du Pont de Nemours and Company, General Motors,
Remington
Arms and other enterprises of the kind they were partial to in the 1930's.
Lundberg - The-Rich-and-the-Super-Rich-by-Ferdinand-Lundberg
The smallest company on the later Fortune list was Scott Paper, closely shadowed by Allied Stores, with assets of $413.
8 million.
The TNEC list was compiled during a depression, the Fortune list after a war and twenty years of boom, heightened concentration and inflation.
As to the owners and controllers, there has been no significant change except that they are more firmly established in the ascendancy than before, Four Rockefeller companies appear among the first twenty-five compared with 3 in 1937, and there are 6 of them on the TNEC list and 7 on the Fortune list. The two big Du Pont companies have moved up among the first twenty-five, improving relatively. One of the chief Mellon properties, Gulf Oil, has moved into the first twenty-five, in eighth place, where it was not to be found in 1937. The Ford Motor Company has moved up from twenty-third to fourth place.
One of the most spectacular improvements in the approximately thirty or so years separating the two lists was Sears, Roebuck and Company, which moved from sixty- ninth place, with assets of $284 million, to ninth place, with assets of $4. 271 billion, making it the world's leading retail merchandiser. The position of the dominant Rosenwald family has been correspondingly improved, making it easily worth more than $500 million and on the threshold of super-wealth. An even more spectacular growth company was International Business Machines, leader of the computer- automation field, which moved from one hundred eighty-fifth to twelfth place in size of assets. Most of the newcomers to the list, however, are the result of mergers, spin-offs or the rise of new industries such as aviation and gas pipelines on the basis of new capital. But, although there are newcomers, few of the newcomers are new properties.
Mergers either brought companies onto the list, moved companies up on the list or kept them on the list: General Telephone, American Metal Climax, International Telephone and Telegraph, Olin Mathieson, Burlington Industries, Erie-Lackawanna, Georgia- Pacific, General Dynamics, United Merchants and others.
While the lists in both cases represent only a small sample of American companies, these companies represent almost 70 per cent of U. S. output. Basic economic activity outside these lists represents the lesser portion of the pie.
Aluminum Company of America moved from seventy-ninth to thirty-eighth place even though its monopoly position was broken by the sale of wartime government aluminum plants to competitors. The Kaiser interests--one of these competitors, and nurtured by government patronage--have put no less than three new companies on the master list: Kaiser Aluminum, Kaiser Industries and Kaiser Steel.
The Pew family's Sun Oil Company moved up from one hundred thirty-eighth place to seventy-fifth. Although J. Paul Getty's Tidewater Oil is only sixty-ninth on the list, up from ninety-second place, it should be remembered that Getty owns most of it and has many other oil interests whose lesser dimensions fail to qualify them for this list.
Viewed again purely from the perspective of this most recent list of the biggest American proprietors, the financial grand dukes of the United States appear still to be, individually and collectively, the Rockefellers, Du Ponts, Fords, Mellons, Rosenwalds, Pews, Gettys, Phiippses, Mathers, Hartfords, McCormicks and individuals like Allen Kirby, who in addition to his New York Central and Woolworth holdings is a leading stockholder of the big Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. of New York.
The old question pops up: Have positions in these companies been maintained at the same level throughout the years? In some cases, as in that of the Du Ponts, we know they have. There have been some shifts in Rockefeller holdings, and the Ford holdings are about what they were when Henry Ford I died. At the time of the TNEC study the Rosenwalds held 12. 5 per cent of Sears, Roebuck. In view of the steady strong growth of this company one would not suppose they would have sold out. If anything, guided by Standard Doctrine, they would have increased their holdings.
As groups like railroads and coal companies declined in the economy, no doubt leading holders tended to sell them out. But they may also have reestablished positions at lower prices, and in recent years the railroads have shown great improvement, both in earnings and in market action of securities.
No big interests such as Hartfords, Zellerbachs, Weyerhaeusers, Dukes, Pitcairns, Mathews, Swifts and others are reported to have cleared out. Among smaller interests there have undoubtedly been inter-company shifts of holdings, as into oils, aviation, natural gas and gas pipelines.
Old money, though, has found its way into successful new enterprises, as in the Harriman-Warburg-Straus ground-floor investment in Polaroid.
We have seen that concentrated ownership is a more prominent feature of small companies. This circumstance and the fact that there is such concentrated ownership of very large companies show that concentration of ownership and control in few hands is a built-in feature of the American economy. While twenty million or more stockholders have an equity (usually trifling) in these and hundreds of other companies, it is a fact, as the TNEC study showed, that from two to three up to twenty of the largest stockholders own very large to total percentages of the companies. Total ownership by small inter- related groups was shown for Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, Ford Motor Company and Campbell Soup Company. The small stockholders are therefore no more than insects crawling on the backs of rhinoceri.
Six
WHERE ARE THEY NOW?
As the TNEC data are more than twenty-five years old the question naturally arises: Are these large holdings of wealth still extant? Have they not been destroyed by ruthlessly vicious taxation? Aren't the large heirs--under pressure not only of a monstrous tax burden but of militant trade unions, draconic government regulation, intense competition with each other, hostile legislators, public welfare schemes at home and Communist inroads at home and abroad--really in reduced and increasingly precarious circumstances?
The sociologist C. Wright Mills, as noticed in Chapter 2, note 2, found difficulty in ascertaining who was wealthy. He spent a good deal of time making inquiries of people supposed to know and who, though sympathetic to his quest, found the question of identities equally mysterious. He was reduced to culling names as they had been more or less randomly mentioned in various books and by authors dealing with unsystematic data and constructing his own architectonic symmetries from them.
While it cannot be claimed on the basis of any available collection of data that one has unearthed every wealthy person and clan, the means are at hand for making far better contemporary determinations than did Mills, who was apparently not aware of the monumental TNEC data. But even the TNEC findings are continually being supplemented in monthly reports of significant securities transactions, required by law, to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Moreover, any new issuance of securities by an existing company, or in the launching of a new company, requires that information be supplied to the SEC about major individual participations in ownership. This information is open to public scrutiny.
The reports to the SEC are tabulated alphabetically and published each month in the Official Summary of Security Transactions and Holdings, published by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, All persons can consult back numbers in any central metropolitan public library or can subscribe to the publication at $1. 50 per year.
Under the Securities and Exchange Act, 1934, all corporate officers, directors, closed- end investment companies and individual nonofficer owners or beneficiaries of 10 per cent or more of any securities issue of any company offering securities for sale in the American market must report each month all purchases, sales or other transfers of securities in any company in which they have a direct or indirect interest.
This requirement in some ways provides far more data than did the TNEC study. For it relates to all security-selling companies, not merely the 200 largest. And while, unlike the TNEC study, it does not single out the largest stockholders as such, the requirement that stockholders owning 10 per cent or more of any issue report changes in investment position often discloses the biggest elements. If someone owned only 2 per cent of an issue but was among the twenty largest stockholders, the SEC reports, unlike the TNEC study, would not disclose him unless he was also an officer or a director.
To some extent the 10-per cent requirement partially screens big wealth, which is held mainly in family phalanxes. For if three buyers or sellers each held 9. 9 per cent of the stock of a big company, amounting to 29. 7 per cent control, the SEC reports would not show them unless they were officers or directors. The same would be true if ten members of a family each owned 5. 5 per cent of the stock, amounting to 55 per cent or absolute control. They could be represented on the board of directors by nominees, their own lawyers or bankers, who might hold only a few directors' qualifying shares.
Not only do the SEC reports show purchases and sales but also acquisitions or dispositions by bequest or inheritance, compensation, corporate distribution, exchange or conversion, stock dividends, stock splits, redemptions and gifts. While personal gifts of stock are strewn throughout the year (apparently in observance of birthdays), Christmas appears to be a favorite time of the propertied for giving stock. The Christmas gifts are especially reflected in the January and February reports for each year.
What the SEC reports do not tell us about wealth-holdings would perhaps be a better guide than the statement of what they do contain.
The SEC reports do not inform us at all about (1) federal, state and municipal bondholdings (although they do inform us about corporate bondholdings and about all senior and junior issues); (2) noncorporate real estate, land or mortgage holdings; (3) personal interests in enterprises abroad that do not offer securities in the American market; (4) holdings of noncorporate promissory notes, options, cash, foreign exchange, insurance policies and collections of jewels or objets d'art; or (5) miscellaneous personal property, such as Swiss bank accounts, racing stables, foreign islands, yachts, airplanes and cars.
It is not our intention to determine the exact extent of participation of any fortune in a particular property, although the TNEC study did make such a determination possible with respect to the largest corporations. Nor is it our intention to determine the exact investment position of any fortune at any given moment. Such a determination could only be made by a new government study or by a Permanent National Economic Committee; even the TNEC study did not inquire into stockholdings below the top twenty, although a person could be incalculably wealthy if he was the twenty-first largest stockholder in many companies. Nor is it our intention to trace shifts in holdings among various companies, although in certain cases such shifts are clearly shown by SEC data.
