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Kerkorian ready for gamble: Casino mogul takes shot at Chrysler

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  • Kerkorian ready for gamble: Casino mogul takes shot at Chrysler

    Kerkorian ready for another gamble: Casino mogul takes shot at Chrysler
    John Gallagher, Detroit Free Press - Michigan - KRTBN
    Published: Apr 06, 2007

    Kirk Kerkorian, part shark and part savior, is back.

    Kerkorian's 17-year duel with Detroit entered yet another stage
    Thursday with the billionaire investor's offer to buy Chrysler Group.

    The offer could set up his third major encounter with Detroit
    automakers.

    The son of Armenian immigrants who ran a produce business in Fresno,
    Calif., Kerkorian quit school as a teenager to go to work. He flew
    military planes during World War II and after the war ran a small
    air-charter service to ferry gamblers between Los Angeles and Las
    Vegas.

    Kerkorian paid $60,000 for the charter service in 1947 when he was
    30. In 1968, he sold it to Trans-america Corp. for a little more than
    $100 million. It was his first fortune, and a banker friend, Walter
    Sharp, said much later that the transaction transformed Kerkorian.

    "Kirk realized then that everything was in the timing," Sharp said in
    1995. "He became fascinated with the idea of making deals."

    With the proceeds of his airline sale, Kerkorian acquired the Flamingo
    Hotel in Las Vegas in 1969. It was the first of several casino-hotels
    he would buy, sell or build in the decades since.

    For 20 years, his Tracinda Corp. has been the controlling shareholder
    of what is now MGM Mirage, owner of the MGM Grand Detroit Casino and a
    gaming company with a market value of almost $21 billion.

    It was a meeting with former Chrysler Corp. boss Lee Iacocca that
    sparked Kerkorian's interest in Detroit. Meeting the then-automotive
    executive at a Florida racetrack, Kerkorian agreed in 1990 to invest
    in Chrysler.

    Five years later, his stance as a passive investor gave way to a
    takeover bid when the company didn't perform as he'd hoped.

    At the height of the controversy, Kerkorian was demanding three seats
    on the board of directors, a prohibition on issuing new stock that
    would dilute shareholders' voting rights, and the right to buy more
    Chrysler stock without penalty.

    That bid ended when Kerkorian couldn't stitch together a workable
    deal.

    Later, he was an early and avid supporter of the deal that saw
    Daimler-Benz AG merge with Chrysler in 1998.

    But pleasure turned to anger once again when Kerkorian came to believe
    that the merger was really an ill-disguised takeover that devalued his
    shares. He sued DaimlerChrysler AG in a bitter and protracted battle
    that he ultimately lost.

    He did make $2.7 billion on his stock.

    Beginning in spring 2005, about the same time he lost his Chrysler
    lawsuit, Kerkorian began buying shares of General Motors Corp. stock
    and increasingly trying to exert his influence over the company. He
    began to push GM management to make bigger changes, and in February
    2006 got his aide, former Chrysler finance officer Jerome York,
    elected to GM's board of directors.

    In his boldest move, Kerkorian pushed GM last July into considering a
    three-way global alliance with Nissan Motor Co. and Renault SA. But
    exploratory talks ended in October, with GM saying an alliance would
    have provided more benefits for Renault-Nissan than for GM.

    Disappointed, Kerkorian began to sell his GM shares. York resigned
    from the GM board.

    Although he sold his GM shares at a slight loss, when dividends were
    included, Kerkorian apparently made a profit of about $112 million
    before taxes and expenses on his $1.7-billion investment in GM.

    By Nov. 30, Kerkorian had sold all his GM shares, and Detroiters
    thought they might have seen their last of him.

    Now's he back.

    Contact JOHN GALLAGHER at 313-222-5173 or [email protected]_
    (mailto:gallagher@freepr ess.com) .

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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