-glazed frame that ensured no one could touch or even
- closely inspect its surface -- which made some skeptical Aussies
- suspect it was an exact copy commissioned, for security reasons,
- by Sotheby's.
- </p>
- <p> Soon after the paintings went on display in Perth, curious
- anomalies arose. Sotheby's suggested to the Art Gallery that
- Irises might remain on view there for some weeks after the
- exhibition ended. The trustees of the museum wanted to be sure
- they would not be held liable for possible damage to Irises;
- there had already been demonstrations outside, protesting Bond's
- investments in Chile. The trustees called in government lawyers
- to check on the insurance of the Van Gogh.
- </p>
- <p> The lawyers reported that they could not be sure, based on
- the papers shown them, who owned it. It seemed to be owned
- jointly owned by Dallhold, Sotheby's and two Hong Kong
- corporations. (This conflicts with Sotheby's insistence that it
- had, and has, no ownership of any kind in Irises, only a lien
- on the painting.) And on checking the insurance, the lawyers
- found that no premium had been paid and that the English
- insurers considered themselves not liable for Irises. Asked
- about this, Sotheby's CEO Michael Ainslie says, "That is news
- to me. It was certainly in force according to our communication
- with the insurers."
- </p>
- <p> So the Van Gogh was sent for safekeeping to an undisclosed
- place -- probably in Switzerland. Sotheby's insists that though
- it has "control" of Irises, Bond still "owns" it. The firm
- denies any knowledge of the Hong Kong companies.
- </p>
- <p> Last month Sotheby's $27 million loan to Bond, which up to
- then had been a closely guarded secret, was disclosed by Bond's
- own company. How much has been repaid? Sotheby's won't say; a
- spokesman for Dallhold soothingly announced that "all is in
- order" and only "10% to 25% of the picture price" (between $5.4
- million and $13 million) remained to be paid. The balance would
- be satisfied by the sale of Bond's Manet, La Promenade, at
- Sotheby's last week.
- </p>
- <p> Banking sources in Australia say Bond only regained title
- to this Manet in the nick of time. He had bought it at
- Christie's in 1983 for $3.96 million and transferred ownership
- to the Sydney branch of Chemical Bank. Chemical then leased it
- back to Bond. Why this maneuver? Because, says a bank source who
- analyzed the lease after it was issued, Bond had found a tax
- loophole. Under Australian tax law, you could lease any asset
- -- say, a tractor -- from its owner and get a tax deduction for
- all payments of principal and interest, as long as you had no
- right to the asset at the end of the term. (The law, needless
- to say, was framed to help undercapitalized businesses that
- cannot afford new tractors, not financiers who want to turn a
- Manet into a tax loss.) Bond had the Manet from Chemical on such
- an operating lease and got tax write-offs on it that may have
- run as high as $3.5 million.
- </p>
- <p> But in 1986 Bond asked Chemical if he could pay up the
- lease early, settle the difference between the lease payments
- and the original $3.96 million and take ownership of the Manet.
- All seemed well until an American adviser in 1987 pointed out
- to Chemical that by law the Manet belonged to the bank and not
- to Bond. Its price had gone up. So why shouldn't Chemical
- auction the Manet on behalf of its shareholders? On learning of
- this suggestion, Bond reportedly flew into an epic rage.
- Chemical backed down and let Bond pay off the lease and keep the
- picture.
- </p>
- <p> Last week at Sotheby's, Manet's La Promenade was sold for
- $14.9 million to an unidentified Japanese buyer. If one accepts
- Dallhold's figures, Bond has thus cleared his debt to
- Sotheby's. If not, not.
- </p>
- <p> Bond's Bond Corporation Holdings Ltd. is on the verge of
- bankruptcy; in the measured language of its auditors, Arthur
- Andersen & Co., there is "some doubt that (it) will be able to
- continue as a going concern." The painting is reportedly back
- on the market at $65 million, but there have been no takers so
- far -- though Bond's spokesmen imply that they have almost had
- to beat would-be buyers off with a stick. Leading dealers, asked
- this month what a feasible price for Irises might be, concurred
- that it might lie in the $35 million to $40 million range.
- </p>
- <p> Will the blue flowers find their white knight? Big money
- loves a fresh picture, but Irises at this point in its market
- career is looking a trifle wilted.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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