Despite the logical possibility of concealment of a fortune in, say, tax-exempt bonds or jewels, it should be noticed that no big fortune was ever made in such investment media. The modern corporation, plus engineering technique, more recently aided by huge government contracts, is the big and virtually exclusive instrument of modern fortune-building, and a fortune once made cannot disappear from view merely by going into tax-exempts or real estate. One can usually trace it, as in the case of Delphine Dodge, at least up to the point of its conversion into more static media.
Even with the help of the voluminous SEC reports, it is possible to lose exact trace of some large fortunes although, having no evidence of their destruction, one knows they must still exist in some form. Individuals or groups owning 15 per cent of enterprises scrutinized by the TNEC may have halved their participation and spread the proceeds of sale among various companies. If they do not function as officers or directors or hold at least 10 per cent of some company, their further transactions are not reported by the SEC.
Lamentable though this may appear, it does not impede us by much for most of the large interests stay put. They are more likely to increase their holdings as J. Paul Getty
and the Du Ponts have steadily done to the date of this writing, than to reduce them. If they merely retain their holdings, new investments are apt to be made with income from the old investments, thus obtaining desirable diversification as a shield against changes of various kinds: technological, political, cultural, economic and social.
Aims of SEC Reports
The object of the SEC reports was to terminate the rigging of securities markets, prevalent before the passage of their enabling law. Before the law was passed, company officers, directors and leading stockholders (while issuing optimistic or pessimistic reports) would secretly sell or buy the company's stock on the basis of knowledge at variance with the reports. A large public of gullible small stockbuyers was in this way repeatedly stung and tended gradually to lose faith in the riproaring Republic for which an earlier gullible horde had bled and died.
Under the securities law, insiders cannot long keep to themselves favorable or unfavorable turns in a company's outlook. Again, what they say can be evaluated in relation to what they actually do in their own securities.
Buying and selling by insiders do not invariably indicate something about a company. Insiders, too, have been wrong in their estimates of a company's position in the context of public policies and conditions. Sometimes insiders sell some of their holdings because they need money for taxes, because they see a better opportunity elsewhere or because they have a fixed policy of taking low-tax capital gains in companies with low dividend payouts. Usually it means only that they are taking profits or avoiding losses.
Some small market operators mechanically follow the buying and selling of insiders, but not with universally fortunate results. Everything else being equal, as it seldom is, it is not a bad policy to pay heed to company officers and directors when they buy or sell heavily. For this reason the SEC monthly reports are closely studied by market aficionados. But company officers, playing only for swings in the market, often sell as quickly as they buy and the knowledge is only available a month later-sometimes too late for outsiders.
One thing the SEC reports show clearly is that in many companies the officers and directors repeatedly buy and sell as a block. Presented to the country as masterful managers of giant enterprises that are the envy of the world, as builders of the nation indeed, they nevertheless in many cases seem interested in playing this private poker game which has no economic justification. It does nothing for gross national product. In so doing they show they are basically Pecuniary Men willing to turn their attention to anything that will swell their bankrolls. If they could go out on the corner and make money by trading baseball cards or stamps the way children do, or lagging pennies, one would find them out on the corner. Their icon is the stock ticker.
Different companies have different policies about timely flutters in the securities market by officers and directors. In some cases such transactions are rare. In many companies it is apparently thought to be one of the perquisites of officers to trade tip and down in a percentage of their holdings, thus incurring low capital-gains taxes while getting more income so their wives and children won't fall behind on country-club dues.
With such factors in mind the monthly SEC reports on holdings have been selectively checked with a view to updating the TNEC data, thus reassuring anxious critics that our material is all fresh and new. But, in general, in-and-out trading by mere company officers and directors has been ignored here except when it has seemed to be of significant proportions or by significant officers.
Attention has been concentrated pretty much on the original TNEC list and the 1964 Fortune list of the largest nonfinancial companies, although there is also presented an extensive listing of control groups in other well-known companies.
As to the method used in examining the SEC reports, which embrace thousands of companies and tens of thousands of individuals: The reports have been closely scrutinized in their entirety from 1960, inclusive, through 1965. As every transaction registered requires that the net remaining holding be given, one is assured of what the latest position is, confirming or not the TNEC finding at a distance of about twenty-five years. In this way, too, late-coming names of big holders (if they buy or sell) are brought into view.
Where significant large holdings have not turned up in this 1960 decade, a special tracing backward by individual companies was made prior to 1960 to ascertain the latest date when a net position was given for some family member (thus showing the continued presence of the family).
In certain companies the holdings were traced back to 1945 or to the point that yielded the latest total holding. Such a complete tracing was made of all the major Rockefeller, Mellon, Ford, Du Pont and Rosenwald properties; it was not necessary in the case of others because their presence is fully revealed by the data of the 1960's in almost all cases.
What may seem to be a defect in this method, and perhaps it is a genuine defect, is that by stopping the retroactive survey with 1960 we won't pick up any new investments made by either new or old wealth-holders prior to 1960. But the objective here is not to show the entire investment position of either new or old wealth-holders or to trace all these elements from one company to another in such cases in which they have transferred investment allegiance. All I am trying to do is to show who is rich now and who is a big newcomer to riches by presenting some large samples.
Nor am I trying to develop in detail the names and holdings of every one of 90,000 or more millionaires. Limited space makes it necessary to confine attention to the cream of the crop.
In the case of some of the new companies, I have examined the original prospectus filed with the SEC, as required by law, to ascertain any significant changes in holdings and identities. Particular attention was given to the new public utility operating companies organized out of the old holding companies, because as matters stood in the earlier chapter we tended to lose sight of the owners in the shuffle. The question is: Are they still there? If not, who has taken their place?
We are initially armed with the fact that these companies aren't owned by just anybody out of 190 million-odd in the population. Even the most tenuous kind of ownership puts the owner into about 10 per cent of the populace. And any holding of any kind worth minimally $60,000 net as of 1953 places him within 1. 6 per cent of the population. The holdings with which we are most concerned are limited to a circle consisting of 0. 11 of 1 per cent of the population.
Thus narrowed, our attention is focused directly on the biggest American proprietors-- the magnates, the big shots.
The SEC requires that reports of a person's entire interest be made if there is any change. in any holding in which he has a beneficial interest. This means that his personal holdings, those in which he has an indirect beneficial interest as from a trust or family holding company, those held by a spouse, those for which he acts as trustee or custodian, must all be reported if more than 100 shares are bought or sold in any part of
the holding, direct or indirect. A good picture is therefore given of particular beneficial interests.
While such reporting is for individuals--except when made by a closed-end or family investment company--the holdings of big financial groups are revealed through different transactions on behalf of various members of a family.
It is true that this method will not reveal the holdings of an entire family group in a particular company unless every member of the group engages in transactions, as they sometimes do. But we already know the names of the big family groups so that if we see one member altering his investment position it may be deduced that the others are still solvent but are merely not interested in buying or selling.
We cannot tell in every case who is better off or worse off. A family group may have closed out a very large holding and diversified its ownership in smaller slices in many companies. The new diversified position may have improved its position or not. In dollar values, owing to the general inflation of prices, probably all positions have been improved. At the very top, among Mellons, Du Pouts, Rockefellers, Rosenwalds, Fords and Pews, we know that relative positions have been improved because their companies have outperformed the economy, sometimes by very wide margins. Comparisons can be made here by relating gross sales to gross national product, gross income to national income and net income to net national income.
The reports are set down by the SEC in the following general form:
John Doe
Transaction
? X shares
Net Holding
X shares
X2 do.
X2 do.
X3 do.
X4 do.
X5 do.
X6 do.
X7 do.
X8 do.
Trust
Savings fund
Employer's fund
Wife or family
As trustee
As custodian
Investment company
Partnership
X1 do.
X2 do.
X3 do.
X4 do.
X5 do
X6 do.
X7 do.
X8 do.
The plus-or-minus, indicating a purchase or sale, is credited in the SEC report to whatever individual or instrumentality did the buying or selling.
It would require too much space here to report individual by individual in this way. A somewhat different form of presentation has been adopted to convey the same information.
Our findings will be set forth as much as possible in semi-tabular form. Although share totals will be given, they will not be translated into market values. This task may be left as an exercise for the interested reader, who will be given the 1965 prices for the biggest companies.
As a foretaste of what we are after let us ask, for example, how do matters stand in the late 1960's with J. Paul Getty? Is he still rich? The SEC Official Summary, September, 1965, informs us that he personally owned 4,610,217 shares of the Getty Oil Company and was an indirect participant in trusts with 7,948,272 shares--a total of 12,558,489 shares or about 80 per cent. At a price of 34-7/8 for Getty Oil on November 22, 1965, this holding had a market value of nearly $438 million; in late 1967, $1. 2 billion.
