Saturday, March 15, 2014

Koch Industries (Koch Brothers) Actually Decreases Pollution and Recycles


So I have been following the Koch brothers/Koch Industries for a while. You often hear of many reports about how Koch Industries pollutes and is making the air and water dirty for everyone else to breathe. However, do Charles and David Koch breathe different air then the rest of us?

I have to admit even I thought Koch Industries made pollution a tad worse until I actually looked at some data. I found reports (this link has all years I will refer to) that showed they do indeed reduce their pollution, recycle, and are actually more green than most people think. The latest Koch EHS report from 2014 is here

Currently about 90% of Koch facilities are STAR certified. STAR certified is a voluntary program from OSHA that companies voluntary join in order to make their workplaces safer than even OSHA regulations. A better explanation of this program is explained here. Because STAR sites are safer (because of voluntary actions of the company) they are rechecked every 3-5 years instead of every year. OSHA reviews incident rates every year though. However, as we will see Koch through continuous improvement has reduced emissions and made their work environment safer.

From 1997-2006 Flint Hills Resources refinery in Rosemount, Minn (this facility is very large-as I have actually driven past it) decreased emissions of carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxide, and sulfur dioxide by 53%. Also in 2006 criteria air emissions were .07 pounds per barrel of refining capacity, which was 65% less than the industry average of the 50 largest refineries in the country. As of 2012 the Flint Hills Resources in Corpus Christi, Texas went 12 years without a lost-time incident. Even the Obama administration praised Flint Hills Texas facilities. In 2000, a senior EPA official praised Koch because their Koch Petroleum Group agreed to reduced emissions by 60,000 tons annually. 

Koch invests 90% of their earnings back into the company. Much of this is to improve or upgrade existing facilities. In 1999 Koch introduced a low sulfur product six years before federal standards would be mandated. The company spent $200 million at the Pine Bend refinery (which produces low sulfur fuels). At a Koch Mont Belvieu, Texas facility decreased plant flaring by 95% which decreased emissions from 40,000 pounds in 2000 to about 2,000 pounds by 2003. 

People forget Koch Industries has a division that actually purifies water (Koch Membrane-which David Koch is in charge of). Koch Membrane provides drinking water to municipalities which use cartridges to clean out the water and can clean millions of gallons of water every day. In fact Koch's reverse osmosis module removed 99% of total arsenic in order to provide clean water to agencies and municipalities. Is is ironic that critics claim Mr. Koch is polluting the earth when he runs a division that purifies water!

In 1997, Koch Petroleum's refining operations had 45% fewer criteria air emissions that the average amount peer refiners. By 2000, Koch Pipeline transported 650 million barrels of liquids (including crude oil, natural gas, and other chemicals) and only one quart of product even touched the water. Between 1995-2000 Koch operated pipelines were able to reduce their leaks by 92%. In order to run these pipelines Koch spent $33 million in order to build a control center that had a fiber optic cable, customized software, plus a power supply that isn't uninterrupted.  In December 2012 Koch Pipeline and Flint Hills Resources went 8 years without a lost time incident. Speaking of Flint Hills from 1997-2012 the company reduced its emissions by 76% and emissions were 38% lower than peer refiners for 2012. 

Koch Industries is also into recycling between 1999 and 2000 Koch Industries more than 326 tons of material which was a 19% increase.  From 2000-2003 the recycling amount per person increased 29%.

Koch operates in a pretty safe environment.  Koch's Matador Cattle company for many years has operated with no incidents. Koch Aviation which flies about 2,300 hours per year had a four year OSHA recordable injuries in the mid 2000's that was 80% lower than the industry average. John Zink worked more than 4 million hours and 850 consecutive days without an injury resulting in time away from work. John Zink at this time had 700 employees working 1.7 million years annually. In 2006 six Georgia Pacific facilities had more than 1 million hours in each facility without a lost day of work. A Koch Nitrogen facility in Oklahoma recorded 3 years with no lost time injuries. An Invista facility in the Netherlands went 15 years without a lost workday case and Invista site in Brazil went 32 years without a lost time injury! At the same plant from 2003-2011 which makes LYCRA fiber reduced the amount of water used and actually saved enough water to fill 80 million one litter bottles.

