The fight over Michael's millions

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The King of Pop's posthumous success has produced a gusher of money. Now, where his estate is concerned, the Michael Jackson show is just getting started.

(Fortune Magazine) -- On a recent Friday afternoon, workers toiled away at Neverland Ranch as part of a curious restoration effort that accelerated after Michael Jackson's sudden death on June 25. The main grounds of the 2,700-acre property had been cleared of encroaching chaparral and were now close to the condition they had been in when Jackson last set foot here some five years ago.
The flower beds next to the Disneyland-replica train station were pristine, though the trains were in storage and the midway amusement rides and zoo animals that once populated the property were gone. The Tudor-style mansion, guesthouse, and separate movie theater/dance studio were in move-in condition. The theater even had fresh candy at its concession stand, though the building's only inhabitant was a wayward bat stranded in the restroom.
It was a bit sad and eerie, albeit, from an MTV Cribs kind of viewpoint, quite excellent.
Through all the hoopla following Jackson's death, no one has said publicly what will become of Neverland, which Los Angeles private equity firm Colony Capital took control of after the property nearly went into foreclosure last year.
The Jackson family's desire to have Michael's body interred here proved too complicated, as has the notion of turning it into a Graceland-like destination for fans. There is talk of moving some of the property's structures, which include a giraffe barn, to Las Vegas with an eye to establishing a Neverland attraction there and selling the ranch.
Under terms of an agreement struck with Jackson after Colony purchased the note on the property for $23.5 million, when Neverland is eventually sold, Colony will recoup its investment in the note plus accrued interest, its management and upkeep expenses, and around 12% of everything above that as a success fee. The rest will go to Jackson's estate.
While he declined to confirm the details of his arrangement with Jackson, Tom Barrack, the CEO of Colony, says the Neverland property ought to be worth $60 million to $70 million.
If so, that would be just one source of a sudden gusher of money into Jackson's estate, the bulk of which he left to his mother and three young children.
Two years ago Jackson was headed for insolvency, a consequence of having barely worked in nearly a decade, a period during which he fought child molestation charges and became better known for his eccentricities than for his musical skills. The deal with Colony, and Jackson's decision to stage a series of comeback concerts, were his way out from under debts that had grown from $90 million a decade ago to around $435 million today.
Though Jackson made some savvy investments early in his career, his loans piled up through an astonishing combination of careless financial decisions -- made with an oft-changing and colorful parade of business advisers -- a mountain of legal bills and distractions, and uncontrollable spending.
"When it came to money, he was almost a contradiction," says Randy Phillips, who runs the company that planned to stage Jackson's comeback. "He didn't care about money but liked to spend money and knew that he had to make money."
His demise might have been a tragic postscript to a faded career. Instead, the singer is having a posthumous comeback that promises to dwarf that of Elvis Presley (whose daughter Jackson was once married to). This year Jackson's estate stands to bring in close to $200 million from music sales, merchandising, and book deals; an exhibition of memorabilia; and especially a hastily made documentary based on his comeback concert rehearsals that hits theaters Oct. 28.
The film, "This Is It," is tracking to be a box office success -- with more tickets presold than the next "Twilight" installment -- and riches from DVD sales could follow. Jackson has sold some 5 million albums and 10 million downloads since his death in the U.S. alone, according to Soundscan, and plans are in the works for at least two albums of unreleased songs. (To put that in perspective, he had sold just under 300,000 records in the half-year before his death.)
In all, Jackson's estate would likely be worth $100 million or more if it were liquidated today, but properly managed, it ought to be worth multiples more in time.
The story of Michael's millions -- reconstructed here from private documents, court files, and dozens of interviews with people who worked with the singer -- is as off-the-wall as he was. Barrack recalls being charmed by the self-proclaimed King of Pop when he first met him last year but deeply skeptical about doing business with him.
"Everybody said two things about him," Barrack says. "Firstly, if Michael Jackson came back it would be the greatest thing in music history. And secondly, it would never happen." Improbably, both have come true.
A brief recounting of tragic and familiar facts: Jackson died suddenly in Los Angeles at age 50 amid final rehearsals for what was expected to be a 50-date gig at London's O2 arena. The cause was a combination of prescription drugs, including a surgical anesthetic, propofol, that Jackson was reportedly being given to treat insomnia. The death is being treated as a homicide, and an investigation continues.
As demand for the London shows demonstrated -- all 800,000 tickets sold out within five hours -- Jackson, despite his tabloid travails, was still a megastar. From child stardom with his brothers in the group the Jackson 5, the Gary, Ind., native skyrocketed as a solo act in the 1980s. His album "Thriller" has sold more than 70 million copies, and he is the biggest-selling recording artist of all time.
Between "Thriller," its very successful follow-up, "Bad," and a 120-date stadium tour and sponsorship deals, Jackson earned as much as $350 million, estimates his manager during that period, Frank DiLeo. Paul McCartney, with whom Jackson recorded the single "Say Say Say," turned him on to the idea of buying music publishing rights, reportedly saying, "This is the way to make big money."
