Reykjavík Grapevine - 16.07.2010, Side 10

Reykjavík Grapevine - 16.07.2010, Side 10
10 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 10 — 2010 The most iconic image of the Ice- landic financial bubble was that of the ‘Corporate viking’—the fi- nancier who engineered one dar- ing takeover after another: One day buying a British supermarket chain, the next a Swedish real-es- tate holding company, then turning around to buy a Danish airline. No foreign asset was safe from the lev- eraged might of these marauding financiers. The ‘Corporate Vikings’ were celebrat- ed by the media and politicians, most notably the President of the Republic, as well as the Chamber of Commerce, which concluded in its infamous 2006 report, Iceland 2015, that the raw capi- talist spirits that drove Icelandic busi- nessmen were in fact an expression of some ingrained Icelandic values welling up from deep within the national soul. This nationalistic theme makes repeat- ed appearances in the speeches of the President. By evoking the image of the Saga Age, the financial plutocrats that emerged in Iceland after the turn of the century were given a certain le- gitimation: The ‘Corporate Viking’ was portrayed as an natural heir to the Ice- landic historical tradition, in fact as the resurrector of a lost history. Finally, af- ter a thousand years, Iceland was again home to ‘real’ Vikings who could strike fear into the hearts of foreigners. TyCOONIFICATION Giving the tycoons and their deal mak- ing a place in the history of Iceland was all the more important because Iceland had historically been a very egalitar- ian society. Gunnar Karlsson, one of Iceland’s most respected historians, has famously argued that Iceland was by and large a “classless society”. The chasm between those who were better off and those who were not was never particularly wide. In the context of Ice- land’s history, the tycoons were unde- niably something alien. In fact, there was no place in the narrative of Icelandic history for the heroic financier, and no historical predecessors the tycoons could style themselves after. In Iceland, the indus- trial revolution was as much a history of farmers-turned-sailors-and-fisher- men—the history of a resilient work- ing class, determined to improve its lot through hard work and determination— as it was a history of wealthy capitalists. The wealth of modern Iceland had not been created by some John Galt char- acters: The Icelandic people had pulled themselves up by their bootstraps. When the tycoons and oligarchs arrived on the scene at the turn of the century, it was therefore necessary for them to invent a historical role for themselves. And so by 2007, the idea of the oligarchs as ‘Corporate Vikings’ and therefore rightful heirs to the most enduring image of Iceland’s national character and Icelandic masculinity, had taken root. “THE MOST POWERFUL CORPO- RATE vIKING” The ‘Corporate Viking’ image was nei- ther the first nor the most obvious his- torical role for the tycoons to assume. For one, while their activities abroad have gained the greatest attention in the public mind, these were all predi- cated on previous success back home in Iceland. In fact, the concept does not appear in the press until 2006, at first as a colloquial term but by 2007 it appears to have gained common acceptance. In July of 2007, the business weekly “The Market” (Markaðurinn) profiled Björgólfur Thor Björgólfsson in a fea- ture titled “The most powerful Corpo- rate Viking”. By this time, of course, the Icelandic invasion to the British Isles, Scandinavia and the continent was in full swing. Before they became ‘Corporate Vi- kings’ the most illustrious tycoons were known as “transformative investors”. Case in point is Björgólfur Thor, who had over the previous years identified himself on numerous occasions as a “transformative investor.” Björgólfur was not alone. Just as all ambitious businessmen were identified as ‘Cor- porate Vikings’ during the bubble’s crescendo in 2006–2008, most tycoons and investment companies defined themselves as “transformative inves- tors” in the period between 2002–2006. The transformative investor talked about finding “dead” or “idle” capital in companies, as well undervalued as- sets—which was referred to as search- ing for “hidden” assets. According to the prevailing discourse, the trans- formative investors would step into moribund companies and transform them—presumably making them able to participate in the globalised economy of the 21st century. The strategy always involved massive leverage and rapid growth through acquisitions. When the opportunities for acquisitions in Ice- land had been exhausted, sights were increasingly turned abroad. A second reason was that while asset prices had risen in Europe, they were still relatively cheap compared to the vastly over- priced Icelandic market. AGENTS OF CHANGE The difference between the two terms is interesting. Unlike the ‘Corporate Vi- king’, the ‘transformative investor’ was neither an heir to tradition nor history. In fact, he was just the opposite: He was the dissolver of traditions and an agent of change. The transformative in- vestor aimed to “dissolve complex webs of ownership among companies and increase their profitability,” as Björgól- fur Guðmundsson, father and business associate of Björgólfur Thor Björgólfs- son, put it in 2003. Björgólfur argued that this was all the more important be- cause Icelandic companies were far too often concerned with protecting politi- cal power and influence at the expense of profitability or efficiency. His goal, however, was to “breathe life into the stock market, break up the ossification of Icelandic business community and ensure that investments were aimed at achieving maximum profitability[...]”