AN ABUSE OF CAPITALISM
As speculators narrowly win the day for asset strippers’ takeover of GKN, will minister veto it on security grounds?
CITY predators and hedge funds were branded the ‘unacceptable face of capitalism’ last night after defence giant GKN fell to an £8billion takeover.
Despite a chorus of criticism, asset strippers Melrose won control of the 259-year- old UK firm, which made cannonballs for the battle of Waterloo and Spitfires for the battle of britain.
They took a narrow majority in a shareholder vote, but only after receiving backing from ruthless hedge funds who bought up 25 per cent of GKN shares in recent weeks.
as Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson suggested the deal could still be reversed on security grounds, those recent investors were thought to have made a quick £172million in profit when GKN’s shares surged on news of the deal. They stand to make millions more.
Melrose bosses Simon Peckham, Christopher Miller, David roper and finance chief Geoffrey Martin could get as much as £285million personally from their takeover of the firm.
but as they celebrate, thousands of GKN jobs are at risk, including at its
head office in Redditch, Worcestershire. The firm, one of the great names of UK engineering, makes aircraft and engine parts for Boeing, Airbus and Rolls Royce, car parts for major manufacturers, and is a supplier to the Pentagon of the F-35 Lockheed Martin fighter – destined for the UK’s aircraft carrier fleet. It has been independent since 1759.
Melrose bosses, by contrast, boast of their ability to break up companies and sell off the component parts to the highest bidder within just a few years.
Last night the Government was urged to block the deal, as critics rounded on ministers for letting vulture funds influence the deal. It came as:
Ministry of Defence sources raised national security concerns, piling pressure on Business Secretary Greg Clark to intervene;
It claimed that US officials could block the takeover over fears it could jeopardise a major contract with the Pentagon;
West Midlands mayor Andy Street called for an urgent meeting with Melrose over job cut concerns;
Campaigners called for reform of takeover rules to protect companies from ruthless hedge funds.
The sale has already paid off for New York hedge fund Elliott, which saw the value of its 3.85 per cent stake jump by £26million. Elliott, which has a reputation for muscling in on global mega-deals, more than doubled its GKN shareholding after the bid was announced. Jack Dromey MP, who has been campaigning against the takeover, said: ‘These hedge funds have been described as the unacceptable face of capitalism. The idea that these super-rich investors can make a killing by selling short a 259-year-old British icon is fundamentally wrong.’
Defence analyst Howard Wheeldon added: ‘Melrose has won this by the spivs who bought in on the hope of making money, as opposed to backing them for the right or wrong reasons or backing British or indeed other jobs … we are losers all round for allowing them to buy in and to be given a vote.’
When Melrose swooped in January, GKN fought it off and put in place its own plan to restructure the business.
But Melrose was undeterred and came back with a bigger offer. Critics argued that it would make Melrose bosses hundreds of millions of pounds, result in the firm being split up and sold to foreign investors, and
Standing up for British industry How the Mail reported the takeover fight on February 15, March 26 and March 28
see a British engineering giant lost. It became a war of words as both sides tried to convince wavering investors.
Crucially, hedge funds saw a chance to make millions by buying GKN stock and forcing the deal through. Under current takeover laws, they received full voting rights. Yesterday Melrose claimed victory, winning 52.43 per cent of votes from shareholders.
Earlier this week, Mr Clark said he had secured a series of promises from Melrose to keep its business in the UK until 2023. But critics claimed these were not worth the paper they were written on.
Lord Heseltine, former deputy PM and defence secretary, said: ‘This is the clash between the culture of the financial world and profits and the strategic interests of this country – and it is inevitable that the financial system wins.
‘No other country of our sort would have allowed this … it’s not what I think serves the national interest. I think it is wrong.’
A Whitehall source last night said the Defence Secretary had ‘significant reservations’, despite the assurances secured by Mr Clark.
The source said: ‘It might not be a done deal just yet.’ Mr Williamson is said to be concerned Melrose could sell off critical elements of GKN’s business in the future.
Mr Clark has said he will take advice from the MoD before deciding whether to block it.
The Government has intervened 12 times in takeovers since the Enterprise Act 2002. Seven of these were on national security grounds – however, none have ever been blocked completely, and instead all had conditions placed on them to protect UK defence concerns.
There also were calls last night to protect British jobs, as it was feared Melrose would close some of the Redditch headquarters. Unite’s Steve Turner said: ‘The takeover is far from a done deal. National security concerns remain not just for the UK, but for the US, where the Committee on Foreign Investment is yet to approve the takeover and to whom Unite has made representations.’
The TUC’s Frances O’Grady said ministers ‘failed to protect GKN workers … [they] got involved far too late and effectively rolled over’.
Paul Everitt, of aerospace and defence trade body ADS, said it was ‘a worrying time for GKN, its employees, pensioners, suppliers and customers’.
Melrose chairman Christopher Miller said it planned to create ‘a UK industrial powerhouse with a market capitalisation of over £ 10billion and a tremendous future’. He added: ‘Melrose has made commitments as to investment in R&D, skills and people … let me assure you that GKN is entering into very good hands.’