This figure by no means represents everything owned by Getty, who is interested directly and indirectly in many other companies, but it does satisfy us that he is still very rich, probably worth more than a billion. And that is all we are concerned with. For many years, he and his companies have been steadily adding to their holdings. The SEC
report for July, 1965, showed Getty Oil owned 4,077,240 shares of Mission Development, a different company. The report for December, 1963, showed that Getty Oil, after buying 21,169 shares, owned 2,748,883 shares or 63 per cent of Tidewater Oil Company, in which J. Paul Getty through a trust fund owned now only 4,225 shares. He owned none directly, having exchanged his earlier Tidewater stock for Getty Oil stock. The report for June, 1964, showed that Mission Corporation in turn, after buying 8,500 shares, owned 3,431,280 shares of Skelly Oil Company. These are all majority ownerships.
We could go on in this way analyzing the multifarious holdings and interholdings of J. Paul Getty but we would never get to the bottom of it in any event. For Getty, like many others, is a big foreign operator and unquestionably does not have all his holdings registered on the American record.
Getty is clearly officially certified as still in possession of vast wealth. But we must continue, as there may be gnawing doubts about others, such as Rockefellers and Pews, Pitcairns, Do Ponts, McCormicks and Rosenwalds, Clarks and Dukes. 1
In requiring reports of a beneficial interest in trust funds and of holdings as a trustee, the law reveals a large portion of the social security system of the rich. It is an excellent system, and provides much security for its beneficiaries. But in considering it, one wonders about the oft-heard thesis of many conservative and ultra-conservative spokesmen and newspapers that the federal Social Security System, the Family Welfare System and the trade-union system all carry great danger of destroying the characters of the participants. They might, among other things, become mercenary or lazy.
The rich themselves very evidently do not believe that being the beneficiaries of huge trust funds has undermined their characters, or that establishing trust funds for their children will distort the children's characters. No case has come to light where the children of the wealthy have been left penniless for their own benefit. All known cases of disinheritance are punitive, because the children have displeased the parents. Why, if drawing benefits without labor from a big trust fund does not destroy character, will drawing benefits in old age from Social Security or a pension system do so? Why would a true Welfare State be injurious to the general public when a private welfare system of trust funds is not apparently injurious to its limited number of beneficiary heirs?
The Du Ponts Today
As it is never wrong to begin with the Du Ponts in any discussion of American wealth, let us begin with this fabulous clan, leveling our fundamental question: Where are they now, financially speaking? The evidence strongly suggests that they are still massively concentrated in Christiana Securities Company, E. I.
du Pont de Nemours and Company, General Motors, Remington Arms and other enterprises of the kind they were partial to in the 1930's. They stand approximately where they were shown to be in the TNEC study. They have neither gone elsewhere, suffered diminution, become bored with property ownership nor disappeared. Taxes have not exterminated them or even visibly shaken them.
Some revelatory SEC reports by members of the Du Pont family in the 1960's are, incompletely, as follows (dates refer to monthly issues of the Official Summary of Security Transactions and Holdings):
Christiana Securities Company
Irene? e du Pont, Jr
Trust
Price range 1965: $232-$315
Shares Date Reported
150,460 March, 1965
22,322
A. Felix du Pont, Jr.
Trust
L. du Pont Copeland
Trust
Crawford H. Greenewalt
Trust
S. Hallock du Pont
William Winder Laird
R. R. M. Carpenter, Jr.
Trusts
Pierre S. du Pont
Lammot du Pont Copeland,
through Delaware Realty
and Investment, merged
with Christiana
20,510
92,132
252,657 August, 1964
100
52,848
4,410
140,000 March, 1964
88,546 August, 1963
11,520 February, 1963
130,995
29,472 October, 1961
52,299*
*Shares of Delaware Realty and Investment
These holdings vary from year to year. Some of the Du Ponts are, from time to time, fairly active traders in a marginal percentage of their holdings. And while they do not reflect the entire holding of the Du Pont family in Christiana Securities, for which the TNEC study showed the family owning 73. 958 per cent of common and 58. 541 of preferred prior to its absorption of Delaware Realty (of which the family owned 83. 985 per cent), what these deals since 1960 do positively show is that the Du Pont family is today still ensconced where it was found to be by the TNEC inquiry. 2
As for E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, the world's largest chemical company, the SEC reports show the following incomplete recent holdings:
E. I. du Pont de Nemours Price range 1965: $225-1/4--$261
Shares Date Reported
Christiana Securities
Crawford H. Greenewalt
Co-trustee
L. du Pont Copeland
Andelot, Inc.
Trust
Irene? e du Pont, Jr. ,
Trusts
Pierre S. du Pont
William du Pont, Jr. ,
Trusts
Irene? e du Pont, Jr. , Trust
Henry B. du Pont
Emile F. du Pont
13,416,120 February, 1965
11,710
4,000
69,297 November, 1963
40,668
86,072
7,562 August, 1963
20,000
2,926 March, 1963
8,000 February, 1963
1,261,888
143,864 September, 1962
12,407 September, 1961
8,766 March, 1961
These are by no means the only transaction dates for Du Ponts in stock of Christiana Securities and E. I. du Pont de Nemours in the early 1960's. They merely represent some of the latest positions.
A more thorough disclosure of the identities of some leading Du Pont stockholders was made in the Monthly Summary for June 11, 1949, on the occasion of a stock split in E. I. du Pont de Nemours. Then the holdings of Du Ponts who were officers and directors and holders of more than 10 per cent were as follows:
Common Shares
Donaldson Brown, married to
Greta du Pont Barksdale
Broseco Corp. (Brown Securities Corporation) 20,000
J. Thompson Brown
W. S. Carpenter, Jr
Christiana Securities
Lammot Copeland
Trust
Delaware Realty & Investment
Emile F. du Pont
Wife
Eugene du Pont
Henry B. du Pont
Henry F. du Pont
Irene? e du Pont
Lammot du Pont
P. S. du Pont III
Pierre S. du Pont
C. H. Greenewalt
Lammot Copeland through
Delaware Realty
Emile F. du Pont
Eugene du Pont
Henry B. du Pont through
Delaware Realty
Henry F. du Pont
P. S. du Pont III
Pierre S. du Pont
Trust
49,096
47,256
12,199,200
110,680
92,572
1,217,920
2,248
180
203,212
10,844
173,000
12,000
63,836
6,940
32,896
4,236
$4. 50 series preferred
shares
16,256
15
6,405
16,256
14,184
11
34
1,611
The way titles stood at the end of 1965 was as follows: Members of the Du Pont family own more than 75 per cent of Christiana Securities, which in turn owns at least 29 per cent of the stock of E. I. du Pont de Nemours. Individual Du Ponts separately own additional E. I. du Pont stock or are beneficiaries of trust funds, so that the entire family holding exceeds 44 per cent in gigantic E. I. du Pont de Nemours.
E. I. du Pont de Nemours itself, until recently, owned 23 per cent of the stock of General Motors Corporation, saleswise the world's largest industrial company. After it and other Du Pont holding companies and trust funds were ordered by a federal court to distribute this stock to individual equity owners, each owner of each share of E. I. du Pont de Nemours received 1. 36 shares of General Motors. Upon receiving their share of the GM distribution, Christiana Securities and other Du Pont family funds (selling some to pay capital gains taxes. ) passed the GM shares they received on to individual Du Ponts.
The question now is: How much General Motors stock remains in the hands of individual Du Ponts? Assuming that they sold none since the court order took effect in 1962, on the face of it they still hold at least 17. 25 per cent of General Motors outstanding stock. This minimal figure is arrived at by assuming the payment of a 25 per cent capital gains tax on the entire holding in GM, an overgenerous assumption because the holding was not all interpreted as capital gains.
However, the Du Pont company management announced that, going beyond the court order, members of the family closely associated with the Du Pont company management would voluntarily dispose of their General Motors stock, but such sale would hardly bring holdings below 17. 25 per cent because no tax at all was required on the GM shares distributed to individuals by E. I. du Pont de Nemours.
The SEC reports do not show holdings for Du Ponts in other companies where they are not officers, do not own more than 10 per cent individually, or have not engaged in stock transactions. But that they are interested personally in other companies is shown by the September, 1965, Official Summary where Henry B. du Pont is reported holding 6,000 shares in Remington Arms after selling 500 shares. E. I. du Pont de Nemours owns 60 per cent of Remington common and 99. 6 per cent of the preferred. Transactions were not traced for this study in companies like U. S. Rubber and Phillips Petroleum, where Du Pont interests are represented on the boards of directors.
But in Remington Arms another big old-line family holding was shown in the December, 1961, report for M. Hartley Dodge, son of the founder, who was reported as retaining 510,787 shares after selling 9,072 shares to other members of his family. Mr. Dodge, son-in-law of William Rockefeller, held 50,000 additional Remington Arms shares through a holding company and 28,407 shares in a trust fund. (The SEC reports provide similar information on the other old-line wealthy families: Phipps, Clark, Danforth, Knudsen, Baker, Anderson-Clayton, Dollar, Fisher, Heinz, Swift, Prince, Pew, Harriman, Block, Ryerson, Pitcairn, Hanna, Levis, Warburg, Kresge, Timken, Armour, Grace, Bedford, Firestone, Rosenwald, Colgate, Peet, Milbank, Crocker, Jennings, Olmsted, Cudahy, Havemever, Cabot, Lehman, Woolworth, Gimbel, Jones- Laughlin, Candler, Rosengarten, Hochschild, Wrigley, Rosenstiel, Reynolds, and others. )
With very few exceptions, and a few additions, the roll that was called in the formidable TNEC study is echoed and reechoed today in the SEC monthly reports.
