Harold Simmons

Harold Clark Simmons (born 1931, Golden, Wood County, Texas)[1] is an American businessman and billionaire whose banking expertise helped him develop the acquisition concept known as the leveraged buyout (LBO) to acquire various corporations. He is the owner of Contran Corporation and of Valhi, Inc., (a NYSE traded company about 90% controlled by Contran).[2] As of 2006 he controlled 5 public companies traded on the New York Stock Exchange: NL Industries; Titanium Metals Corporation, the world's largest producer of titanium; Valhi, Inc., a multinational company with operations in the chemicals, component products, wastemanagement, and titanium metals industries; CompX International, manufacturer of ergonomic products, and Kronos Worldwide, leading producer and marketer of titanium dioxide.[3] According to Forbes, his net worth was about $5.7 billion in 2011.[4]

Contents

Education and early life

Simmons' parents,Reuben Leon and Fairess Clark Simmons, were teachers who stressed the value of a good education. Simmons' father was a school superintendent, and his mother was an secretarial skills teacher.[5] Simmons has BA (1951) and MA (1952) degrees in economics from the University of Texas at Austin.[6] Simmons hold a Phi Beta Kappa key.[7][8]

Career

After completing graduate school in 1952, Simmons worked for the U.S. government as a bank examiner, then for a Dallas-based bank, Republic National Bank.[9]

In 1960, using $5,000 of his savings, and a $95,000 loan, he bought a small drugstore, University Pharmacy on Hillcrest Avenue, across from the campus of Southern Methodist University.[8] Before Simmons owned it, University Pharmacy was the site of a racially charged sit-in in January, 1961, when its owner C.K. Bright sprayed insecticide over and around 60 students, only two of whom were black seminary students.[10] Simmons purchased the store and parlayed it into a chain of 100 stores, which in 1973 he sold for more than $50 million, to Eckerd Corporation. This launched his career as an investor, when he used the proceeds of that sale to begin speculation in the financial services industry. By 1974, he had been indicted for and acquitted of wire and mail fraud, and involved in a pension-related lawsuit brought against him by the United Auto Workers.[11][12]

Simmons developed his "all debt and no equity" philosophy of capital management from having observed banks as a bank examiner, realizing that "Small banks in Texas were casual about getting the maximum use of their funds. . . banks were the most highly leveraged thing I saw. They borrowed most of their money and really didn't need much equity except for purposes of public confidence." Understanding that banks could be bought entirely with borrowed money, Simmons theorized that he should "buy a bunch, because one bank could be used to finance another. All debt and no equity."[13]

Simmons conducted a widely publicized but unsuccessful takeover attempt on the Lockheed Corporation, after having gradually acquired almost 20 per cent of its stock. Lockheed was attractive to Simmons because one of its primary investors was the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS), the pension fund of the state of California. At the time, the New York Times said, "Much of Mr. Simmons's interest in Lockheed is believed to stem from its pension plan, which is over financed by more than $1.4 billion. Analysts said he might want to liquidate the plan and pay out the excess funds to shareholders, including himself." Citing the "mismanagement" of its chairman, Daniel M. Tellep, Simmons stated a wish to replace its board with a slate of his own choosing, since he was the largest investor. His board nominations included former Texas Senator John Tower, the onetime chairman of the Armed Services Committee, and Adm. Elmo Zumwalt Jr., a former chief of Naval Operations.[14][15] Simmons had first begun accumulating Lockheed stock in early 1989 when deep Pentagon cuts to the defense budget had driven down prices of military contractor stocks, and analysts had not believed he would attempt the takeover since he was also at the time pursuing control of Georgia Gulf.[16]

In 1997, Simmons made a $5 million investment in T. Boone Pickens, Jr.'s first fund BP Capital Energy Commodity Fund; by 2005 this had grown to $150 million.[17]

