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[Marxism] Michael Jackson and the private equity firms
- To: archive@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: [Marxism] Michael Jackson and the private equity firms
- From: Louis Proyect <lnp3@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 26 Jun 2009 12:36:04 -0400
- User-agent: Thunderbird 2.0.0.22 (Macintosh/20090605)
DealBook - A Financial News Service of The New York Times
June 26, 2009, 9:18 am
The Pop Star and the Private Equity Firms
Michael Jackson delighted people around the world with his music,
inspired countless amateur moonwalkers with his moves and had an untold,
but surely huge, effect on the sales of individual white gloves.
The pop superstar, who died unexpectedly on Thursday, also kept a lot of
people in high finance very busy. His wealth, and, later in his career,
his expanding debt, became fodder for deals with private equity firms
such as Fortress Investment Group and Colony Capital as well as big
banks such as Citigroup and Bank of America.
In the process, his fantastical Neverland Ranch in California was nearly
put on the auction block — saved only when one investment firm swooped
in to buy the related debt from another firm, with hopes of backing, and
profiting from, a revival of Mr. Jackson’s career.
A lot of Mr. Jackson’s monetary dealings have been conducted in private.
But several of the pivotal moments have been described in media reports
over the years.
Driving many of the deals was Mr. Jackson’s increasingly unmanageable
debt load — something that private equity firms can probably relate to
these days.
A 2006 article in The New York Times said the principal drains on Mr.
Jackon’s finances may have been “monumentally unwise investments that
apparently produced equally colossal losses” — and, later, the payments
to service his debt.
A financial adviser to Mr. Jackson described how he might have frittered
away $50 million on things like amusement-park ideas and “bizarre,
global kinds of computerized Marvel comic-book characters bigger than life.”
In 2003, Fortress Investment, a private equity and hedge fund firm that
has since gone public, bought some of Mr. Jackson’s loans from Bank of
America after the pop singer missed some payments. Shortly before
Christmas in 2005, Fortress threatened to call the loans because of his
delinquency, The Times reported.
A few months later, a new deal was reached, as part of a $300 million
refinancing structured by Citigroup.
Mr. Jackson’s financial problems continued, however, and in spring of
2008, it looked as if Fortress would foreclose on the Neverland Ranch.
But Colony Capital, a private equity firm led by Thomas Barrack, stepped
in to buy Mr. Jackson’s loan from Fortress, averting an auction.
A few months later, the deed to Neverland was transferred to Sycamore
Valley Ranch Company, a joint venture between Mr. Jackson and Colony.
Just a few weeks ago, Mr. Barrack expressed optimism about Mr. Jackson’s
career and his plans for a concert series in London. “You are talking
about a guy who could make $500 million a year if he puts his mind to
it,” Mr. Barrack told The Los Angeles Times.
While the wrangling over Mr. Jackson’s Neverland Ranch was among the
most visible signs of his financial troubles, the debt ran far deeper.
Over the years, he amassed hundreds of millions of dollars in other
loans to fund his lifestyle.
The collateral for those loans is not his real estate, but Mr. Jackson’s
stake in Sony/ATV Music Publishing. It’s a valuable asset: It holds a
portfolio of thousands of songs, including rights to 259 songs by John
Lennon and Paul McCartney.
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- Thread context:
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- [Marxism] Michael Jackson and the private equity firms,
Louis Proyect Fri 26 Jun 2009, 16:01 GMT
- [Marxism] Michal Jackson, Elvis Presley and the perils of success,
Louis Proyect Fri 26 Jun 2009, 14:49 GMT
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