SOURCE: Los Angeles Times
Note: The Los Angeles
Times requested that I review Jeb Bush financial disclosures and this
is the story that resulted. Bush resigned from Tenet
Healthcare as this story was being printed. Tanfani did a fine
substantive unbiased article based upon Bush's financial holdings,
which are primarily private equity related investments. I
generally ask not to be quoted in such reviews yet agreed to minor
quotes given Tanfanis stellar record regarding high quality
non-sensational journalism.
Jeb Bush eases out of some businesses, such as firm helped by Obamacare
Joseph Tanfani, Los Angeles Times
December 25, 2014
When
Jeb Bush completed two terms as governor of Florida in 2007, he
reported his net worth at $1.3 million, about $700,000 less than when
he took office.
Today, nearly eight years later, he is a wealthier man. He has plunged
into business and entrepreneurial ventures involving consulting, the
paid lecture circuit and energy development. He has developed real
estate, advised international investment banks and joined high-paying
corporate boards.
FOR THE RECORD:
Jeb Bush: An article in Section A on Dec. 26 about former Florida Gov.
Jeb Bush's financial affairs quoted a spokeswoman, Kristy Campbell, as
saying that an investment fund, BH Global Aviation, was set up overseas
to protect it from having to comply with U.S. business regulations.
Actually, Campbell said the fund was structured that way because its
only investment, Hawker Pacific, has no operations in the United States
and therefore does not need to make U.S. corporate filings. —
------------
But as he considers a run for president in 2016, Bush has begun to
unwind some of his financial affairs, apparently to avoid the kind of
criticism that hobbled fellow Republican Mitt Romney in his
unsuccessful bid for the White House in 2012.
Bush is quitting Tenet Healthcare Corp. — a company that has profited
from Obamacare — and is ending a consulting contract with Barclays Bank
to focus on his political future. Aides say he also has stopped giving
highly paid speeches to focus on traveling America, meeting with
potential donors and testing what a friend calls a “visionary” brand of
campaigning.
But Bush’s business record, enmeshed in international finance and some
troubled former ventures in south Florida, could end up complicating
his return to politics and his hopes to follow his father, George H.W.
Bush, and his older brother, George W. Bush, into the Oval Office.
Last year, he took a step into the rarefied world of private equity and
offshore investments, joining with former banking executives and a
Chinese airline company to make bets on natural gas exploration and
shipping. One of the funds was set up in the United Kingdom, a
structure that allows the company to shield overseas investors from
U.S. taxes.
During the 2012 race, Romney drew ceaseless attacks from Democrats for
his lucrative work at Bain Capital, a pioneering venture capital
company that bought scores of troubled companies, took over their
management and sometimes laid off employees while garnering huge fees
and payouts.
But Bush and his aides argue that his investments and entrepreneurial
ventures are different because he isn’t taking control of companies and
restructuring them.
“These are all growth investments that the governor has worked on,” said Bush’s spokeswoman, Kristy Campbell.
Bush’s latest undertaking is as a
partner in three privately held funds that have raised a total of $127
million for investments in domestic and foreign companies. Bill Parish,
an investment advisor in Portland, Ore., says the funds are fairly
small in the private equity world.
But in the heat of a political
campaign, Parish said, opaque investment vehicles, especially involving
overseas accounts, inevitably will raise questions about the identities
of his investors and the nature of their businesses.
“If he’s smart, he’s going to take care of it and shut them down,” Parish said.
Campbell said the 61-year-old former governor is “reviewing all his
engagements and his business commitments” now that he’s begun to focus
on a potential race. “That’s a natural next step,” she said.
the Bush family & Florida supreme court judicial coup of the 2000
election will be an eternal wound suffered by the USA. the absolute
unwillingness to hold a recount or runoff election cheated us out of an
honest presidential election results. the Supreme Court recommended
against using that...
Born and raised in Texas, Bush moved in 1981 to Miami, where his wife’s
family lived, and went to work for a wealthy Cuban-born businessman,
Armando Codina. Both had worked on George H.W. Bush’s failed bid for
the Republican Party’s 1980 presidential nomination, and Codina
ultimately made the younger Bush a partner in a south Florida real
estate development firm.
In 1986, Bush got into politics when he was named Florida’s commerce
secretary. He quit in 1988 to help his father, then the vice president,
win the White House. In 1994, the younger Bush lost his first race for
the governor’s mansion, but four years later he won, and ultimately
became Florida’s first two-term Republican governor.
After leaving office in 2007, he set up Jeb Bush and Associates, a
management consulting firm. His son, Jeb Bush Jr., serves as managing
partner. Bush has said the firm’s clients range from Fortune 500
companies to small tech startups, but Campbell declined to discuss the
company’s business or identify its clients.
That same year, Bush also was hired as an advisor to Lehman Brothers,
the New York investment bank and financial services firm. When Lehman
collapsed in bankruptcy in 2008 amid the global financial crisis, Bush
shifted to Barclays, the London-based multinational banking and
financial services giant that bought Lehman Brothers’ North American
divisions.