What has been proved in these foregoing pages? Not very much, one would be forced to agree: Merely that the Du Ponts are still alive and thriving and are richer and more powerful today than they were in 1940. And one can predict that they will continue to grow richer and more powerful as long as the continually amended New Deal, Square Deal, New Frontier and Great Society politico-economic synthesis prevails.
The Ford Family
There isn't much doubt about the financial endurance of the Ford family, because the holdings of Henry and Edsel Ford were transferred only after 1947 to the present heirs. Those who believe they may be suffering extinction under the impact of metaphorically brutal taxes or other forces may gain reassurance from recent records.
The Fords did not turn up in the SEC reports until September, 1956, when it was shown that Benson Ford held 1,025,915 shares of Ford Motor Class B stock and Henry Ford II held 1,055,346 of the Class B. The Class B stock, all of which went to the Fords, holds 40 per cent of the voting power. The way this Class B holding came to the SEC record was explained as follows: "Reported that by the terms of a trust created by a relative, Benson Ford and Henry Ford II had in common with two others an option expiring 6/26/56 to acquire 15000 shares of Class B stock. Benson Ford, on 6/20/56, by gift, delivered an assignment of his portion (3750 shares) of the option. On 6/26/56 Henry Ford II, for a consideration, delivered an assignment of his portion (3750 shares) of the option. "
In the February, 1957, Official Summary it was reported that Henry Ford II disposed of 9,000 shares of Class B and in September, 1957, it was shown that he disposed of 100,000 shares and acquired 100,000 shares of the common. The March, 1959, report showed him disposing of 19,415 Class B shares in a private sale and that he had established a holding company that owned 3,284 shares; he retained 815,901 Class B shares at this point. By September, 1959, he had reduced his common holdings to 90,500 shares.
As of September, 1964, Henry Ford II no longer held any common in his own name but did hold 43,846 shares through a trust.
In March, 1964, it was reported that he now owned 1,319,576 Class B shares, held 75,000 B shares in trust, 12,000 B shares through holding companies and was trustee for 316,398 B shares. He now held 99,846 common -shares in a trust.
In January, 1962, it was reported that Benson Ford had reduced his direct holdings of the Class B to 894,147 shares but indirectly held 5,987 in holding companies and 105,456 in trust.
These are the latest positions through 1965 shown for the two men. No positions are shown for William or Charlotte Ford, which presumably were originally identical.
As reported earlier in this account, the Ford family effectively controls the Ford Motor Company and would continue to control it even if a considerable amount of additional common stock were given voting power through sale by the Ford Foundation.
The Mellon Family
The SEC report of March, 1965, showed Richard King Mellon clearing out his last 100 shares of Aluminum Company of America $3. 75 cumulative preferred stock, leaving his holdings in this issue at zero. In July, 1963, however, he was shown as holding 861,200 common shares of Alcoa ($61-1/2-$79-5/8) ) after disposing of 291,552 shares. Alcoa is the world's largest aluminum producer. And in June, 1963, he retained 2,809,922 shares of Gulf Oil ($87-$94-1/4) ) after disposing of 1,943,580. But in July, 1961, he held 4,666,929 shares of Gulf after selling 400,000 shares.
On the basis of the above facts one might reasonably conclude that the Mellons were still flourishing, without taking into account their other manifestations in the form of directorships and the like.
But a more positive showing can be made. In December, 1945, according to SEC reports, some years before six-for-one stock splits, Richard King Mellon owned 1,070,637 shares of Gulf Oil, and his sister, Sarah Mellon Scaife (who died late in 1965) owned 1,041,144 shares. Donaldson Brown of General Motors and Du Pont intermarriage owned 100 shares of Gulf Oil in July, 1947, and held 93,400 through the Broseco Corporation. Alan M. Scaife owned 9,300 shares of Gulf Oil, according to the January 10, 1949, SEC report, and by January, 1950, had raised his holding to 10,300 shares. He owned 30,600 shares in June, 1951.
Down through the years various other transactions in Gulf Oil and Alcoa are shown for this branch of the Mellon family but there is no present point in tracing them; the Mellons are, obviously, still in the ascendant.
The SEC reports show no transactions since 1945 in Gulf Oil or Alcoa for Paul or Ailsa Mellon or transactions for either of these two Mellons in the securities of any companies since 1960. Paul Mellon has been less active than his older cousin in corporate affairs, has more particularly applied himself to foundation and cultural affairs.
The TNEC study found that this clan had a finger in some hundred companies. Even if one had records of recent transactions in them all it would be awkward to set them forth. Exposition is defeated by the very extent of holdings. Recent SEC reports show, for example, that the Consolidation Coal Company, formerly the Pittsburgh Coal Company, of which Richard, Paul, Sarah and Ailsa Mellon owned more than 50 per cent (according to the TNEC study), now holds a 7 per cent interest in the Chrysler Corporation. To trace all such ramifications would be a virtually endless task.
Nor can we undertake to scrutinize all overlappings of large interests. The M. A. Hanna Company is a very large stockholder in Consolidation Coal, the SEC reports, and has heavy investments in many other large companies. H. Barksdale Brown, of the Du Pont clan, owns 3,317 shares of Gulf Oil (SEC, May, 1965); and the Broseco Corporation, instrument of the Brown family, held 666,684 shares on that date. We have already seen that Donaldson Brown, former high General Motors executive, and the Broseco Corporation are heavy stockholders in E. I. du Pont de Nemours. Donaldson Brown and the Broseco Corporation are also substantial stockholders in General Motors (SEC, October, 1950). Down through the years there has been much talk, much of it uninformed, about interlocking directorships. It is more significant that there is a great deal of interlocking ownership among the big interests.
The Pew Family
The TNEC study found the Pew family of Philadelphia in firm ownershipcontrol of the huge Sun Oil Company ($56-5/8-$67-3/4). Recent SEC reports confirm that the family is still in charge with a large dominant interest, 41. 5 per cent. John G. Pew recently held 44,139 shares (September, 1965). Arthur E. Pew, Jr. , held 37,170 shares and a John G. Pew trust 217 shares (December, 1964). Walter C. Pew held 434,214 shares (November, 1964). J. Howard Pew held 794,416 shares (April, 1964). A trust for A. E. Pew, Jr. , held 32,207 shares (November, 1963). J. N. Pew, Jr. , held 647,335 shares (November, 1960). And so on. Whatever the precise Pew ownership position is at any given time, one is obliged to conclude that the Pews are still in full charge of the Sun Oil Company.
The Pitcairn Family
This Pennsylvania family, shown by the TNEC study to dominate the giant Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company ($67-1/4-$85), in the SEC report for August, 1965, was shown to still hold 3,121,296 shares (about 30 per cent) through the Pitcairn Company, the family holding company. Nathan Pitcairn, according to SEC reports (August, 1963) owned 2,912 shares of the Pittston Company ($23-1/8-$32-3/8), big coal, oil and transportation holding company; and the Pitcairn Company held 42,000 shares of Pittston, Whatever else they own the available record showeth not.
The Rockefeller Family
The SEC reports fail to show any dealings in any of the Standard Oil Company stocks by the six leading Rockefellers since 1940. This lacuna is perhaps to be expected, as none of them is a director in the Standard Oil cluster and apparently none individually owns as much as 10 per cent of any Standard Oil stock. As far as the SEC reports show, the Rockefeller position in the Standard Oil group has remained basically unchanged since the time of the TNEC study, although there could have been sales or purchases without their being reflected in the SEC reports. There were indeed sales of Socony in the early 1950's by the late John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
The SEC report for July 10, 1947, showed the Rockefeller Foundation holding 345,902 shares of Standard Oil of Ohio after selling 6,782 shares. Various SEC reports show recent holdings for old-line Standard Oil families such as the Jennings and Bedfords.
But a few dealings in stocks of non-Standard Oil companies of which they are directors are shown in the reports for David and Laurance Rockefeller, suggesting that they still command ample resources. Whether they have sold out any Standard Oil holdings in order to participate in other companies the record does not show, but there is no reason to suppose they have. Apart from their foundation trusteeships the
Rockefeller brothers, with the exception of New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller, are currently all directors of Rockefeller Center, Inc. , and Rockefeller Brothers, Inc.
David Rockefeller is chairman of the Chase Manhattan Bank, second largest in the country, and is known to hold stock in companies in which he holds directorships. The SEC, November, 1962, showed that he held 8,950 shares of B. F. Goodrich stock through trusts. As of 1965 he was a director of Goodrich, Rockefeller Brothers, Inc. , Equitable Life Assurance Society; and chairman of Morningside Heights, Inc. , a real estate development.
