The Economist Europe – July 22-28, 2017

(National Geographic (Little) Kids) #1

50 Business The EconomistJuly 22nd 2017


1

2 ing to Vornado’s recent filings—eclipses the
value of the office building itself, says Jed
Reagan of Green Street, a research firm.
That is partly Kushner Companies’ own
doing, because of the price it paid and be-
cause it is intentionally letting the building
slowly empty of its office tenants so it can
be rebuilt. The new design, created by Zaha
Hadid, an architectwho died last year,
would include a hotel, luxuriousflats, new
space for shops and would cost $7.5bn.
The talks with Anbang fell apart in
March amid protests from ethics experts
and from Democrats, who fretted about
conflicts of interest and threats to national
security. Another avenue also recently
closed. For over two years, Kushner Com-
panies has talked to Sheikh Hamad bin Jas-
sim al-Thani, an eminent Qatari, about in-
vesting in 666 Fifth. This month The
Intercept, a newssite, reported thatHBJ, as
he is known, had agreed to invest $500m if
Mr Kushner could raise other money else-
where. Kushner Companies confirmed on
July 11th that talks had recently ended and
that it is reassessing the financing structure
of the redevelopment project.
Some speculate that MrKushner has
looked elsewhere, too. In December he
met with the head of a government-
owned Russian bank that issubject to
American sanctions. Vnesheconombank
said it was a business meeting. The White
House said that Mr Kushner was “acting in
his capacity as a transition official”.
The proposed One Journal Square de-
velopment has also hit trouble. In May Ni-
cole Meyer, Mr Kushner’ssister, courted
Chinese investors as part of America’s
“EB-5” visa programme, which offers a
path to citizenship for certain investors. In
Beijing Ms Meyer touted One Journal
Square, explained Mr Kushner’s new role
in Washington and said the building
“means a lot to me and my entire family”.
That sparked accusations that the family
was exploiting Mr Kushner’spublic role.
Kushner Companies apologised “if that
mention of her brother was in any way in-
terpreted as an attempt to lure investors”.
On May 7th Jersey City’s mayor, Steven
Fulop, said the project would not receive
the tax breaks and bonds that Kushner
Companies had sought. The city might not
have granted them in any circumstance—
the Kushners had asked for a particularly
generous package. But Mr Fulop, a Demo-
crat, and city councilmen are up for re-elec-
tion, and Mr Trump received just14% of the
city’s vote in November. Kushner Compa-
nies had already lost its anchor tenant, We-
Work, a shared-office company.
If Kushner Companies is not yet bene-
fiting from proximity to the presidency, the
potential for conflicts remains enormous.
Corporate-tax reform would have a size-
able impact on property firms, for exam-
ple. Mr Trump has said he wants a 15% cor-
porate tax to apply to pass-through

entities, which would include the LLCs
that comprise much of the Kushner busi-
nesses (and Mr Trump’s as well). Loosen-
ing of financial regulation, expected under
Mr Trump, ought to benefit lenders to
Kushner Companies. Citigroup, for exam-
ple, recently provided $425m to refinance
one of its projects in Brooklyn. Blackstone,
which lent $375m for Panorama, is raising
an infrastructure fund that might be ex-
pected to find investment opportunities in
Mr Trump’s infrastructure plan. And so on.
Richard Painter, the chief ethics lawyer
under President George W. Bush, says that
some of this “stinks to high heaven”. That

does not mean that Mr Kushner has or is
likely to violate any law. The rules govern-
ing conflicts of interest bar him from “per-
sonally orsubstantially” participating in
matters with a “direct and predictable” ef-
fect on his finances. But policies that bene-
fit Mr Kushner’s parents or Kushner Com-
panies’ partners may be allowed,
depending on circumstances. “That’s the
grey area,” saysLarry Noble of the Cam-
paign Legal Centre in Washington, DC.
What seems to have developed, in sum,
is a lose-lose situation. Mr Trump’s presi-
dency appears to be doing Kushner Com-
panies as much harm as good. If potential
business partners continue to be wary of
the scrutiny that comes with involvement
with a firm bearing his name, Mr Kushner
might end up having to choose between
his property interests and his public role.
Yet the list of potential conflicts is so
long that public confidence in policymak-
ing is at risk. A White House spokesman
says Mr Kushner will recuse himself in any
matter with “a direct and predictable ef-
fect” on entities in which he retains a finan-
cial interest. Those issues include EB-5 fi-
nancing and affordable housing, he notes.
But the White House has notpublished a
complete list of matters in which Mr
Kushner would decline to participate. And
no such list is planned. 7

The sky’s no limit

Source: Real
Capital Analytics

*Deals worth at least $2.5m
†To June 27th

Kushner Companies, investment activity*, $bn

Buys 666 Fifth
Avenue, Manhattan

2

1

0

1

2

+





20010305070911131517 †

Acquisition Disposal

Net investment

“P


RETTY close to a laughing stock.”
That is Walter Shaub’s verdict on
America’s standing in the world, at least
from an ethics point of view, under Presi-
dent Donald Trump. MrShaub’sview
counts: he stepped down this week as
head of the Office of Government Ethics, a
federal watchdog.
He is leaving his job six months early,
frustrated at the president’s failure to sepa-
rate himself from his businesses, at White
House foot-dragging on disclosing ethics
waivers for staff, at its failure to admonish a
Trump adviser who plugged the family’s
products in an interview, and more. “It’s
hard for the United States to pursue inter-
national anticorruption and ethics initia-
tives when we’re not even keeping our
own side of the street clean,” Mr Shaub
told the New York Times.
No American leader has ever entered
office with such wide business interests as
Mr Trump. In the context of the country’s
corporate landscape, his group is small,
mostly domestic and rather mediocre, but

encompasses hundreds of firms that run
hotels, golf courses, licensing agreements,
merchandise deals and more, in over two
dozen countries. Keeping tabs on the po-
tential for self-dealing is “a monumental
task”, says Kathleen Clark, an ethics expert
at Washington University. In some areas,
particularly abroad, increased scrutiny ap-
pears to be making deals harder to pull off.
But in others, such as his American hotels
and golf clubs, Mr Trump already appears
to be monetising the presidency.
On becoming president, Mr Trump put
his businesses in a trust. But it is run by two
of his sons, Eric and Donald junior, and it is
“revocable”, meaning its provisions can be
changed at any time. Eric has since said he
will update his father with profit reports,
even though Mr Trump pledged not to talk
business with his children while in office.
Mr Trump, the Trump Organisation and his
daughter, Ivanka, who owns a fashion
business and is a White House adviser,
have all hired ethics advisers to review
deals for potential problems. But how the

The Trump family’s businesses (2)

Not one to avoid a conflict


Six months into his presidency Donald Trump’s conflicts ofinterest look worse,
and his handling of them less principled, even than many expected
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