Business commentators are now starting to reflect upon the
business consequences of the government’s decision to delay the first of the
partial assets sales until the second quarter of 2013. Rod Oram, writing in the
Star-Times of 9th September comments on the related issues of a glut
of electricity generation, a downturn in domestic and industrial power
consumption, the possibility of problems with electricity usage at the Tiwai
Point smelter, and the downturn in coal imports by China as issues which will
have an impact of the value of Mighty River Power (MRP) shares at float. From
any prudent investor’s point of view each and all of these issues represent
risks which need to be taken into account when deciding whether or not to
invest.
But, he could also have included some assessment of the impact of the MRP delay and the options presented to the government by the Waitangi Tribunal, which, if taken seriously, constitute an additional raft of investment risks which possibly exceed those which Oram considers.
On the positive side, electricity generation and distribution in New Zealand should be a sound strategic investment, principally because it is a virtual monopoly and also because it is a strategic industry essential to the day to day functioning of our nation. Apart from one significant generator, Contact Energy, the others are all owned by the New Zealand government, which also owns the National Grid, Transpower.
In spite of some degree of blatant government nepotism in the appointment of directors to the boards of these companies, by and large the boards appear to do a sound professional job. Governance is not currently an issue in the generators. The electricity industry returns significant dividends to central government coffers annually. So, by any measure, an investment in a principal generating company such as Mighty River Power should be a very good move indeed, should it not? And government retaining a 51% shareholding might, to some, be an additional measure of comfort - after all, if you cannot depend upon the government to look after our national interests, who can you trust? And Government Bonds are said to be the safest of all investments, and used as a base line against which some interest rates and other forms of equities are measured.
A few weeks ago, I for one would have said, “absolutely - no
hesitation, I am in”. Since then, however, the risk profile for MRP and similar
investments just got a whole lot worse. I refer of course to the Waitangi
Tribunal recommendations regarding Maori claims to the ownership of all fresh
water in New Zealand. These claims have, due to public outrage, been scaled
down somewhat to one of (untested) “property rights”, which are claimed under
the ubiquitous Treaty of Waitangi.
Notwithstanding this shift, the taxpayer-funded Maori Council has threatened to take the government to court to seek an injunction to prevent any sale until Maori interests have been investigated and obviously settled to their satisfaction. (What is this, if it is not a direct threat or challenge to the government’s ability to govern?) Suddenly, the deal is off-at least until April-May next year. What was stated to be absolutely critical to the governments fiscal management programme ( ie floating MRP this year) is now seen to be not quite that important after all. No matter that this delay is estimated to cost the taxpayer an additional $10 million.
Government’s response to the Tribunal has been interesting. It
has declined to deal with the ownership of fresh water resources on a pan-Maori
basis, preferring to deal with individual iwi on a case by case basis. (A
sensible step which avoids it being conned into gifting a whole chunk of the
entire electricity system to Maori interests - as was the case in the Sealords
fisheries deal some years ago). It has also, (apparently), decided against the
Maori Council’s “shares plus” option where Maori would be given parcels of
shares in the company, a seat or seats on the board, and reportedly the power
of veto over key management decisions.
This bizarre arrangement, if accepted, effectively accords
Maori interests a level of preference ahead and above those of any other
shareholder-and of course means there will be less income for government from
the wider sale as the Maori shares will apparently be a gift. Seats on the
board will be another significant issue. One might expect that, with a business
the size and value of MRP, any government appointments to the board would
comprise directors who have significant experience and the skills to enhance
the wealth generation of the company.
Not necessarily so. In New Zealand, one need only consider
ethnic and political appointments to a range of governance bodies in the public
sector, District Health Boards in particular, (and remember SOEs like MRP are
essentially public entities) to appreciate that in many cases, ethnic and
political appointees sometimes find themselves completely out of their depth,
often lacking in governance experience, financial acumen and industry
knowledge. (See especially Modlik, H, 2004 for insight into Maori appointees*).
And it is not only democratically elected bodies either. The
Independent Maori Statutory Board, a completely unelected body with no
electoral mandate, established by the
present government, has recently announced its intention to spend $300 million
of Auckland ratepayers’ money (to which it has no right) insulating Maori
homes. It has a $3 million budget met by the Auckland ratepayer. No mandate was
sought from ratepayers to establish this “board”.
Then there is the question of to whom would such directors
be responsible? Modlik (2004) states that Maori appointees to governance bodies
owe their principal allegiance, not to the organisation on whose board they
sit, (MRP in this case) but to their constituency (hapu or iwi). If directors
are not working primarily in the interests of the company, then dysfunctional
governance is bound to follow, with subsequent loss of share value and dividends
a real possibility.
Now add to this the right of veto by the said directors over
management decisions and we have a recipe for disaster. Given that the
principal commodity central to most of New Zealand’s electricity generation is
fresh water, then the possible downstream consequences of this questionable
option are starkly evident.
If government accedes to this option, there is no way any
investor with even an ounce of sense, should invest in MRP, nor in any other
such assets, if the above scenarios are enacted.
But wait-there’s more! It didn’t take Maori long (less than
a week, actually) to work out that if they can screw the government so
effectively on fresh water assets, then the same strategy might work for
underground aquifers or, wait for it-the wind. Yes, the wind! Two iwi, Ngati Kahungungu and Nga Puhi respectively
have announced they have made claims to the Waitangi Tribunal for ownership of
aquifers, inter alia, and wind. John Key’s immediate knee-jerk reaction? ”Nobody
owns the aquifers nor the wind”. We seem to have heard that one before
somewhere? Seabed and Foreshore, was it? Or perhaps the ownership of fresh
water? Maybe the Radio Spectrum? Or was it all native Flora and Fauna?
It will not be long before we are all paying at least a
royalty to the Maori minority for the use of natural resources which are
considered to be freely available in most countries around the word. Some wags
have even mentioned, in newspaper comments, daylight and the very air we
breathe. Not much left after that lot!
*Reference: Modlik, H.K, (2004) Issues Facing Maori in
Governance, Public Sector,27,(1),20-23
Professor Martin Devlin has a distinguished career in the fields of education - in business, management, entrepreneurship, and corporate governance - in the private business sector, and in the NZ Army. He was appointed an Officer in the NZ Order of Merit, ONZM, in the Queen’s Birthday honours in 2011 for services to education. He is a fifth generation New Zealander.
Professor Martin Devlin has a distinguished career in the fields of education - in business, management, entrepreneurship, and corporate governance - in the private business sector, and in the NZ Army. He was appointed an Officer in the NZ Order of Merit, ONZM, in the Queen’s Birthday honours in 2011 for services to education. He is a fifth generation New Zealander.
2 comments:
Sensible and worrying comment. Could we please all try to remember to call these racists what they really are, that is "part-Maori". It is no coincidence that they should emphasise only one side (and usually the smaller percentage) of their ancestry!
Well said. Sooner or later someone will need to take a stand.... I just hope that it happens in my lifetime
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