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Carlyle's way
Making a mint inside "the iron triangle"
of defense, government, and industry.
By Dan Briody
January 8, 2002
Like everyone else in the United States, the
group stood transfixed as the events of September 11 unfolded. Present
were former secretary of defense Frank Carlucci, former secretary of
state James Baker III, and representatives of the bin Laden family. This
was not some underground presidential bunker or Central Intelligence
Agency interrogation room. It was the Ritz-Carlton in Washington, D.C.,
the plush setting for the annual investor conference of one of the most
powerful, well-connected, and secretive companies in the world: the
Carlyle Group. And since September 11, this little-known company has
become unexpectedly important.
That the Carlyle Group had its conference on
America's darkest day was mere coincidence, but there is nothing
accidental about the cast of characters that this private-equity
powerhouse has assembled in the 14 years since its founding. Among those
associated with Carlyle are former U.S. president George Bush Sr.,
former U.K. prime minister John Major, and former president of the
Philippines Fidel Ramos. And Carlyle has counted George Soros, Prince
Alwaleed bin Talal bin Abdul Aziz Alsaud of Saudi Arabia, and Osama bin
Laden's estranged family among its high-profile clientele. The group has
been able to parlay its political clout into a lucrative buyout practice
(in other words, purchasing struggling companies, turning them around,
and selling them for huge profits)--everything from defense contractors
to telecommunications and aerospace companies. It is a kind of ruthless
investing made popular by the movie Wall Street, and any industry that
relies heavily on government regulation is fair game for Carlyle's brand
of access capitalism. Carlyle has established itself as the gatekeeper
between private business interests and U.S. defense spending. And as the
Carlyle investors watched the World Trade towers go down, the group's
prospects went up.
In running what its own marketing literature
spookily calls "a vast, interlocking, global network of businesses
and investment professionals" that operates within the so-called
iron triangle of industry, government, and the military, the Carlyle
Group leaves itself open to any number of conflicts of interest and
stunning ironies. For example, it is hard to ignore the fact that Osama
bin Laden's family members, who renounced their son ten years ago, stood
to gain financially from the war being waged against him until late
October, when public criticism of the relationship forced them to
liquidate their holdings in the firm. Or consider that U.S. president
George W. Bush is in a position to make budgetary decisions that could
pad his father's bank account. But for the Carlyle Group, walking that
narrow line is the art of doing business at the murky intersection of
Washington politics, national security, and private capital; mastering
it has enabled the group to amass $12 billion in funds under management.
But while successful in the traditional private-equity avenue of
corporate buyouts, Carlyle has recently set its sites on venture capital
with less success. The firm is finding that all the politicians in the
world won't help it identify an emerging technology or a winning
business model.
Surprisingly, Carlyle has avoided the fertile VC
market in defense technology, which now, more than ever, comes from
smaller companies hoping to cash in on what the defense establishment
calls the revolution in military affairs, or RMA. Thus far,
Carlyle has passed up on these emerging technologies in favor of some
truly awful Internet plays. And despite its unique qualifications for
early-stage funding of defense companies, the firm seems to have no
appetite for the sector.
Despite its VC troubles, however, the Carlyle
Group's core business is set for some good times ahead. Though the group
has raised eyebrows on Capitol Hill in the past, the firm's close ties
with the current administration and its cozy relationship with several
prominent Saudi government figures has the watchdogs howling. And it's
those same connections that will keep Carlyle in the black for as long
as the war against terrorism endures.
For the 11th-largest defense contractor in the
United States, wartime is boom time. No one knows that better than the
Carlyle Group, which less than a month after U.S. troops began bombing
Afghanistan filed to take public its crown jewel of defense, United
Defense, a company it has owned for nearly a decade. That this company
is even able to go public is testament to the Carlyle Group's pull in
Washington.
United Defense makes the controversial Crusader,
a 42-ton, self-propelled howitzer that moves and operates much like a
tank and can lob ten 155-mm shells per minute as far as 40 kilometers.
The Crusader has been in the sights of Pentagon budget cutters since the
Clinton administration, which argued that it was a relic of the cold war
era--too heavy and slow for today's warfare. Even the Pentagon had
recommended the program be discontinued. But remarkably, the $11 billion
contract for the Crusader is still alive, thanks largely to the Carlyle
Group.
"This is very much an example of a cold
war-inspired weapon whose time has passed," notes Steve Grundman, a
consultant at Charles River Associates, a defense and aerospace
consultancy in Boston. "Its liabilities were uncovered during the
Kosovo campaign, when the Army was unable to deploy it in time. It is
exceedingly expensive, and it was a wake-up call to the Army that many
of its forces are no longer relevant."
But the Carlyle Group was having none of that.
