Thanks rohheck.....
  It sounds like you could substitute Goldman Sachs for Kinross..... and not be very far off (below :-) I still think there is an elephant hiding on "Railroad" and the few results are NOT THAT BAD :-) Regards
  2:30p EST Thursday, December 2, 1999
  Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:
  Here's an important story from today's Financial  Times examining the Ashanti Gold disaster and  particularly the role played by its banker, Goldman  Sachs, which helped put Ashanti in the soup and then  made a bundle bailing the company out, minus a good  deal of its innards. Note the interest ascribed to  the Bank of England and to all parties involved --  an interest in keeping the gold price down.
  Please post this as seems useful.
  CHRIS POWELL, Secretary Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
  * * * 
  HOW GOLDMAN SACHS HELPED RUIN AND THEN DISMEMBER ASHANTI GOLD
  By Lionel Barber and Gillian O'Connor  The Financial Times, London  December 2, 1999
  On Friday, October 1, a worried Mark Keatley,  finance director of Ashanti, the Ghanaian gold  mining company, flew from Accra for a crisis meeting  in London. Mr. Keatley knew his company was in  trouble, but he was about to discover that things  were a great deal worse than he had feared. 
  Mr Keatley was carrying a 3-inch stack of papers.  The papers summarised several thousand derivatives  contracts Ashanti had entered with 17 banks,  including Goldman Sachs, the company's main  financial adviser. 
  Six days before, the European central banks had  announced they were limiting sales and loans of  gold. The price of gold, which had been falling  steadily since spring, suddenly surged, rising from  $269 an ounce to $307 over the week. 
  On the face of it, a rising gold price should have  benefited one of the world's biggest gold producers.  But the papers Mr. Keatley was carrying told a  different story. For Ashanti, aided by Goldman, had  for months been placing a huge bet on gold prices  continuing to fall. 
  Ashanti was not the only one in trouble. Goldman  Sachs' multiple roles as corporate adviser to  Ashanti, seller of over-the-counter financial  derivatives, and trader in the bullion market were  about to converge in a way that was to test not only  the bank's expertise but its reputation. 
  The full extent of the crisis began to emerge that  Friday evening at Goldman Sachs' headquarters in  Fleet Street. With Mr. Keatley's agreement, Goldman  secretly ran Ashanti's trading positions -- over  2,500 in all -- on a computer model. 
  The results were shocking. Ashanti's "hedge book" of  derivatives contracts was deeply in the red. If the  17 banks that were its "hedge counterparties"  demanded the cash deposits they were entitled to,  Ashanti would go into default. Ashanti would also  squeeze the bullion market in closing all its  contracts because it would need to purchase gold. 
  Over the next few days, under the watchful eye of  the Bank of England, an extraordinary sequence of  events unfolded as the banks, led by Goldman Sachs,  sought to rescue Ashanti and prevent a crisis in the  bullion market. The effort was successful, but it  left lingering questions among rival banks in the  City about Goldman's role. 
  Ashanti was built up on the century-old Obuasi mine  in Ghana. In 1994 it became the first black African  firm to list on the London Stock Exchange. Thanks to  the charm and political connections of its boss, Sam  Jonah, the company expanded rapidly through  acquisitions in other African countries. 
  Goldman became the main corporate adviser to Ashanti  in 1996. Like other investment banks, Goldman  allowed the two sides of its operations -- the  private advisory arm and the public trading  operation -- to deal with the same client. 
  It imposed safeguards to prevent confidential  information passing across the "Chinese wall" from  private to public. This arrangement was subject to  constant monitoring by a "control room" of  compliance officers and corporate lawyers. 
  In the case of Ashanti, Goldman's special place in  the bullion market made these arrangements highly  complicated. Goldman sold a wide range of financial  derivatives to gold companies. It was the leading  member of a so-called "big four" of investment banks  with which Ashanti traded. The others were Credit  Suisse Financial Products, Societe Generale of  France, and UBS of Switzerland. 
  For Ashanti, derivatives were much more than an  insurance against a falling gold price -- they were  a source of profit and cash. This was important for  Ashanti, which had a heavily indebted balance sheet,  partly because it had been forced to borrow to  finance acquisitions rather than issue equity. 
  The main reason for this was that neither of  Ashanti's two principal shareholders -- the Ghanaian  government and Lonmin, the rump company originating  from Tiny Rowland's empire -- wanted to have their  stakes in the company diluted. 
  Sam Jonah boasted that Ashanti had "earned" more  than $700 million by using derivatives to make  forward sales of its future gold output. As long as  the gold price was falling, Ashanti was able to make  a profit from the gap between the current and future  price. By the middle of 1999, the company had "pre- sold" some 50 percent of its reserves. 
  But when Europe's central banks intervened on  September 26, Ashanti's hedge book suddenly turned  from an asset into a crushing liability. And as its  derivatives positions spiralled into loss, its  counterparties started to demand cash deposits --  known as margin calls. At the end of June, Ashanti's  hedge book had a positive value of $290 million. In  early October, it was $570 million in loss, and  there were margin calls pending of $270 million. 
  The dramatic deterioration in Ashanti's financial  position was being closely watched by Goldman's  derivatives salesmen. But they did not know that  their colleagues in Goldman's advisory team were  also taking an active interest in Ashanti's affairs. 
