Entity Dossier
entity

Rob Cameron

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

"The new Forestry Corporation was originally going to start functioning in September 1986, but it was held up by parallel work being done in other parts of the public service. The ideas in Gibbs’ model of a state-owned enterprise, operating under the Companies Act with staff who weren’t civil servants, fed into work also under way at the Treasury, led by Rob Cameron, Graham Scott and other officers, and at the State Services Commission, particularly after Roderick Deane took over as chairman on 1 April 1986.[42](private://read/01jrsfvkjy84rkprtbz9amfvj8/#rw-num-note-477308-556173400-42) It made sense to handle the state’s other commercial activities — such as electricity, Telecom and State Coal — in the same way.[43](private://read/01jrsfvkjy84rkprtbz9amfvj8/#rw-num-note-477308-556173400-43) Complicated legislative changes were required, which set back the new dawn until 1 April 1987."

Source:Serious Fun

"Alongside Gibbs and Richwhite, two Fay, Richwhite men, Rob Cameron, a former senior Treasury official, and Steve Walker (‘Wakka’), a young thruster, rounded off the core of the team. For a while they called themselves the ‘Steam Team’, after a local brew in San Francisco (Anchor Steam) which they’d drunk in large quantities on American visits. In May 1989, a few months into their quest for Telecom, Gibbs was stunned to learn that Michael Fay had successfully obtained a 30 per cent stake in the Bank of New Zealand for Capital Markets, a public company Fay, Richwhite controlled. Richwhite remembers Gibbs yelling, ‘Why the hell did you want to buy a bloody bank?’ ‘He rang up a few hours later to apologise and said it was an amazing deal, well done; but Gibbsie’s first reaction was right.’ It emerged that the BNZ was laden with bad debts, mostly in Australia, making the investment a sour one."

Source:Serious Fun

"Gibbs and Richwhite pared back the Telecom task to its essentials. Rob Cameron’s team carried out a very detailed and robust valuation exercise; Richwhite thought they’d have to pay at least $3 billion, a lot more than their resources. The primary object, then, was to find the hungriest potential buyers overseas, since they’d pay the most and thus were most likely to win the tender. Gibbs and Richwhite divided responsibilities; Richwhite dealt with Telefonica in Spain, BT and several American companies, while Gibbs concentrated on other Americans. As early as May 1989 Gibbs had met with Bell Atlantic. He quickly concluded that they and Ameritech, another US firm, were ‘the hottest to trot’."

Source:Serious Fun

Appears In Volumes