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Tunnel Vista: On Bill Gates' Proprietary New Philanthropy

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http://snipurl.com/1c9fo

Dark cloud over good works of Gates Foundation
By Charles Piller, Edmund Sanders and Robyn Dixon,
Los Angeles Times Staff Writers

January 7, 2007

Ebocha, Nigeria — Justice Eta, 14 months old, held out his tiny thumb.

An ink spot certified that he had been immunized against polio and
measles, thanks to a vaccination drive supported by the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation.

But polio is not the only threat Justice faces. Almost since birth, he has
had respiratory trouble. His neighbors call it "the cough." People blame
fumes and soot spewing from flames that tower 300 feet into the air over a
nearby oil plant. It is owned by the Italian petroleum giant Eni, whose
investors include the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Justice squirmed in his mother's arms. His face was beaded with sweat
caused either by illness or by heat from the flames that illuminate Ebocha
day and night. Ebocha means "city of lights."

The makeshift clinic at a church where Justice Eta was vaccinated and the
flares spewing over Ebocha represent a head-on conflict for the Gates
Foundation. In a contradiction between its grants and its endowment
holdings, a Times investigation has found, the foundation reaps vast
financial gains every year from investments that contravene its good
works.

In Ebocha, where Justice lives, Dr. Elekwachi Okey, a local physician,
says hundreds of flares at oil plants in the Niger Delta have caused an
epidemic of bronchitis in adults, and asthma and blurred vision in
children. No definitive studies have documented the health effects, but
many of the 250 toxic chemicals in the fumes and soot have long been
linked to respiratory disease and cancer.

"We're all smokers here," Okey said, "but not with cigarettes."

The oil plants in the region surrounding Ebocha find it cheaper to burn
nearly 1 billion cubic feet of gas each day and contribute to global
warming than to sell it. They deny the flaring causes sickness. Under
pressure from activists, however, Nigeria's high court set a deadline to
end flaring by May 2007. The gases would be injected back underground, or
trucked and piped out for sale. But authorities expect the flares to burn
for years beyond the deadline.

The Gates Foundation has poured $218 million into polio and measles
immunization and research worldwide, including in the Niger Delta. At the
same time that the foundation is funding inoculations to protect health,
The Times found, it has invested $423 million in Eni, Royal Dutch Shell,
Exxon Mobil Corp., Chevron Corp. and Total of France — the companies
responsible for most of the flares blanketing the delta with pollution,
beyond anything permitted in the United States or Europe.

Indeed, local leaders blame oil development for fostering some of the very
afflictions that the foundation combats.

Oil workers, for example, and soldiers protecting them are a magnet for
prostitution, contributing to a surge in HIV and teenage pregnancy, both
targets in the Gates Foundation's efforts to ease the ills of society,
especially among the poor. Oil bore holes fill with stagnant water, which
is ideal for mosquitoes that spread malaria, one of the diseases the
foundation is fighting.

Investigators for Dr. Nonyenim Solomon Enyidah, health commissioner for
Rivers State, where Ebocha is located, cite an oil spill clogging rivers
as a cause of cholera, another scourge the foundation is battling. The
rivers, Enyidah said, "became breeding grounds for all kinds of waterborne
diseases."

The bright, sooty gas flares — which contain toxic byproducts such as
benzene, mercury and chromium — lower immunity, Enyidah said, and make
children such as Justice Eta more susceptible to polio and measles — the
diseases that the Gates Foundation has helped to inoculate him against.

Investing for profit

AT the end of 2005, the Gates Foundation endowment stood at $35 billion,
making it the largest in the world. Then in June 2006, Warren E. Buffett,
the world's second-richest man after Bill Gates, pledged to add about $31
billion in installments from his personal fortune. Not counting tens of
billions of dollars more that Gates himself has promised, the total is
higher than the gross domestic products of 70% of the world's nations.

Like most philanthropies, the Gates Foundation gives away at least 5% of
its worth every year, to avoid paying most taxes. In 2005, it granted
nearly $1.4 billion. It awards grants mainly in support of global health
initiatives, for efforts to improve public education in the United States,
and for social welfare programs in the Pacific Northwest.

