#23 - JRL 2007-75 - JRL Home
From: "Lucy Komisar" <lkomisar@gmail.com>
Subject: Commentary on Yukos auction
Date: Wed, 28 Mar 2007
From
http://thekomisarscoop.com/2007/03/28/western-critics-khodorkovsky-stole-yukos-fair-and-square/
Western critics: Khodorkovsky stole Yukos fair and
square
By Lucy Komisar
Russia, through its energy company Rosneft, has started Yukos logoto recover
the multi-billion dollar oil company Yukos that was stolen from it in the
mid-1990s. It is doing so through auctions of the bankrupt company’s assets. And
indignant protests continue from westerners. The latest comes from the
California state comptroller John Chiang, a Democrat, complaining about “illegal
and unethical activities by the Russian government.” Add that to attacks by Sen.
John McCain (Republican) and Rep. Tom Lantos (Democrat). The latter wants the
State Department to designate Khodorkovsky a political prisoner.* There have
also been critical statements from our ethically-challenged administration.
Funny there was no indignation from western officials when Mikhail
Khodorkovsky, with the help of crooked President Boris Yeltsin, was
appropriating Russian assets for kopeks on the ruble. Western journalists like
to talk about the “murky” period of the 1990s, or the “controversial”
loans-for-shares deals. Such euphemisms are egregiously dishonest. What went on
in the 1990s was theft, pure and simple.
Loans-for-shares meant that Yeltsin made deals with his friends to “borrow”
money from their banks, putting up state assets as security. The cash from the
loans had actually been deposited by the state in those banks, so it was
borrowing its own money. And then Yeltsin’s government conveniently “defaulted”
on the loans, so the properties were sold at auction. At phony knock-down
prices.
After competitors were “disqualified” by Menatep (the bank owned by
Khodorkovsky) which was running the auction, Yukos was won by a company “owned”
by offshore shells controlled by Khodorkovsky. Hmmmm. It paid $309 million for a
controlling 78 percent of Yukos. Months later, Yukos traded on the Russian stock
exchange at a market capitalization of $6 billion.
That puts in perspective complaints that Yukos’s nearly 10-percent share in
Rosneft had been offered at “a sharply discounted starting price of $7.5
billion, roughly 12 percent below its market value.” How does that compare to
Khodorkovsky buying Yukos at about six percent of its market value?
If I had been Putin, I would have simply yelled “fraud” and renationalized
the stolen assets. But he was trying to play by “western” rules, and so he took
a page from the US. Remember how the Feds got Al Capone on his taxes? Well,
Putin got Khodorkovsky on taxes.
Khodorkovsky had been engaging in transfer-pricing, another western
invention. Instead of selling oil directly to customers, he “sold” it to
offshore companies he secretly owned, which then sold the oil to customers.
Yukos reported to Russian tax authorities only the “profits” made on sales to
the shells.
Maybe western critics got so upset because transfer-pricing is the same shell
game western companies use to cheat on their home taxes.
Yukos transfer-pricing hurt minority foreign investors as well, since they
benefitted only from the reported profits. Of course, they knew that the company
was built on an offshore network, so I can’t feel too sorry for them. When you
lie down with dogs…. The US RICO statute calls for criminals to forfeit their
ill-gotten gains. Putin in effect is doing the same. Maybe that’s one of the
reasons he has, according to the Wall Street Journal, a 70-percent approval
rating among Russians.
*Lantos, you will recall, orchestrated the phony 1990 “human rights” hearing,
pre-America’s first invasion of Iraq, where the unidentified daughter of the
Kuwaiti ambassador told an invented story about Iraqi troops taking babies out
of incubators.
|