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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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08218900.015
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1994-03-25
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<text id=89TT2158>
<title>
Aug. 21, 1989: He's Hungry To Buy An Airline
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Aug. 21, 1989 How Bush Decides
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 42
He's Hungry to Buy an Airline
</hdr><body>
<p>High-roller Marvin Davis mounts a $5.4 billion bid for United
</p>
<p> Other than luck, what an oilman needs most is persistence.
Marvin Davis has plenty of both. The bulky son of a dress
manufacturer from Newark, Davis made his first billion dollars
in less than 20 years as a Denver-based wildcatter with a
salesman's knack for raising capital and a blessed instinct for
drilling gushers. Now, amid the takeover frenzy gripping the
airline industry, Davis has set his cap for a giant carrier.
</p>
<p> Only two months after Northwest Airlines rebuffed his $2.6
billion bid, Davis has bounced back with an even grander
scheme. Last week he offered to pay $5.4 billion, or $240 a
share, for UAL, the parent company of United Airlines, the
second largest U.S. carrier. UAL's board said it would consider
the offer, and sent emissaries to meet with Davis' advisers.
Meanwhile, UAL shares rocketed from 164 1/2 to 257 in just four
days. Wall Streeters believe that the price could top $300 if
other buyers bid.
</p>
<p> Either way, Davis is likely to score big, which is his
habit. He used his oil profits in 1981 to buy 20th Century Fox,
then sold it to Rupert Murdoch four years later for an estimated
profit of $325 million. Davis picked up another $50 million by
buying the Beverly Hills Hotel from the family of insider trader
Ivan Boesky in 1986, then turning around and selling it to the
Sultan of Brunei. Even Davis' "dry hole" takeover attempts often
pay off. While Los Angeles investor Alfred Checchi won Northwest
with a $4 billion bid, for example, Davis pocketed an estimated
$30 million by selling his shares after the price ran up.
</p>
<p> Colleagues have described Davis, 63, as a "killer" in
business, an intimidating dealmaker whose 6-ft. 4-in. height and
280-lb. heft amplify his forceful nature. At the same time, he
is a gregarious socialite who counts among his close friends
Gregory Peck, Don Rickles, Henry Kissinger and former President
Gerald Ford. Like many pals, Ford has invested in Davis' oil
deals over the years. Says Ford: "You look at Marvin, and he
looks like a tough, mean guy -- and he is a tough businessman.
But on a personal side, he's a warm person, a nice guy to be
with."
</p>
<p> Davis has contributed millions of dollars to medical
research. From 1978 to 1985, he and his wife Barbara were the
hosts of Denver's annual Carousel Ball, a glittering,
star-studded bash devoted to fund raising for diabetes research.
(One of Davis' three daughters suffers from the disease.) Since
moving to Beverly Hills in 1985, Davis has supported a string
of California medical-research centers.
</p>
<p> Davis' sons John, 35, and Gregg, 26, are his business
partners. John says his father taught him to do his homework,
then "trust your gut." Sometimes the big man means it literally.
When Davis spotted a good investment in the Carnegie Deli, the
venerable Manhattan restaurant featured in Woody Allen's
Broadway Danny Rose, the financier struck a deal to open a
Hollywood branch. The glitzy grand-opening party last month
featured a 3-ft. plastic matzo ball being lowered into a vat of
simulated chicken soup. Best of all, Davis can now order his
favorite pastrami sandwiches at poolside.
</p>
<p> If another bid for United emerges, stock speculators
wonder, will Davis raise the ante or once again take his stock
profits and move on (he is believed to hold a 3.5% stake in the
company)? Back at Horace Mann High School in the Bronx, Davis'
classmates said the pugnacious youth could -- and would -- argue
any side of an issue. Even now he may be mulling his next daring
move over a nice hot pastrami sandwich in Beverly Hills.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>