It invests the other 95% of its worth. This endowment is managed by Bill
Gates Investments, which handles Gates' personal fortune. Monica
Harrington, a senior policy officer at the foundation, said the investment
managers had one goal: returns "that will allow for the continued funding
of foundation programs and grant making." Bill and Melinda Gates require
the managers to keep a highly diversified portfolio, but make no specific
directives.

By comparing these investments with information from for-profit services
that analyze corporate behavior for mutual funds, pension managers,
government agencies and other foundations, The Times found that the Gates
Foundation has holdings in many companies that have failed tests of social
responsibility because of environmental lapses, employment discrimination,
disregard for worker rights, or unethical practices.

One of these investment rating services, Calvert Group Ltd., for example,
endorses 52 of the largest 100 U.S. companies based on market
capitalization, but flags the other 48 for transgressions against social
responsibility. Microsoft Corp., which Bill Gates leads as board chairman,
is rated highly for its overall business practices, despite its history of
antitrust problems.

In addition, The Times found the Gates Foundation endowment had major
holdings in:

•  Companies ranked among the worst U.S. and Canadian polluters, including
ConocoPhillips, Dow Chemical Co. and Tyco International Ltd.

•  Many of the world's other major polluters, including companies that own
an oil refinery and one that owns a paper mill, which a study shows sicken
children while the foundation tries to save their parents from AIDS.

•  Pharmaceutical companies that price drugs beyond the reach of AIDS
patients the foundation is trying to treat.

Using the most recent data available, a Times tally showed that hundreds
of Gates Foundation investments — totaling at least $8.7 billion, or 41%
of its assets, not including U.S. and foreign government securities — have
been in companies that countered the foundation's charitable goals or
socially concerned philosophy.

This is "the dirty secret" of many large philanthropies, said Paul Hawken,
an expert on socially beneficial investing who directs the Natural Capital
Institute, an investment research group. "Foundations donate to groups
trying to heal the future," Hawken said in an interview, "but with their
investments, they steal from the future."

Moreover, investing in destructive or unethical companies is not what is
most harmful, said Hawken and other experts, including Douglas Bauer,
senior vice president of Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, a nonprofit
group that assists foundations on policy and ethical issues. Worse, they
said, is investing purely for profit, without attempting to improve a
company's way of operating.

Such blind-eye investing, they noted, rewards bad behavior.

At the Gates Foundation, blind-eye investing has been enforced by a
firewall it has erected between its grant-making side and its investing
side. The goals of the former are not allowed to interfere with the
investments of the latter.

The foundation recently announced a plan to institutionalize that firewall
by moving its assets into a separate organization, the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation Trust. Its two trustees will be Bill and Melinda Gates.
The trust will invest to increase the endowment, while the foundation
gives grants.

"We've been operating under these principles for many years," said
Harrington, the foundation policy officer. "But having an official
separation makes it even more clear."

With the exception of tobacco companies, asset managers do not avoid
investments in firms whose activities conflict with the foundation's
mission to do good.

"Because we want to maintain a focus on the programmatic work," Harrington
said in a written response to Times questions, "we have made it a policy
to not comment on individual investment holdings."

Finally, the foundation does not invest any portion of its endowment in
companies specifically because they advance its philanthropic mission.

Much of the rest of philanthropy, however, is beginning to address
contradictions between making grants to improve the world and making
investments that harm it. According to recent surveys, many foundations,
including some of the nation's largest, have adopted at least basic
policies to invest in ways that support their missions.

Major foundations that make social justice, corporate governance and
environmental stewardship key considerations in their investment
strategies include the Ford Foundation, worth $11.6 billion, the nation's
second-largest private philanthropy; the John D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation; the Rockefeller Foundation; and the Charles Stewart
Mott Foundation.

Moreover, nearly one-third of foundations participate directly in
shareholder initiatives, voting their proxies to influence corporate
behavior. A few have become shareholder activists. In recent years, for
instance, the Nathan Cummings Foundation, with an endowment of $481
million, has sponsored proxies to force corporations to address
environmental sustainability and political transparency.

