Thursday, July 11, 2013

18 and Counting: Plum Ambassador Posts Go to Obama Campaign Bundlers | CNS News

My Orchids.  With a Bundler, with a B like in Bee. 
That makes a Bundle-Bee. Photo ET

18 and Counting: Plum Ambassador Posts Go to Obama Campaign Bundlers | CNS News

I''m counting and counting. Is there one missing?

OK, this is just a distraction from other Luxembourg stories. Like being orphans when the nanny state doesn't have a government anymore.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Luxembourg Crisis. Mr. Juncker’s Fantasia - Genesis of a Downfall

My Orchids, Phalaneopsis. Three scandals cannot be whitewashed. Photo ET


Luxembourg Crisis. Mr. Juncker’s Fantasia - Genesis of a Downfall

I would characterize Mr. Juncker’s career, that when he graduated from College where he had majored as Prime Minister, he became Prime Minister. Of course it is a little cartoonish, but it helps to understand the story. Being the Prime Minister at a very young age carries some problems. Such as, what is your career perspective, except to slide from boring reelection to boring reelection in a boring small country? The therapy is a European ambition, in that vast field of unelected European positions.

His dream was to become the first European President. Mr. Sarkozy killed that. Maybe become President of the European Commission? Not good enough. The second Prize was acceptable though: President of the Euro Group, or “Mr. Euro”. He would cumulate this job with his duties as Prime Minister of Luxembourg. Any military commander knows that you can’t command the whole and also a part of the whole. Something had to give, and that was to care about his Luxembourg duties. He governed superficially as an absentee Prime Minister, something the Luxembourg voter tolerated. Of course, if you don’t pay attention, you pay a price. In his case he pays for a succession of scandals during his tenure.

The first scandal was a real estate project combined with a "National Stadium" in a wetland zone. Developers, politicians and environmentalists got into a brawl that killed the project. An effort to investigate related threats and wrongdoings was voted down in Parliament. Public opinion sizzled.

The second scandal was the sale by Luc Frieden, Minister of Finance, of 35% of Cargolux, the national all cargo airline to Qatar Airways for $117.5 million. Qatar also bought two banks, KBL and BIL, and other arrangements were made for a rapprochement of Al Jazeera with SES, the Luxembourg satellite company. Pricing and those strange alliances brought up suspicions, but an effort to investigate wrongdoings was voted down again in Parliament. Public opinion sizzled more.

Then emerged a third scandal. Actually it started with a benign revelation by Mr. Juncker himself. He revealed that about four years ago, the chief of SREL, the Luxembourg spying agency, had secretly recorded a conversation both had. With the help of a gadget disguised as a wrist watch. Mr. Juncker, the political boss of the agency learned about it through a mole he had placed into the agency, but did not take legal action. To me the story was broken by Mr. Juncker to distract from scandal one and two, according to the wag the dog strategy, where you put your kitchen on fire to distract from the fire in the garage. Parliament got involved and lo and behold, didn’t dare to vote a third time against an official inquiry. A Parliamentary investigation was set up. What was considered as a low risk inquiry was however revealing very soon that the spying agency, under benign neglect, had taken a life of its own. Feeding into that inquiry were court proceedings in a 25 year old series of terrorist attacks on Luxembourg infrastructure, still unresolved but with suspicions that actually it was a plot by security forces, including episodes of the spying agency’s involvement.

The cumulative effect of those scandals have created an atmosphere of distrust in the government. The Parliamentary inquiry about the spying agency’s wrongdoing is so damaging for Mr. Juncker, its formal political chief, that the emerging consensus is that Mr. Juncker has to go and that the present Christian Social / Socialist coalition government will not survive.


The final outcome might be known as of today. Though an outdated and murky Constitution makes it very hard to predict which one of the many options it leaves open, will be adopted. A free interpretation could be that Parliament be dissolved and new elections held by October.



Friday, July 5, 2013

Andy and Frank Schleck's Career Building

    My Orchids. Vanda Maillot Jaune. Photo ET.

Andy and Frank Schleck's Career Building

Many, many years ago, I was dreaming myself of winning the Tour de France. Let me insert a picture here to lend some credibility to 

Emile Lamberty, Pierre Meyer, Marcel Holtgen, Egide Thein as members of UC Dippach, time ago

what I'm saying. But after a while, I postponed that ambition, and though I haven't completely given up hope yet to one day win the Tour, I have to consider those critical voices in my family that argue that a grandfather never won the Tour. Defeatists in my family! But I can still lecture the Schlecks I hope!