. This was the gospel of “share- holder value”—the idea that the over- riding concern of managers should be the share price and thus the wealth of shareholders. And it received a ready audience, partly because the way in which Björgólfur identified the problem rang true to many people. The complex connections and webs of interlocking directorships between the largest cor- porations and the unhealthy mix of poli- tics and business were seen by many as perhaps the worst ailments afflicting the Icelandic economy. This state of af- fairs was the result of the tightly regu- lated economy of the post-war years and the virtual division of the economy into three blocs: publicly owned firms and then the feuding blocs of the coop- erative movement and private business. With privatisation and the collapse of the cooperative movement in the 1990s, the remaining bloc, commonly referred to as ‘The Octopus’ (Kolkrab- binn), dominated by the shipping com- pany turned conglomerate Eimskipa- félagið, seemed like a living fossil—a dinosaur that had to be put out of its misery if the Icelandic economy was to enter the 21st century. ‘THE OCTOPUS’ DISMEMBERED And sure enough, in September of 2003, the Björgólfurs made a move against Eimskipafélagið. On September 18, Landsbankinn, which the invest- ment company of the father-son team controlled, Íslandsbanki and the invest- ment company Straumur announced the largest and most complex deal in the history of Icelandic business. Con- trolling stakes in some of the largest and most stable firms were divvied up. Eimskipafélagið, including its shipping operations, its investment arm and its fishing subsidiary, which was one of the largest in Iceland, went to Lands- bankinn and the Björgólfurs. Fluglei- ðir, the parent company of Icelandair, went to Straumur, which then sold it to Hannes Smárason and the insurance company Sjóvá went to Íslandsbanki, which later sold it to Karl Wernersson. However, severing the ties between the individual companies that made up the core of the ‘The Octopus’ was only the first step. Eimskipafélagið and Flugleiðir were broken up, subsidiaries as well as other assets and operations were sold off as the companies piled on debt, all with an eye to maximising short-term profits. After all real assets and operations had been sold off, what remained were stripped down invest- ment companies. The shareholders of Eimskipafélagið and Flugleiðir, people who had bought shares in two of the oldest and pre- sumably safest publicly held compa- nies in Iceland, now found themselves shareholders in leveraged investment companies. Much like the people who had in the ’90s bought shares in the Icelandic stock market mutual funds that were transformed into leveraged investment firms after the turn of the century (see Grapevine, issue 8, 2010), the average shareholder was taken for a ride. A MASSIvE ASSET BUBBLE By and large, the media went along and reported breathlessly on the “realised profits” achieved from these asset sales. A careful reading of the press reveals that on only one occasion was this magic of the ‘transformative inves- tors’ recognised for what it was: classic corporate raiding. On March 13 2004, Morgunblaðið argued that there were eerie similarities between the American leveraged takeover boom of the 1980s, fuelled by junk bonds, and the activi- ties of the transformative investors of Iceland. Morgunblaðið warned that the end result of the leveraged takeovers in the US had been disastrous: “Peo- ple lost their jobs and the companies in question were left in ruins, while a handful of financiers made off with princely sums.” Whatever the reason, people were unwilling to admit that what the trans- formative investors were really doing was taking sound, publicly held compa- nies, and transforming them into highly leveraged investment firms that might topple if asset prices fell. And while this process did “breathe life” into the stock market, as Björgólfur Guðmundsson had talked about, it would be more apt to say that it puffed up a massive asset bubble. Then, when the bubble had inflated asset prices too much—when targets for leveraged buyouts had disappeared, and the supply of firms ripe for corpo- rate raids had dried up—the transfor- mative investors became ‘Corporate Vikings’, using their investment com- panies for more leveraged acquisitions. This time abroad. This, then, was the historical role of the transformative investor turned ‘Cor- porate Viking’: Transforming the Icelan- dic economy into one giant hedge fund! It is perhaps fitting that the ‘trans- formative investors’ became known as ‘Corporate Vikings’. While Icelanders have a romanticized vision of Vikings as explorers, traders and poets, others are more likely to see for what they were: marauding barbarians who had no re- spect for the law, property or life. Their primary occupation was pillage, pure and simple. If the ‘Corporate Vikings’ were 21st century incarnations of these heroes of the Sagas, it stands to reason that they, too, took to plundering and looting. Business | Corporate Vikings MAGNúS SvEINN HELGASON The ‘Corporate vikings’: Robber Barons And Corporate Raiders Magnús Sveinn Helgason is a historian. He most recently authored addendum five to the SIC report, and is currently working on a book on financial bubbles. 1. Banksters Lárus Welding and Bjarni Ármannsson 2. Business Entrepreneurs jón Ásgeir jóhannesson and jóhannes jónsson 3. yacht Couple Björgólfur Thor Björgólfsson and Kristín Ólafsdóttir 4. Billionaires Björgólfur Guðmundsson, 50 Cent and Björgólfur Thor Björgólfsson at Thor's birthday party in jamaica 2007.

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