Business Standard

Racist outburst prompts Faber’s exit from two company boards

- MAX ABELSON & DANIELLE BOCHOVE

Veteran investor Marc Faber left the boards of money manager Sprott and mining companies Novagold Resources and Ivanhoe Mines after he claimed in his newsletter this month that “the US would look like Zimbabwe” if it had been settled by black people instead of whites.

“The recent comments by Faber are deeply disappoint­ing and are completely contradict­ory with the views of Sprott and its employees,” Sprott Chief Executive Officer Peter Grosskopf said in announcing Faber’s departure from the board. “We pride ourselves on being a diverse organisati­on and comments of this sort will not be tolerated."

In a 15-page edition of his investor letter, "The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report," Faber argued against the removal of confederat­e statues, saying the “only crime” of the men those monuments honored was to defend slavery and that the controvers­y distracts from more important debates. In between quotes from George Orwell and historian Edward Gibbon and his opinions on universal basic income, he wrote the following:

Far-right movements are gaining traction across Europe and the US On Sunday, Austrian voters paved the way for a nationalis­t party to enter government in an election upset. Last month, Alternativ­e for Germany won enough seats in parliament to become the legislatur­e’s third-largest party. After protesters met white supremacis­ts with torches at a march in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, in August, President Donald Trump faced criticism for saying there were “very fine people on both sides.”

Faber, who was a managing director at Drexel Burnham Lambert until 1990 and has been a frequent commentato­r on markets for decades, is known for bearish and what he calls contrarian views. He told investors to bail out of US stocks a week before the 1987 Black Monday crash.

A CNBC spokespers­on said Tuesday the cable channel doesn’t plan to invite Faber back for appearance­s. Ty Trippet, a spokesman for Bloomberg Television, said “he hasn’t been on our air since June 2016, and we don’t intend to book him in the future.”

Sprott, based in Toronto, focuses on precious metals. Novagold announced Faber’s resignatio­n in a news release, but didn’t provide any comment.

“If stating some historical facts makes me a racist, then I suppose that I am a racist,” Faber wrote in an email to Bloomberg. “For years, Japanese were condemned because they denied the Nanking massacre.”

It’s unclear what Faber was suggesting. The Imperial Japanese army is estimated to have killed hundreds of thousands in the Chinese city during the Sino-Japanese War in the late 1930s, according to Encycloped­ia Britannica.

Ivanhoe, which unearthed Congo’s largest copper deposit last year, said late Tuesday that it had requested and accepted Faber’s resignatio­n from the board.

“Respect and dignity for all people are a fundamenta­l underpinni­ng of the company’s enterprise and the conduct of every aspect of its business,” Ivanhoe said in a statement. “There is zero tolerance for racism.”

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