While it is impossible to say what U.S. secretary of defense Donald
Rumsfeld was thinking when he made the decision to keep the Crusader
program alive, people close to the situation claim to have a pretty good
idea. Mr. Carlucci and Mr. Rumsfeld are good friends and former
wrestling partners from their undergraduate days at Princeton
University. And while Carlyle executives are quick to reject any
accusations of them lobbying the current administration, others aren't
so sure. "In this particular effort, I felt that they were like any
other lobbying group, apart from the fact that they are not," said
one Washington, D.C., lobbyist with intimate knowledge of the Crusader
negotiations, noting the fine line between lobbying and having a drink
with a old friend.
According to Greg McCarthy, a spokesperson for
Representative J.C. Watts Jr. (R: Oklahoma), whose district is home to
one of the Crusader's assembly plants, the Carlyle Group's influence was
indeed felt at the Pentagon. "Carlyle's strength was within the DoD,
because as a rule someone like Frank Carlucci is going to have
access," says Mr. McCarthy. "But they have other staff types
that work behind the scenes, in the dark, that know everything about the
Army and Capitol Hill."
Perhaps even more disconcerting than Carlyle's
ties to the Pentagon are its connections within the White House itself.
Aside from signing up George Bush Sr. shortly after his presidential
term ended, Carlyle gave George W. Bush a job on the board of
Texas-based airline food caterer Caterair International back in 1991.
Since Bush the younger took office this year, a number of events have
raised eyebrows.
Shortly after George W. Bush was sworn in as
president, he broke off talks with North Korea regarding long-range
ballistic missiles, claiming there was no way to ensure North Korea
would comply with any guidelines that were developed. The news came as a
shock to South Korean officials, who had spent years negotiating with
the North, assisted by the Clinton administration. By June, Mr. Bush had
reopened negotiations with North Korea, but only at the urging of his
own father. According to reports, the former president sent his son a
memo persuasively arguing the need to work with the North Korean
government. It was the first time the nation had seen the influence of
the father on the son in office.
But what has been overlooked was Carlyle's
business interest in Korea. The senior Bush had spearheaded the group's
successful entrance into the South Korean market, paving the way for
buyouts of Korea's KorAm Bank and Mercury, a telecommunications
equipment company. For the business to be successful, stability between
North and South Korea is critical. And though there is no direct
evidence linking the senior Bush's business dealings in Korea with the
change in policy, it is the appearance of impropriety that excites the
watchdogs. "We are clearly aware that former President Bush has
weighed in on policy toward South Korea and we note that U.S. policy
changed after those communications," says Peter Eisner, managing
director at the Center for Public Integrity, a watchdog group in
Washington, D.C., which has an active file on the Carlyle Group.
"We know that former President Bush receives remuneration for his
work with Carlyle and that he is capable of advising the current
president, but how much further it goes, we don't know."
While the Center for Public Integrity looks for
its smoking gun, others in Washington say hard evidence is unimportant.
"Whether the decisions made by the former president are a real or
apparent conflict of interest doesn't matter, because in the public's
eye they're equally as damaging," says Larry Noble, executive
director and general counsel of the Center for Responsive Politics.
"Bush [Sr.] has to seriously consider the propriety of sitting on
the board of a group that is impacted by his son's decisions."
And the controversy is expected only to increase
as Carlyle's investments in Saudi Arabia are scrutinized during the war
on terrorism. Mr. Eisner says that very little is known about Carlyle's
involvements in Saudi Arabia, except that the firm has been making close
to $50 million a year training the Saudi Arabian National Guard, troops
that are sworn to protect the monarchy. Carlyle also advises the Saudi
royal family on the Economic Offset Program, a system that is designed
to encourage foreign businesses to open shop in Saudi Arabia and uses
re-investment incentives to keep those businesses' proceeds in the
country.
But the money flowing out of Saudi Arabia and
into the Carlyle Group is of even more interest. Immediately after the
September 11 attacks, reports surfaced of Carlyle's involvement with the
Saudi Binladin Group, the $5 billion construction business run by
Osama's half-brother Bakr. The bin Laden family invested $2 million in
the Carlyle Partners II fund, which includes in its portfolio United
Defense and other defense and aerospace companies. On October 26, the
Carlyle Group severed its relationship with the bin Laden family in what
officials termed a mutual decision. Mr. Bush Sr. and Mr. Major have been
to Saudi Arabia on behalf of Carlyle as recently as last year, and
according to reports, the Federal Bureau of Investigation is currently
looking into the flow of money from the bin Laden family. Carlyle
officials declined to answer any questions regarding their activities in
Saudi Arabia.
