-Caveat Lector-

New York dispatch
http://www.guardian.co.uk/elsewhere/journalist/story/0,7792,904812,00.html

Corporate America, come home! In the wake of the Enron scandal, US
shareholders are calling for an end to tax-avoiding companies registering
off-shore, writes David Teather
David Teather
Friday February 28, 2003
The Guardian
"Ahhh ... Bermuda!" The headline appears on a postcard, bearing the image
of a man in a suit sitting on a briefcase on the beach, beneath an umbrella
and with a laptop open. But the postcard, part of a full-page advertisement
in Thursday's Wall Street Journal, was not for a holiday company. Instead
it signified the intensifying campaign by one of America's largest pension
funds to stop US companies hiding in tax havens to avoid paying taxes. The
umbrella and the briefcase both carry the logo of Tyco, a conglomerate
making everything from garden sprinklers to security systems, which has
suffered more than its share of scandal in the past year after its top two
executives were charged with looting the company. "A nice place for a
vacation - but should US companies take legal refuge there?" the
advertisement asks. Calpers, the Californian Public Employees' Retirement
System and the largest in the country with assets of $133bn (£84bn), is
leading the charge. It has been joined by other public pension funds and
unions. Other companies highlighted by the campaign include Ingersoll-Rand,
Cooper Industries and McDermott. Off-shore registrations have always raised
suspicions but the concerns have come to the fore since the shocks
delivered to corporate America and Wall Street in the 18 months since Enron
began to implode and which continue to reverberate. In the past week alone,
the Dutch retailer Ahold discovered $500m of accounting irregularities in
its US business, two senior executives at the discount store chain Kmart
were charged with fraud and four middle managers at the telecoms company
Qwest were indicted for allegedly cooking the company's books. An offshore
company, as well as avoiding taxes, is more difficult to hold to account
and often more opaque at a time when investors are demanding further
transparency. Tyco moved its registration after a reverse takeover of Lord
Ashcroft's ADT in 1997. But more recently, in a post-September-11
environment when the US government is suffering record deficits and facing
huge bills to fund the war on terrorism, companies registering in Bermuda
have also been denounced as unpatriotic. The prospect of war is weighing
heavily on US markets, as is the wider economic malaise, but the blow to
investor confidence from the slew of accounting scandals that bruised Wall
Street has not yet been shaken off. As a result the campaign for reform of
the way American companies do business has thankfully not dissipated. The
rise of the activist shareholder is a welcome byproduct of the financial
malfeasance. During the 1990s, the term referred to bumptious, usually
small funds that attacked weak companies in the hope of a quick profit.
Eliot Spitzer, the campaigning New York state attorney general who acted
when financial regulators had their feet stuck in mud, has been a fierce
critic of Wall Street. But he has also delivered sharp reminders to
shareholders that they have a responsibility to act, to rein in the
excesses that led so many executives and investment bankers to overstep the
line and to ensure that proper levels of corporate governance prevail. The
influence of shareholders has already been witnessed in the curtailing of
some of the more excessive compensation packages awarded to American
executives. Calpers has written to the top 100 Tyco shareholders asking
them to force Tyco to reincorporate in the US in a non-binding resolution
at the company's annual meeting on March 6. "With its past history, Tyco
cannot afford to further erode investor confidence," said Sean Harrigan,
president of Calpers. "Everyone should tell Tyco: come home." Calpers has
won the key support of an organisation called Institutional Shareholder
Services, which many investors rely on to decide their votes at annual
meetings. The campaign has also won backing from the third biggest pension
fund in the country, the California State Teachers' Retirement System:
"California's educators expect accountability from their pension fund and
we expect it from the companies we invest in," said its chief executive,
Jack Ehnes. A spokesman for Tyco said the company's new management would
take a "close and serious look" at where it should be incorporated. The US
taxman is stepping up efforts to collect revenue from offshore registered
firms. Legislation is also pending in congress and several states including
California, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania to prohibit governments from
contracting with expatriate American companies. But if the stubbornness
displayed by Calpers and others can be maintained then something more
worthwhile and enduring than the tightening of regulations will have
emerged from one of the most shameful periods in the history of corporate
America.

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2003

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Euphorian

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