Vancouver Stock Exchange - Street Wire
Garrod named president of Global Securities
APPOINTMENT COMES AMID BROKERAGE FEAR OF WHAT THE SEC MAY HAVE IN STORE
by Stockwatch Business Reporter
Securities lawyer and former VSE listings vice-president Douglas Garrod has a new job. On Friday the 50 year old took over the reigns of Art Smolensky's Global Securities Corp. Mr. Smolensky remains chairman. His appointment as president is Mr. Garrod's first time back in the brokerage side of the industry since resigning as corporate secretary and director of First Vancouver Securities Ltd. nearly 11 years ago. That retreat came amid official allegations in the U.S. in December, 1988, that First Vancouver's principal owners were cronies of ousted Philippines president Ferdinand Marcos and that First Vancouver may have been used to launder money Marcos stole from his homeland. Mr. Garrod takes over at Global from David Chernoff, who resigned as president after just over four years on Aug. 31 to head Chan Buckland's Bolder Investment Partners, Ltd. "In terms of my career, I felt it was time for Doug Garrod to do something different, and the brokerage industry seemed to be the only place where I might be competent to do a half job," Mr. Garrod says. Mr. Garrod has mixed feelings about leaving the law business. "My sense of it was, opportunity only strikes once," he says. Although he will be paid more than what he received as a Gowling Strathy & Henderson lawyer (he declines to provide an estimate of his remuneration), money was not a priority in his decision to leave. More important, he says, was the opportunity of having a greater influence on the local market than that offered as a securities lawyer. As far as compensation is concerned, Mr. Garrod concedes that he expects to receive an interest in Global once he settles in. "It's fair to say that will be open to discussion," he says. Mr. Garrod and Mr. Smolensky are old pals. Their association dates to the mid-1970s, when the pair were classmates at law school in the University of British Columbia. Mr. Smolensky's early projects included founding, while studying law, a chain of camera shops, Lens and Shutter, which he sold to a partner in 1984. While Mr. Smolensky chose the entrepreneurial side of the industry, Mr. Garrod practiced law and sought a career in securities regulation. After graduating in 1976 and articling for a year, Mr. Garrod took a job as deputy director, legal, at the B.C. Securities Commission. In 1981, he joined Worrall Scott & Page. In 1982, at 33, Mr. Garrod was made VSE listings vice-president; it was a position he would hold until 1985 and it was the job in which he probably made his greatest impact on the local market. With the complexity and depth of the VSE's current rules and regulations, it is difficult to imagine that in 1982 the market's guiding documents consisted of one or two pamphlets and a brochure outlining how listings and underwritings take place. Mr. Garrod set about writing the VSE's first formal set of rules and regulations, an accomplishment about which he remains proud. "I was the first person to put all of that into writing, which is actually a significant feat," he says. "All the policies that are there now, most of them are varied from what I did way back when." Mr. Garrod explains that the Vancouver market in the late-1970s was extremely small compared with today, with perhaps probably fewer than two dozen securities lawyers handling legal matters. When companies had problems, they called senior officials directly at the VSE. "There were no rules whatsoever, on how financings were done, how they were priced,
stoppages in trading, those sorts of things," he recalls. Mr. Garrod left the VSE for law firm Campney & Murphy in 1985. In November, 1987, while still at Campney & Murphy, he accepted the senior positions at the newly minted First Vancouver without digging into the identities of the silent partners behind the brokerage. "I made a mistake by not meeting and talking to the major shareholders of the company," he says. Instead, Mr. Garrod took assurances about ownership from New York lawyer Elias Rosenzweig, who also sat on the First Vancouver board. In December, 1988, the BCSC and the VSE announced "an implied connection" between the firm's majority shareholders and Marcos associate Roberto Benedicto, who was indicted in the U.S. two months earlier on racketeering charges. No charges in connection with the affair were ever laid in Canada. In January, 1989, Georgia Pacific Securities took over First Vancouver's accounts and offered employment to First Vancouver principals George Delmas and Fausto (Toti) Mabanta. Mr. Garrod, badly singed by the controversy, resigned his other directorships and focused on securities law. Mr. Delmas and Mr. Mabanta went on to further controversy as Georgia Pacific employees. In 1994, the pair faced a VSE disciplinary hearing in connection with overseas hospital builder Stonewall Resources Ltd. The VSE alleged that upon joining Georgia Pacific in January, 1989, and October that year, Mr. Delmas and Mr. Mabanta accounted for 44 per cent of the market