Israel's tycoons are
ailing, who will buy their assets?
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[October 05, 2016]
By Ari Rabinovitch and Tova Cohen
TEL
AVIV (Reuters) - They once pulled the strings of Israel's economy, but
now the country's most influential tycoons are reeling under a popular
backlash against corporate power and selling assets in a regulatory
squeeze.
For investors willing to wade into a market in the middle of a dramatic
overhaul, there is a rare opportunity to snatch up companies, from
insurers to oil refineries, at bargain prices.
About a decade ago, as Israel's corporate debt market was just getting
started, there was little oversight and risk taking was encouraged. A
small number of tycoons used debt to expand their conglomerates into
tiered corporate structures with cascading control over huge chunks of
the economy.
By 2010, 10 large business groups controlled 30 percent of the market
value of public companies, while 16 controlled half the money in the
entire country.
The following year hundreds of thousands of Israelis took to the streets
to protest against the high cost of living, and they pointed their
fingers at the high concentration of corporate power.
"There is no question that in the past, these - let's call them tycoons
- they had personal relationships with the managers or the chairmen of
the banks. And this enabled them to get credit," said Ben-Zion
Zilberfarb, an economics professor at Israel's Bar Ilan University.
After the 2011 protests, the banks started clamping down. When markets
soured, a handful of them were stuck with tremendous debt.
Four years on, high-profile moguls can still feel the heat.
In July, Nochi Dankner, who through holding company IDB controlled
Israel's largest supermarket chain and cellphone operator - Shufersal <SAE.TA>
and Cellcom <CEL.TA> - and other businesses including a small airline,
was sentenced to jail for manipulating share prices to try to save his
crumbling empire.
Diamond dealer Lev Leviev, while busy negotiating a haircut with
debtors, had to pay 550 million shekels ($146 million) from his own
pocket last month to buy control of ailing Russia-focused real estate
firm AFI Development <AFRBb.L> from his holding company Africa Israel
Investments <AFIL01.TA>.
Eliezer Fishman, who controls some of the biggest Israeli retail chains,
a top-selling newspaper and a stake in real estate holding company
Jerusalem Economy <ECJM.TA>, spent last Thursday in court arguing over
his debt of about $1 billion.
Leviev and Fishman declined to comment.
CAVALIER
Zilberfarb pointed to a "domino effect" in the banks' new attitude
toward the tycoons.
The banks had "extended so much credit to one tycoon because they
trusted his abilities and his vision," but he ended up losing money.
They realized this may happen to another, and then another, until they
stopped lending, he said.
At the same time, the government passed a law to break up the
concentration of power that is now forcing conglomerates to sell
billions of dollars in assets, and the time they have is running out.
Cavalier behavior among the tycoons was noticeable beyond the
overleveraging, like in generous dividend policies, said Ofir Naor, a
lawyer representing bondholders in a number of debt restructuring talks
with Israeli conglomerates.
"Dividend decisions were made without any debate. The controlling
shareholder came, told a story, and everyone said 'amen'," Naor said.
"Today the hurdle is much higher."
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Nochi Dankner (C), the chairman of indebted Israeli conglomerate IDB
Holding Corp, speaks to members of the media after a court hearing
at the district court in Tel Aviv December 17, 2013. REUTERS/Amir
Cohen/File Photo
In 2013, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pushed through legislation
known as the concentration law that forces conglomerates to chose
between control over banks and other financial institutions or
non-financial companies, like refineries or real estate firms.
The law gives them until the end of 2019 and it was estimated that 40
firms worth 80-100 billion shekels would come up for sale. But there has
been only one major deal so far: China's Bright Food [SHMNGA.UL] bought
control of foodmaker Tnuva for $1.1 billion.
Two major insurance companies are on the market. Billionaire Yitzhak
Tshuva's Delek Group chose to keep its energy assets over Phoenix
Holding. Argentinian businessman Eduardo Elsztain, who now controls IDB,
the former vehicle of convicted tycoon Dankner, is looking to sell Clal
Insurance.
Neither have been able to finalize a deal, both saying stepped up
regulation scared away investors.
"It's funny to be in a process that we have to sell in three years, but
nobody can achieve that," Elsztain said.
IDB appointed JPMorgan to find a buyer for its 55 percent stake in Clal
following two failed attempts to sell to Chinese investors. Under an
agreement with the regulator it may have to sell off 5 percent of the
company every four months.
"A forced sale will make a tremendous loss to shareholders," Elsztain
said at a news conference.
Two weeks ago, businessman Zadik Bino sold a small fraction of his 23
percent stake in refiner Paz Oil <PZOL.TA> for 8.2 million shekels to an
unnamed financial body.
His lawyer David Hodak confirmed to Reuters it was a "symbolic" first
sale and that Bino as of now planned to reduce his stake in Paz to below
5 percent so he could keep his holdings in the First International Bank
of Israel.
Hodak also headed a government committee in 2010 that created new
parameters for how institutional investors could operate in the debt
market after the global crisis.
He argues that government interference has since gotten out of hand.
"Foreign investors look at what happened to Israel and are seeing many
changes, over-regulation," he said. "Yes, we have opportunities but I
don't think that we create appetite for foreign investors."
(Editing by Jeffrey Heller and Peter Graff)
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