Capital gains tax opposition and activism

In August 1997, President Bill Clinton used a line-item veto to draw attention to the type of "special benefits" that investors such as Simmons employ to avoid paying capital gains taxes since the early 1980s. Simmons had formed the "Snake River Sugar Cooperative" of 2,000 beet farmers and classified it as a joint-venture, shared ownership co-op, to purchase his Amalgamated Sugar Company, for $260 million. At the time, Charles Schumer, serving as a House Representative from New York, wrote a letter to Clinton stating that the measure before him for consideration would benefit Simmons with a $104 million tax deferral. Simmons stated at the time that his tax deferral was only $80 million.[18]

Political activism

1980s

During the Ronald Reagan presidency, Simmons was a contributor to GOPAC, the political action committee originally founded by Newt Gingrich when he was Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives. Simmons also contributed to the defense funds of Oliver North and John Poindexter, Reagan aides implicated in the Iran-Contra scandal.

1990s

In 1993, Simmons was fined $19,000 by the Federal Election Commission for exceeding the legal limit of campaign contributions in 1989 and 1990 elections.[19]

Between 1993 and 1997, Simmons and family members and Contran gave more than $315,000 to Republican candidates, according to FEC records.[19]

2004 presidential election

During the 2004 presidential campaign Simmons made a $4 million donation to the group Swift Vets and POWs for Truth.[20] He also donated $100,000 to George W. Bush's January 2005 inaugural ball.[21]

2008 presidential election

Simmons, a longtime Republican donor, gave the maximum $2,300 contributions to Senator John McCain, as well as to fellow Republican candidates Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani. He was listed as a "bundler" for the McCain campaign on McCain's website, which meant that he had raised between $50,000 and $100,000 for the Republican candidate. He also contributed to Rep. Chet Edwards, a Texas Democrat.[22] Simmons has given more than $500,000 to Texas governor Rick Perry, and more than $300,000 to Texas Lt. Governor David Dewhurst and Attorney General Greg Abbott.[23] He was a major donor to the American Issues Project, an independent conservative political group that ran ads critical of Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama.[24]

2010 midterm elections

Two of Harold Simmons’ companies – Southwest Louisiana Land which he owns and Dixie Rice Agricultural Corp in which he is a major investor – were each $1 million donors to the American Crossroads, a 527 organization working to elect primarily Republican legislators during the 2010 midterm elections.[25]

Environmental management

NL Industries, originally named National Lead Industries, Inc. has been involved in numerous lawsuits brought by the U.S. Department of Justice to force the company to pay funds into the Superfund to clean up contaminated sites at various sites around the country such as Granite City, Illinois,[26] and Depew, New York.[27]

Philanthropy

In 1973, Simmons was a significant contributor to the Dallas Civic Opera.[28]

Harold Simmons is a former board member of the Edwin L. Cox School of Business at Southern Methodist University. He has given $1.8 million to establish the Simmons Distinguished Professorship in Marketing, and $1.2 million for the President's Scholars Program.[29]

The Harold Simmons Foundation is the philanthropic arm of the Simmons financial empire. Two of Simmons' daughters, Serena Simmons Connelly and Lisa Simmons Epstein, are its administrators. The foundation supports the causes of immigration rights, campaign reform, prison reform, handgun control, and reproductive rights.[30] The contributions to the presidential bids of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama made by Serena Simmons Connelly were privately made, not funded by the foundation.[31]

Simmons donated money to help fund the Hobby-Eberly Telescope Dark Energy Experiment at the University of Texas. He has previously given to UT athletic programs and the McCombs School of Business. By 2005, total donations from his family and foundation to the UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas exceeded $70 million.[12]

In 2006, Simmons pledged $1 million to the George W. Bush Presidential Library contingent upon its being located at SMU.[32]

In 2006, Harold Simmons made a grant to the Young America's Foundation to establish the Harold Simmons Lecture Series, which enabled former U.S. Senator Zell Miller to tour college campuses during the 2006-2007 school year to promote "his message in defense of America from foreign and domestic threats to our freedom."[33]