He got involved in a venture that provides disaster response services.
He and two partners also set up another company, Maghicle Driverless,
that is trying to develop self-driving vehicles for passengers and
cargo.
“He was grabbing at a lot of things to make money quickly,” said Susan
MacManus, a political science professor at the University of South
Florida.
Now Bush has begun to pull back.
Campbell, the Bush spokeswoman, said he will leave Barclays by Dec. 31
to focus on a possible presidential run. She said his work for Lehman
Brothers and Barclays was mostly offering clients “his perspective on
the impact of economic trends, regulations and policies.”
And on Wednesday, Bush resigned from the board of directors of Tenet
Healthcare Corp., also effective Dec. 31, according to a corporate
filing. The Dallas-based company actively supported the 2010 Affordable
Care Act, and has seen its revenue rise from it, an issue that could
draw fire in Republican primaries.
Bush earned cash and stock awards worth nearly $300,000 from Tenet in
2013, according to corporate filings. He also sold Tenet stock worth
$1.1 million that year, the records show.
“Mr. Bush is not resigning on account of any disagreement with Tenet,” the company said.
Bush remains on the board of directors of a Florida-based timberland
owner, Rayonier, which paid him about $200,000 last year, according to
the company’s proxy statement.
Some of Bush’s business ventures have gone badly.
In 2007, Bush joined InnoVida, a Miami manufacturer of composite
building materials, winning a seat on the board and a $15,000-a-month
consulting contract. At the time, company president Claudio Osorio was
a big player in Miami’s glitzy social and political world, hosting
fundraisers at his Star Island mansion for Democratic politicians like
Hillary Rodham Clinton and, in 2008, for then-Sen. Barack Obama.
In March 2010, InnoVida obtained a $10-million federal loan to build
homes and a factory in earthquake-wrecked Haiti. But Osorio scammed
millions from that loan and from investors, according to a federal
indictment filed in Miami.
A Securities and Exchange Commission complaint in 2012 said Osorio had
recruited Bush and other high-profile figures to lend “an air of
legitimacy” to InnoVida and help him raise money. In 2013, Osorio
pleaded guilty to fraud charges and was sentenced to 121/2 years in
prison.
Bush was paid a total of $468,901 before leaving InnoVida in September
2010. A court-approved settlement agreement in the company’s bankruptcy
case says he provided “substantial assistance” to investigations into
the company’s finances, and he agreed to pay back $270,000 to the
bankruptcy court.
His foray into private equity began last year with three banking
industry veterans: Amar Bajpai, formerly of Lehman Brothers; Ross
Rodrigues, a former Credit Suisse analyst and hedge fund principal; and
David Savett, a former energy trader at Credit Suisse. Details were
first reported by Bloomberg News.
Their firm, Britton Hill Holdings, named after the highest point in
Florida, raised $40.4 million from investors and put it in Inflection
Energy, a Denver-based company that has been investing in hydraulic
fracturing, or fracking — specifically, in natural gas wells in the
Marcellus shale region in Pennsylvania and New York.
Bush and his partners also set up two other funds.
BH Logistics raised $26 million and invested it in Dorian LPG Ltd., a
shipping company incorporated last year in the Marshall Islands to
transport propane gas. BH Global Aviation, based in the United Kingdom,
raised $60.8 million. That money was invested in Hawker Pacific, an
aviation sales and services firm based in Hong Kong that mainly does
business in Asia and Australia.
Hawker Pacific has no operations in the United States, and the
investment fund was set up overseas to protect the company from having
to comply with U.S. business regulations, Campbell said.
Nearly all of the money for Dorian LPG Ltd. and BH Global Aviation came
from investors outside the United States, according to Security and
Exchange Commission filings.
The biggest investor was a Chinese firm called HNA Group, a
conglomerate that includes an airline and other businesses. In a news
release, HNA said its investment in Dorian was part of a plan to build
a distribution network in China to “take advantage of the significant
opportunities for growth” in propane.
Al Cardenas, former Republican Party chairman in Florida and a longtime
friend of Bush, says he doesn’t think the former governor’s involvement
with international finance will hurt his appeal should he run for
president.
“I think he’s always been an honest man in business and in politics,”
Cardenas said. “He’s comfortable with his actions and what he’s done.
All the public wants to know is that you behaved honorably and that you
care for them.”
MacManus, the political science professor, isn’t so sure. Some of
Bush’s business dealings might draw heat during a campaign,
particularly from unbridled outside political groups.
“The thing with investments,” she said, is that “there’s always something to criticize.”
For a link to the story on the LA Times website simply google Bill Parish Jeb Bush.
Bill Parish
Parish & Company
10260 SW Greenburg Rd., Suite 400
Portland, OR 97223
Tel: 503-643-6999
email: bill@billparish.com