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WSWS : News & Analysis : Europe : Britain
The Maxwell report: a revealing picture of life in the City of London
By Jean Shaoul
16 April 2001
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Ten years ago Robert Maxwell, the Labour Party's biggest backer, died after
apparently falling from his yacht off the Canary Isles. His companies�Maxwell
Communications (MCC) and Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN)�collapsed under a tidal wave
of debts. Maxwell had systematically looted their pension funds and pillaged their
assets, switching funds between businesses to expand his empire and rig the market
for his companies' shares, which he had used as collateral for bank loans several
times over. In all, he had spent £344 million on his illegal share ramp and £450
million had gone missing from the pension funds. Thousands of pensioners lost their
savings.
Not a single person has ever been punished for the scandal that rocked the City of
London at the end of 1991. In 1996, Maxwell's co-directors, his sons Kevin and Ian,
were exonerated in a trial whose outcome was entirely predictable. And all the city
institutions involved in the Maxwell's' transactions have managed to avoid any
responsibility for their part in the chicanery. Now after nearly a decade, the
Department of Trade and Industry has published a report of its investigation into
the affairs of MGN, which had floated on the Stock Exchange only six months before
its collapse.
The report was held up in part because of the trial in 1996 of Kevin and Ian
Maxwell, but also because of Kevin Maxwell's refusal to testify until last summer.
For all the politicians, City figures and the Great and the Good who had benefited
from their association with him, however, the longer the report took, the better.
The two volume, 700-page report cost nearly £10 million to prepare. It is long on
description of what went wrong, but short on substantive recommendations.
It charts in great detail Maxwell's methods. Maxwell "personally controlled through
a central treasury the movement of cash within and between his companies (including
having sole signatory authority for an unlimited amount over bank accounts,
including those of his main listed company MCC", it states. "Maxwell had always
regarded the pension funds as his own and ran his companies and the pension funds as
if they were one."
Maxwell took cash from the pension fund on a regular and unsecured basis from 1985.
His organisation of some 400 companies, many with similar names, was so complex that
people dealing with Maxwell would not know who owned the shares. He disclosed
minimal information about the financial position of his companies and pension funds.
MGN should never have been allowed to float as the prospectus was materially
inaccurate and misleading, the report states. Although MGN was meant to be a stand-
alone company, because Maxwell owned or controlled 51 percent of the shares, its
fortunes were inextricably linked to his other companies. But the prospectus,
prepared by Coopers & Lybrand Deloitte gave no indication of the position of the
other companies.
The investigators attributed most of the blame to Maxwell himself, but Kevin Maxwell
was severely criticised. He bore "heavy responsibility" for making sure that MGN was
run as Maxwell's private fiefdom. His conduct was "inexcusable" throughout, the
report states. Ian Maxwell was also given a rap across the knuckles, as were several
other members of the board of directors, including the Labour peer, Lord Donoghue.
The Chairman, Sir Robert Clark, was nothing more than a cipher who rubber-stamped
Maxwell's every whim.
More importantly, as well as showing how the Maxwell companies and their directors
operated, it also shows how some of London's major financial institutions took
Maxwell's shilling and turned a blind eye to his criminal dealings.
Coopers & Lybrand Deloitte, Maxwell's longstanding auditors, whose function is
supposedly to act as watchdogs on behalf of the shareholders, failed to report the
abuse of the pension funds. They explained to the DTI investigators what they were
expected to do and they never demurred, "The first requirement is to continue to be
at the beck and call of RM [Robert Maxwell], his sons and staff, appear when wanted
and provide what ever is required". Why? The annual audit was the loss leader to
sell their more profitable consultancy services.
Goldman Sachs, Wall Street's top investment banker, organised Maxwell's manipulation
of his companies' share prices by buying up the shares until he controlled 78
percent of the shares. It tried to maintain that Maxwell lied to them, but the DTI
inspectors clearly thought the bank was lying. They were "satisfied that the deals
were in reality done between RM and Mr Sheinberg [an ex-Goldman Sachs partner]". He
was "motivated by the very large profits that he perceived would be made... the
resulting trading relationship was very profitable for Goldman Sachs [£8m from MCC
shares and £15m from other deals]." Senior management must have known that Maxwell
was behind the overseas buying by Liechtenstein [where Maxwell's private companies
were registered] trusts, but did not tell the regulator, the report said.
Simon Montagu, MGN's merchant bank that prepared the flotation, did not warn
investors that the media tycoon ran the company as if it were his own piggy bank. As
such, it was totally unsuitable for listing on the London Stock Exchange. They did
not ask the right questions. If they had, the floatation would have had to be
abandoned.