I did so in 2009, when it was obvious that what the Schleck brothers needed was a strong team, and learning from the Master. And the biggest Teacher at the time was Lance Armstrong and the best team was Radio Shack. In my analysis, it combined the most efficient training program, the best biking technologies, a scientific approach to diet and life style. Of course no one knew at the time that Armstrong's success also included a toxic component, prescribed by the famous doctor. As much as Armstrong is to blame, the supervisory bodies of UCI and other sports authorities are to blame for failing to detect the wrongdoings. Was it permissiveness, or willful blindness or another reason? Those  certainly failed the public too.

I still argue that joining Radio Shack by then would have been the right move for the 2010 season. Indeed you could have joined the team, and maybe when confronted with a culture of doping, decide to either participate or reject it. That's what grownups do.

For Frank in any case, convicted and barred for doping for one year, it wouldn't have made a difference, right?

Finally,after losing two years, an altered version of the once great Radio Shack team emerged from the Leopard constellation. But to me it looked like a Luxembourg "me too" shadow of the great Brand. Mr. Becca, the Luxembourg builder and sports fan being the new engine behind the team. The little engine that could not. And things went the way they went.

Today, Frank Schleck at age 33 has no team when his ban expires on July 15th. He is not happy, and Andy Schleck is not happy either about his brother's fate. Both Schlecks have to contemplate the obvious solutions: they were dealt a lemon, they should make lemonade.

Which means that the two brothers have to make the best out of their two particular situations. They are no longer linked by the hip. Andy has to show a good result in the Tour, all by himself. Recrimination about his brother's fate does not help. Actually, I would also like to understand the geniuses at the team management, who felt that now was the moment to fire a prime associate, Frank, and demoralize the team in the midst of the one hundredth Tour. Continuing mediocre results will of course disqualify Andy Schleck from the A-list of serious contenders for anything, and that is not a career.

Frank is the equivalent of a 55 year old employee who lost his job. It will take some good luck, help and optimism to get into the saddle again.


Impossible? No, certainly not, given the talent. However the two brothers integrating the same team might just be a wishful possibility. It cannot be a condition anymore.



Thursday, June 27, 2013

A weather balloon for Cargolux

                     My Orchids. Phalneopsis. Photo ET


A weather balloon for Cargolux

Finally, prudently the Cargolux management takes a peek at that other route that suggests that you can achieve profitability by motivating your troops and achieve let's say a 5% increase in enthusiasm. Instead of beating down everyone to achieve 1% in savings. Both strategies carry high multipliers, except in opposite directions.

The weather balloon finally launched by management seems to deliver the right answers to them. Hopefully there won't be too many misinterpretations about the positive reactions, as conclusions will be couched on paper over the days to come. Maybe unions should do the same, just to compare notes on Monday about what was said and how it was meant and how it was understood.

Too bad, those two years of bad feelings before getting there. 



Thursday, June 20, 2013

WSJ: Dolce and Gabbana Convicted of Tax Evasion

    My Orchids. Phalaneopsis "Tax Shelter". Photo ET



Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana were sentenced to 20 months in prison for tax evasion by an Italian court. 20 months in the cabana is no dolce vita. The good news: there will be appeals, and even if that fails, it will be mostly a sentence of "house arrest". However it has been a nightmare for both designers.

It is also a dubious public relations event for Luxembourg. Indeed the tax evasion, or was it "optimization", occurred through a Luxembourg structure, "Gado" holding the company's brands. In the present times of efforts to dismantle tax havens, it is just a prominent example for those who say: see! At first sight you may also wonder, who advised those gentleman? Obviously, they didn't set up the Luxembourg structure by themselves. In which case all those consultants have to worry: how to maintain trust in their expertise? Or, do they have any kind of liability?

And very bluntly comes up the question: are those financial engineering adventures still worth the risks, mostly in view of a universal FATCA, that is bound to be enforced in a matter of years.


There goes the possibility for companies like Dolce and Gabbana to be creative outside fashion. There goes a huge market for the Big Four and other local players. Five years left, but financial engineering and tax rulings clients will desert before that. Proof are the Amazon hearings in the UK and the Apple hearings in the US. And there goes the windfall for tax havens, that will have to struggle to replace an easy source of budgetary revenue.