But for all the questions, Carlyle has stayed
clean in the eyes of the law. Lobbying laws in Washington, D.C., are
ambiguous at best, requiring only that former politicians observe a
one-year "cooling-off period" before they reënter the
lobbying scene on behalf of industry. It is playing within this gray
area that has given the Carlyle Group some of the best returns in the
business.
After David Rubenstein, a former aide in the
Carter administration, and William Conway Jr., former chief financial
officer of MCI Communications, hooked up at New York's Carlyle hotel in
1987 to form the company, the Carlyle Group spent two lost years
investing in a hodgepodge of companies. It wasn't until 1989, when the
company brought in Mr. Carlucci, fresh off his two-year stint as U.S.
secretary of defense, that Carlyle got serious in government. In 1991
the company made a name for itself by facilitating a $590 million
purchase of Citicorp stock for Prince Alwaleed bin Talal. Shortly
thereafter, Carlyle snatched up defense contractors Harsco, BDM
International, and LTV, turning the companies around and selling them to
the likes of TRW, Boeing, and Lockheed Martin.
The Carlyle Group has diversified its holdings
since then, investing in everything from bottling companies to
natural-food grocers. In the process, it has become one of the biggest,
most successful private-equity firms in business, with annualized
returns of 35 percent. (Judging by the early numbers from some of their
funds, however, like many other private-equity funds, 2001 will be a
considerably less profitable year for Carlyle.) "They are the new
breed of private equity, acting more like a large mutual fund of private
companies," says David Snow, editor of PrivateEquityCentral.net, a
Web site that tracks private-equity firms. The numbers are impressive:
Carlyle employs 240 people, as opposed to the 10 or 12 typical of most
private-equity firms. It has ownership stakes in 164 companies, which
collectively employ more than 70,000 people. George Soros invested $100
million in the group's funds; the California Public Employees'
Retirement System is in for $305 million.
Carlyle has succeeded by raising money first,
then finding the talent to manage it. For instance, it raised a fund for
buying out telecom companies and hired William Kennard, the former U.S.
Federal Communications Commission chairman, to run it. Accused early on
of being nothing more than a bunch of Washington grip-and-grinners,
Carlyle has proven its critics wrong. At a Salomon Smith Barney
private-equity conference last March, a panel of professional investment
managers were asked who the best fund managers are. Carlyle cofounder
Mr. Conway was one of two managers chosen.
With its size and success, questions about the
firm's ability to grow revenue has arisen. Carlyle has placed its bets
for future growth on the VC markets, which it entered in 1996. But to
date, it has found that venture capital is a game with far different
rules than that of corporate buyouts. "They may be very established
in private equity, but it seems to me that they don't really know the
venture capital business," says one VC who has done deals with
Carlyle. "In buyouts, you take over a company and fight the
management, but in venture capital it's the opposite. You want to work
with people."
Carlyle executives admit as much. As a result,
the Carlyle Europe Venture Partners fund has been slow to commit its
capital. So far, it has spent just more than 20 percent of its $660
million, and 3 of its original 17 investments have already folded. None
has gone public or been acquired. As Jack Biddle, cofounder of Novak
Biddle Venture Partners, dryly puts it, "I haven't been involved in
a lot of venture deals where the participation of a president mattered
that much. In venture capital, it's all about the technology."
For a firm that has made its money in highly
regulated, politically charged industries, picking business-to-business
plays is hardly second nature. While Carlyle has investments in highly
regulated sectors like telecom and banking, it has avoided defense
entirely, instead focusing on tech industries that have already gone
flat. The firm's European fund alone boasts six B2B companies, two
optical-networking companies, and Riot-E, a wireless media play. Jacques
Garaïalde, managing director of the Europe fund concedes that
expectations have been shifted. "Clearly, we can't make 100 times
returns on B2B, but there are some situations in which we can make 3
times."
But the struggles in its VC business may be
offset, at least temporarily, by the expected windfall from the war on
terrorism. The federal government has already approved a $40 billion
supplemental aid package to the current budget, $19 billion of which is
headed straight to the Pentagon. Some of the additional government
spending is likely to find its way into Carlyle's coffers.
The Bush administration isn't afraid to mix
business and politics, and no other firm embodies that penchant better
than the Carlyle Group. Walking that fine line is what Carlyle does
best. We may not see Osama bin Laden's brothers at Carlyle's investor
conferences any more, but business will go on as usual for the biggest
old boys network around. As Mr. Snow puts it, "Carlyle will always
have to defend itself and will never be able to convince certain people
that they aren't capable of forging murky backroom deals. George Bush's
father does profit when the Carlyle Group profits, but to make the leap
that the president would base decisions on that is to say that the
president is corrupt."
Additional reporting by Lawrence Aragon, Mark
Chediak, Julie Landry, Christopher Locke, Eric Moskowitz, Mark Mowrey,
and Michael Parsons.
Write to Dan
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