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<text id=90TT0692>
<title>
Mar. 19, 1990: The Profits Of Doom
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Mar. 19, 1990 The Right To Die
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 41
The Profits Of Doom
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Drexel, Campeau sat on a wall. They and others had a great fall.
But for experts in bankruptcy and picking up the pieces,
business is booming
</p>
<p>William McWhirter/Chicago
</p>
<p> As ailing U.S. companies collapse beneath the debt they
assumed in the Roaring Eighties, a new breed of vultures has
begun to swoop down on the corporate carcasses. The predators
include sharp-eyed lawyers, investment bankers and bargain
hunters who have parlayed the business of profiting from
failure into Wall Street's hottest growth industry. Ironically,
many of the same financiers who loaded companies down with debt
are now cashing in on the overleveraged firms' troubles. Not
since merger madness first hit corporate America in the
mid-'80s has so lucrative a financial field opened up so
swiftly. Says Robert Miller, a Manhattan attorney who advises
failing companies: "The buyout business of the 1980s has become
the turnaround business of the 1990s." Concurs bankruptcy
adviser Jay Alix: "To us, LBO means large bankruptcy
opportunity."
</p>
<p> The switch reflects the growing peril of runaway borrowing.
Last year 68,112 U.S. firms filed for bankruptcy vs. 10,622 in
1981. And the failures are getting larger. The assets of
bankrupt companies totaled $67 billion in 1989, up 52% from the
previous year. The 1990 pace could be even quicker. Since
January the Wall Street firm Drexel Burnham Lambert (assets:
$3.6 billion) and the U.S. retailing arm of Canada's Campeau
Corp. ($9 billion) have sought protection from creditors. They
joined such major companies as Eastern Air Lines and LTV Corp.,
the third largest U.S. steel company, which had earlier taken
refuge in bankruptcy proceedings.
</p>
<p> But companies do not have to file for Chapter 11 to lure the
new vultures. "There are many shades of failure," says Sanford
Sigoloff, a turnaround specialist who runs the bankrupt U.S.
operations of Australia-based Hooker Corp., which owns the B.
Altman and Bonwit Teller department-store chains. Such troubled
but solvent corporations as Wang Laboratories, the Lowell,
Mass., computer maker that laid off more than 1,500 workers
last year, have hired "workout" advisers to help pare down
their debt. By pursuing a workout instead of bankruptcy,
management can maintain control of the company and generally
reorganize faster. "There's more room to maneuver outside of
court," says Richard Feintuch, a partner in Wachtell, Lipton,
a leading Wall Street law firm.
</p>
<p> Turnaround experts can rake in hefty fees by representing
ailing companies or disgruntled creditors--or sometimes both.
Lawyers and accountants earned nearly $4 million for preparing
Campeau's 6,000-page bankruptcy petition in January, and
currently share fees that total about $2 million a month for
advising the company. The legal and financial specialists who
guided Manville Corp. out of bankruptcy in 1988 received $100
million from the asbestos maker. "Every profession in the
business of fixing and restructuring troubled companies is
going through a sudden growth spurt," says Christopher Beard,
publisher of Turnarounds & Workouts, an industry newsletter.
</p>
<p> The bust business has attracted some unlikely saviors.
Shortly before it declared bankruptcy last month, Drexel
Burnham Lambert beefed up a unit that advised distressed
companies. The move was viewed with cynicism by some on Wall
Street since Drexel, through its junk-bond financing of
buyouts, was a prime contributor to today's bankruptcy boom.
Other improbable rescuers include First Boston, which advised
Campeau to borrow more than $10 billion to buy Bloomingdale's,
Jordan Marsh and seven other U.S. store chains. Some critics
attack Wall Street firms for profiting from both the debt
buildup of the '80s and the subsequent spate of failures.
"There ought to be something unethical about cashing in on the
way up and on the way down," says novelist Michael Thomas
(Hanover Place), a former investment banker. "It's like a
doctor who builds a trade infecting people and then purports
to cure them. This would raise ethical questions anywhere but
on Wall Street."
</p>
<p> In Washington Congress has begun to consider sweeping
changes in U.S. bankruptcy laws that could make it harder for
turnaround artists to profit from troubled companies. One call
for reform came from James Queenan Jr., a U.S. bankruptcy judge
for Massachusetts, who termed the wave of 1980s buyouts "the
greatest demonstration of greed that I have seen in my
lifetime." Queenan testified that tougher restrictions on
bankrupt companies "would present a major deterrent to abuses"
by discouraging firms from irresponsibly loading up on debt and
then enjoying court protection.
