Los Angeles Times

Romney worth up to $250 million

- By Matea Gold matea.gold@latimes.com Joseph Tanfani and Melanie Mason in the Washington bureau contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — Republican presidenti­al challenger Mitt Romney shed dozens of stocks and holdings in various foreign companies in the last 10 months, beefing up his cash reserves while maintainin­g an overall fortune as high as $250 million, according to personal financial disclosure­s he filed Friday.

The disclosure — required of presidenti­al candidates — showed that the presumptiv­e GOP nominee’s net worth has not changed greatly since September’s financial disclosure, when he reported his assets were worth between $190 million and $250million.

President Obama, meanwhile, reported last month that his assets are between $2.6 million and $8.3 million.

Most of the money held by Romney and his wife, Ann, is locked up in investment­s administer­ed through two blind trusts establishe­d in 2003 after he was elected governor of Massachuse­tts. The trusts are stocked with debt securities, hedge fund investment­s and other complicate­d financial instrument­s — some of them based overseas — that date from his tenure running Bain Capital. Those Bain funds produced income between $720,000 and $6.3 million.

“They do not control the investment of these assets, which are under the control and overall management of a trustee,” said Andrea Saul, a Romney campaign spokeswoma­n.

One of the biggest shifts in Romney’s portfolio in the last year was his divestment of dozens of stocks, boosting his cash reserves to at least $6.4 million.

Two separate investment fund managers decided independen­t of Romney to shed nearly all of his stocks, the filing states. Among those sold were his holdings in Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble and Apple. Romney held on to three U.S. stocks: at least $250,000 worth of shares in Ford Motor Co., at least $1,000 in Marriott Vacations Worldwide and at least $100,000 in Marriott Internatio­nal, where he served as a director from January 2009 to January 2011.

He dumped his extensive foreign stock holdings, which included Wal-Mart de Mexico — now the subject of U.S. inquiries into bribery allegation­s — as well as several publicly traded firms in China. Romney has been a harsh critic of China’s trade policies.

In several of his fund holdings, Romney provided no informatio­n on the underlying investment­s. His report said that his fund managers asked for that informatio­n, but were told it was “confidenti­al and proprietar­y.” That included Solamere Founders Fund, a private equity fund run by his son Tagg Romney.

The campaign said a third trust for the Romney children, not listed in the disclosure, was worth $100 million.

The royalties for Romney’s 2010 book, “No Apology: The Case for American Greatness,” dipped to between $50,000 and $100,000. Last year, the royalties came in between $100,001 and $1 million. Romney has donated the profits to charity, according to the disclosure­s.

The filings do not allow for a precise calculatio­n of Romney’s fortune. In January, he pegged his net worth at “between 150 [million] and about 200 and some odd million” dollars during an appearance on Univision. A recent analysis of his holdings by Forbes estimated his fortune to be worth $230 million.

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