Since July 2006, Simmons has given funds to a chronic kidney disease research team led by scientist Dr. Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh to examine predictors of longevity in chronic kidney disease. Subsequently, the “Harold Simmons Center for Chronic Disease Research and Epidemiology” was created in “Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute” at “Harbor-UCLA Medical Center”, which has published a large number of scientific reports and articles.[34]

In 2007, Oprah Winfrey announced that Harold and Annette Simmons, her neighbors in Montecito, California, had contributed $5 million to her Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls in South Africa.[35]

In 2007, Harold and Annette Simmons announced a landmark $20 million gift to Southern Methodist University to provide an endowment for the university's School of Education and Human Development. The gift allocated $10 million for construction of a new facility, to be named the Annette Caldwell Simmons Building; $5 million for graduate student fellowships; and $5 million for faculty support and an endowed deanship.[36]

In 2008 the Harold Simmons Foundation made a donation of $5 million to the Dallas Zoo, the largest single private contribution in the zoo's 120 year history.[37]

Annette and Harold Simmons have been underwriters for 28 consecutive years to the Dallas Crystal Charity Ball Fashion Show and Luncheon.[38][39] The Crystal Charity Ball has distributed more than $82 million to children's charities since 1953.

The Harold Simmons Foundation is a major donor of over $500,000 to the Dallas Women's Foundation which commissioned a study of women's economic security in the 12-county Dallas-Arlington-Fort Worth metropolitan area.[40]

The Harold Simmons Foundation issued a $50 million challenge grant to the Parkland Memorial Hospital Foundation, to aid in fundraising to build a new public hospital, one of the largest private gifts for a public hospital campaign in the nation.[41]

The Harold Simmons Foundation made a 2010 gift to the Legal Hospice of Texas, a nonprofit lawfirm providing compassionate legal services at no charge to low income individuals who are terminally ill.

Awards

Charles Cameron Sprague Community Service Award Annette G. Strauss Humanitarian Award 2002 Angel of Freedom Award,(Harold Simmons Foundation) Human Rights Initiative

Personal life

He married his wife, Sandra K. Saliba in 1960. The union produced daughters Andrea Leigh Simmons, born August 25, 1965, and Serena Sha Simmons, born January 18, 1970. His third marriage to his current wife Annette Caldwell Fleck, was in June, 1980. In October 2004, Mrs. Simmons was featured on the Oprah! television show, giving a tour of Simmons' boyhood town, Golden, Texas, during its sweet potato festival.[42] In another episode, "Annette's Tea Party," Mrs. Simmons entertainment style was a feature.

