Tyco’s Kozlowski resigns as
CEO
Move comes amid a report he is subject of
tax-evasion probe
June 3 —
The news that the chairman and Chief Executive
of Tyco International, Ltd., Dennis Kozlowski, resigned over the
weekend in the midst of a personal tax evasion scandal, inspires
some thoughts about the man’s own moral compass in life, as well as
an observation or two about where he led the company from which he
has now abruptly
resigned.
IF REPORTS IN
TODAY’S New York Times are correct — and Kozlowski’s resignation suggests
there is little apparent reason to doubt them — the chairman and CEO of
Tyco International is now resigning because he has become the target of a
criminal tax fraud investigation by Manhattan district attorney Robert
Morgenthau. The probe is said to focus on
Kozlowski’s creation of an array of personal family trusts, into which he
has moved hundreds of millions of dollars of family assets. The Times
cites lawyers in the probe as asserting that Kozlowski may have used those
trusts to purchase various goods and services without paying New York
State taxes on them. The interesting thing
about all this is, of course, that Tyco International itself is a kind of
tax-dodger’s romper room. The company conducts nearly all its business out
of various U.S. offices — most notably in New Hampshire and New York. But
in 1997 the company bought a burglar alarm business that was based in
Bermuda, and arranged the transaction so that Tyco itself became based in
Bermuda.
This rearrangement of things instantly sheltered all Tyco’s non-U.S.
income from U.S. taxation — a common tax sheltering device for growing
numbers of U.S. companies. Indeed, were Tyco an individual and not a
corporation, it would have been subject to U.S. taxation on all its
worldwide income whether it repatriated to the U.S. or not.
So, given what he’s set up with his company, maybe its
not all that surprising that Kozlowski would have become entangled in a
personal version of the same sort of thing. In a certain sense, both
Kozlowski and Tyco are reflections of each other.
On the other hand, don’t you think he should have known better?
Kozlowski, 55, grew up in Newark, N.J., the son of a police detective, so
you’d at least think he learned the difference between right and wrong.
And you’d also think he could have applied
those moral judgments to his business, since he has a degree in
accounting, and has run Tyco for the last ten years, orchestrating dozens
upon dozens of deals.
Maybe Tyco Intl. has been as clean as
new-fallen snow all along. But Kozlowski’s own personal affairs now have
an obvious cloud over them, and since he himself has been running Tyco for
the last decade — a period during which Tyco as well began to structure
its business around tax-avoidance strategies — it’s frankly hard to be
confident about much of anything involving the company, especially when
you consider the mind-boggling complexity of its financial filings.
During the 1990s, no one cared much of anything about the company’s
financials (or indeed the financials of almost any company), and the stock
just went up and up, driven aloft in the late bull market’s frenzy of
momentum trading. By the summer of 1999,
Tyco had ballooned into a more than $40 billion financial erector set of
businesses, with interests in everything from electronics, to fire
protection systems, to healthcare products and even undersea fiber optical
cable company. At that point a well-known
short-seller named David Tice began openly criticizing Tyco’s accounting
methodology, focusing particularly on Kozlowski’s use of “pooling of
interests” merger accounting, in which an acquiring company could greatly
overpay in a takeover deal without generating any so-called “goodwill”
writeoffs.
Kozlowski
instantly turned up on TV shows, attacking Tice as a short-seller who was
simply trying to drive down Tyco’s shares. The press handled Kozlowski
with kid-gloves throughout the affair, and when a Securities &
Exchange Commission probe of the company ended the following year without
bringing action, Kozlowski seemed vindicated.
The stock thereafter recovered all its Tice-related losses and
climbed by the beginning of last year to more than $61 per share. Thanks
to an intervening stock split, this gave the company an overall market
value on Wall Street of nearly $107 billion, making it one of the 100
largest companies in America. But through it
all, the company remained little more than a financially engineered house
of cards, with much of management’s time and attention devoted to
activities that boosted earnings by lowering taxes. Typical example: to
have a captive offshore finance subsidiary borrow money at, say, 4
percent, then re-lend it to a U.S. operation at, say, 8 percent. The 8
percent interest payment lowers the U.S. company’s taxes, whereas the 4
percent “profit” that flows to the offshore captive lender never gets
taxed by the U.S.
In the midst of all of this - which apparently passed muster by the
SEC and, we may presume, is thus wholly on the up-and-up - we have now
discovered that Kozlowski was busy arranging his own personal affairs as
if, so far as the State of New York is concerned, he himself was a one-man
Tyco International. Along the way, Tyco’s
share price has collapsed, from its January 2001 high of more than $61, to
a closing price last Friday of less than $22, partly as a result of a
series of bizarre missteps by Kozlowski, who earlier this year announced a
plan to break the company up, then reversed himself and said he’d decided
not break up the company after all. Watching
those events unfold as they did, it was hard to escape the feeling that
Tyco was being run by a man with other things on his mind. And with the
benefit of hindsight we can now see what they were: His troubles with the
New York D.A. were apparently beginning to close in on him.
Tyco’s latest
quarterly financial statement, filed only two weeks ago, shows $33.2
billion of balance sheet equity, but 100 percent plus of it is accounted
by goodwill from acquisitions. The company is operating in the red on an
Income Statement basis, and its cash flow looks good only because it is
$400 million light on capital investment and doesn’t have to shell out
cold cash for its staggering balance sheet charges, which top $3.8 billion
in the six months ended March 31. At $16.75
per share, the market is saying this stock is worth not much more than $33
billion, or barely one times revenues. But now that its chairman and CEO
has left under a cloud of possible criminal wrongdoing, it seems a
foregone conclusion that the stock is going to undergo a whole new round
of skeptical scrutiny by the market. On Monday Tyco’s stock price dropped
close to 23 percent, and ended the day at less than $17 per share — down
from $60 at the start of the year. And Kozlowski tendered his resignation
from the board of directors of the defense contractor Raytheon.
Worst of all, because so much of Tyco’s business as a
public company seems to have been conjured out of the same sorts of
tax-related preoccupations that have now gotten Kozlowski himself in hot
water, it’s hard to see why an investor would want to hold this stock at
almost any price. This is a company in which the expectation of more bad
news to come now seems to have become permanently a part of its public
image - and who’d want to invest in a situation like that?
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