Saturday, June 8, 2013

PwC's Cargolux report is great literature

    My Orchids. Ghostly Angraecum. Phot ET.


PwC's Cargolux report is great literature
It is said that it is always the victor who writes History when the war is over. I'd similarly observe that he who pays for an "independent" report, is writing the report. Mr. Frieden paid € 200,000 for a report on Cargolux. And indeed, the end product just presented is exactly what the government had ordered. The customer is satisfied. But this is not an investigation, let alone a criminal investigation, it is probably an exercise in "damage control" and it is also history-fiction.

1. The report is a tale of 1001 nights

It's a beautiful story sewn with white thread, where well-known events in Cargolux' past, disparate and random elements, were woven together into one single oriental rug, well smoothed out around the corners . Part of the fiction would have it that a cohesive Cargolux-government team  superbly motivated, but under pressure from the Brussels Commission to accept another shareholder, had identified Qatar Airways as THE ideal strategic partner for Cargolux. Thanks to senior negotiator Mr. Frieden's superior negotiating talents, the big fish was finally pulled heroically on board in 2011, against all odds. The other parts of the fiction are  the embellished elements which have been under suspicion for years: the notion of THE strategic partner and the perilous justification of the privileges attached to BIP's and Luxavantage's preferred stock.

In connection with the choice of Qatar Airways as THE best strategic partner, the term "at the time" is used. This is probably an excuse for the rapid and scandalous failure of the strategy that was so great "at the time." Remember the increase in traffic, tonnage, destinations, revenue, employment to justify THE startegic partner?  However a good strategy to merit its name is not limited to a short moment in time and space. It should stand the test of time, and therefore it has to be a well thought-out plan for the long-term. The strategy of a partnership with Qatar Airways failed, because it wasn't good at any time. The question is, who were those strategists behind the Cargolux decision to engage in this way? Just to make sure to never recommend them to anyone.

The twisted story of BIP Group's beautiful exit as a Cargolux shareholder also became a revised fairy tale: in this variable geometry transaction , BIP's and Luxavantage's preferred shares enjoyed another privilege on top of  being preferred. They were singled out to have earned a 40% capital gain. This was explained at the time as a dividend only available to BIP and Luxavantage. This looked indeed like a magic move, not easy to explain. Don't worry you'll get it. The new explanation is that those shareholders,  determined to leave the company,  were actually deprived  of  the fantastic gains in shareholder value that the arrival of Qatar Airways would bring to Cargolux. In other words, the shareholder who withdraws does not participate in future gains, and therefore loses an opportunity. He must be immediately compensated for that potential loss!  Luxembourg has invented a new form of investment: if you invest zero, so at zero risk, in a company which is projected to pay big dividends, you will be deprived of those gains. That's so old school! According to this new thinking, you'll have to be immediately compensated for your loss of future earnings!

What the report does not say about BIP's withdrawal is that it was not even necessary from the Cargolux point of view, and a waste of the company's resources. But that goes beyond the imagination and the scope of the mission of PwC's report. Despite of a perceived European obligation that the government had to withdraw as a shareholder, which is now an obsolete argument after years of shareholding, fact is that no one had to sell shares to make Qatar Airways a 35% shareholder. It was not even desirable. Logic would have dictated to create new shares for Qatar Airways, to the level representing the 35% coveted. All existing shareholders would have been diluted. But  Cargolux would have had an immediate shot in the arm of $117.5 million, providing a real and alas also the only benefit to the company from the transaction. BIP could have sold its shares to an outside buyer without resorting to the much criticized metamorphoses of preferred shares. Or given the new argument of extraordinary future gains that were forecast "at the time", why not stay invested? I was surprised by the omission of this alternative in an investigation by one of the Big Four, but it is true that the client only wanted a photographic novel where pictures from "at the time" are stitched together. It could not capture the picture of the ghost of an idea that was never contemplated "at the time" by the customer.

The great mystery that was not illuminated by the lights of the report is how come that 35% of Cargolux were valued at only $135 million in 2011. It is a ridiculously low amount  Who did this valuation? It must have been the strategists from before.