  1. ^ Richard Kimble, "Philanthropist Harold Simmons Establishes Lecture Series Featuring Senator Zell Miller"
  2. ^ "Conflicts of Interest and Special Committees Revisited: Has Kahn V. Tremont Corp. Permanently Changed the Landscape, or Merely Slyghtly Altered It?", FindLaw.com
  3. ^ Richard Kimble, "Philanthropist Harold Simmons..." Libertas, Young America's Foundation, 2006.
  4. ^ Harold Simmons - Forbes, forbes.com. Retrieved April 2011.
  5. ^ Richard Kimble, "Philanthropist Harold Simmons Establishes Lecture Series Featuring Senator Zell Miller," Libertas, Young America's Foundation, 2006.
  6. ^ Bill Bancroft, "Perils of the Simmons Watch," New York Times, December 3, 1989.
  7. ^ Ledgerwood Sloan, "Harold Simmons Builds $80 Million Empire, Dallas Morning News, Dec. 12, 1922.
  8. ^ a b "Harold Simmons," SMU News, Nov. 9, 2007.
  9. ^ Kimble, Young America's Foundation, 2006.
  10. ^ James Lehrer, "Protesting Students Sit In, Walk Picket Line at Store," Dallas Morning News, January 10, 1961.
  11. ^ "Harold Simmons," International Directory of Company Histories, vol. 19, St. James Press, 1998.
  12. ^ a b "Simmons donates $15 million for cancer research", Andrew County News, January 5, 2005
  13. ^ Bill Bancroft, "Perils of the Simmons Watch," New York Times, December 3, 1989.
  14. ^ Thomas Hayes, "Lockheed Fends Off Simmons," The New York Times, March 19, 1991.
  15. ^ Richard W. Stevenson, "Simmons Is Considering Possible Lockheed Bid," New York Times, February 1990.
  16. ^ "Simmons to Lift Lockheed Stake," New York Times, November 22, 1989.
  17. ^ "Raider to trader - Rising oil prices bring gushing profits to T. Boone Pickens", www.projo.com
  18. ^ Allen R. Myerson, "Billionaire Feels Sting of Line Item Veto," New York Times, August 12, 1997.
  19. ^ a b Allen R. Myerson, "A Family Feuds in Texas Over 2 Trust Funds," New York Times, April 8, 1997.
  20. ^ Wayne Slater, Gomer Jeffers, "Dallas Billionaire Harold Simmons Finances Anti-Obama Ad," Dallas Morning News, August 23, 2008.
  21. ^ "Bush inaugural ball in big donors' court - Top-tier contributions to revelry viewed by some as an investment", krem.com
  22. ^ Mark Murray, “Obama, Meet Harold Simmons,” First Read, MSNBC, August 23 , 2008
  23. ^ Wayne Slater, "Dallas Billionaire Harold Simmons Finances Anti-Obama Ad," Dallas Morning News, August 23, 2008.
  24. ^ "Anti-Obama Ayers Ad Funded By One Billionaire McCain Supporter", Huffington Post, August 22, 2008
  25. ^ Politico, Secret funds flow into races, Sept 17 2010, http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=1C329E1C-18FE-70B2-A8B8431BE56245EE
  26. ^ Environmental Protection Agency, "NL Industries/TARACORP LEAD SMELTER," EPA ID# ILD096731468, September, 2006.
  27. ^ Environmental Protection Agency, "EPA Announces Commitment to Clean Up Contaminated Properties in Depew, New York," Sep 15, 2008 Environmental Protection Agency Documents and Publications/ContentWorks via COMTEX.
  28. ^ "Civic Opera Tunes Up in Russian for Season Preview," Dallas Morning News, October 10, 1973.
  29. ^ "Harold Simmons," SMU News, Nov. 9, 2007.
  30. ^ Tom Matzzie, "Harold Simmons' Obama-Supporting Philanthropist Daughter," Accountable America, August 26, 2008.
  31. ^ ibid.
  32. ^ "SMU On Property-Shopping Spree," Dallas Business Journal, February 24, 2006.
  33. ^ Richard Kimble, "Philanthropist Harold Simmons Establishes Lecture Series Featuring Senator Zell Miller," Libertas, Young America's Foundation, 2006.
  34. ^ "PubMed list of “Harold Simmons Center” publications." 2009
  35. ^ "Oprah Winfrey Has Powerful (Giving) Friends," www.oprahsschoool.com, 2007.
  36. ^ "News," ,Second Century, Southern Methodist University, November 9, 2007.
  37. ^ "Dallas Zoo receives largest private gift in its 120-year history", Pegasus News, September 3, 2008
  38. ^ "Snapped," Dallas Morning News, September 19, 2008.
  39. ^ Robert Miller, "Couple Donates $1 Million," Dallas Morning News, Sept. 15, 2008.
  40. ^ Robert Miller, "Campaign Opens With 2/3 Raised," Dallas Morning News, October 1, 2008.
  41. ^ Sherry Jacobson, "Project Enjoys Big Donations," Dallas Morning News, September 10, 2008.
  42. ^ "Golden Sweet Potatoes," Oprah!, October 28, 2004.

Further reading

External links