for Stonewall. While these First Vancouver players moved onto the next game, the stolid Mr. Garrod would suffer its legacy. He would be a candidate for the presidency of the VSE in 1995, but would lose to Michael Johnson, the man from Household Finance, in July of that year. The First Vancouver debacle was a painful episode for a former exchange executive whose knowledge of the industry and reputation for integrity were, ironically, part of the reason he was chosen to join First Vancouver. "Personally, I was very much affected by First Vancouver," he says stoically. "I have not been a director of anything public or private since then." While a securities lawyer, Mr. Garrod continued to contribute to the industry, often as a lonely voice calling for measures to improve the market. He did this publicly in several ways, one of which was with his column in Stockwatch, called The Regulators, which he wrote from 1986 to 1997. The column often reflected his bedrock support for the Vancouver exchange. In September, 1993, he made a submission to the Matkin Commission in which he proposed that stock promoters be licenced under the statute. Jim Matkin and the other commission members nodded sagely and politely, and that was about the end of Mr. Garrod's suggestion. "It was seen as ... well, I don't know what it was seen as," he recalls. "It wasn't really dealt with; it certainly wasn't adopted." Instead of adopting what Mr. Garrod sees as a simple and effective means of pulling the plug on miscreants, the commission recommended the creation the position of investor relations, and ordained that they should tell the truth. The result was a regulation that "basically said you shouldn't lie, but it struck me that that was the law in any event," he comments. Global's appointment comes amid concern on the part of many Vancouver brokers that the Securities and Exchange Commission is cracking down on penny-stock activity in the U.S., and that Canadian brokers playing the game south of the border may be at risk. Canaccord Capital's Peter Brown, in a well advertised but rather late memo of Sept. 2 warns his staff that the BCSC, in co-operation with the SEC, has gathered all the L board (OTC Bulletin Board) trading records of several B.C. firms. Whatever the outcome of this investigation, it will probably not be happy news to local brokers. Global's solid citizen appointment may be seen in some quarters as a bid to install a management that can help avoid the troubles that have befallen Pacific International Securities. Two PI brokers were arrested in the U.S. recently, and the PI name keeps appearing in SEC investigations of bulletin board companies. Global has its own experience on the windward side of the SEC. In July 1996, the SEC requested assistance from the BCSC with an investigation into the U.S. clients of broker Tracey-Anne Godoy. Ms. Godoy resigned from the firm, but the case made legal history two years later when the B.C. Court of Appeal ruled ultra vires the section of the Securities Act that authorized the 1988 co-operative agreement between the SEC and the BCSC. The case goes to the Supreme Court of Canada in January, and until the case is resolved, the BCSC cannot order brokerages to comply with SEC requests. Mr. Garrod is clear that one of the biggest problems facing the junior markets is now the over-complexity of rules and regulations, and he warns that the new Canadian Venture Exchange (CDNX) faces extinction if the problem that plagues both Vancouver and Calgary is not addressed. Success for the new exchange will largely depend on its ability to quickly and effectively process listing applications. "The ultimate issue for listed companies is whether or not the new exchange will process paper in a fair and diligent way, because if it's going to take four and five months to do a deal, this new exchange will fail," he asserts. "They've got to in certain respects simplify the rules, which are extremely complicated, both in Vancouver and Alberta." Global was founded by Mr. Smolensky in 1988 with six registered representatives. It became a full-service brokerage in February, 1991, when a trio of ex-C.M. Oliver brokers -- David Levi, Bruce McConnachie and Brian Worth -- joined the firm. At that time, Mr. Smolensky, now 52, ended his term as Global's first president, and became its first chairman. The company now employs around 100 brokers. Mr. Garrod offers hints about Global's future, with reference to the overall good of the market. He says key to the future of the brokerage industry is in meeting the challenge presented by e-trading systems and other systems that allow investors to trade without brokers. These, he says, are going to put "enormous pressure" on retail brokers. That means retail brokers must place a greater emphasis on seeking corporate clients and expanding the range of products offered through brokers. "Ultimately, the retail commissions are going to decrease and if you're going to survive, you've got to pick it up somewhere else." (c) Copyright 1999 Canjex Publishing Ltd. canada-stockwatch.com
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