Leon Black step downs as Apollo CEO after review of Epstein ties
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[January 26, 2021] By
Mike Spector and Chibuike Oguh
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Leon Black said on Monday he would step down as
chief executive at Apollo Global Management Inc, following an
independent review of his ties to the late financier and convicted sex
offender Jeffrey Epstein.
While Black, whose net worth is pegged by Forbes at $8.2 billion, will
remain Apollo's chairman, his decision to step down illustrates how
doing business with Epstein weighed on the reputation of one of Wall
Street's most prominent investment firms. Black co-founded Apollo 31
years ago.
Apollo said it plans to change its corporate governance structure, doing
away with shares with special voting rights that currently give Black
and other co-founders effective control of the firm.
The independent review, conducted by law firm Dechert LLP, found Black
was not involved in any way with Epstein's criminal activities. Black
paid Epstein $158 million for advice on tax and estate planning and
related services between 2012 and 2017, according to the review.
Black, 69, said that although the review confirmed he did not engage in
any wrongdoing, he "deeply" regretted his involvement with Epstein.
"I hope that the results of the review, and related enhancements ...
will reaffirm to you that Apollo is dedicated to the highest levels of
transparency and governance," Black wrote in a note to Apollo fund
investors. He will step down as CEO no later than July 31.
Apollo co-founder Marc Rowan, 58, will take over as CEO.
Rowan has often kept a low-key profile compared with Apollo's other
co-founder, Joshua Harris, 56, and spearheaded many initiatives that
turned Apollo into a credit investment giant, including the permanent
capital base the firm enjoys through its ties to reinsurer Athene
Holding Ltd.
The revelations of Black's ties to Epstein took a toll on Apollo, which
Black turned into one of the world's largest private equity groups.
Apollo executives had warned in October that some investors had paused
their commitments to the buyout firm's funds as they awaited the
review's findings.
Apollo shares are down 1% since the New York Times reported on Oct. 12
that Black paid at least $50 million to Epstein for advice and services,
when most of his clients had deserted him.
Over the same period, shares of peers Blackstone Group Inc, KKR & Co Inc
and Carlyle Group Inc are up 19%, 10% and 23%, respectively.
"We think a large number of (Apollo fund investors) took a 'pause', and
we believe the outcome (of the review) and changes today will cause most
of them to return to allocating to future Apollo funds," Credit Suisse
analysts wrote in a research note.
Apollo shares jumped 4% to $47.65 in after-hours trading on Monday.
"We continue to follow these events closely and will evaluate how Apollo
addresses its issues," the California State Teachers' Retirement System,
one of the largest U.S. public pension funds and an Apollo investor,
said in a statement.
Epstein was found dead at age 66 in August 2019 in a Manhattan jail,
while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges for allegedly abusing
dozens of underage girls in Manhattan and Florida from 2002 to 2005. New
York City's chief medical examiner ruled that the cause of death was
suicide by hanging.
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Leon Black, Chairman,
CEO and Director, Apollo Global Management, LLC, speaks at the
Milken Institute's 21st Global Conference in Beverly Hills,
California, U.S. May 1, 2018. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
FALLING OUT
Black previously said he had paid millions of dollars to Epstein, but the exact
size of his payments was revealed for the first time on Monday. Beyond the $158
million in payments, Black made two loans to Epstein totaling $30.5 million in
early 2017.
Dechert said in its report that Black's social ties with Epstein, who built his
fortune by endearing himself to powerful figures in high society, went back to
the mid-1990s.
Epstein won Black's trust by resolving an estate tax issue for him in 2012
potentially worth at least $500 million, the report said. He ended up advising
Black on various aspects of his personal financial affairs, from his family
office and airplane to his yacht and artwork.
Black believed that Epstein provided advice over the years that conferred
between $1 billion and $2 billion in value to him, according to the Dechert
report. Black said in his note to investors that he had paid Epstein a fee
equivalent to 5% of the value he generated on an after-tax basis, and not tied
to hourly rates.
Black and Epstein's relationship deteriorated after Epstein failed to repay $20
million of the loans and Black refused to pay tens of millions of dollars in
fees that Epstein demanded, according to the Dechert report.
They severed ties in October 2018, according to the report. Black knew Epstein
had been convicted in Florida a decade earlier for soliciting prostitution from
a minor, the Dechert report said, but there was no evidence suggesting Black had
knowledge of the other alleged crimes before they were publicly reported in late
2018, culminating in Epstein's July 2019 arrest.
On Monday, Black pledged $200 million toward "initiatives that seek to achieve
gender equality and protect and empower women," as well as helping survivors of
domestic violence, sexual assault and human trafficking.
Apollo said it would pursue a "one share, one vote" corporate governance
structure that would do away with shares with special voting rights. It said the
move could qualify it for listing on the S&P Global indices.
Apollo also said it would seek to give its board more authority to oversee its
business, eroding the power of its executive committee led by Black.
The board will be expanded to include four new independent directors, including
Avid Partners founder Pamela Joyner and physician and scientist Siddhartha
Mukherjee, Apollo said. Apollo co-Presidents Scott Kleinman and James Zelter
will join the board and take on increased responsibility running day-to-day
operations.
Apollo had about $433 billion in assets under management as of the end of
September.
(Reporting by Mike Spector and Chibuike Oguh; Additional reporting by Lawrence
Delevigne and Jessica DiNapoli in New York; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall, Leslie
Adler and Kim Coghill)
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