</p>
<p> Today's turnaround boom is rooted not only in overleveraging
but also in a 1978 overhaul of the bankruptcy laws that
strengthened the hand of ailing companies in negotiations with
their creditors. The changes permitted bankrupt firms to
restructure their finances and return to business without
struggling through pitched court battles over every asset.
Explains David Post, executive director of the Turnaround
Management Association, a North Carolina-based trade group:
"1978 said that if you can achieve an agreement with a majority
of your creditors, the court will allow you to reorganize"
without satisfying all of them.
</p>
<p> Among turnaround artists, the competition to advise the
creditors of bankrupt companies has grown fiercer by the week.
To gain the confidence of prospective clients, even the
best-known advisers must often work for months without being
formally hired. The day after Drexel declared bankruptcy in
February, some of its major creditors sought help from Wilbur
Ross, a senior managing director at Rothschild Inc., a top
workout firm. Ross agreed to represent half a dozen large
bondholders, who held a total of $100 million in Drexel notes,
without a retainer in order to win their business. Says he: "We
can't run ads, so we market by being there and offering help
when they need it."
</p>
<p> Even after they sign up clients, turnaround specialists must
land a spot on court-appointed creditor committees before they
can earn big payments. To boost the odds in their favor,
specialists often bombard the creditors who head the committees
with letters and phone calls as part of campaigns known as
"beauty contests." In the wake of the Campeau bankruptcy
filing, 50 leading legal, accounting and investment firms have
been battling for some 15 seats on the all-important creditors'
panels. Says a disappointed attorney who lost the opportunity
to earn at least $300,000 in monthly fees: "It's a very
political process."
</p>
<p> Many advisers who work the company side of the street offer
a rich range of services to their corporate clients for fees
that can reach $6,000 a day. The specialists take over a
company's debt-cleanup chores, including negotiations with
banks and creditor committees, leaving executives free to run
their businesses. "Some people call us vultures," says adviser
Jay Alix, "but that's unfair, because we provide a valuable
service. Just as people with cancer go to a doctor, and people
with a toothache go to a dentist, sick companies come to us.
We're debt doctors."
</p>
<p> On Wall Street, some firms have created funds that let small
investors profit from improvements in the condition of ailing
companies. Called "vulture," "phoenix" or even "Lazarus" funds,
such portfolios invest in troubled companies deemed likely to
return to health. Other brokerages specialize in recommending
bargain-price stocks and bonds of ailing companies to their
clients. "You just have to do your homework," says Michael
Singer, the president of R.D. Smith, which advised its
customers to buy Public Service of New Hampshire bonds in 1988
after the utility filed for bankruptcy. The price of the bonds
has since climbed from 30 cents on the dollar to nearly full
value as the company has reorganized.
</p>
<p> Other investors seek to profit from failing companies by
buying them and turning them around. Sam Zell, chairman of
Chicago-based Itel Corp. (1989 revenues: $2 billion), is
raising up to $1 billion for a fund that would acquire firms
at fire-sale prices. Says he: "Anytime you have a period of
excess, you're going to have a period of distress that follows.
Our sole purpose is to buy good companies with bad balance
sheets. Our goal is to restructure their finances and come out
the other end with a viable company." Zell is hardly alone in
his ambition. Texas investor Thomas Kelly II and several
partners plan to launch a fund to invest up to $500 million in
cash-starved companies. "This is not some brilliant concept
that somebody just thought up," Kelly says. "Everyone wants to
do it."
</p>
<p> That includes cash-rich foreign corporations. In Dallas the
Pizza Inn chain of 700 restaurants, which filed for bankruptcy
last September, has had nibbles from Japanese and European
investors. Says Harry Dixon, an Omaha-based attorney and
chairman of the American Bankruptcy Institute, who represents
Pizza Inn: "We are getting constant inquiries from some very
substantial companies, including FORTUNE 500 firms that are
looking for bargains. Anybody who's got cash in today's market
is a major player."
</p>
<p> The game could remain hot for years if more overleveraged
companies run into trouble. "There will be plenty of
bankruptcies and workouts," predicts Rothschild's Ross,
"because if we're this busy now, what's going to happen when
the economy sours?" Indeed, in the world of finance, the 1990s
could prove to be the decade of the vulture.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>