Anheuser-Busch had used the hangar over the years for everything from run-of-the-mill marketing meetings to high-drama negotiating sessions between warring baseball team owners back in the days when it ran the Cardinals. Like everything Anheuser owned, it was done up in rich styleâfilled with aviation-related Anheuser-Busch mementos and sporting gleaming floors that were clean enough to throw a picnic on.
Trappings at the hangar still weren't as cushy as the ninth floor executive suites at headquarters, but meeting at the airport brought benefits on another level: The board and its advisors could be stealthily shuttled to and from the site on Anheuser's sparkling fleet of corporate jets. They tended to arrive hungry, since Anheuser stocked no food on its aircraft despite their formidable supplies of free beer. But it was tough to complain.
Each time they landed at Spirit of St. Louis, the board and its advisors would walk through the hangar and into a small waiting room on the ground level, where they could plop down on a set of sofas to wait for their colleagues. They had a view of the tarmac from there and easy access to the adjacent coffee room and a tiny bathroom, which allowed them a few moments to relax as they waited for The Third's helicopter to float into view on the horizon. A stairway led up to the boardroom on the hangar's second floor, which was situated down the hall from a small kitchen.
Board meetings usually followed the same format each timeâagain, to leave no room for critique. The entire board would sit down for its main meeting first, along with a range of Anheuser-Busch executives, bankers, and attorneys. When that session finished, the executives would leave, often taking the bankers with them, and The Fourth would have a few minutes to make comments before exiting the room. The Third and Pat Stokes would then take the floor before leaving as well, turning the session over to the independent directors and their lawyers. A company secretary who stood sentry outside the boardroom would force everyone else to leave the second floor and go downstairs to wait it out. They weren't even allowed back upstairs to grab food from the kitchen. “If you were downstairs and went upstairs to get a bagel, they were like, âNo, you're not allowed upstairs,' ” one advisor said, “which always seemed kind of silly.”
Good corporate governance always warrants a certain degree of precaution, but Anheuser's board was much more fearful than most about all of the different ways they might get sued. If they wanted to buy Modelo instead of dealing with InBev, for instance, all they would need to do was sufficiently explain that they felt the Modelo plan was better for shareholders in the end. “Skadden said we could go ahead from a legal standpoint and do it,” said one advisor.
“But there's always this question mark about what will happen if you go and make an acquisition and fend off a bid, and then the shares trade down. That's what scared them. Getting sued. Very few companies will do an acquisition in the face of an offer.”
The board also knew that Anheuser-Busch's shareholders included some high-powered and influential investors, the most famous of whom was Warren Buffett, the so-called Sage of Omaha. Just two months earlier, Buffett had teamed up with family-owned candy maker Mars to buy Wrigley, the world's largest gum manufacturer, for $23 billion. The deal, which Goldman Sachs helped engineer, gave Buffett a more than 10 percent stake in Wrigley, and it helped prompt a later bid by Kraft to buy Cadburyâtwo other companies in which Buffett had major stakes.
Buffett was influential enough that his utterings tended to sway opinion on Wall Street just as much as former U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan's once had. And Buffett happened to have a significant connection to InBev that tweaked nerves at Anheuser-Busch. He had served on the board of Gillette with Jorge Paulo Lemann and called Lemann a good friend. With his money on one side of the deal and his friends on the other, it was tough to tell how Buffett felt about the proposed transaction. If he publicly endorsed InBev's bid, it might not be worth Anheuser's effort to fight anymore. But he was Anheuser's second-largest shareholder, with a stake of nearly 5 percent, and he didn't usually come out in favor of hostile takeover bids, which could bode well for Anheuser's case. Buffett often kept quiet about his investments, however, and many industry watchers assumed he would stay out of the Anheuser-Busch fracas altogether.
“We all wanted to know where Buffett stood,” said one person close to InBev. “Both sides wanted Buffett on their side.” But on July 11, a month after InBev registered its official bid, he confirmed in an interview that he hadn't been involved in the matter, and would be “making no news on that subject.”
Another wrinkle added to the board's paranoia about lawsuits, and while it shouldn't have had much of an effect on the directors ' behavior, it did. Both August III and Enterprise's Andy Taylor had been personally sued, as former directors of St. Louis's General American Life Insurance Co., after the company collapsed on their watch and was forced to sell itself to MetLife in 2000 for $1.2 billion. They and other directors, many of them prominent St. Louis figures, agreed to a $29.5 million settlement more than two years later. They admitted no wrongdoing, and the payment was covered by insurance, but the fiasco had put August III and Taylor through the legal wringer, and they were hell-bent on ensuring that it never happened again.
August III and Taylor focused their lines of questioning during many of the board's meetings on legal scenarios that were incredibly unlikely. The Third, in particular, raised so many legal concerns that he appeared to sway the board toward undue fear as well. “I think that was done to get some of his fellow directors to be more concerned than they had a right to be,” said one person who heard The Third's incessant queries. The board's lawyers pointed out that in the lawsuit-ridden United States, getting sued was almost a matter of course for any board whose company underwent a merger. Some infamous law firms start drawing up documents and searching for plaintiffs the day a deal is announced.