Harrington said the Gates Foundation's investment managers vote proxies,
but declined to give any specifics. The foundation would not make its
chief investment manager, Michael Larson, available for an interview. In
May, Harrington told the Chronicle of Philanthropy that the Gates
Foundation did not get involved in proxy issues.

At the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, on the other hand, Michael J.
Smith, its chief investment officer, said voting proxies to improve
corporate behavior had become a fiduciary necessity.

"Companies that have good governance are generally well-managed," he said,
"and have a good record of profitability."

Even the relatively tiny Needmor Fund, with a $27-million endowment,
screens its investments to bar companies with poor environmental records,
antagonism to worker rights or tolerance for repressive governments.

Leadership, however, is open to the Gates Foundation. It has unique power
to move the debate, said Bauer, of Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors. If
Gates adopted mission-related investing, Bauer said in an interview, the
shift in the world of philanthropy would be "seismic."

The foundation did not respond to written questions about whether it might
change its investment policies.

Life in 'Cancer Valley'

AT a clinic in Isipingo, a suburb of the South African port city of Durban
where the HIV infection rate is as high as 40%, Thembeka Dube, 20, was
getting a checkup.

Dube had volunteered for tests of a vaginal gel that researchers hope will
be shown to protect against HIV. The tests are part of a study conducted
by the New York-based Population Council, and funded by a $20-million
grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Dube's boyfriend won't use condoms. She hoped the tests would show she
could use the microbicidal gel, called Carraguard, and stop worrying about
AIDS.

Research into prophylactics such as Carraguard can fight AIDS by
empowering women, Bill Gates told the International AIDS Conference in
Toronto in August. "Whether the woman is a faithful married mother of
small children, or a sex worker trying to scrape out a living in a slum …
" he said, "a woman should never need her partner's permission to save her
own life."

Two days before Gates spoke, Kyrone Smith was born only a few kilometers
from the Isipingo clinic. At the same time the Gates Foundation was trying
to help Dube, it owned a stake in companies that appeared to be hurting
Kyrone.

At six weeks, his lungs began to fail. Kyrone struggled to cry, but he was
so weak that no sound came out — just husky, labored breaths.

His mother, Renee Smith, 26, rushed him to a hospital, where he was given
oxygen. She feared it would be the first of many hospital visits. Smith
knew from experience.

"My son Teiago was in and out of hospital since the age of 3," she said.
"He couldn't breathe nicely…. There are so many children in this area who
have the same problems."

Two of the area's worst industrial polluters — a Mondi paper mill and a
giant Sapref oil refinery — squat among the homes near Isipingo like
sleepy grey dragons, exhaling chemical vapors day and night.

The Sapref plant, which has had two dozen significant spills, flares,
pipeline ruptures and explosions since 1998, and the Mondi plant together
pump thousands of tons of putrid-smelling chemicals into the air annually,
according to their own monitoring.

In 2002, a study found that more than half of the children at a school in
nearby Merebank suffered asthma — one of the highest rates in scientific
literature. A second study, published last year, found serious respiratory
problems throughout the region: More than half of children aged 2 to 5 had
asthma, largely attributed to sulfur dioxide and other industrial
pollutants. Much of it was produced by companies in which the Gates
Foundation was invested.

Asthma was not the only danger. Isipingo is in what environmental
activists call "Cancer Valley." Emissions of benzene, dioxins and other
carcinogens were "among the highest levels found in any comparable
location the world," said Stuart Batterman at the University of Michigan,
a coauthor of both studies.

The Gates Foundation is a major shareholder in the companies that own both
of the polluting plants. As of September, the foundation held $295 million
worth of stock in BP, a co-owner of Sapref. As of 2005, it held $35
million worth of stock in Royal Dutch Shell, Sapref's other owner. The
foundation also held a $39-million investment in Anglo American, which
owns the Mondi paper mill.

The foundation has held large investments in all three companies since at
least 2002. Since then, the worth of BP shares has shot up by about 83%,
Royal Dutch Shell shares by 77% and Anglo American shares about 255%.
Dividends have padded the foundation's assets by additional millions of
dollars.

The foundation has gotten much more in financial gains from its
investments in the polluters than it has given to the Durban microbicide
study to fight AIDS.

