Hi Vaughn, Goalie, Confluence, and everybody else, another SA Press article: "Tough year ahead for new De Beers boss Nicky O"
Vaughn, thanks kindly for your comments and your information which are very highly valued.
Just following up on the Mail and Guardian (an SA paper with an excellent Web site) articles I posted:
There's another pertinent article entitled "Tough year ahead for new De Beers boss Nicky O" at the Mail and Guardian Web site, from January of this year. The URL is:
mg.co.za
For those who don't have very high bandwidth coming into their office/home, or have slow connectivity, here's the article:
------------------------------------------------------------ ELECTRONIC MAIL&GUARDIAN Johannesburg, South Africa. January 5, 1998
Tough year ahead for new De Beers boss Nicky O
Nicky Oppenheimer takes over De Beers from this week -- during one of the toughest periods in the diamond cartel's history with shares down 40%.
[by] Dan Atkinson in London CHRISTMAS FOR Nicky Oppenheimer, chairman-elect of the De Beers diamond giant, was spent on a farm in South Africa, incommunicado. The affable, bearded 52-year-old had, perhaps wisely, decided to spend his last few days prior to assuming the chairman's burden, out of reach of the world's media.
He ought to have made the most of it. Because, as he knows, De Beers equals diamonds equals big news. Even during periods of relative calm, the gemstone group is the focus of huge public interest. And this not such a period. The nineties has seen a series of major problems for De Beers and the industry over which it presides.
There were the colossal leakages of stones from Russia, the world's second largest producer, and the tortuous negotiations to keep Moscow within the sales cartel. There was recession in the west - terrible for the jewellery trade. There was the Angolan civil war and smuggling of diamonds out of that unhappy country on to the world market, and the spiral of criminality in De Beers's own backyard, South Africa. There was the walk-out from the De Beers cartel of the world's biggest diamond mine, Argyle in Australia.
As these crises were contained, new ones emerged, chiefly the economic meltdown in the Far East and the consequent threat to gem sales in Japan and south-east Asia, which account for more than 40 per cent of all jewellery demand. Cricket-loving Mr Oppenheimer must feel he is facing a faulty bowling machine that has begun slinging him one ball after another - at head height.
Looked at from another angle, of course, the De Beers glass is half full, not half empty. The cartel - which markets about 80 per cent of the world's diamonds and stabilises prices by manipulating supply - has survived the nineties.
De Beers still mines half the world's diamonds by value; the Russians are back on board; overall sales may be down, but the 1997 total of $4.64 billion was not far short of 1996's record $4.834 billion, and the company remains engaged in Angola, even if its attempts to regularise that country's gemstone industry are having mixed results.
Above all, De Beers and its sisters within the Oppenheimer empire - mining group Anglo American (of which Nicky is expected to become chairman in due course) and the Minerals and Resources Corporation (Minorco) - have coasted the transition to majority rule in South Africa without the once-feared confiscatory nationalisation.
Mr Oppenheimer may have hoped for a jollier time in which to take charge, but - in the calm of January 1, his first day in office - he must surely have accepted things could have been a lot worse.
And, if that is the case, one of his most pressing tasks will be to convince the outside world. Shares have dived since the summer by more than 40 per cent in Swiss-franc terms. De Beers has always had fans and devotees in the investment community.
But for those analysts to whom the trend is their friend, De Beers looks old-fashioned, not to say archaic. In the world of "focused" industrial groups, it is part of a sprawling conglomerate whose activities include travel agency, insurance and the wonderfully-quaint Rhodes Fruit Farms, a company vineyard named after founder Cecil John Rhodes and producer of the splendid Boschendal red wine.
In a world of corporate transparency, the Oppenheimer empire is a maze of cross-holdings and subsidiaries. In a world devoted to free markets, De Beers operates a price-fixing cartel on behalf of most of the world's diamond producers.
And - there's no nice way of putting it - in a world devoted to meritocracy, De Beers is now chaired by the son of Harry Oppenheimer (chairman until 1984) and grandson of Sir Ernest Oppenheimer (founder of modern De Beers). Not only that, but the chaps from Kimberley don't even seem remotely bothered by this absence of open competition for the top job. When family man Andrew Buxton took charge of Barclays, the bank's PR machine worked day and night to insist he was there on his own merits.