Jackson began buying some publishing catalogues with his earnings, including those of Sly and the Family Stone. But McCartney ended up miffed when, in 1985, Jackson -- with the help of his then-lawyer, John Branca -- paid $47.5 million for ATV Music Publishing, a catalogue that included more than 250 Beatles songs. (It was around this time that Jackson also bought Neverland, for $17 million in cash, after visiting McCartney, who happened to be renting it during a video shoot for "Say Say Say.")
Separately, Jackson set up a company called MiJac to hold the publishing rights for what would eventually be eight studio albums of his own music, plus the other catalogues he owned pre-ATV.
In the 1990s, Jackson's ambitions grew ever larger, but his meteor started to sputter. He faced accusations of child molestation and settled a civil suit for $15 million. He burned through piles of money on movies and other ventures that didn't pan out. In 1995 he merged ATV with a publishing business owned by his recording label, Sony (SNE), in a deal that valued ATV at far more than what Jackson had paid -- $115 million plus half the combined company.
Jackson wanted to transcend being a music performer by making films and theme park attractions and videogames. His short video, "Captain EO," directed by Francis Ford Coppola, was shown in 3-D at Disney theme parks. But the only feature movie project he ever completed, called "Moonwalker," failed to find a U.S. distributor when it was released.
By the late 1990s, according to court filings, Jackson had borrowed $90 million from NationsBank, collateralized by his half-interest in what was now called Sony/ ATV. Myung-Ho Lee, a Korean businessman who for a time was Jackson's business manager, claimed in a lawsuit that he lined up "desperately needed financing" from Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500) (which had merged with NationsBank) to refinance that loan and borrow more -- increasing Jackson's debts to $220 million.
Some of that new money was pumped into dotcom ventures, including Tickets.com, a gaming company, and a fuel-cell business. In court papers Lee also claimed he was not paid for his services and accused Jackson of "bizarre and extravagant" behavior. (Jackson claimed in response that it was Lee who had defrauded him.) "Michael Jackson was -- and is -- a ticking financial time bomb waiting to explode at any moment," Lee said in his complaint.
The case was settled not long after Jackson's last studio album, "Invincible," was released, in 2001. Compared with his past chart busters, "Invincible" had lackluster sales, and Jackson was unhappy.
Bob Daly, who ran Warner Music (WMG) for years and later the Warner Bros. studio, knew Jackson through his wife, the songwriter Carol Bayer Sager, to whom Jackson had dedicated the album. One day Jackson asked Daly, as a favor, to investigate whether Sony had cheated him in the making of the album. Daly reviewed the album's financing and found nothing untoward.
"When I told him that, he sort of disappeared on me," recalls Daly. "Some people don't like hearing what they don't want to hear." Soon after, Jackson had a blowup with Sony during which he was photographed carrying a placard portraying Sony Music's then chief as a devil-like figure.
Before long Jackson and Sony Music parted ways -- a situation that layered tension and mistrust onto his continuing partnership in Sony/ATV, which was operated as a separate entity from the music business.
At this point Jackson had a staff (or "organization," as he liked to say) numbering some 50 people on his payroll. Upkeep at Neverland was costing upwards of $4 million a year, and Jackson was also underwriting the staff and upkeep costs of the Encino, Calif., compound where his mother and other family members lived.
Jackson sought help from a colorful roster of managers and advisers that included a guy who Jackson didn't realize was a gay porn producer, a Florida lawyer who once represented mobster Meyer Lansky, a prominent member of the Nation of Islam, and Michael's own brother Randy.
Finances took a back seat as Jackson spent two years fighting new child molestation charges filed against him in 2003. During his successful defense, according to court papers, Jackson received $2 million from Sheikh Abdulla, the 33-year-old son of the ruler of Bahrain, to help foot his legal bills.
The sheikh, who had ambitions to be in the music business, had taken a shine to Jackson after being introduced by Michael's brother Jermaine. He says in court papers that he took care of the utility bills at Neverland for a time and helped Michael arrange his first mortgage on the property. The sheikh would describe his new friend as "a person who is very switched on, a fantastic businessman and fantastic intellectual."
Several weeks before he was acquitted, Jackson attended the funeral of lawyer Johnny Cochrane. There Jackson confessed his financial straits to Ron Burkle, the Yucaipa Cos. financier, whom Jackson had befriended.
Jackson asked Burkle if he would have an accountant look at Jackson's troubled finances. Burkle agreed, eventually telling the singer that his spending was untenable and he either needed to cut back dramatically or go back to work.
But Jackson told him, as he did others, that under no circumstances did he want to go back to performing. At the very least, Burkle insisted that Jackson begin signing all his own checks so that he could see how much he was paying for things.
Most of Neverland's staff was laid off, and Jackson -- who said he felt violated after police raided his home -- vowed never to return there. Soon after his acquittal, Jackson was living in Bahrain with his children as a guest of the sheikh.
Amid all the negative publicity swirling around Jackson, Bank of America quietly sold the loans it held on Jackson's interest in Sony/ATV, MiJac, and Neverland at a steep discount to Fortress Investments (FIG), a big hedge fund that specialized in distressed assets.
Because of covenant breaches and penalties, the loans now carried stiff terms, with an interest rate in the mid-teens, say two people who were involved in Jackson's finances.
Jackson's income consisted of small dividends from Sony/ATV, $10 million or so from MiJac, plus roughly $10 million from music royalties and other sources -- but that was not enough to stay ahead of his mounting interest payments and his legal and living expenses.