Sapref said it had cut sulfur dioxide emissions by two-thirds since 1997
and spent more than $64 million over 11 years on environmental
initiatives. It said lead in its gasoline and sulfur in its diesel fuel
were reduced a year ago. Plant officials said: "Sapref does not accept any
responsibility for any health issues in South Durban."

Mondi said that its Merebank paper mill had cut "chemical oxygen demand,"
a key pollutant, in 2005, and that it was cutting its sulfur dioxide
emissions. But by the company's own estimate, the mill still releases
about three times the combined amount of sulfur dioxide produced by Mondi
plants in five other nations, and the other plants operate at nearly six
times the capacity. Merebank uses a coal-fired power plant, while the
others burn cleaner fuel.

Just as the Gates Foundation investments in Mondi, BP and Royal Dutch
Shell have been very profitable, so too have its holdings in the top 100
polluters in the United States, as rated by the University of
Massachusetts, and the top 50 polluters in Canada, as rated by the trade
publication Corporate Knights, using methods based on those developed by
the university.

According to the foundation's 2005 figures, it held a $1.4-billion stake
in 69 of those firms. They included blue chips, such as Chevron Corp. and
Ford Motor Co., as well as lesser-known companies such as Lyondell
Chemical Co. and Ameren Corp.

At the same time, the foundation held a $2.9-billion stake in firms ranked
by the investment rating services as among the worst environmental
stewards, including Dominion Resources Inc. and El Paso Corp.

Without double-counting companies flagged by both the University of
Massachusetts and the rating services, the combination totals an
investment of about $3.3 billion.

The Gates Foundation did not respond to written questions about its
investments in companies that were high polluters or those rated as poor
environmental stewards.

Drugs out of reach

NEARLY every morning, a 56-year-old retired soldier named Felix makes a
short trek from his house on the outskirts of Lagos, Nigeria, to a factory
to purchase a 40-cent block of ice.

Felix has a pressing, private reason to get the ice: He needs it to keep
his medicine from melting.

Two years ago, Felix's wife died from AIDS, and he learned he was
HIV-positive.

He told his six children, now 16 to 24 years old, but no one else. He was
afraid of the stigma of HIV. He agreed to be interviewed only if he was
identified by his first name alone. "I thought the world had come to an
end for me," Felix said. "Everyone believes that once you have it, you're
a living ghost."

He took antiretroviral drugs and felt better. But his treatment was
interrupted frequently because he could not afford the cost: $62 a month.
His pension as a former staff sergeant was $115 a month, and the money
came sporadically.

Worse, his body soon stopped responding to the drugs. His kidneys began to
fail, and his count of immune cells crucial to fight off infections
plummeted.

In May, Felix began taking Kaletra, a second-line AIDS drug — needed when
the first round of treatments fail.

His health rebounded, but it came at a cost.

Gel capsules of Kaletra melt in Nigeria's sweltering climate, where
temperatures often top 100 degrees. Felix kept his Kaletra in a small
chest filled with ice.

Each day, he had to go get more ice. And each day, he had to take Kaletra
precisely at 10 a.m. and 10 p.m. These things made it difficult for him to
work, even at odd jobs.

A new version of Kaletra does not require refrigeration. But his
physician, Dr. T.M. Balogun, who helps run the AIDS program at Lagos State
University Teaching Hospital, told him not to get his hopes up.

The hospital is helped by the Nigerian government, which gets money from
the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. The fund has been
awarded $651 million by the Gates Foundation. Yet the hospital does not
offer the new Kaletra. It is too expensive.

In August, private pharmacists said they could sell it for $246 a month.
But that was far out of Felix's reach.

Kaletra is made by Abbott Laboratories. As of this September, the Gates
Foundation held $169 million in Abbott stock. In 2005, the foundation held
nearly $1.5 billion worth of stock in drug companies whose practices have
been widely criticized as restricting the flow of key medicines to poor
people in developing nations.

On average, shares in those companies have increased in value about 54%
since 2002. Investments in Abbott and other drug makers probably have
gained the foundation hundreds of millions of dollars.

Drug makers say they need price protection for research and development.
"Our global needs and global systems are in conflict," Miles White,
Abbott's chief executive, wrote in the Financial Times last year. "This
threatens to harm one goal, innovation, in the name of another, access to
medicine."