  For over a year advisers led by Richard Campbell- Breeden had been working on a possible merger  between Ashanti and its shareholder Lonmin. But Mr.  Campbell-Breeden had not yet fully grasped the  implications of Ashanti's financial hedging  activities. 
  "We thought that if the gold price went up it was  good for Ashanti because it enhanced its long-term  value," says Mr. Campbell-Breeden, "We did not  appreciate that it could produce a short-term  liquidity crisis." 
  The truth dawned when he was told of Ashanti's  looming cash crunch by Ron Beller, co-head of fixed  income, currency, and commodity sales for Goldman in  Europe. Mr. Beller told Mr. Campbell-Breeden that J.  Aron, Goldman's commodity trading subsidiary, would  soon have the right to make margin calls. 
  Mr. Campbell-Breeden immediately called Mr. Keatley  in Accra. Mr. Keatley assured him there was "no  margin problem." But three days later he called Mr.  Campbell-Breeden at 1 a.m. and modified his  position. There was indeed a margin problem, but he  insisted it was containable. 
  Later that day -- Thursday, September 30 -- Ashanti  issued a statement to the London Stock Exchange,  saying it had reorganised its hedge book. It said  the "management was satisfied that the hedge  portfolio is robust in the current gold market." 
  As the market absorbed news of Ashanti's problems,  Mr. Beller tried to stabilise the company. He  assured Ashanti and Mr. Campbell-Breeden that J.  Aron would temporarily waive its right to margin  calls. Mr. Beller then took on an additional role.  At Ashanti's request, he approached SocGen to inform  the French bank of Goldman's decision to waive  margin calls. At the same time, he informed SocGen  about the merger talks with Lonmin. 
  As Mr. Keatley prepared to fly to London, Goldman  was becoming entangled. 
  First, it was trying to prevent a client from going  bankrupt, with the risk of turmoil in the gold  market. Ashanti's heavy derivatives exposure made  the position more serious because other gold  companies could come under pressure. 
  Second, Goldman had to avoid the suspicion that it  would exploit its access to Ashanti's books in its  trading. Goldman admits this required "extraordinary  measures." Mr. Beller and a few Goldman traders were  operating full-time during the crisis on the  advisory side of the Chinese wall. 
  Third, Goldman had to reconcile its position as  corporate adviser with being Ashanti's principal  counterparty. The former role involved Mr. Beller  not only advising Ashanti and Lonmin on derivatives,  but acting as an intermediary with 16 banks. By its  own admission, Goldman found these multiples roles  extremely hard to manage. It created special  confidentiality agreements for several people from  Goldman's trading side before they were seconded to  Ashanti. It also kept the Bank of England informed. 
  Over the weekend of October 2 and 3, Goldman led  frantic efforts to sort out Ashanti's hedge book and  persuade the hedge counterparties not to make  immediate margin calls. There was a brief break from  negotiations on Sunday as some of those involved  watched a football match, in which Chelsea beat  Manchester United 5-0. 
  Linklaters, the law firm, helped in negotiations  with the "big four," some of which were wary about  agreeing to a moratorium on margin calls without  similar commitments from others. On Monday evening,  most counterparties met in Fleet Street. Others took  part by telephone. Later one executive from  Westdeutsche Landesbank was tracked down on his  honeymoon in Australia. He was told his bank had an  exposure of $3 million -- 10 times the amount he had  believed. 
  After agreeing to a series of temporary standstills  -- and after the appointment of CIBC in place of  Goldman as principal corporate adviser to Ashanti --  the 17 banks extended the moratorium to a three-year  margin holiday. But they extracted a price: the  right to acquire 15 percent of Ashanti's equity  through cheap warrants issued by an offshore  subsidiary of the company. 
  Ashanti was saved, although the Lonmin bid  ultimately failed because the Ghanaian government  was determined not to lose control. But one month  later, questions remain over the role of Goldman.  Many involved pay tribute to its skill in resolving  the crisis. But some rivals remain concerned about  Goldman's privileged access to information. 
  One complaint that went as far as the Bank of  England concerned a large trade executed by Goldman  in the middle of the crisis. Some rivals believe it  traded gold heavily at $325 an ounce in an effort to  extricate both itself and clients from derivative  liabilities. 
  Goldman agrees that it traded heavily at $325 on  Monday, October 4. But the bank insists it was  trading options on behalf of clients, rather than  spot trading for itself. Any information used for  trading was gained from its own exposure to Ashanti,  as well as market knowledge. 
  The bank says it offered to resign as corporate  adviser to Ashanti several times, but Ashanti  resisted. As a compromise, Goldman says it  encouraged Ashanti to appoint CIBC as its lead  financial adviser in charge of discussions with the  other banks, as soon as possible. 
  With hindsight, some Goldman executives admit that  some of the derivatives it sold Ashanti may not have  been ideal for a heavily-indebted company. But it  argues that the deals were "client-driven  transactions" -- the responsibility of Ashanti's  management. 
  Wherever responsibility lies, the result is beyond  dispute. Ashanti is heavily in debt, and dependent  on the goodwill of its banks. In the words of one  person involved, the company is "a prisoner on the  run." 
  -END-
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