August III, however, was also soliciting opinions from others. “He was taking it from third parties,” said one Anheuser-Busch advisor. “He'd raise the most horrible and rare potential results as possibilities.” He was “crazy-focused on the legal side of things,” said another. The behavior pattern fit perfectly with The Third's longstanding habit of scuttling potential deals by pricking as many trial balloons as he could before they got off the ground.
“I remember he said, âI'm not going to spend the rest of my life in depositions,' ” said another advisor. “He was very hung up about that. It was an issue every time.”
That fear seemed to serve as an equally cumbersome millstone around Taylor's neck. As one advisor put it, “He was involved in some deal with August that led to shareholder litigation, so that was his only concern.”
Goldman Sachs had started working with Anheuser-Busch's management on its restructuring efforts not long after the gathering in Cancun, and it had officially signed on to advise the company on the InBev situation on May 27, four days after the leaks first erupted and just prior to the board's first meeting. Two weeks later, Citigroup had solidified the terms of its own engagement with the company. But Goldman's ability to capture the flag first paid off handily. Although the board hired both banks for advice, it wanted only one of them to speak on its behalf during the critical talks with Modelo and other partiesâand it chose Goldman.
“Would Citi have liked to have been in all the rooms and negotiations? Yeah,” said one person close to Anheuser-Busch. “But I think the company realized that was going to be too many chefs” in the kitchen. “Citi was brought in because, I think, the board wanted to not necessarily have a bank that could be accused of only being on management's side.”
Being relegated to a secondary role wasn't an easy pill for Citigroup's Kalvaria and Schackner to swallow, but they handled it gracefully. They were, after all, one of just two banking teams that were actively advising on one of the biggest takeover defenses in history. Citigroup was set to earn up to $30 million in fees, plus another $2 million for the quarter, for advising Anheuser-Busch, and Goldman had up to $40 million in fees coming its way.
The board erected a Chinese wall between Goldman and Citigroup in the boardroom, again in the interests of being cautious. Bankers from different institutions often combine forces on certain tasks if they've both been hired to advise on a deal. But Anheuser's board asked the two banks to make all of their presentations separately, using separate sets of analysis, to make it clear that they had solicited enough independent advice. The Goldman team would stand first to outline its case to the board, and Citigroup would follow. Both teams reached the same general conclusions and provided similar recommendations throughout the process, but Anheuser's directors felt they could never be too careful.
Anheuser had also considered whether to hire a bunch of other banks as co-advisors to tie them up and prevent them from helping to fund InBev's takeover. Because of the conflicts of interest, no bank that was actively counseling Anheuser-Busch would be able to assist InBev as well. Yet the board opted not to go that route, which didn't improve the odds of its takeover defense.
The board met twice in late May and early Juneâonce on May 29 and then again on June 13, once they had InBev's proposal in front of them and could review the bid. “Ladies and gentlemen, this is a very serious offer,” The Third said when he addressed the board that day, confirming the obvious. Anheuser's directors had known InBev was serious the moment its bid came in at the rumored $65 a share, which was higher than many of them expected its initial foray might be.
“I was surprised that they picked such a big number,” said lead director Sandy Warner. “Once $65 was on the table, that was a pretty good price.”
But things didn't really fire up in St. Louis until the morning of Thursday, June 19, when the teams from Goldman, Skadden, and Citigroup shuttled in on “Air Bud” from the Teterboro, New Jersey, airport and assembled at the soccer park to prepare for the board's scheduled meeting the following day. After a comprehensive dry run, part of the group left to grab dinner together while others headed to the Four Seasons hotel downtown to finalize their materials and get a decent night's sleep. The next day's session at the airport would be the first in which both banking teams would present their views to the board.
Meetings at the airport hangar allowed August III and, when he also flew in, August IV, to land their helicopters outside and stride straight into the waiting room minutes laterâwhich is exactly what The Third did the next morning as he made his usual ceremonial arrival. He often showed up a minute or two after the rest of the crew assembled. “It was always a staged entrance,” said one advisor.
The Third and the rest of the company's directors filed up the stairs to the second floor of the hangar and settled into their places around the makeshift conference room's giant U-shaped table, which didn't match the grandeur of the horseshoe-shaped boardroom table down at headquarters. Whether out of seniority or decorum, The Third always sat at the top of the horseshoe next to Pat Stokes and The Fourth while the rest of the board scattered up and down either sideâalways in the same seats. By the time Anheuser's other executives and advisors claimed the chairs that ran along the walls, the room was usually packed.
The Third slipped out of character that morning and started spinning animated stories as his colleagues readied for the meetingâa rarity for someone who wasn't prone to small talk. St. Louis was awash in the worst floodwaters in 15 years, and with the Mississippi River threatening to crest near record levels, the basement of his farmhouse was soaked. Water damage didn't present the same quandary for August III as it did for St. Louis's poorer residents, but his visible agitation still gave him a more relatable quality that morning.