So contemptuous does De Beers seem of such managerial correctness that Nicky Oppenheimer's official CV, after noting his education (Harrow and Oxford) states: "He joined Anglo American in 1968 as personal assistant to the chairman". Well, he had to start somewhere.
Furthermore, in a mining industry where it is de rigeur for executives to stress their formative experiences at the deep-level workface, Mr Oppenheimer's company biography prefers to note his acceptance of a high award from King Boudewijn of Belgium for services to the industry.
But, as Alan Bond found out to his cost when he tilted at another apparently stuffy, old-boy outfit with African connections - Tiny Rowland's Lonrho - appearances can be deceptive. Mr Oppenheimer may not have worked his way up from a miners' cage, but as head of the company's London-based Central Selling Organisation (CSO) since 1985, he has had a far from easy time.
The CSO is as important to De Beers as its mines - perhaps even more so. This cartel, run round the corner from Hatton Garden, is the instrument through which De Beers controls the flow of diamonds on to world markets to prevent a glut of gemstone jewellery and a consequent price collapse. And some of the toughest times in its history have occurred during the 12 years since 1985.
The first recession had hit sales and, hardly were prices recovering, than a renewed bout of disorder in South Africa intensified international isolation of the Pretoria regime. The CSO, with its Rhodesian roots, was uncomfortably exposed. The fashion for cartel-busting had even infected such bastions of "managed capitalism'' as the European Commission. Roaring economic growth in the late eighties raised the spectre of secondary stockpiles of diamonds threatening the CSO's grip.
But much worse was to follow. Bust followed boom; the Soviet Union - a reliable partner of the CSO, on Lenin's principle of "when amongst wolves, howl like a wolf" - collapsed, to be replaced by rogue capitalism and wholesale diamond smuggling; Argyle grumbled ever-more audibly about De Beer's supposed failure to prop up the value of the sort of cheaper stones in which it specialised.
In the event, the Russians were kept on board - after a year in which De Beers effectively suspended their CSO membership - and Argyle was allowed to jump ship. If the proof of the pudding is in the eating, then both these difficult choices have been proved right. There were initial doubts about the worth of the Russian deal, but an in-depth report by London broker T. Hoare on November 27 concluded: "Overall, the deal between the CSO and the Russians is good news for both partners". The report added: "For De Beers it makes clear that the CSO is still very much in control of the rough diamond market".
As for the loss of Argyle, it has at least relieved the CSO of the obligation to buy the mine's stones and given De Beers an excuse to allow prices at the lower end of the market to sink by more than half. The fate of Argyle's products on the open market has, in addition, given De Beers a not-unwelcome opportunity to demonstrate to would-be deserters the difficulties of life outside the CSO fold.
That T. Hoare report, while recommending De Beers shares as a buy, marked Ashton mining - Argyle's co-owner with giant Rio Tinto - as a sell, bringing, no doubt, a grim smile to the face of De Beers chiefs in London.
Detractors will suggest Nicky Oppenheimer cannot take all the credit for the Russian deal or for the masterly retreat from Argyle.
But one can be sure he would be taking the blame had either of these crises been called wrongly. Anyone who has faced down the simultaneous wrath of the Australians and the Russians - two nations with whom it is inadvisable to enter a Mr Angry competition - is reasonably well-equipped to navigate the storms blowing from the Far East, and to handle looming negotations with diamond newcomer Canada.
Some expect him radically to trim down the sprawling empire, and concentrate on extraction. Should this be true, his Christmas sojourn may have been more of a farewell tour than a holiday.
-- Mail&Guardian, January 5, 1998.
------------------------------------------------------------------ [End of Mail and Guardian article]
Note to all: the above article is actually linked from the original Mail and Guardian article I posted. FYI, that Mail and Guardian is available both in print as a leading article by Mungo Soggot in the Vol 14 No. 22, June 5 to 11, 1998 Mail and Guardian, entitled "De Beers hijacked rival diamond mine" and also on the Web under the heading "Canadians in diamond dispute with De Beers -- A Canadian mining company is locked in battle with De Beers for rights to an unexpected diamond find in Northern Province. Caught in the middle is minerals minister Penuell Maduna." The URL for the latter, which I've already posted, is mg.co.za
Nempela |