In 1994, however, the drug makers, with other research-intensive
businesses, lobbied hard and successfully for the international Agreement
on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, which made it
harder to move from costly brand-name drugs to cheap generics. The
agreement protected new-drug monopolies for 20 years or more.

This meant no low-priced generic for Kaletra. The pact locked in Abbott as
its sole supplier, and Abbott set prices for the world.

Under pressure from activists, Abbott and other companies cut prices for
key AIDS drugs in poorer nations. In Guatemala and Thailand, the new
Kaletra costs $2,200 per patient per year, plus taxes and fees — a
fraction of the more than $8,000 it costs in the United States. In poorer
Nigeria, the official price was $500 a year.

But this was still too costly for most patients, including Felix.

The industry's approach "has the effect of making medicines available only
to a narrow spectrum of a rich elite in a developing country," said Brook
Baker, an intellectual property expert at Northeastern University.

He called it "pharmaceutical apartheid."

Drug companies say critics overlook billions of dollars' worth of drugs
they donate to developing nations. Abbott says it has given AIDS drugs to
25,000 patients, along with millions of test kits, and has underwritten a
major project to improve AIDS services in Tanzania.

In emergencies, critics welcome donated drugs. The problem, they say, is
that donations scare away generic suppliers. Donations, said Ellen 't
Hoen, who directs a drug-access program for Doctors Without Borders,
"remove the prospect of any stable supply."

And when the free drugs are gone, patients die.

Most medicines are reliably profitable. In the most recent quarter, Abbott
posted a gross profit margin of 59% of sales, and recently paid its 331st
consecutive quarterly dividend. A congressional analysis shows that during
the first six months of 2006, the 10 largest drug companies earned $39.8
billion in profits.

The Gates Foundation's top priority is stopping AIDS, Bill Gates told the
International AIDS Conference in August. Since its inception, the
foundation has donated more than $2 billion to fight the disease.

The foundation did not respond to written questions about the problems of
patients who cannot obtain needed AIDS drugs due to pharmaceutical company
policies.

Meanwhile, the foundation holds its grant recipients to a far higher
standard than the drug companies on which it bets large portions of its
endowment. Its grant form says it expects recipients "to exercise their
intellectual property rights in a manner consistent with the stated goals
of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to promote the … availability of
inventions for public benefit in developing countries at reasonable cost."

Some critics say the foundation's failure to use its own investments "to
promote … public benefit in developing countries at reasonable cost" might
trace back to the source of most of its money — Microsoft — which Bill
Gates serves as chairman.

Microsoft monopolies in computer operating systems and business software
depend upon the same intellectual-property and trade-law approaches
favored by drug companies.

"The Gates Foundation is in a position to change the dynamic, to make sure
that drugs get first to the places they are most needed," said Daniel
Berman, deputy director in South Africa for Doctors Without Borders. "But
it conflicts with the interests of Microsoft."

In response to written questions, Harrington, the Gates Foundation policy
officer, said the foundation tried to guarantee that grantee discoveries
made in partnership with for-profit companies trickled down to people in
developing nations.

"The foundation's goal is to help ensure that new scientific knowledge is
broadly shared … and that lifesaving health advances are created and made
available and affordable to those most in need," she said. "We also
recognize that private industry needs adequate incentives to develop new
drugs."

The foundation's pharmaceutical company investments, Harrington said, "are
completely separate from what's being done on the programmatic side to
help spur the development and delivery of drugs/vaccines."

--------------

Contact the journalists:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sanders reported from Nigeria, Dixon from South Africa and Piller from San
Francisco. Times staff writer Doug Smith, data analyst Sandra Poindexter
and researchers Maloy Moore and Robin Mayper contributed to this report.

*

(INFOBOX BELOW)

Foundation investments

A sampling of the Gates Foundation's largest investments*:

More than $1.5 billion

Berkshire Hathaway Inc.**
Canadian government


Between $1 billion and $1.5 billion

Fannie Mae
German government


Between $100 million and $1 billion

Abbott Laboratories
Archer Daniels Midland Co.
BP (formerly British Petroleum)
Canadian National Railway
Exxon Mobil Corp.
Freddie Mac
French government
Japanese government
Merck & Co.
Schering Plough Corp.
Tyco International Ltd.
Waste Management Inc.