"He always was asset rich and cash-flow poor," one of these people says. "The best way to think about it is a middle-income family that spends too much on their credit card and doesn't care about the fees."
In late 2005, Jackson received a fax from Robert Wiesenthal, the chief financial officer of Sony's U.S. business. Wiesenthal understood that Jackson was days from defaulting on his Fortress publishing loan and offered to meet to discuss ways to help.
Besides aiding a partner, Sony was concerned that Jackson's half of Sony/ATV could end up in bankruptcy court -- or in the hands of an outsider like Burkle or Fortress. (Burkle declined to be interviewed, and Fortress did not respond to an interview request.)
Howard Stringer, Sony Corp.'s chairman, dispatched Wiesenthal to Dubai. In a gilded hotel suite, Wiesenthal met with Jackson and several of the sheikh's advisers and explained that Sony had lined up bankers from Citi who were willing to refinance Jackson's ATV debt on much better terms. And Sony agreed to a dividend policy from the publishing company that would help cover interest payments on the ATV loan.
In exchange, Sony received a freer hand to make investment decisions without Jackson's approval; a right of refusal on his stake; and an option to buy half of Jackson's half for around $250 million. To everyone else's surprise, Fortress exercised a right it held to match any financing terms and held onto its Jackson loans, though only for a short term.
Problems solved? Of course not. In Bahrain, Abdulla had given Jackson use of a Rolls-Royce and a Maybach and bought him jewelry and watches and a gold statue. But after a few months their relationship became another tale of mutual hurt.
Jackson left Bahrain, and Abdulla sued him for reneging on an agreement to start a label and record songs together -- including a Hurricane Katrina relief song they'd spent weeks preparing. Jackson claimed that he either did not know what he was signing or was misled. The case went to trial in London but was settled just before Jackson was to testify.
Jackson moved mostly around Europe with his children, at one point in 2006 living in Ireland and contemplating settling there. According to Raymone Bain, Jackson's spokeswoman and general manager at the time, although Jackson was focusing on raising his children, he was also determined to revive his career.
Jackson told Bain, a crisis specialist who had been spokeswoman for incarcerated D.C. mayor Marion Barry, that two constant subjects of media inquiry were off-limits: his children and his finances. "My finances are my business," he said. "Let them think I'm broke."
Jackson invited Bob Sillerman, the Wall Street entrepreneur who had acquired Elvis Presley Enterprises, to visit him in Ireland to talk about ways to turn Neverland into a fan destination. And although he had been hands-off at Sony/ATV, he was excited about acquisitions the company was making, even calling the legendary songwriter Mike Stoller before the company acquired the catalogue owned by him and Jerry Lieber, which, to Jackson's delight, included the Elvis hits "Hound Dog" and "Jailhouse Rock." "He wanted to really assure Jerry and me that we would be in the best of hands," recalls Stoller.
The Fortress loans were coming due yet again at the end of December 2007. Barclays refinanced the $300 million loan against Sony/ATV from Fortress. HSBC (HBC) lent $30 million against MiJac. Plainfield Asset Management, a hedge fund, loaned another $40 million against MiJac at a 16% interest rate on terms that allowed Jackson to defer payments while the amount due grew.
The financing was supposed to enable Jackson to settle 13 outstanding lawsuits and still have roughly $11 million on hand for creative ventures. The other loans against Sony/ATV and MiJac were both structured so that Jackson was unable to access any of the money -- dividends and profits went directly toward debt payments. And additional money was raised to have "interest reserves" that would make interest payments when Jackson couldn't. Frank DiLeo, Jackson's manager during his heyday, still can't believe the star let it all pile up. "I want to wake him up and slap him," he says.
Jackson was still, according to two people who advised him, running a deficit of $10 million to $15 million a year beyond a similar amount that he would bring in from royalties and new ventures like a special 25th anniversary "Thriller" album released last year.
Not counting financing charges, last year Jackson's personal expenses were around $8 million, says an adviser who reviewed his books -- counting everything from rent and Neverland upkeep to security, child care, and tutoring Jackson was receiving for moviemaking.
Fortress had held onto the mortgage on Neverland, and in early 2008 -- to the surprise of Bain and some of Jackson's other former advisers -- reports emerged that Neverland was going to be sold in a foreclosure auction, only to be "saved" for Jackson by Colony Capital.
By then Bain was out of the picture after Jackson had changed his phone numbers, which he did frequently. This time he didn't give her the new ones. Several months before he died, Bain filed a $44 million lawsuit against Jackson for, you guessed it, unpaid services.
"This is the saddest story in history," says Tohme Tohme, the man who succeeded Bain. "I had no purpose except to help him, to bring Michael Jackson back and make him the King of Pop. One consolation for me: I did it. He died the King."
In the days following Jackson's death, Tohme was portrayed in media reports as a mysterious if not sinister figure -- a portrait he feels besmirched him. A longtime Los Angeleno of Lebanese heritage and habitué of the Bel Air Hotel, Tohme comes from outside the entertainment business but declines to say what businesses he is in.
"If you are writing about Linda Lovelace, you don't need to know about John Holmes," he laughs, making an unexpected reference to 1970s porn stars.
Say what you will, Tohme was able to get Jackson working again. Tohme says that he has known the Jackson family for years, and that Jermaine asked Tohme to help his brother out in early 2008 when Neverland faced foreclosure.

