Muldoon
Strategic Concepts & Mechanics
Primary Evidence
"*Carters was run by a tough old sawmiller, Alwyn Carter, and his two sons. I remember going to their offices and persuading the old man to convert to the Chase Prime Rate, but the boys stepped in. They’d had a long-running fight with my brother Ian over pulp and paper equipment and were keen to take out their frustrations on me. I remember them laughing at me: ‘You’ve got your balls in a knot, Gibbsie, you’ll lose some money; what a joke, ha ha ha.’ ‘All right, you bastards,’ I thought. I went back and told my staff to look at the loan contract and if there is any infraction, the slightest irregularity, we’ll call in the loan. And sure enough, not long after they were one day late with an interest payment. I called in the loan. They went berserk. No one else would lend them money, since no one could make any profit lending money under the conditions Muldoon had created. The Carters got on to Chase Manhattan in the US: here they were with the top credit rating in New Zealand, and this little bugger in Auckland* *was calling in their loan! I got reverberations from Australia but nobody stopped me. It was one of those satisfying victories, going back to the Carter brothers and saying, ‘Tough titties, boys: pay up.’ And they did.*"
"*Alan Gibbs first really entered my consciousness one day during the Muldoon era, probably early 1984, when Michael Fay returned to the office after a lunch with the deputy prime minister, Jim McLay, and a few businessmen. He was fizzing. Apparently Gibbs had let rip at McLay* *about Muldoon, it was an amazing situation; he just went for it. Michael was impressed, shocked, and in awe of his courage. Then a few years later I saw it myself at an informal meeting of business heavy-hitters a couple of days after the 1987 share market crash. Chase, Equiticorp and those sorts of businesses were all going downstairs and someone, maybe Alan Hawkins, called a meeting. They wanted us to stump up $20 million each to support the market, like JP Morgan had once done in the US. I sat there listening. Then suddenly Gibbs just launched into it. ‘The notion that you can throw a few million together to support a market is just nonsense; you guys have been cowboys for your investors and you’re getting what you deserve.’ When he goes for it, he combines the precision of a scalpel with the power of a chainsaw. The delivery is brutal, but what he said was right on point. So I knew Alan Gibbs was razor sharp and terribly impressive.*[10](private://read/01jrsfvkjy84rkprtbz9amfvj8/#rw-num-note-477273-050103421-10)"