Then there is the Wicked Witch in Brussels, the Commission, which is said to have put the Luxembourg government under pressure to sell, because it could be accused of subsidizing Cargolux. Can we ignore these "pressures", please? I would without any hesitation. Elsewhere so many European rules are ignored by France, Germany and others. Examples are the permanent violations of budget deficits regulations, or changing Schengen, or treating many other rules with benign neglect, making them effectively obsolete. It seems that the Cargolux subsidy rule is effectively obsolete too at this moment. And what about foreign governments owning large stakes in European companies. Example at random: Qatar acquired or saved or subsidized Luxembourg's BIL at 90% and KBL at 100%. Why would a bureaucratic Brussels regulator prevent the Luxembourg government from saving one of its core economic activities, air cargo? European subsidiarity principles are weak indeed!

2. The report is an exercise in "damage control"

In any case, the report is an attempt in damage control. To be effective, one should not violate some basic rules.

The first rule is that you cannot undo what was done, you cannot go back. The report moves against this rule, as it revises some former explanations and a posteriori stitches together disparate events in a causal sequence. The appearance is descriptive rather than analytic.  The report paints an idyllic and syncretic view of the new Cargolux, pleasantly describing a large picture, and conveniently avoiding too much analysis. That's impressionism! Which allows for the  superficial conclusion you must have: convey the impression through a reputable third party, without too much analysis or contradiction, that the Cargolux affair was smoothly conducted in the interest of all. You may need to spin the report a bit on the news cycle and the thing goes away.

This violates another rule: avoid falling into the trap of arrogance. We are right there: here is the report, now let's move on. Arrogance always sets the scene for violating another rule: if truth is not served, obstruction and obfuscation are generally worse than the incriminating facts. Hiding things and erasing evidence is not a good idea. Most often this attitude is more expensive and dangerous than presenting the facts openly, all the facts at once, the way things happened. Because the truth will eventually prevail. Do not forget that at the origins of this report were serious questions about the genesis of relations with Qatar Airways, possibly misconduct. If the perception remains that the public has not received all the information in all honesty, the damage control will be seen as an operation of obscuration.

However the operation deserves some respect for staging a diversion. We must pay tribute to a good play when there is one. While presenting  the report we also got the news of the Luxembourg Government's brave response to the European Commission's recommendation (them again), to introduce a toll on Luxembourg highways. This tactics of creating a diversion is often described as "setting fire to the kitchen to hide the fire in the garage." Mr Juncker also applied it when shouting "Fire" by disclosing old illegal tape recordings by Luxembourg's spy agency, the SREL, in order to distract from Cargolux and National Stadium affairs. In our case, the attention immediately turned from Cargolux to the highway tolls, monstrosity that does not even exist, but would highly infuriate even the most docile citizen. However, I would have chosen rather a Friday afternoon to make both announcements to maximize the capabilities of the Luxembourg public's forgetfulness over the weekend.

3. The report is not an investigation either

Remember that initially several members of Parliament were demanding a Parliamentary inquiry on the Qatar Airways deal. However, the House of Representatives voted along party lines to let darkness prevail. And the light was not. There was no criminal investigation either. For there to be an investigation in either case worthy of that name, there needs to be sworn testimony, contradictory hearings and seizure of documents and other evidence and this preferably before anyone can destroy them. But our elected representatives preferred to vote right away that there was no scandal, before gathering the facts. It was the equivalent of the old military firing order, but in reverse: "Fire, Aim, Ready!"


In conclusion, Mr. Frieden has received a medical certificate of complacency. i.e. of good health. He was an actor, sponsor of the report, payer, witness, I guess editor too, investigator and presenter. The whole orchestra. For Cargolux and its employees who are fully aware of their History, there is only one lesson: beware, and draft your own report. 



Monday, June 3, 2013

FT: Luxembourg regulator acts to salvage reputation

    My Orchids. Lonesome regulator in the rain. Photo ET

FT: Luxembourg regulator acts to salvage reputation

Once a reputation is tarnished, repair is a large undertaking.  FT goes into the Petercam and Madoff affairs in Luxembourg, and CSSF's handling thereof. It lays the finger on the dysfunctional relationship between regulation and justice. Madoff investors didn't know they invested with Madofff and that the custodians weren't UBS or HSBC. Investors are still battling. It may take years.

The final quote in the articele is from a business lawyer: "But I wouldn't be inclined to criticize them because we work with them every day". 

Sounds like the source of the evil.