Neither did the bank consider Maxwell's previous history. In 1971, a previous DTI
investigation into Maxwell's business affairs had famously criticised him saying,
"We have to conclude that not withstanding Mr Maxwell's acknowledged abilities and
energies, he is not in our opinion a person who can be relied on to exercise proper
stewardship of a publicly quoted company".
The list goes on. Clifford Chance, the largest firm of corporate lawyers in Britain,
did not bother to read board minutes. The brokers Saloman Brothers and Smith New
Court�now part of Merrill Lynch� did not carry out the proper checks.
Despite its restrained language, the report shines a fascinating light on the venal
workings of the Square Mile. Yet the response of the Financial Services Authority,
the city's regulator, has been to say that it can take no action against any of
these financial institutions for their negligence.
The report will do nothing to change the situation. Its authors must have used every
possible variation on the theme of "while we recognise the problems, we do not feel
that legislation is the answer". After all, nothing will deter a determined man like
Maxwell, they say.
Its recommendations are truly banal: train pension trustees, impose severe sanctions
for companies who do not report fraud, provide more guidance on the audit of
business' empires, discourage auditors from cross selling their other services to
their auditees, make non-executive directors more accountable and finally, disabuse
the public of any notion that fraud, malpractice and market manipulation can be
eliminated.
The contrast with the government's approach to so-called welfare benefit fraud could
not be greater. So company law will continue to shield corporate swindlers and their
legal and financial advisors. Since companies are limited liability entities, their
directors can escape personal liability for most corporate crimes and wrongdoings.
The Maxwell's follow a long line of city swindlers who enjoyed the protection of the
law: The top brass at British & Commonwealth, Blue Arrow, Polly Peck, Barings and a
host of others all escaped justice. And they were only the most visible of the
recent corporate criminals. There are many others who encounter few legal
difficulties as they engage in crimes that include the production of dangerous and
harmful goods, breach of health and safety rules, and pollution of the air, soil and
water.
The press and the DTI report have vilified Maxwell and portrayed him as some kind of
monster, consumed with excessive "greed". But Maxwell was part of the financial and
political establishment. Senior financial figures were happy to sit in his boards
and hob nob with him. He was a major backer of the Labour Party. Geoffrey Robinson,
a former minister in Blair's government was a director of one of Maxwell's
companies. Peter Jay, a former ambassador to the US and economics editor at the BBC,
was his chief of staff from 1986 to 1989. Helen Liddell, Scottish Secretary and
former BBC journalist, was personnel and public affairs director of Maxwell's
Scottish Daily Record from 1988 to 1992. Maxwell once described her as his "eyes and
ears in Scotland". He had links with Mossad, the Israeli secret service, and
Moscow's KGB.
When he died, heads of state and leading government figures from all over the world
attended his funeral in Israel.
The demonisation of Maxwell serves to divert attention away from the fact that the
capital markets are uncontrollable. As the report acknowledges, "...it is impossible
to regulate investment activity on a nation state basis, but progress [on the
international arena] in solving the difficulties created is clearly very difficult".
The solution? Avoid an "expectations gap". Educate the public to realise that
regulation cannot eliminate fraud, malpractice or manipulation of the markets. "It
is obvious from the above that protection by national regulators of the public in
their dealings on markets is less effective than it was before the advent of global
markets and the transnational firms that deal across those markets. It is therefore
very important that the public appreciate this fact and that as globalisation
increases, so the level of protection afforded any national regulation of markets
gets less". [Emphasis added]
As these gentlemen understand all too well, the conditions that produced this venal
layer have not gone away. On the contrary, as share prices tumble after years of
frenzied speculation on Internet, telecoms, media and other technology-related
shares, many more Maxwell's will emerge.
The long awaited report was a one-day wonder. The business magazine, the Economist,
did not even cover it. There was a palpable sense of unease about its lack of
recommendations and the picture it portrayed of the City unwilling to put its own
house in order. But the press are well trained: after all, the next day the
government launched its stakeholder pension scheme�an attempt to get low wage
earners without occupational pensions to buy a private pension plan. They know they
must not frighten the horses, with tales of what City folk get up to.

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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
by exploitive rule over the public; and that such rule is the reverse
of objective necessity.  He strives to show that the existence of
taxation and the State necessarily sets up a class division between
the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
Fox & Wilkes, 1973, 1978, p. 25]]

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