The TNEC list was compiled during a depression, the Fortune list after a war and twenty years of boom, heightened concentration and inflation.
As to the owners and controllers, there has been no significant change except that they are more firmly established in the ascendancy than before, Four Rockefeller companies appear among the first twenty-five compared with 3 in 1937, and there are 6 of them on the TNEC list and 7 on the Fortune list. The two big Du Pont companies have moved up among the first twenty-five, improving relatively. One of the chief Mellon properties, Gulf Oil, has moved into the first twenty-five, in eighth place, where it was not to be found in 1937. The Ford Motor Company has moved up from twenty-third to fourth place.
One of the most spectacular improvements in the approximately thirty or so years separating the two lists was Sears, Roebuck and Company, which moved from sixty- ninth place, with assets of $284 million, to ninth place, with assets of $4. 271 billion, making it the world's leading retail merchandiser. The position of the dominant Rosenwald family has been correspondingly improved, making it easily worth more than $500 million and on the threshold of super-wealth. An even more spectacular growth company was International Business Machines, leader of the computer- automation field, which moved from one hundred eighty-fifth to twelfth place in size of assets. Most of the newcomers to the list, however, are the result of mergers, spin-offs or the rise of new industries such as aviation and gas pipelines on the basis of new capital. But, although there are newcomers, few of the newcomers are new properties.
Mergers either brought companies onto the list, moved companies up on the list or kept them on the list: General Telephone, American Metal Climax, International Telephone and Telegraph, Olin Mathieson, Burlington Industries, Erie-Lackawanna, Georgia- Pacific, General Dynamics, United Merchants and others.
While the lists in both cases represent only a small sample of American companies, these companies represent almost 70 per cent of U. S. output. Basic economic activity outside these lists represents the lesser portion of the pie.
Aluminum Company of America moved from seventy-ninth to thirty-eighth place even though its monopoly position was broken by the sale of wartime government aluminum plants to competitors. The Kaiser interests--one of these competitors, and nurtured by government patronage--have put no less than three new companies on the master list: Kaiser Aluminum, Kaiser Industries and Kaiser Steel.
The Pew family's Sun Oil Company moved up from one hundred thirty-eighth place to seventy-fifth. Although J. Paul Getty's Tidewater Oil is only sixty-ninth on the list, up from ninety-second place, it should be remembered that Getty owns most of it and has many other oil interests whose lesser dimensions fail to qualify them for this list.
Viewed again purely from the perspective of this most recent list of the biggest American proprietors, the financial grand dukes of the United States appear still to be, individually and collectively, the Rockefellers, Du Ponts, Fords, Mellons, Rosenwalds, Pews, Gettys, Phiippses, Mathers, Hartfords, McCormicks and individuals like Allen Kirby, who in addition to his New York Central and Woolworth holdings is a leading stockholder of the big Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. of New York.
The old question pops up: Have positions in these companies been maintained at the same level throughout the years? In some cases, as in that of the Du Ponts, we know they have. There have been some shifts in Rockefeller holdings, and the Ford holdings are about what they were when Henry Ford I died. At the time of the TNEC study the Rosenwalds held 12. 5 per cent of Sears, Roebuck. In view of the steady strong growth of this company one would not suppose they would have sold out. If anything, guided by Standard Doctrine, they would have increased their holdings.
As groups like railroads and coal companies declined in the economy, no doubt leading holders tended to sell them out. But they may also have reestablished positions at lower prices, and in recent years the railroads have shown great improvement, both in earnings and in market action of securities.
No big interests such as Hartfords, Zellerbachs, Weyerhaeusers, Dukes, Pitcairns, Mathews, Swifts and others are reported to have cleared out. Among smaller interests there have undoubtedly been inter-company shifts of holdings, as into oils, aviation, natural gas and gas pipelines.
Old money, though, has found its way into successful new enterprises, as in the Harriman-Warburg-Straus ground-floor investment in Polaroid.
We have seen that concentrated ownership is a more prominent feature of small companies. This circumstance and the fact that there is such concentrated ownership of very large companies show that concentration of ownership and control in few hands is a built-in feature of the American economy. While twenty million or more stockholders have an equity (usually trifling) in these and hundreds of other companies, it is a fact, as the TNEC study showed, that from two to three up to twenty of the largest stockholders own very large to total percentages of the companies. Total ownership by small inter- related groups was shown for Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, Ford Motor Company and Campbell Soup Company. The small stockholders are therefore no more than insects crawling on the backs of rhinoceri.
Six
WHERE ARE THEY NOW?
As the TNEC data are more than twenty-five years old the question naturally arises: Are these large holdings of wealth still extant? Have they not been destroyed by ruthlessly vicious taxation? Aren't the large heirs--under pressure not only of a monstrous tax burden but of militant trade unions, draconic government regulation, intense competition with each other, hostile legislators, public welfare schemes at home and Communist inroads at home and abroad--really in reduced and increasingly precarious circumstances?
The sociologist C. Wright Mills, as noticed in Chapter 2, note 2, found difficulty in ascertaining who was wealthy. He spent a good deal of time making inquiries of people supposed to know and who, though sympathetic to his quest, found the question of identities equally mysterious. He was reduced to culling names as they had been more or less randomly mentioned in various books and by authors dealing with unsystematic data and constructing his own architectonic symmetries from them.
While it cannot be claimed on the basis of any available collection of data that one has unearthed every wealthy person and clan, the means are at hand for making far better contemporary determinations than did Mills, who was apparently not aware of the monumental TNEC data. But even the TNEC findings are continually being supplemented in monthly reports of significant securities transactions, required by law, to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Moreover, any new issuance of securities by an existing company, or in the launching of a new company, requires that information be supplied to the SEC about major individual participations in ownership. This information is open to public scrutiny.
The reports to the SEC are tabulated alphabetically and published each month in the Official Summary of Security Transactions and Holdings, published by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, All persons can consult back numbers in any central metropolitan public library or can subscribe to the publication at $1. 50 per year.
Under the Securities and Exchange Act, 1934, all corporate officers, directors, closed- end investment companies and individual nonofficer owners or beneficiaries of 10 per cent or more of any securities issue of any company offering securities for sale in the American market must report each month all purchases, sales or other transfers of securities in any company in which they have a direct or indirect interest.
This requirement in some ways provides far more data than did the TNEC study. For it relates to all security-selling companies, not merely the 200 largest. And while, unlike the TNEC study, it does not single out the largest stockholders as such, the requirement that stockholders owning 10 per cent or more of any issue report changes in investment position often discloses the biggest elements. If someone owned only 2 per cent of an issue but was among the twenty largest stockholders, the SEC reports, unlike the TNEC study, would not disclose him unless he was also an officer or a director.
To some extent the 10-per cent requirement partially screens big wealth, which is held mainly in family phalanxes. For if three buyers or sellers each held 9. 9 per cent of the stock of a big company, amounting to 29. 7 per cent control, the SEC reports would not show them unless they were officers or directors. The same would be true if ten members of a family each owned 5. 5 per cent of the stock, amounting to 55 per cent or absolute control. They could be represented on the board of directors by nominees, their own lawyers or bankers, who might hold only a few directors' qualifying shares.
Not only do the SEC reports show purchases and sales but also acquisitions or dispositions by bequest or inheritance, compensation, corporate distribution, exchange or conversion, stock dividends, stock splits, redemptions and gifts. While personal gifts of stock are strewn throughout the year (apparently in observance of birthdays), Christmas appears to be a favorite time of the propertied for giving stock. The Christmas gifts are especially reflected in the January and February reports for each year.
What the SEC reports do not tell us about wealth-holdings would perhaps be a better guide than the statement of what they do contain.
The SEC reports do not inform us at all about (1) federal, state and municipal bondholdings (although they do inform us about corporate bondholdings and about all senior and junior issues); (2) noncorporate real estate, land or mortgage holdings; (3) personal interests in enterprises abroad that do not offer securities in the American market; (4) holdings of noncorporate promissory notes, options, cash, foreign exchange, insurance policies and collections of jewels or objets d'art; or (5) miscellaneous personal property, such as Swiss bank accounts, racing stables, foreign islands, yachts, airplanes and cars.
It is not our intention to determine the exact extent of participation of any fortune in a particular property, although the TNEC study did make such a determination possible with respect to the largest corporations. Nor is it our intention to determine the exact investment position of any fortune at any given moment. Such a determination could only be made by a new government study or by a Permanent National Economic Committee; even the TNEC study did not inquire into stockholdings below the top twenty, although a person could be incalculably wealthy if he was the twenty-first largest stockholder in many companies. Nor is it our intention to trace shifts in holdings among various companies, although in certain cases such shifts are clearly shown by SEC data.
