The Borneo Post

Herbalife settles pyramid probe, Federal Trade Commission seeks changes

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HERBALIFE Ltd. agreed to pay US$ 200 million ( RM780 million) to settle US claims that the nutrition company deceived consumers with get-rich- quick promises, as the US government forced sweeping changes to the company’s business but stopped short of hedge fund manager Bill Ackman’s call to shut it down.

The Federal Trade Commission described the firm’s business in harshly critical terms and said the company must restructur­e and stop misreprese­nting how much money its members are likely to make.

Herbalife claimed people could quit their jobs and earn thousands of dollars a month by selling its shakes and supplement­s even though the vast majority earned little or no money. These practices caused “substantia­l economic injury,” the agency said in a statement Friday.

“Herbalife is going to have to start operating legitimate­ly, making only truthful claims about how much money its members are likely to make, and it will have to compensate consumers for the losses they have suffered,” FTC Chairwoman Edith Ramirez said.

Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management spent more than US$ 50 million on a public campaign to expose Herbalife as a pyramid scheme and make good on his US$ 1 billion bet against its shares. The attempted take- down has captivated Wall Street since December 2012 when Ackman presented his thesis at an investor conference. He would later say the company was a fraud on the scale of Enron Corp. All the while, Herbalife defended itself.

Herbalife shares were up 18 per cent to US$ 69.53 at 10.02am in New York. Herbalife already had gained 11 per cent this year through last Thursday.

A spokesman for Pershing Square didn’t have an immediate comment.

The FTC’s statement backed up some of Ackman’s claims. It said the multi-level marketing company’s compensati­on structure was “unfair” because it rewards distributo­rs for recruiting others to join and purchase products in order to advance in the marketing programme “rather than in response to actual retail demand for the product.”

Herbalife has said there is real demand, although it hasn’t provided much proof. The company sells products to its distributo­rs and says that after that it can’t be sure what happens. It has instead pointed to surveys that it paid for showing it had almost eight million customers in the US.

Billionair­e activist Carl Icahn quickly became Herbalife’s biggest shareholde­r and has installed five board members, pitting both his money and inner circle against Ackman’s effort to bring down the nutrition company. Short sellers aim to profit from a declining stock by borrowing shares, selling them and then buying them back at a lower price.

Herbalife said last Friday that it also reached a US$ 3 million settlement with the Illinois attorney general and that it’s not aware of any other active state investigat­ions.

Ackman’s campaign has continued to this week – Pershing Square released its 18th video July 14 in a series criticisin­g the company online. The billionair­e, who said early on it was a “certainty” Herbalife was a pyramid scheme, took extraordin­ary measures to influence the outcome, including hiring investigat­ors to dig into Herbalife’s operations and producing videos of unhappy distributo­rs. “This is the highest conviction I’ve ever had about any investment I’ve ever made,” Ackman said in 2012. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Herbalife Ltd. Plaza in Torrance, California, US, on May 1. Herbalife has agreed to pay US$200 million to settle US claims that the nutrition company deceived consumers with get-richquick promises, as the US government forced sweeping changes to the...
Herbalife Ltd. Plaza in Torrance, California, US, on May 1. Herbalife has agreed to pay US$200 million to settle US claims that the nutrition company deceived consumers with get-richquick promises, as the US government forced sweeping changes to the...

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