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Fay and Richwhite

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Identity & CultureFree Market Conviction from Regulation Experience
Strategic PatternDiscontinuity Hunting as Core Strategy
Competitive AdvantageStructural Value Recognition Over Market Timing
Cornerstone MovePrivatization Partnership Arbitrage
Capital StrategyIntellectual Freedom Through Financial Independence
Signature MoveWalk Away as Negotiation Weapon
Signature MoveCash Preservation as Freedom Doctrine
Cornerstone MoveZero-Money Leveraged Takeovers
Signature MoveHands-Off Management Through Trusted Operators
Relationship LeverageRelationship Leverage in Government Asset Sales
Operating PrincipleManagement Avoidance as Operational Principle
Signature MoveSingle A4 Sheet Analysis
Risk DoctrineRisk Elimination Over Risk Taking
Decision FrameworkPsychology Over Numbers in Deals
Signature MovePartner Selection Over Capital

Primary Evidence

"Gibbs and Farmer called Fay and Richwhite in early 1989: ‘We think we should buy Telecom. There’s a huge play here, we can probably get it for a good price, but we can’t do it ourselves; we’d love to work with you.’ Gibbs said that he’d handle the deal from their end; after a short discussion at the other end, Richwhite was nominated as their leader."

Source:Serious Fun

"Gibbs was happy now. As September 1993 drew near, when Freightways and Midavia Holdings had to buy their 224 million Telecom shares from the Americans at the privatisation price of $1.81, the share price was floating upwards towards the $4.00 range. Gibbs’ and Farmer’s pay day arrived when they outlaid around $200 million for their 112 million shares and immediately sold 67.5 million on the open market for $256 million (at an average price of $3.80 a share). They’d made more than $50 million instantly and still retained 50 million shares, with a market value of $210 million. Gibbs was convinced these shares would continue to rise in value; Fay and Richwhite, who had other pressing calls on their money, sold down their shareholding more rapidly.[41](private://read/01jrsfvkjy84rkprtbz9amfvj8/#rw-num-note-477273-050103421-41) Brilliant negotiations in 1990 and the insistence of a second round of restructuring in 1992 to set the company back on track had produced the highlight in a successful career of deal making. Real money is often made at the point of discontinuities: when seismic shifts occur in the economy, such as from a regulated environment to a deregulated one, or from state enterprise to privatisation. Such conditions provide the opportunity for a few smart entrepreneurs who are in the right place at the right time to prosper extraordinarily. But, as the purchasers of the Bank of New Zealand, New Zealand Steel and the Central North Island Forest discovered, there was nothing automatic about profiting from privatisations."

Source:Serious Fun

Appears In Volumes