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Sept 27, 2000
Danaharta's
'misleading' picture of NSC mis-venture
Kim Quek
Pengurusan Danaharta Nasional
Berhad's (Danaharta) statement of denial of any bailout in the
Halim Saad's RM3-billion loan scandal is misleading. It wholly
misses the essence of the scandal.
In a press statement on Sept
21 apparently in response to an Asian Wall Street Journal article
on Sept 19, Danaharta denied there was any bailout of the four
Malaysian banks or the borrower, Hottick Investment. It further
claimed that Malaysian taxpayers suffer a maximum loss of RM4
only (Danaharta paid RMl to each of the four lending banks for
taking over the loans).
On the surface, Danaharta seems
correct, as it has not paid out any money to the banks or Hottick.
But it misses completely the central figure of the scandal, Halim
Saad, who is the real borrower of the RM3-billion loan.
In an intricate manoeuvre, Halim
(photo) took over National Steel Corp (NSC) of Philippines, using
Hottick Investment of Hong Kong as the vehicle, whose main registered
shareholder is Abdul Rashid Manaff, lawyer for Halim as well
as for the Renong Group. With NSC shares as the only collateral,
the banks lent out RM3 billion to Hottick to take over NSC.
The vital question in this scandal
is: Why have the lending banks sold the RM3-billion loans to
Danaharta for a nominal RM4, instead of taking steps to recover
the money from the real borrower and investor Halim Saad, who
must have stood as a personal guarantor to these loans?
The option taken by the banks
is all the more puzzling when Halim happens to be one of the
most prominent businessmen in this country. He is the controlling
shareholder of the Renong Group, one of the largest and most
powerful conglomerates in Malaysia, having some 10 listed companies
under its umbrella.
Surely, Halim is worth billions,
and is quite capable of repaying the debts, at least substantially
if not fully. Why have the banks decided to forego this wonderful
option for a hopeless one, which is recovery through Danaharta,
which can do nothing other than selling the worthless NSC shares?
By Danaharta's own admission,
Hottick shareholders' investment is subject to a complete write-off.
By virtually writing off these loans when the option to recover
them through the guarantors is still feasible, the management
of these lending banks have committed an unforgivable sin, and
have betrayed the interests of their shareholders. Which sane
banker would have dared to do that?
Government influence
To understand the intrigue of
this scandal, one has to recognise two facts.
Firstly, these lending banks,
Malayan Banking, Bank Bumiputra, RHB and Commerce Asset, are
subject to direct or indirect government control or influence,
through shareholdings and other connections. And in this country,
the wishes of the political masters can be interpreted as commands,
as far as these banks are concerned.
Secondly, Halim Saad is no ordinary
businessman. He is generally considered as proxy for the financial
interests of the ruling leadership, as apparent from the fact
that his Renong Group is usually given preference to take on
government contracts and privatised projects. And again in this
country, it may not be surprising that he is recognised among
banking circles as someone out of bounds to the pursuers of debts.
Under these circumstances, a
simple political directive from the top may be all that was needed
to persuade the banks to let Danaharta take over the loans at
a nominal price in exchange for the privilege of writing off
these bad loans by annual instalments over a comfortably long
period, as has happened. (Incidentally, by what authority or
under what legal basis were these banks allowed to write off
the bad loans by instalments over a prolonged period?)
As for Danaharta's claim that
Malaysian taxpayers only lose RM4 in this fiasco, this is totally
false. By letting Halim off scot-free, his RM3 billion losses
are then transferred to these four banks, some of which are wholly
or partially owned by the Malaysian government (taxpayers). Hence,
the taxpayers are shouldering a substantial amount of this RM3
billion loss, and the balance is borne by corporate and individual
shareholders of the respective banks, many of whom are ordinary
citizens.
Questionable conduct
The second part of this scandal
is the questionable conduct under which these loans were given
out in the first place. The net asset of National Steel was found
to be only one quarter of the price paid for by Halim at the
time of takeover, as calculated from the data published by AWSJ.
And with NSC's poor track record of profits and difficult financial
position then, NSC should have been taken over at a discount,
not at a whopping premium to its net asset, if at all any taking
over this concern was considered wise.
The lending banks had therefore
blundered in agreeing to accept the grossly over-valued NSC shares
as the only collateral, and in failing to evaluate the risks
involved. But how could these banks have erred by such big margin,
considering their formidable cumulative expertise in project
evaluation and lending? And how could any banker be so daring
and foolhardy as to commit such a huge sum on such precarious
terms?
The only plausible explanation
is the hidden hand of politics again, considering Halim's closeness
to the centre of political power in this country. This of course
does not preclude the additional possibility of criminal improprieties
on all parties concerned: the lenders, the borrowers and even
the vendors (who sold the NSC shares to Halim), in view of the
strangeness of these transactions.
As the Malaysian taxpayers and
public investors are the real losers in this colossal scandal,
doesn't the government owe the people of this country a full
explanation?
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