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The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich [Ammann, Daniel] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich Review: An Intriguing, Frightening Tale - Is there any prospect as frightening as a political show trial in the court of public opinion? Reading about the 17-year government witch hunt for Marc Rich - the global commodities trader credited with inventing the spot oil market - I was reminded of an old quote attributed to Cicero: "A bureaucrat is the most despicable of men, though he is needed as vultures are needed, but one hardly admires vultures whom bureaucrats so strangely resemble. I have yet to meet a bureaucrat who was not petty, dull, almost witless, crafty or stupid, an oppressor or a thief, a holder of little authority in which he delights, as a boy delights in possessing a vicious dog. Who can trust such creatures?" In the early 1980s Rich became a prototype for the celebrity show trial, having been accused of 1) the largest tax fraud in history and 2) "trading with the enemy" through the duration of the Iran hostage crisis. Rich was essentially a star-making vehicle for a fame-hungry prosecutor you may have heard of, Rudy Giuliani, launching the career in politics that followed. For the reader with strong liberterian instincts, the thrust of government overreach in the Rich story is nauseating. The U.S. government tried to pursue Rich by means fair and foul for 17 years, including a kidnapping scheme in blatant violation of Swiss laws. (In refusing to succumb to U.S. bullying, the Swiss government is an unsung hero in this tale.) The bungled extradition attempts came after Giuliani had used RICO, a controversial legal statue designed for mafia cases, to essentially shut down Rich's commodity trading business and extract hundreds of millions of dollars at gunpoint. (Imagine the government freezing your assets and mortally threatening your livelihood before there is any trial - forcing your enterprise to settle or die - and you get the idea.) Rich ultimately left the United States for Switzerland, never to come back, because he feared the sensationalized media treatment (gleefully encouraged by Giuliani and others) would increase his odds of a possible lifetime prison sentence, with prosecutors crowing about 100+ years of jail time and refusing to discuss finer points of evidence. The mind boggles at the mindset necessary for one man to pursue another in such blatant fashion. Another government operative, Ken Hill, spent 14 years "solely and exclusively" committed to the Rich case, obsessing over the bitter, vindictive image he and other crusaders had created in their own minds. What kind of life could that possibly be? The story as told by the book's author, Daniel Ammann, is unquestionably sympathetic to Rich. But that seems reasonable, based on the evidence presented, and also based on the merciless beating Rich's reputation took in the hands of his detractors. There are many who see him as "the biggest devil" to this day. There is nothing wrong with diligent pursuit of justice, obviously, or upholding the rule of law. What is so off-putting (again from a libertarian perspective) is how selectively the rule of law is applied. In other words, an individual with a show trial profile may be pursued to the ends of the earth because it conveniently fits the image-burnishing goals of the prosecutors - yet at the same time, activities of proven and far greater corruption, covered over through deep complications or access to the Washington power structure, are routinely ignored. There was perhaps nothing so galling, for example, as the trillions of dollars lifted out of taxpayers' pockets in recent years via the global financial crisis - an insider con job orchestrated at such high levels that the public (and the SEC) had zero chance of understanding. The true criminality is embedded in the system itself, and the Giulianis and Weinbergs of the world could care less. The "trading with the enemy" charges leveled against Rich also seemed gallingly hypocritical. After all, is anyone as actively involved in "trading with the enemy" as the United States government itself? One would not be surprised to find that more than half the regimes who give the U.S. trouble were, at one time or another, propped up by U.S operatives in the first place. (On top of that, one hardly needs to bring up Iraq, Afghanistan, CIA connections to the "war on drugs", and so on.) At the same time, the tax questions that originally entangled Rich - for which there is still a credible case that nothing illegal was done, as interpreted through the lens of a Swiss company operating under Swiss laws - were born of Nixon's ridiculously byzantine system of oil price controls. (Which, by the way, worsened the energy crisis rather than improving it.) The fact of the matter is that Rich was an easy man to hate, and to prosecute in the public eye, because of his willingness to do fully legal business (from the perspective of a neutral Swiss corporation) with unsavory characters like Iran, Angola, and South Africa at a time others preferred to grandstand on moral issues. This willingness to operate in the "gray areas" of capitalism (as Amman dubs them) allowed Rich to provide significant value to large-scale buyers and sellers of vital commodities, especially regarding transactions between