The Martin Shkreli Schadenfreude Will Pass When He Wins Like Every Other CEO | Chris Lehmann
We all detest the price-gouging, bottom-feeding pharmaceutical bro. But, like most CEOs, hes unlikely to face real penalty for his alleged misdeeds
The elves of schadenfreude would seem to have much to celebrate this vacation season with the news that the price-gouging pharmacy bro Martin Shkreli is in police detention, pending federal charges of securities fraud.
Shkreli, of course, rocketed into public infamy over recent reports that the bottom-feeding concern he captains, Turing Pharmaceuticals, had elected to hike the price of a 70 -year-old medication known as pyremethamine( used in the treatment of Aids and parasitic infections) from $1.50 to $750 per pill.
The self-infatuated 32 -year-old cretin who calls to mind a chilling alternate universe in which Justin Bieber is a Hitler Youth leader was unscathed by the cloudburst of criticism and abuse that came in the wake of this bout of unwelcome publicity.( It no doubt helped Shkreli to carry off his posture of Wall Street omnipotence that he hasnt at all been slowed down by the tedious work of actually seeing just how the science of this narcotic ran .) He insisted that he was simply doing the market-savvy product repositioning that his stockholders expected from him.
And in a sense, Shkreli is right. Hes not facing federal prosecution for his gaudy, greedy philosophy of the pharmaceutical cost point. In the mobbed-up world of drug for profit, there are no penalties for milking the final dime from a desperately sick patients cash reserves. No, thats the glorious rent-seeking genius of our free-enterprise medical system, even after the socialist apparatchiks of the Obamacare regime got their grubby mitts on it.
Instead, Shkreli appears to have been hauled up on charges of C-suite chicanery, stemming from his earlier tenure at the helm of another narcotic firm called Retrophin. The specifics of the charges will become clearer after the boyish CEOs formal arraignment, but there is, fortunately, an eye-popping civil suit pending against Shkreli for the many abuses he allegedly leapt on the guileless Retrophin board of directors.
This suit contends that Shkreli used Retrophin as a virtual ATM machine to dispense cash and company shares of disgruntled investors in Shkrelis erstwhile hedge-fund, yet another health-care consortium called MSMB Capital.
The lawsuit alleges that Martin Shkreli, self-proclaimed master of the universe, launched his hedge-fund career with a disastrous belly flop: a cash-hemorrhaging trade with Merrill Lynch involving Orexigen Therapeutics, which was seeking to develop a new weight-loss narcotic. As a result of the Orex deal, MSMB Capital lost over$ 7m, and was virtually bankrupt, the Retrophin complaint alleges, before drily mention: Shkreli did not tell his MSMB Capital investors that he had lost all their fund as a result of the Orex Trade.
Instead, the nimble, fast-talking lout made Retrophin and a company called MSMB Healthcare shell companies that allegedly made the illusion of ongoing profitable Shkreli-led market activity while also neatly doubling as sources of equity with which to pay off or otherwise placate MSMB Capital investors trying either their fund back or, God forbid, a measure of justice.
Toting up the broad array of elaborate stock issuances and cash payouts that Shkreli employed in engineering this shell game, the suit attempts $65 m in damages a comparatively modest sum, given the scale of Shkrelis enterprise.
Against that backdrop, the shameless price-gouging policy of Shreklis latest vesture, Turing, begin to make a sick sort of market sense. Like a millennial Bernie Madoff, Martin Shkreli virtually has to kite fraudulent stock bargains and other dubious means of profit maximization to stave off the aggrieved corps of ground-floor investors hes accused of initially misleading and defrauding.
But this is where a much longer-running, far sicker joke is poised to kick in the one known as federal criminal prosecution of large-scale fiscal malefactors. For all the short-term tabloid attention that Shkrelis prosecution is likely to garner, the odds against a genuinely satisfying, Madoff-style turn in the hoosegow for our boy CEO are steep.
Thats because the legal pursuing of fiscal titans is notoriously compromised and corrupted. University of Virginia statute professor Brandon L Garrett carried out in exhaustive survey of more than 2,000 criminal prosecutions of business organizations from 2000 to 2012, and published the results in his recent eloquently titled book Too Big to Jail.
Less than half of the 273 publicly traded firms facing criminal charges went through the motions of an actual trial, Garrett find; the remaining 54% of such companies either entered into cushy deferred prosecution bargains generous, laxly enforced agreements to improve the culture of criminal malfeasance at the wayward firm in question or simply skirted prosecution altogether.
And once these bargains are struck, the fix is genuinely in, financially speaking. Garrett calculates that criminal penalties extracted by the feds amount to only. 04% of the market capitalisation for the firms that enter into these agreements.( That would leave plenty of cash lying around for the bad-acting CEOs in question to spring for a secret Wu-Tang Clan CD, for example, or any number of other ego-flattering baubles .)
Garrett also reports that 40% of companies that were parties to deferred prosecution bargains paid no fines whatsoever. All told, publicly traded firms which Turing and Retrophin are make up 58% of all deferred prosecution bargains, and only 6% of the already small pond of criminally prosecuted business concerns.
It may well be, of course, that Martin Shkreli, thanks to his own big mouth and unapologetic hilarity over shaking down sick people for profit, demonstrates to be an outlier in this cruel parody of justice served. But dont bet on it.
Way back in 2004, federal prosecutors managed to secure the conviction of another celebrity investor and business mogul whom the American populace loved to detest: Martha Stewart, whose pastel-clad rear end was packed off to the federal penitentiary in Alderson, West Virginia on charges of insider trading involving a pharmaceutical company called ImClone.( That companys signature narcotic, Erbitux, which almost no one noted with horror at the time, had a marketing cost point of $1,000 per injection .)
ImClones CEO Sam Waksal also did a brief tour behind bars, but the company continued to thrive, netting a cool $6.5 bn in a takeover by Eli Lilly. Waksal himself has brushed off his prison detour to found and captain a biotech startup called Kadmon Pharmaceuticals. Kadmon is currently positioning itself for an IPO which, under SEC rules, has forced Waksal to surrender his CEO post to his brother Harlan. But the big plan has run aground among a lawsuit alleging yes securities hoax.
So lets not get too giddy over the specter of Martin Shkreli in an orange jumpsuit. Even in the unlikely event that hes tried and convicted, the system is plainly put in for him to learn nothing at all from the experience.
Read more: www.theguardian.com
The Martin Shkreli Schadenfreude Will Pass When He Wins Like Every Other CEO | Chris Lehmann
The Martin Shkreli Schadenfreude Will Pass When He Wins Like Every Other CEO | Chris Lehmann
The Martin Shkreli Schadenfreude Will Pass When He Wins Like Every Other CEO | Chris Lehmann
The Martin Shkreli Schadenfreude Will Pass When He Wins Like Every Other CEO | Chris Lehmann
The Martin Shkreli Schadenfreude Will Pass When He Wins Like Every Other CEO | Chris Lehmann