Unite reveals bankers, lawyers and financiers to pocket massive £140m in GKN takeover
Wednesday, 7 February 2018 10:47
Bankers, financiers, lawyers and public relations executives stand
to rake in millions as part of a massive payday totalling
around £140 million if Melrose succeeds in its ‘debt
fuelled’ bid for the aerospace and automotive engineering firm GKN,
Britain’s largest union, Unite revealed today (Wednesday 7
February). The ‘eye watering’ sum in fees and expenses
is the equivalent to winning tonight’s (Wednesday 7
February) national lottery 12 times...Request free trial
Bankers, financiers, lawyers and public relations executives stand
to rake in millions as part of a massive payday totalling
around £140 million if Melrose succeeds
in its ‘debt fuelled’ bid for the aerospace and automotive
engineering firm GKN, Britain’s largest union, Unite revealed today
(Wednesday 7 February).
The ‘eye watering’ sum in fees and expenses is the
equivalent to winning tonight’s (Wednesday 7 February) national
lottery 12 times over, or 83
times the average total lifetime
wage of a GKN worker (see notes).
Detailed in Melrose’s own bid document, the figures for
fees and expenses follow earlier revelations that the four top
executives of Melrose stand to make a reported £285
million between them in ‘incentives’ if they boost
GKN’s share price following a successful
takeover.
In echoes of the ‘cowboy capitalist’ takeovers of the
1980s, the potential total amount to be pocketed by Melrose
executives and their advisors from a successful takeover could be
upwards of £425 million, or the equivalent of
six Airbus A320 airliners whose wings GKN work
on.
The figures come ahead
of today’s (7 February) meeting with the business secretary
, where Unite workplace
representatives from GKN will urge the secretary of state to block
Melrose’s bid in the public interest, warning that the deal could
damage the government’s industrial strategy and national defence
interests.
A full breakdown of the bid fees and expenses as
detailed by Melrose in its bid document are as
follows:
-
Financing arrangements – between £6
million and £69
million depending on whether the bid
succeeds
-
Financial and corporate broking advice – up
to £50.5 million depending on
whether the bid succeeds
-
Legal advice – estimated at £9
million
-
Accounting advice - £2
million
-
Public relations advice – between £1
million and £5
million depending on whether the bid
succeeds
-
Other professional services - £1
million
-
Other costs and expenses - £3
million
Commenting Unite assistant general secretary for
aerospace Steve Turner said: “The astronomical
sums of money that could be pocketed by bankers, financiers and
Melrose bosses from the ‘debt fuelled’ takeover of GKN would have
the Gordon Gekkos of the 1980s licking their
lips.
“This is a bid that puts a ‘jackpot’ payday
for a small number of people ahead of the long-term stability of a
world a class engineering firm and the thousands of workers who
make it a success.
“The government needs to stop this takeover
and prevent the wealth of the firm being stripped and funnelled
into the pockets of wheeler dealers at the expense of GKN workers’
livelihoods.”
Unite assistant general secretary for manufacturing
Tony Burke added: “GKN is at the cutting edge of
electric vehicle technology and aerospace engineering. It is a
vital component in making the UK government’s industrial strategy a
success and integral to UK defence
interests.
“The short term desire of a few to rake in
millions through this takeover puts all this at risk. There is a
real danger if the takeover succeeds that long term investment will
dry up, leading to cuts in research and development and the UK’s
defence capability being harmed.
“The business secretary must use the power he has to act
in the national interest and intervene to block this bid, as well
as strengthening takeover laws to ensure public and social
interests are put first.
“Unite is clear, we will not allow two sets of
management to compete for the affections of shareholders by
promising faster and deeper cuts. For Unite defending jobs always
comes first.”
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