those countries who, on an official public level, professed to have nothing to do with each other (the most eye-opening example being mutually beneficial trade between Iran and Israel). Questions of morality and government hypocrisy aside, "The King of Oil" is a fascinating tale of how one of the most successful traders of the twentieth century built his business at the heart of the global commodities trade. It should be noted that Rich is not a trader in the modern-day popular sense of the term, i.e. one who moves quickly in and out of positions and uses stop losses. He began with Phillipp Brothers, a commodities trading house later acquired and spun off as Phibro, in 1954, nearly three decades before crude oil futures hit the NYMEX. The business then, and the business of Marc Rich + Co. as it grew, was facilitating long-term arrangements between commodity buyers and sellers on a very large scale. The typical profit margins of "commodities trading" as Rich practiced it were generally small, perhaps only two or three percentage points on a deal, but the scale of activity - hundreds of millions to billions - made it an incredibly lucrative practice. In addition to matching buyers and sellers, handling transport and distribution, and making discreet use of well-placed contacts in dozens of countries, Rich's firm acted as something of a de facto investment bank for many of its developing world partners, facilitating access to international loans and letters of credit (or even investing the necessary capital itself). Some of the biggest scores also came via aggressive directional exposure to rising commodity prices. (Marc Rich + Co. eventually became Glencore International, with mentions of the founder purged from its history.) All in all "The King of Oil" is a fast and light read, interweaving a compelling story of political intrigue with the twentieth century development of global commodity markets. It is easy for an idealistic public to take a sensationalized view of Marc Rich, but not so easy to see how the wheels of trade would turn without men like him behind the scenes. Review: The Hidden World of High Finance Masterfully Revealed - Insightful, an eye-opener. This is the life of a very unusual man with an unusual destiny and Daniel Ammann brings the point home: Marc Rich is brilliant, he is really like nobody else, the true "king of oil" - and a tragic figure, almost a Greek tragedy complete with family disruption. Why not give this book 5 stars? Only because after a magnificent start, the book slows down and at the end meanders too much in details that most readers probably wouldn't care about. If the book could be cut back a little, it would be a masterpiece - but even as it is, it's a must read, highly recommended. You will learn a lot about the world of high finance and oil that you never suspected and you won't regret the time you spent on this book. As I said, an eye-opener
| Best Sellers Rank | #41,275 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #81 in Crime & Criminal Biographies #110 in Biographies of Business & Industrial Professionals #168 in Entrepreneurship (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (1,661) |
| Dimensions | 6.1 x 0.8 x 9.15 inches |
| Edition | Illustrated |
| ISBN-10 | 031265068X |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0312650681 |
| Item Weight | 12.8 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 336 pages |
| Publication date | November 9, 2010 |
| Publisher | St. Martin's Griffin |
M**R
An Intriguing, Frightening Tale
Is there any prospect as frightening as a political show trial in the court of public opinion? Reading about the 17-year government witch hunt for Marc Rich - the global commodities trader credited with inventing the spot oil market - I was reminded of an old quote attributed to Cicero: "A bureaucrat is the most despicable of men, though he is needed as vultures are needed, but one hardly admires vultures whom bureaucrats so strangely resemble. I have yet to meet a bureaucrat who was not petty, dull, almost witless, crafty or stupid, an oppressor or a thief, a holder of little authority in which he delights, as a boy delights in possessing a vicious dog. Who can trust such creatures?" In the early 1980s Rich became a prototype for the celebrity show trial, having been accused of 1) the largest tax fraud in history and 2) "trading with the enemy" through the duration of the Iran hostage crisis. Rich was essentially a star-making vehicle for a fame-hungry prosecutor you may have heard of, Rudy Giuliani, launching the career in politics that followed. For the reader with strong liberterian instincts, the thrust of government overreach in the Rich story is nauseating. The U.S. government tried to pursue Rich by means fair and foul for 17 years, including a kidnapping scheme in blatant violation of Swiss laws. (In refusing to succumb to U.S. bullying, the Swiss government is an unsung hero in this tale.) The bungled extradition attempts came after Giuliani had used RICO, a controversial legal statue designed for mafia cases, to essentially shut down Rich's commodity trading business and extract hundreds of millions of dollars at gunpoint. (Imagine the government freezing your assets and mortally threatening your livelihood before there is any trial - forcing your enterprise to settle or die - and you get the idea.) Rich ultimately left the United States