Read the rest here http://money.cnn.com/2009/10/23/new...assets.fortune/index.htm?section=money_latest

Reporter associates Marilyn Adamo and Kim Thai


 
I loathe it that they since june 25th. print and lament everywhere on how wealthy he (or his children) is. That makes the whole suing thing even more attractive
 
I read half way through this long article and decided to stop because it is obvious the timing of this article and the hidden agenda. You can see these days Kenny Ortega is going around making interviews promoting the movie and talking very highly of Michael. When they didn’t find or get any negativity in his interviews they decided to do it on their own. We as fans should have immunity from all of this rubbish because we know their tactics.
 
I hate that everyone has to talk about how much money he had. That's what it's all about, itsn't it?
 
^^ Yes, that financial info should private. In this article they refer to court and legal documents, but we all know that this is not the full story, this is what they make out of what they have in front of them, not the actual story. Michael has lots of substantial assets which he could sell to pay his loans and depts. It is obvious that they are trying to paint a very bad image of Michael and to give a negative public perception about him. They can’t handle all the positivity that is going on these days.
 
Within this article lies the reason why Michael was killed. MONEY.

Someone killed Michael for money - and no one can shake that feeling from me.
 
I can't even read this.. it just portrays Michael as money.
 
Within this article lies the reason why Michael was killed. MONEY.

Someone killed Michael for money - and no one can shake that feeling from me.


IF someone killed him FOR money...wouldn't it have been more profitable to do it at the height of his fame? When was MJ more profitable? When did he have less liabilities (less debt)? There are people a LOT richer than MJ....yet they are still alive.

I am not convinved anyone killed him for anything. MJ had been taking propofol for years, durign the History tour he did the exact same thign he was gonna be doing in London. Taking Propofol to sleep. No one FORCED MJ to take that propofol.

CNN interviewed that anesthesiologist who gave propofol to MJ during the history tour, and contrary to Murray, he knew what he was doing.

People keep talking about MJ was if he was 5...this was a 50 year old man. He wanted Diprivan to sleep, he hired someone, debt-ridden and desperate to make a quick buck, to do it. It is time for people to face the music...


Murray's incompetency killed MJ. There are plenty of blame to go around, whoever gave MJ that idea that Diprivan could be used to sleep, is the first of that list. MJ share also some blame. His family. Joe. I could go on and on.
 