Despite the logical possibility of concealment of a fortune in, say, tax-exempt bonds or jewels, it should be noticed that no big fortune was ever made in such investment media. The modern corporation, plus engineering technique, more recently aided by huge government contracts, is the big and virtually exclusive instrument of modern fortune-building, and a fortune once made cannot disappear from view merely by going into tax-exempts or real estate. One can usually trace it, as in the case of Delphine Dodge, at least up to the point of its conversion into more static media.
Even with the help of the voluminous SEC reports, it is possible to lose exact trace of some large fortunes although, having no evidence of their destruction, one knows they must still exist in some form. Individuals or groups owning 15 per cent of enterprises scrutinized by the TNEC may have halved their participation and spread the proceeds of sale among various companies. If they do not function as officers or directors or hold at least 10 per cent of some company, their further transactions are not reported by the SEC.
Lamentable though this may appear, it does not impede us by much for most of the large interests stay put. They are more likely to increase their holdings as J. Paul Getty
and the Du Ponts have steadily done to the date of this writing, than to reduce them. If they merely retain their holdings, new investments are apt to be made with income from the old investments, thus obtaining desirable diversification as a shield against changes of various kinds: technological, political, cultural, economic and social.
Aims of SEC Reports
The object of the SEC reports was to terminate the rigging of securities markets, prevalent before the passage of their enabling law. Before the law was passed, company officers, directors and leading stockholders (while issuing optimistic or pessimistic reports) would secretly sell or buy the company's stock on the basis of knowledge at variance with the reports. A large public of gullible small stockbuyers was in this way repeatedly stung and tended gradually to lose faith in the riproaring Republic for which an earlier gullible horde had bled and died.
Under the securities law, insiders cannot long keep to themselves favorable or unfavorable turns in a company's outlook. Again, what they say can be evaluated in relation to what they actually do in their own securities.
Buying and selling by insiders do not invariably indicate something about a company. Insiders, too, have been wrong in their estimates of a company's position in the context of public policies and conditions. Sometimes insiders sell some of their holdings because they need money for taxes, because they see a better opportunity elsewhere or because they have a fixed policy of taking low-tax capital gains in companies with low dividend payouts. Usually it means only that they are taking profits or avoiding losses.
Some small market operators mechanically follow the buying and selling of insiders, but not with universally fortunate results. Everything else being equal, as it seldom is, it is not a bad policy to pay heed to company officers and directors when they buy or sell heavily. For this reason the SEC monthly reports are closely studied by market aficionados. But company officers, playing only for swings in the market, often sell as quickly as they buy and the knowledge is only available a month later-sometimes too late for outsiders.
One thing the SEC reports show clearly is that in many companies the officers and directors repeatedly buy and sell as a block. Presented to the country as masterful managers of giant enterprises that are the envy of the world, as builders of the nation indeed, they nevertheless in many cases seem interested in playing this private poker game which has no economic justification. It does nothing for gross national product. In so doing they show they are basically Pecuniary Men willing to turn their attention to anything that will swell their bankrolls. If they could go out on the corner and make money by trading baseball cards or stamps the way children do, or lagging pennies, one would find them out on the corner. Their icon is the stock ticker.
Different companies have different policies about timely flutters in the securities market by officers and directors. In some cases such transactions are rare. In many companies it is apparently thought to be one of the perquisites of officers to trade tip and down in a percentage of their holdings, thus incurring low capital-gains taxes while getting more income so their wives and children won't fall behind on country-club dues.
With such factors in mind the monthly SEC reports on holdings have been selectively checked with a view to updating the TNEC data, thus reassuring anxious critics that our material is all fresh and new. But, in general, in-and-out trading by mere company officers and directors has been ignored here except when it has seemed to be of significant proportions or by significant officers.
Attention has been concentrated pretty much on the original TNEC list and the 1964 Fortune list of the largest nonfinancial companies, although there is also presented an extensive listing of control groups in other well-known companies.
As to the method used in examining the SEC reports, which embrace thousands of companies and tens of thousands of individuals: The reports have been closely scrutinized in their entirety from 1960, inclusive, through 1965. As every transaction registered requires that the net remaining holding be given, one is assured of what the latest position is, confirming or not the TNEC finding at a distance of about twenty-five years. In this way, too, late-coming names of big holders (if they buy or sell) are brought into view.
Where significant large holdings have not turned up in this 1960 decade, a special tracing backward by individual companies was made prior to 1960 to ascertain the latest date when a net position was given for some family member (thus showing the continued presence of the family).
In certain companies the holdings were traced back to 1945 or to the point that yielded the latest total holding. Such a complete tracing was made of all the major Rockefeller, Mellon, Ford, Du Pont and Rosenwald properties; it was not necessary in the case of others because their presence is fully revealed by the data of the 1960's in almost all cases.
What may seem to be a defect in this method, and perhaps it is a genuine defect, is that by stopping the retroactive survey with 1960 we won't pick up any new investments made by either new or old wealth-holders prior to 1960. But the objective here is not to show the entire investment position of either new or old wealth-holders or to trace all these elements from one company to another in such cases in which they have transferred investment allegiance. All I am trying to do is to show who is rich now and who is a big newcomer to riches by presenting some large samples.
Nor am I trying to develop in detail the names and holdings of every one of 90,000 or more millionaires. Limited space makes it necessary to confine attention to the cream of the crop.
In the case of some of the new companies, I have examined the original prospectus filed with the SEC, as required by law, to ascertain any significant changes in holdings and identities. Particular attention was given to the new public utility operating companies organized out of the old holding companies, because as matters stood in the earlier chapter we tended to lose sight of the owners in the shuffle. The question is: Are they still there? If not, who has taken their place?
We are initially armed with the fact that these companies aren't owned by just anybody out of 190 million-odd in the population. Even the most tenuous kind of ownership puts the owner into about 10 per cent of the populace. And any holding of any kind worth minimally $60,000 net as of 1953 places him within 1. 6 per cent of the population. The holdings with which we are most concerned are limited to a circle consisting of 0. 11 of 1 per cent of the population.
Thus narrowed, our attention is focused directly on the biggest American proprietors-- the magnates, the big shots.
The SEC requires that reports of a person's entire interest be made if there is any change. in any holding in which he has a beneficial interest. This means that his personal holdings, those in which he has an indirect beneficial interest as from a trust or family holding company, those held by a spouse, those for which he acts as trustee or custodian, must all be reported if more than 100 shares are bought or sold in any part of
the holding, direct or indirect. A good picture is therefore given of particular beneficial interests.
While such reporting is for individuals--except when made by a closed-end or family investment company--the holdings of big financial groups are revealed through different transactions on behalf of various members of a family.
It is true that this method will not reveal the holdings of an entire family group in a particular company unless every member of the group engages in transactions, as they sometimes do. But we already know the names of the big family groups so that if we see one member altering his investment position it may be deduced that the others are still solvent but are merely not interested in buying or selling.
We cannot tell in every case who is better off or worse off. A family group may have closed out a very large holding and diversified its ownership in smaller slices in many companies. The new diversified position may have improved its position or not. In dollar values, owing to the general inflation of prices, probably all positions have been improved. At the very top, among Mellons, Du Pouts, Rockefellers, Rosenwalds, Fords and Pews, we know that relative positions have been improved because their companies have outperformed the economy, sometimes by very wide margins. Comparisons can be made here by relating gross sales to gross national product, gross income to national income and net income to net national income.
The reports are set down by the SEC in the following general form:
John Doe
Transaction
? X shares
Net Holding
X shares
X2 do.
X2 do.
X3 do.
X4 do.
X5 do.
X6 do.
X7 do.
X8 do.
Trust
Savings fund
Employer's fund
Wife or family
As trustee
As custodian
Investment company
Partnership
X1 do.
X2 do.
X3 do.
X4 do.
X5 do
X6 do.
X7 do.
X8 do.
The plus-or-minus, indicating a purchase or sale, is credited in the SEC report to whatever individual or instrumentality did the buying or selling.
It would require too much space here to report individual by individual in this way. A somewhat different form of presentation has been adopted to convey the same information.
Our findings will be set forth as much as possible in semi-tabular form. Although share totals will be given, they will not be translated into market values. This task may be left as an exercise for the interested reader, who will be given the 1965 prices for the biggest companies.
As a foretaste of what we are after let us ask, for example, how do matters stand in the late 1960's with J. Paul Getty? Is he still rich? The SEC Official Summary, September, 1965, informs us that he personally owned 4,610,217 shares of the Getty Oil Company and was an indirect participant in trusts with 7,948,272 shares--a total of 12,558,489 shares or about 80 per cent. At a price of 34-7/8 for Getty Oil on November 22, 1965, this holding had a market value of nearly $438 million; in late 1967, $1. 2 billion.