for Switzerland, never to come back, because he feared the sensationalized media treatment (gleefully encouraged by Giuliani and others) would increase his odds of a possible lifetime prison sentence, with prosecutors crowing about 100+ years of jail time and refusing to discuss finer points of evidence. The mind boggles at the mindset necessary for one man to pursue another in such blatant fashion. Another government operative, Ken Hill, spent 14 years "solely and exclusively" committed to the Rich case, obsessing over the bitter, vindictive image he and other crusaders had created in their own minds. What kind of life could that possibly be? The story as told by the book's author, Daniel Ammann, is unquestionably sympathetic to Rich. But that seems reasonable, based on the evidence presented, and also based on the merciless beating Rich's reputation took in the hands of his detractors. There are many who see him as "the biggest devil" to this day. There is nothing wrong with diligent pursuit of justice, obviously, or upholding the rule of law. What is so off-putting (again from a libertarian perspective) is how selectively the rule of law is applied. In other words, an individual with a show trial profile may be pursued to the ends of the earth because it conveniently fits the image-burnishing goals of the prosecutors - yet at the same time, activities of proven and far greater corruption, covered over through deep complications or access to the Washington power structure, are routinely ignored. There was perhaps nothing so galling, for example, as the trillions of dollars lifted out of taxpayers' pockets in recent years via the global financial crisis - an insider con job orchestrated at such high levels that the public (and the SEC) had zero chance of understanding. The true criminality is embedded in the system itself, and the Giulianis and Weinbergs of the world could care less. The "trading with the enemy" charges leveled against Rich also seemed gallingly hypocritical. After all, is anyone as actively involved in "trading with the enemy" as the United States government itself? One would not be surprised to find that more than half the regimes who give the U.S. trouble were, at one time or another, propped up by U.S operatives in the first place. (On top of that, one hardly needs to bring up Iraq, Afghanistan, CIA connections to the "war on drugs", and so on.) At the same time, the tax questions that originally entangled Rich - for which there is still a credible case that nothing illegal was done, as interpreted through the lens of a Swiss company operating under Swiss laws - were born of Nixon's ridiculously byzantine system of oil price controls. (Which, by the way, worsened the energy crisis rather than improving it.) The fact of the matter is that Rich was an easy man to hate, and to prosecute in the public eye, because of his willingness to do fully legal business (from the perspective of a neutral Swiss corporation) with unsavory characters like Iran, Angola, and South Africa at a time others preferred to grandstand on moral issues. This willingness to operate in the "gray areas" of capitalism (as Amman dubs them) allowed Rich to provide significant value to large-scale buyers and sellers of vital commodities, especially regarding transactions between those countries who, on an official public level, professed to have nothing to do with each other (the most eye-opening example being mutually beneficial trade between Iran and Israel). Questions of morality and government hypocrisy aside, "The King of Oil" is a fascinating tale of how one of the most successful traders of the twentieth century built his business at the heart of the global commodities trade. It should be noted that Rich is not a trader in the modern-day popular sense of the term, i.e. one who moves quickly in and out of positions and uses stop losses. He began with Phillipp Brothers, a commodities trading house later acquired and spun off as Phibro, in 1954, nearly three decades before crude oil futures hit the NYMEX. The business then, and the business of Marc Rich + Co. as it grew, was facilitating long-term arrangements between commodity buyers and sellers on a very large scale. The typical profit margins of "commodities trading" as Rich practiced it were generally small, perhaps only two or three percentage points on a deal, but the scale of activity - hundreds of millions to billions - made it an incredibly lucrative practice. In addition to matching buyers and sellers, handling transport and distribution, and making discreet use of well-placed contacts in dozens of countries, Rich's firm acted as something of a de facto investment bank for many of its developing world partners, facilitating access to international loans and letters of credit (or even investing the necessary capital itself). Some of the biggest scores also came via aggressive directional exposure to rising commodity prices. (Marc Rich + Co. eventually became Glencore International, with mentions of the founder purged from its history.) All in all "The King of Oil" is a fast and light read, interweaving a compelling story of political intrigue with the twentieth century development of global commodity markets. It is easy for an idealistic public to take a sensationalized view of Marc Rich, but not so easy to see how the wheels of trade would turn without men like him behind the scenes.