This is why somebody competent needs to run the estate - i.e. NO JACKSONS, who have a history of bankruptcy & mooching off of Michael.

They'd be nothing left for the MJ3 by the time they turn into adults if their uncles were in charge of MJs estate.
 
according to documents obtained by TMZ, mj assets were worth $ 1.700 billion in 2007 and has 350$ debts . by the end of 2007 mj created two trusts to pay the debts where all his profits from Sony/ATV were deposed . the debt would have been paid by the end of 2011 if everything went according to the plan . MJ was cash poor but never desperate for money . he was a billionaire who refused to sell his assets to generate cash . whatever , the estate is making alot and the sony/atv is also making alot . the debt probably will vanish within two years .

and I wish that the probate take as long as possible , it won't at all affect the estate ability to generate money , although the executors will spend extra time explaining every little detail to the judge , but on the other hand , no money will be distributed to katherine at all as a beneficiary . I think the allowance is more than enough . no need to get money from mj and create trusts to benefit her other children .
 
Michael meant money to every one who tried to befriend him even in Baharain. Michael knew he had money and I do not think that Tohme should be crediting himself with saving Michael? If anything he should be stating the many ways he robbed Michael!!
The height of Michael's career he was in top form where his finances were concerned. I do not think others could of taken advantage of him then. It was when he became weak, with everyone suing him, that people thought they could get his money. Michael was controlled by too many money hungry people in his last few years with who had alternate agenda.

I always say, If Michael did not have money he would of been alive today..
 
I read half way through this long article and decided to stop because it is obvious the timing of this article and the hidden agenda. You can see these days Kenny Ortega is going around making interviews promoting the movie and talking very highly of Michael. When they didn’t find or get any negativity in his interviews they decided to do it on their own. We as fans should have immunity from all of this rubbish because we know their tactics.

i certainly agree with you Arabian Knight. you put it perfectly.
 
^^ Yes, that financial info should private. In this article they refer to court and legal documents, but we all know that this is not the full story, this is what they make out of what they have in front of them, not the actual story. Michael has lots of substantial assets which he could sell to pay his loans and depts. It is obvious that they are trying to paint a very bad image of Michael and to give a negative public perception about him. They can’t handle all the positivity that is going on these days.

I agree Michael's financial statements are none of anyone business.....If he wanted everyone to know his business he would of went nation wide with it....he would of called...Oprah..:lmao:
 
No comment on the article but i will say it hurts me that he was murdered and people failed him.
 
IF someone killed him FOR money...wouldn't it have been more profitable to do it at the height of his fame? When was MJ more profitable? When did he have less liabilities (less debt)? There are people a LOT richer than MJ....yet they are still alive.

I am not convinved anyone killed him for anything. MJ had been taking propofol for years, durign the History tour he did the exact same thign he was gonna be doing in London. Taking Propofol to sleep. No one FORCED MJ to take that propofol.

CNN interviewed that anesthesiologist who gave propofol to MJ during the history tour, and contrary to Murray, he knew what he was doing.

People keep talking about MJ was if he was 5...this was a 50 year old man. He wanted Diprivan to sleep, he hired someone, debt-ridden and desperate to make a quick buck, to do it. It is time for people to face the music...


Murray's incompetency killed MJ. There are plenty of blame to go around, whoever gave MJ that idea that Diprivan could be used to sleep, is the first of that list. MJ share also some blame. His family. Joe. I could go on and on.

100% agree with you here
 
his way out from under debts that had grown from $90 million a decade ago to around $435 million today.
===================================================

OMG the debt is not 500 million yet? or 600 million or billion? come on, what is taking them so long....
losers
 
IF someone killed him FOR money...wouldn't it have been more profitable to do it at the height of his fame? When was MJ more profitable? When did he have less liabilities (less debt)? There are people a LOT richer than MJ....yet they are still alive.

It's not an issue of when it's more profitable, but when it's more accessible. You can't touch someone in good standing. But once you start letting people in to help you and everyone has their butts in your business and their hands in your pockets, then your situation isn't as unshakable. Of course he was intelligent, strong, and fully grown, but he handed his empire over to people he trusted to understand, more than he did, how to secure it and grow it. That has nothing to do with being weak or immature. It's good business acumen. He knew what he had, he knew "how much he was worth", so to speak, but he was sharp enough to realize it would be best to bring someone else in. The problem was, he put his trust in the wrong people. They were good at their job, sure - a little too good.

"Michael Jackson is an institution. He needs to be run like an institution." - Tohme
 
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