This figure by no means represents everything owned by Getty, who is interested directly and indirectly in many other companies, but it does satisfy us that he is still very rich, probably worth more than a billion. And that is all we are concerned with. For many years, he and his companies have been steadily adding to their holdings. The SEC
report for July, 1965, showed Getty Oil owned 4,077,240 shares of Mission Development, a different company. The report for December, 1963, showed that Getty Oil, after buying 21,169 shares, owned 2,748,883 shares or 63 per cent of Tidewater Oil Company, in which J. Paul Getty through a trust fund owned now only 4,225 shares. He owned none directly, having exchanged his earlier Tidewater stock for Getty Oil stock. The report for June, 1964, showed that Mission Corporation in turn, after buying 8,500 shares, owned 3,431,280 shares of Skelly Oil Company. These are all majority ownerships.
We could go on in this way analyzing the multifarious holdings and interholdings of J. Paul Getty but we would never get to the bottom of it in any event. For Getty, like many others, is a big foreign operator and unquestionably does not have all his holdings registered on the American record.
Getty is clearly officially certified as still in possession of vast wealth. But we must continue, as there may be gnawing doubts about others, such as Rockefellers and Pews, Pitcairns, Do Ponts, McCormicks and Rosenwalds, Clarks and Dukes. 1
In requiring reports of a beneficial interest in trust funds and of holdings as a trustee, the law reveals a large portion of the social security system of the rich. It is an excellent system, and provides much security for its beneficiaries. But in considering it, one wonders about the oft-heard thesis of many conservative and ultra-conservative spokesmen and newspapers that the federal Social Security System, the Family Welfare System and the trade-union system all carry great danger of destroying the characters of the participants. They might, among other things, become mercenary or lazy.
The rich themselves very evidently do not believe that being the beneficiaries of huge trust funds has undermined their characters, or that establishing trust funds for their children will distort the children's characters. No case has come to light where the children of the wealthy have been left penniless for their own benefit. All known cases of disinheritance are punitive, because the children have displeased the parents. Why, if drawing benefits without labor from a big trust fund does not destroy character, will drawing benefits in old age from Social Security or a pension system do so? Why would a true Welfare State be injurious to the general public when a private welfare system of trust funds is not apparently injurious to its limited number of beneficiary heirs?
The Du Ponts Today
As it is never wrong to begin with the Du Ponts in any discussion of American wealth, let us begin with this fabulous clan, leveling our fundamental question: Where are they now, financially speaking? The evidence strongly suggests that they are still massively concentrated in Christiana Securities Company, E. I.
du Pont de Nemours and Company, General Motors, Remington Arms and other enterprises of the kind they were partial to in the 1930's. They stand approximately where they were shown to be in the TNEC study. They have neither gone elsewhere, suffered diminution, become bored with property ownership nor disappeared. Taxes have not exterminated them or even visibly shaken them.
Some revelatory SEC reports by members of the Du Pont family in the 1960's are, incompletely, as follows (dates refer to monthly issues of the Official Summary of Security Transactions and Holdings):
Christiana Securities Company
Irene? e du Pont, Jr
Trust
Price range 1965: $232-$315
Shares Date Reported
150,460 March, 1965
22,322
A. Felix du Pont, Jr.
Trust
L. du Pont Copeland
Trust
Crawford H. Greenewalt
Trust
S. Hallock du Pont
William Winder Laird
R. R. M. Carpenter, Jr.
Trusts
Pierre S. du Pont
Lammot du Pont Copeland,
through Delaware Realty
and Investment, merged
with Christiana
20,510
92,132
252,657 August, 1964
100
52,848
4,410
140,000 March, 1964
88,546 August, 1963
11,520 February, 1963
130,995
29,472 October, 1961
52,299*
*Shares of Delaware Realty and Investment
These holdings vary from year to year. Some of the Du Ponts are, from time to time, fairly active traders in a marginal percentage of their holdings. And while they do not reflect the entire holding of the Du Pont family in Christiana Securities, for which the TNEC study showed the family owning 73. 958 per cent of common and 58. 541 of preferred prior to its absorption of Delaware Realty (of which the family owned 83. 985 per cent), what these deals since 1960 do positively show is that the Du Pont family is today still ensconced where it was found to be by the TNEC inquiry. 2
As for E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, the world's largest chemical company, the SEC reports show the following incomplete recent holdings:
E. I. du Pont de Nemours Price range 1965: $225-1/4--$261
Shares Date Reported
Christiana Securities
Crawford H. Greenewalt
Co-trustee
L. du Pont Copeland
Andelot, Inc.
Trust
Irene? e du Pont, Jr. ,
Trusts
Pierre S. du Pont
William du Pont, Jr. ,
Trusts
Irene? e du Pont, Jr. , Trust
Henry B. du Pont
Emile F. du Pont
13,416,120 February, 1965
11,710
4,000
69,297 November, 1963
40,668
86,072
7,562 August, 1963
20,000
2,926 March, 1963
8,000 February, 1963
1,261,888
143,864 September, 1962
12,407 September, 1961
8,766 March, 1961
These are by no means the only transaction dates for Du Ponts in stock of Christiana Securities and E. I. du Pont de Nemours in the early 1960's. They merely represent some of the latest positions.
A more thorough disclosure of the identities of some leading Du Pont stockholders was made in the Monthly Summary for June 11, 1949, on the occasion of a stock split in E. I. du Pont de Nemours. Then the holdings of Du Ponts who were officers and directors and holders of more than 10 per cent were as follows:
Common Shares
Donaldson Brown, married to
Greta du Pont Barksdale
Broseco Corp. (Brown Securities Corporation) 20,000
J. Thompson Brown
W. S. Carpenter, Jr
Christiana Securities
Lammot Copeland
Trust
Delaware Realty & Investment
Emile F. du Pont
Wife
Eugene du Pont
Henry B. du Pont
Henry F. du Pont
Irene? e du Pont
Lammot du Pont
P. S. du Pont III
Pierre S. du Pont
C. H. Greenewalt
Lammot Copeland through
Delaware Realty
Emile F. du Pont
Eugene du Pont
Henry B. du Pont through
Delaware Realty
Henry F. du Pont
P. S. du Pont III
Pierre S. du Pont
Trust
49,096
47,256
12,199,200
110,680
92,572
1,217,920
2,248
180
203,212
10,844
173,000
12,000
63,836
6,940
32,896
4,236
$4. 50 series preferred
shares
16,256
15
6,405
16,256
14,184
11
34
1,611
The way titles stood at the end of 1965 was as follows: Members of the Du Pont family own more than 75 per cent of Christiana Securities, which in turn owns at least 29 per cent of the stock of E. I. du Pont de Nemours. Individual Du Ponts separately own additional E. I. du Pont stock or are beneficiaries of trust funds, so that the entire family holding exceeds 44 per cent in gigantic E. I. du Pont de Nemours.
E. I. du Pont de Nemours itself, until recently, owned 23 per cent of the stock of General Motors Corporation, saleswise the world's largest industrial company. After it and other Du Pont holding companies and trust funds were ordered by a federal court to distribute this stock to individual equity owners, each owner of each share of E. I. du Pont de Nemours received 1. 36 shares of General Motors. Upon receiving their share of the GM distribution, Christiana Securities and other Du Pont family funds (selling some to pay capital gains taxes. ) passed the GM shares they received on to individual Du Ponts.
The question now is: How much General Motors stock remains in the hands of individual Du Ponts? Assuming that they sold none since the court order took effect in 1962, on the face of it they still hold at least 17. 25 per cent of General Motors outstanding stock. This minimal figure is arrived at by assuming the payment of a 25 per cent capital gains tax on the entire holding in GM, an overgenerous assumption because the holding was not all interpreted as capital gains.
However, the Du Pont company management announced that, going beyond the court order, members of the family closely associated with the Du Pont company management would voluntarily dispose of their General Motors stock, but such sale would hardly bring holdings below 17. 25 per cent because no tax at all was required on the GM shares distributed to individuals by E. I. du Pont de Nemours.
The SEC reports do not show holdings for Du Ponts in other companies where they are not officers, do not own more than 10 per cent individually, or have not engaged in stock transactions. But that they are interested personally in other companies is shown by the September, 1965, Official Summary where Henry B. du Pont is reported holding 6,000 shares in Remington Arms after selling 500 shares. E. I. du Pont de Nemours owns 60 per cent of Remington common and 99. 6 per cent of the preferred. Transactions were not traced for this study in companies like U. S. Rubber and Phillips Petroleum, where Du Pont interests are represented on the boards of directors.
But in Remington Arms another big old-line family holding was shown in the December, 1961, report for M. Hartley Dodge, son of the founder, who was reported as retaining 510,787 shares after selling 9,072 shares to other members of his family. Mr. Dodge, son-in-law of William Rockefeller, held 50,000 additional Remington Arms shares through a holding company and 28,407 shares in a trust fund. (The SEC reports provide similar information on the other old-line wealthy families: Phipps, Clark, Danforth, Knudsen, Baker, Anderson-Clayton, Dollar, Fisher, Heinz, Swift, Prince, Pew, Harriman, Block, Ryerson, Pitcairn, Hanna, Levis, Warburg, Kresge, Timken, Armour, Grace, Bedford, Firestone, Rosenwald, Colgate, Peet, Milbank, Crocker, Jennings, Olmsted, Cudahy, Havemever, Cabot, Lehman, Woolworth, Gimbel, Jones- Laughlin, Candler, Rosengarten, Hochschild, Wrigley, Rosenstiel, Reynolds, and others. )
With very few exceptions, and a few additions, the roll that was called in the formidable TNEC study is echoed and reechoed today in the SEC monthly reports.