*May include stocks, bonds and other securities

**Warren E. Buffett committed his first installment of Berkshire Hathaway
stock in June 2006.

Sources: Gates tax and SEC filings

---------------

(INFOBOX BELOW)

Ethics-based investing

Some foundation trustees shun ethical investments out of concern about
inferior returns. But several studies conducted over the last decade by
financial analysts have eased that worry. Despite some exceptions, many
mutual funds, for instance, that consider the social and environmental
impact of their investments compete well against standard funds.

In the 12 months that ended in November, several funds that consider the
impact of their investments upon social welfare — including the New
Alternatives Fund, the Parnassus Fixed-Income Fund and the Catholic Equity
Fund I — performed in the top ranks of standard mutual funds in the same
categories, according to SRI World Group.

Broad indexes of stocks selected because of their companies' social
concerns also have tended to keep pace with standard indexes. The Domini
400 Social Index is modeled on the Standard & Poor's 500 Index, a widely
used measure of market performance. While results from the two indexes
tend to leapfrog each other over short periods, from 1990 through November
the Domini index has outperformed the S&P 500 by nearly 6%.

>From its inception about 18 months ago through November, KLD Research &
Analytics' Global Climate 100 Index — made up of companies selected for
their efforts to reduce climate change — rose 22.03%. In the same period,
by comparison, the MSCI World Index, which measures general corporate
performance in the U.S. and 22 other major developed nations, rose 20.73%.

"After controlling for investment style," said economists at Maastricht
University in the Netherlands who studied U.S., U.K. and German mutual
funds, "we find little evidence of significant differences in
risk-adjusted returns between ethical and conventional funds.

Source: Times reporting

-------------

(INFOBOX BELOW)

About this series

This series is based on more than 90 interviews and hundreds of documents,
including thousands of pages of Gates Foundation grant descriptions and
policies, evaluation reports, tax forms, filings to the U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission through September 2006 and lists of endowment
holdings from 2002 through 2005.

Information was used from four leading services that provide guidance for
investors regarding corporate performance: Calvert Group Ltd., Innovest
Strategic Value Advisors, KLD Research & Analytics Inc. and Oekom
Research. None of the companies was directly involved in The Times'
assessment of the Gates Foundation portfolio; they have taken no position
on The Times' conclusions.

The research groups consider companies in context and weigh their efforts
to improve. The Times tally of Gates investments in companies that
contradict its goals included only those firms that were ranked among the
worst by the investment rating services.

Companies among the 100 highest-polluting in the United States were
derived from rankings by the University of Massachusetts Political Economy
Research Institute. These rankings consider total air pollution released,
toxicity of pollutants and the number of people at risk of exposure. The
top 50 polluters in Canada were rated by the trade publication Corporate
Knights, based largely on the University of Massachusetts approach.

The Times used several studies that reviewed or evaluated actions of the
pharmaceutical industry regarding intellectual property rights, patents
and drug pricing in developing nations. A preliminary list of relevant
companies was drawn up using studies or evaluations conducted by Innovest,
KLD, Oekom, the nonprofit medical group Doctors Without Borders, and the
Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, a coalition of 275
faith-based institutional investors that includes religious groups,
pension funds, endowments, hospital corporations and colleges.

The list was refined and validated in interviews with experts and through
a review of more than 40 technical papers and analyses, including studies
by the World Bank and the World Health Organization. Those sources were
supplemented with reports and announcements from the pharmaceutical
companies and the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, a
leading trade group.

Companies in the sub-prime industry were compiled from National Mortgage
News and Inside Mortgage Finance, leading trade publications.

Information about proxies was gathered from the EthVest database,
sponsored by the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility. The data
were supplemented by interviews with officials from various foundations.

The overall figures in this series may significantly understate the volume
of Gates Foundation investments that tend to conflict with its charitable
goals. The Gates Foundation did not provide details for about $4.3 billion
of investments it characterizes as loans.

For details, see http://www.latimes.com/gates
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