January 28, 2021

USA: CEO of Apollo Global Management Inc To Step Down From Position After An investigation Into His Ties To Sex Offender Jeffrey Epstein Concluded. No Evidence That He Was Involved In Crminal Activities

The Wall Street Journal (WSJ)
written by Miriam Gottfried
Monday January 25, 2021

Leon Black plans to step down as chief executive of Apollo Global Management Inc. APO 1.01% after an independent review revealed larger-than-expected payments to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein that it nevertheless deemed justified.

The months long review by Dechert LLP found no evidence that Mr. Black was involved in the criminal activities of the late Epstein, who was indicted in 2019 on federal sex-trafficking charges involving underage girls, according to the law firm’s report, which was disclosed in a securities filing Monday.

In its report, Dechert found the fees that the billionaire had paid Epstein were for legitimate advice on trust- and estate-tax planning that proved to be of significant value to Mr. Black and his family. Mr. Black paid Epstein a total of $148 million, plus a $10 million donation to his charity—far more than was previously known.

Mr. Black wrote in a letter to Apollo’s fund investors that he would cede the role of CEO to co-founder Marc Rowan on or before his 70th birthday on July 31 while retaining the role of chairman. In the letter, which was also disclosed in the securities filing, Mr. Black detailed other governance changes he is recommending to the board, including the appointment of more independent directors and the elimination of Apollo’s dual-class share structure.

The Wall Street Journal had earlier reported on the contents of the report and letter.

Mr. Black also pledged to donate $200 million of his family’s money to women’s initiatives.

The moves conclude a tumultuous period for Mr. Black, who in October asked a committee of Apollo’s independent directors to launch the review of his relationship with Epstein, who killed himself in his Manhattan jail cell in 2019. The request was an effort to assuage concerns among public pension funds and other institutions that invest with Apollo, some of which had said they would pause further investments with the firm after the New York Times reported that Mr. Black had paid the financier at least $50 million in the years after Epstein was convicted in 2008 of soliciting prostitution from a teenage girl.

Mr. Black “believed, and witnesses generally agreed, that Epstein provided advice that conferred more than $1 billion and as much as $2 billion or more” in tax savings, the report states.

It also supports Mr. Black’s contention that he paid Epstein a fee he believed was roughly equivalent to 5% of the value that the late financier generated on an after-tax basis. It describes the two men’s relationship deteriorating beginning in 2016 after a fee dispute. Mr. Black’s last payment to Epstein was made in April 2017.

The report also says Mr. Black asked outside accounting and legal advisers, including attorneys at law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton and Garrison LLP, to vet and challenge Epstein’s advice when given.

“In short, there is no question that Epstein performed substantive work for Black and that Black genuinely believed that Epstein was extremely smart, capable, and saved him substantial amounts of money,” the report says.

Epstein was arrested in July 2019 after scrutiny of a 2007 nonprosecution agreement he signed with federal authorities in Florida to resolve an investigation into improper conduct involving underage girls. He pleaded guilty in 2008 to two state prostitution counts and spent much of his 13-month sentence outside prison.

Epstein, who grew up in Coney Island, built a fortune of more than half a billion dollars by leveraging close relationships with a who’s who of the nation’s rich and famous, among them retail magnate Leslie Wexner, Johnson and Johnson heiress Elizabeth Johnson and hedge-fund billionaire Glenn Dubin.

After serving his sentence, Mr. Epstein worked to rehabilitate his public image and continued to surround himself with luminaries of politics, academia and finance.

In his letter, Mr. Black added, “It is important to emphasize that both Apollo and I condemn Mr. Epstein’s reprehensible conduct in the strongest possible terms, and, as I have previously stated, I deeply regret having had any involvement with Mr. Epstein.”

In addition to giving up the CEO title, Mr. Black has recommended other governance changes, including adopting a “one share, one vote” structure and eliminating the supervoting shares held by the firm’s founders. He has also proposed augmenting the board so that the majority of directors are independent.

“I am keenly aware that Apollo must continue to innovate and improve its corporate governance processes and focus on creating an enduring world-class financial institution with a best-in-class governance structure,” Mr. Black wrote in the letter.

Apollo’s board voted to add two new independent directors: Pamela Joyner, founder of marketing firm Avid Partners LLC, and Siddhartha Mukherjee, a scientist, oncologist and Pulitzer Prize-winning author, in addition to Apollo Co-Presidents Scott Kleinman and Jim Zelter. Mr. Black told investors that the board plans to add at least two more independent directors.

Apollo abandoned its partnership structure and became a corporation in September 2019, as a number of its rivals have done. Removing the dual-class share structure would take it a step further, possibly allowing the company to be included in the SandP 500.

Mr. Black would be one of just a few founders of big, publicly traded private-equity firms to pass the CEO torch. The founders of Ares Management Inc. and Carlyle Group Inc. have already done so, but Blackstone Group Inc.’s Stephen Schwarzman and KKR and Co.’s Henry Kravis and George Roberts, all in their 70s, remain in their CEO roles, though they have put clear succession plans in place.

In elevating Mr. Rowan, the architect of the insurance platform that powers Apollo’s $300 billion credit business, the firm is underscoring the degree to which its focus has moved away from the distressed-debt and private-equity deals that made it famous and toward generating yield for institutions like insurance companies.

The ascension of Mr. Rowan, 58 years old, was in some ways unexpected. Apollo said in July that he would take a step back from his day-to-day responsibilities and embark on a “semisabatical.” To some insiders, that seemed to pave the way for co-founder Josh Harris —who has for years overseen the firm’s day-to-day operations and has spent the past few years trying to institutionalize and revamp what some had described as a cutthroat culture—to take the top executive spot.

Mr. Harris will remain a member of Apollo’s board and executive committee and will “continue to focus on expanding our global search for investor returns,” Mr. Black told investors.

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