What has been proved in these foregoing pages? Not very much, one would be forced to agree: Merely that the Du Ponts are still alive and thriving and are richer and more powerful today than they were in 1940. And one can predict that they will continue to grow richer and more powerful as long as the continually amended New Deal, Square Deal, New Frontier and Great Society politico-economic synthesis prevails.
The Ford Family
There isn't much doubt about the financial endurance of the Ford family, because the holdings of Henry and Edsel Ford were transferred only after 1947 to the present heirs. Those who believe they may be suffering extinction under the impact of metaphorically brutal taxes or other forces may gain reassurance from recent records.
The Fords did not turn up in the SEC reports until September, 1956, when it was shown that Benson Ford held 1,025,915 shares of Ford Motor Class B stock and Henry Ford II held 1,055,346 of the Class B. The Class B stock, all of which went to the Fords, holds 40 per cent of the voting power. The way this Class B holding came to the SEC record was explained as follows: "Reported that by the terms of a trust created by a relative, Benson Ford and Henry Ford II had in common with two others an option expiring 6/26/56 to acquire 15000 shares of Class B stock. Benson Ford, on 6/20/56, by gift, delivered an assignment of his portion (3750 shares) of the option. On 6/26/56 Henry Ford II, for a consideration, delivered an assignment of his portion (3750 shares) of the option. "
In the February, 1957, Official Summary it was reported that Henry Ford II disposed of 9,000 shares of Class B and in September, 1957, it was shown that he disposed of 100,000 shares and acquired 100,000 shares of the common. The March, 1959, report showed him disposing of 19,415 Class B shares in a private sale and that he had established a holding company that owned 3,284 shares; he retained 815,901 Class B shares at this point. By September, 1959, he had reduced his common holdings to 90,500 shares.
As of September, 1964, Henry Ford II no longer held any common in his own name but did hold 43,846 shares through a trust.
In March, 1964, it was reported that he now owned 1,319,576 Class B shares, held 75,000 B shares in trust, 12,000 B shares through holding companies and was trustee for 316,398 B shares. He now held 99,846 common -shares in a trust.
In January, 1962, it was reported that Benson Ford had reduced his direct holdings of the Class B to 894,147 shares but indirectly held 5,987 in holding companies and 105,456 in trust.
These are the latest positions through 1965 shown for the two men. No positions are shown for William or Charlotte Ford, which presumably were originally identical.
As reported earlier in this account, the Ford family effectively controls the Ford Motor Company and would continue to control it even if a considerable amount of additional common stock were given voting power through sale by the Ford Foundation.
The Mellon Family
The SEC report of March, 1965, showed Richard King Mellon clearing out his last 100 shares of Aluminum Company of America $3. 75 cumulative preferred stock, leaving his holdings in this issue at zero. In July, 1963, however, he was shown as holding 861,200 common shares of Alcoa ($61-1/2-$79-5/8) ) after disposing of 291,552 shares. Alcoa is the world's largest aluminum producer. And in June, 1963, he retained 2,809,922 shares of Gulf Oil ($87-$94-1/4) ) after disposing of 1,943,580. But in July, 1961, he held 4,666,929 shares of Gulf after selling 400,000 shares.
On the basis of the above facts one might reasonably conclude that the Mellons were still flourishing, without taking into account their other manifestations in the form of directorships and the like.
But a more positive showing can be made. In December, 1945, according to SEC reports, some years before six-for-one stock splits, Richard King Mellon owned 1,070,637 shares of Gulf Oil, and his sister, Sarah Mellon Scaife (who died late in 1965) owned 1,041,144 shares. Donaldson Brown of General Motors and Du Pont intermarriage owned 100 shares of Gulf Oil in July, 1947, and held 93,400 through the Broseco Corporation. Alan M. Scaife owned 9,300 shares of Gulf Oil, according to the January 10, 1949, SEC report, and by January, 1950, had raised his holding to 10,300 shares. He owned 30,600 shares in June, 1951.
Down through the years various other transactions in Gulf Oil and Alcoa are shown for this branch of the Mellon family but there is no present point in tracing them; the Mellons are, obviously, still in the ascendant.
The SEC reports show no transactions since 1945 in Gulf Oil or Alcoa for Paul or Ailsa Mellon or transactions for either of these two Mellons in the securities of any companies since 1960. Paul Mellon has been less active than his older cousin in corporate affairs, has more particularly applied himself to foundation and cultural affairs.
The TNEC study found that this clan had a finger in some hundred companies. Even if one had records of recent transactions in them all it would be awkward to set them forth. Exposition is defeated by the very extent of holdings. Recent SEC reports show, for example, that the Consolidation Coal Company, formerly the Pittsburgh Coal Company, of which Richard, Paul, Sarah and Ailsa Mellon owned more than 50 per cent (according to the TNEC study), now holds a 7 per cent interest in the Chrysler Corporation. To trace all such ramifications would be a virtually endless task.
Nor can we undertake to scrutinize all overlappings of large interests. The M. A. Hanna Company is a very large stockholder in Consolidation Coal, the SEC reports, and has heavy investments in many other large companies. H. Barksdale Brown, of the Du Pont clan, owns 3,317 shares of Gulf Oil (SEC, May, 1965); and the Broseco Corporation, instrument of the Brown family, held 666,684 shares on that date. We have already seen that Donaldson Brown, former high General Motors executive, and the Broseco Corporation are heavy stockholders in E. I. du Pont de Nemours. Donaldson Brown and the Broseco Corporation are also substantial stockholders in General Motors (SEC, October, 1950). Down through the years there has been much talk, much of it uninformed, about interlocking directorships. It is more significant that there is a great deal of interlocking ownership among the big interests.
The Pew Family
The TNEC study found the Pew family of Philadelphia in firm ownershipcontrol of the huge Sun Oil Company ($56-5/8-$67-3/4). Recent SEC reports confirm that the family is still in charge with a large dominant interest, 41. 5 per cent. John G. Pew recently held 44,139 shares (September, 1965). Arthur E. Pew, Jr. , held 37,170 shares and a John G. Pew trust 217 shares (December, 1964). Walter C. Pew held 434,214 shares (November, 1964). J. Howard Pew held 794,416 shares (April, 1964). A trust for A. E. Pew, Jr. , held 32,207 shares (November, 1963). J. N. Pew, Jr. , held 647,335 shares (November, 1960). And so on. Whatever the precise Pew ownership position is at any given time, one is obliged to conclude that the Pews are still in full charge of the Sun Oil Company.
The Pitcairn Family
This Pennsylvania family, shown by the TNEC study to dominate the giant Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company ($67-1/4-$85), in the SEC report for August, 1965, was shown to still hold 3,121,296 shares (about 30 per cent) through the Pitcairn Company, the family holding company. Nathan Pitcairn, according to SEC reports (August, 1963) owned 2,912 shares of the Pittston Company ($23-1/8-$32-3/8), big coal, oil and transportation holding company; and the Pitcairn Company held 42,000 shares of Pittston, Whatever else they own the available record showeth not.
The Rockefeller Family
The SEC reports fail to show any dealings in any of the Standard Oil Company stocks by the six leading Rockefellers since 1940. This lacuna is perhaps to be expected, as none of them is a director in the Standard Oil cluster and apparently none individually owns as much as 10 per cent of any Standard Oil stock. As far as the SEC reports show, the Rockefeller position in the Standard Oil group has remained basically unchanged since the time of the TNEC study, although there could have been sales or purchases without their being reflected in the SEC reports. There were indeed sales of Socony in the early 1950's by the late John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
The SEC report for July 10, 1947, showed the Rockefeller Foundation holding 345,902 shares of Standard Oil of Ohio after selling 6,782 shares. Various SEC reports show recent holdings for old-line Standard Oil families such as the Jennings and Bedfords.
But a few dealings in stocks of non-Standard Oil companies of which they are directors are shown in the reports for David and Laurance Rockefeller, suggesting that they still command ample resources. Whether they have sold out any Standard Oil holdings in order to participate in other companies the record does not show, but there is no reason to suppose they have. Apart from their foundation trusteeships the
Rockefeller brothers, with the exception of New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller, are currently all directors of Rockefeller Center, Inc. , and Rockefeller Brothers, Inc.
David Rockefeller is chairman of the Chase Manhattan Bank, second largest in the country, and is known to hold stock in companies in which he holds directorships. The SEC, November, 1962, showed that he held 8,950 shares of B. F. Goodrich stock through trusts. As of 1965 he was a director of Goodrich, Rockefeller Brothers, Inc. , Equitable Life Assurance Society; and chairman of Morningside Heights, Inc. , a real estate development.