C**E
The Hidden World of High Finance Masterfully Revealed
Insightful, an eye-opener. This is the life of a very unusual man with an unusual destiny and Daniel Ammann brings the point home: Marc Rich is brilliant, he is really like nobody else, the true "king of oil" - and a tragic figure, almost a Greek tragedy complete with family disruption. Why not give this book 5 stars? Only because after a magnificent start, the book slows down and at the end meanders too much in details that most readers probably wouldn't care about. If the book could be cut back a little, it would be a masterpiece - but even as it is, it's a must read, highly recommended. You will learn a lot about the world of high finance and oil that you never suspected and you won't regret the time you spent on this book. As I said, an eye-opener
D**K
A must read for any aspiring international businessman
For anyone seeking to understand the kind of dangers and trappings involved when in pursuit of the high life, this book is just about the material to read. Marc Rich was the granddaddy to all of the neo-rich children of globalization. Way before products and services could be distributed over the internet viz a viz Google, Facebook, etcetera - the old school tycoons actually had to travel to far flung nations and deal with questionable personalities. This was Globalization before the dot com era and how fortunes were built. Marc Rich was probably one of the precedents to globalization in 21st Century. What he managed to do was remarkable though many may consider it questionable. Rich never invented anything, never patented anything, he was a hardcore businessman and a profiteer who saw the money in ideas, a true textbook Jewish capitalist that went above and beyond for the pursuit of profit. As one U.S. Marshall put it, "if Marc calls you today it's can I make money with you today and if not today can I make money with you in the future". What this book really embellishes upon is the various intricacies involved in building an empire from getting approvals from gatekeepers and financing and all the legal headaches involved. An absolute must-read for anyone who doesn't want to be stepping on the wrong toes or getting embroiled in a life-altering manner. Lastly, as far as the man himself is concerned, in my view Marc never murdered anyone, raped anyone, or stole from anyone. The fortune he amassed was a result of his genius and life's work. Demonizing someone who tried to pay less tax and sold goods to questionable parties is not even close to what some of the rogues in America have done. Even your frat boy in modern America's Ivy League college will have a history of questionable behavior. Marc Rich at the most was a frat boy in the world of trade.
S**T
The King of Oil
I enjoyed this book. Very informative.
L**R
Closer to the truth about Marc Rich
I read "Metal Men" by Copetas when it was published in the 1980's. At the time it was a supposed expose about Marc Rich and his expoitative behavior and treachery, and was the only book written about him. There was never an interview with Rich in the book, and when I re-read it after the Clinton pardon in 2001 it still left me with a feeling that alot was missing. This new book by Ammann is a satisfying, eye-opening piece of balanced journalism that sheds enough light on Rich's life and works to allow the reader to make his own judgment on the man and the circumstances. A well-written read for anyone interested in the life and motivations of an international businessman and, by default, political figure.
G**R
very well written ....sad story of total greed
G**D
GREAT SELLER +++ FAST, CLEAN,PERFECT ... WHAT ELSE ? GREAT SELLER +++ FAST, CLEAN,PERFECT ... WHAT ELSE ? GREAT SELLER +++ FAST, CLEAN,PERFECT ... WHAT ELSE ?
S**H
A great book about a great man, truly one of a kind. Goes to show that there is no rule of law when lawyers have ambition to become politicians. A reason why everyone should become sovereign and rely not on any one country!
T**R
The book shares the dramatic life of Marc Rich, the billionaire trader who changed the global oil business. It explains Rich’s rise from his origins as a Jewish refugee fleeing Nazi-occupied Europe, through his entry in the oil and commodities trading world, to his indictment in the U.S., self-exile, and eventual pardon by President Bill Clinton. Rich was a pioneer of spot oil trading, which allowed him to break the monopoly of the big oil companies. He became wealthy by striking deals with countries under embargo and unstable regimes — places where no one else dared to go. These bold moves gave him both fortune and fame, but also made him one of the most wanted men by the CIA, FBI, and Interpol — almost like a real-life spy thriller of James Bond and Bourne Series Hollywood movies. Overall, its an engaging, well-researched, and thought-provoking book. A must-read for anyone interested in business biographies, geopolitics, and the hidden mechanics of global markets.
R**0
In a world of cookie cutter financial market participants few people have the innovation, the charisma and the determination to stick out. Marc Rich was one of those people. I have read and reread this book a number of times - and frankly the personality of Marc Rich comes through. In parts it feels reflective - and there is a sense of brooding and sense of sadness as if Marc feels he was never properly appreciated by the US. Indeed the tax issues which ultimately led to him fleeing the US feel slightly flimsy. Daniel Ammann has done an excellent job in laying out how an outsider, fleeing from Germany developed into a global titan striding the world of oil. And then how he fell - and the portrait of the death of Marc Rich's daughter and how he could only attend via conference call is heart-rending. I was recently reading a Glencore presentation which described their business model (particularly for their marketing business) - and it was surprising how the principles of Marc Rich still permeate the business. This is a must read for anyone interested in oil, markets or Glencore. But it is also a fantastic story well worth reading in its own right. Highly recommended
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