To my knowledge Koch no longer explores for oil/gas. The company does refine oil which is turning the crude oil into other byproducts that are used into everyday goods like plastics. Koch just purchased Molex which is a connectors company that makes connectors for iPhone and other electronic devices. The company makes plastics, fibers, refines oil/gas, minerals, fertilizer, sends oil and gas through pipelines, and even does ranching. It seems as if though Koch Industries voluntary invests 90% of their earnings back into the company to make company assets and employees safer. By reinvesting the earnings back into the company Koch increases productivity and reduces lost work time due to accidents. By reducing the amount of waste Koch is able to make more money and use fewer resources. How many people would have guessed that Koch Industries actually reduces pollution and makes the world a greener place?


Wednesday, March 12, 2014

FDA Make Another Boneheaded Move on Lemtrada: Meanwhile Patients Suffer



I recently was reading this article and started to get somewhat frustrated while reading it. Basically the FDA recently announced that last December a drug called Lemtrada which is used to treat people with multiple sclerosis (MS) was not approved because according to the FDA the studies were not adequate and well controlled.

The drug Lemtrada is used to currently treated people with leukemia. The drug is an intravenous drug and produced by a company called Genzyme. The drug has been approved in Canada, Australia, and even all members of the socialist European Union (according to this Wall-Street Journal article). One no brainer for the FDA is to have reciprocal approval with other countries-so if Canada or Switzerland approve a drug by their equal FDA than it should be okay for the United States.

When the trials were conducted they found a 50% decrease in symptoms (1,400 patients took this drug). The nice thing about the drug is that you only have to administer it essentially once a year as opposed to taking numerous pills and multiple weekly injections from other MS drugs.  We have to remember that these patients are real people with a real illness who I would imagine spend a fair deal of time worry if they will ever get better. The FDA said the issue with the trial was that it was not double blind (which is the gold standard for FDA trials). However, if you have a serious chronic illness and you actually do get the placebo (sugar pill) and get worse and worse who does that help? Doctors and patients correctly pointed out that Rebif which already FDA approved did not used double blind trials when it was going through approval.

The only thing Genzyme can do now (after it has already spent many years and hundreds of millions of dollars in running the drug trials) is to run a double blind study trial which would take at least 2 years and would cost another $100 million for a drug that nearly every other rational country has approved.

The FDA approval panel should have a rule that states "you must have a loved one, family member, or someone you deeply care about that suffers from the illness from the drug you are trying to decide on". If this where the case I would imagine different results if they actually stopped to think how many people are harmed by the FDA holding back drugs to people with chronic illnesses. Maybe the FDA needs a mental evaluation.

Monday, March 3, 2014

Charles Koch Wichita Business Journal Interview


                                          Photo Credit: Kellen Jenkins of WBJ 

So last Friday morning the Wichita Business Journal (the article is only unlocked for a week) in an effort to revamp their journal came out with a profile of Charles Koch. Koch is not known to give very many interviews. Although in the past few years he did one with Forbes and one with the Wichita Eagle. The story of how the interview came about is interesting (more on that later).

In the interview done in February 18, 2014. From the pictures Charles Koch looks very relaxed wearing an Oxford Polo Shirt (who would think a billionaire would wear Ralph Lauren-that isn't Ralph Lauren). Koch talked about a number of different things like why Koch Industries is still in Wichita (I was even surprised he quoted Hayek on that). On innovation when asked why Charles Koch who is 78 years old and still shows up up to work everyday. According to Koch "I may be old, but I'm not dead yet". Koch Industries is still trying to integrate Molex from their merger last year. I would imagine Molex employees are learning more about Market Based Management. Koch said that Molex has to "get an idea built and get it commercialized immediately". Molex makes connectors that go into computer and electrical products (wait I thought Koch Industries was an oil giant). What is really interesting was Koch discussing products that can learn themselves. He discussed about building a computer into a glass mirror that could learn to adjust the temperature or the amount of light to come through the mirror all with the press of a button. Koch Industries has also made some interesting investments like into American Greetings (a card company). Essentially, Koch provided capital to American Greetings in order to take the company back. Charles Koch points out that it is hard to give a loved one the same message from a digital card as a hand delivered card. Koch said he liked the new technology in the drilling business (however he doesn't want to get back into that industry).

Chase Koch is the son of Charles Koch and earned his BBA in Marketing from Texas A&M University and has been with the company since 2003. I talked about Chase Koch and possible estate planning here. Charles Koch even challenged if his son would be the best person for the job. I honestly believe that if Charles Koch didn't believe his son was ready he would not have him on board with the company. Koch Industries has a large bench to pool from in terms of talent in the future if needed.

When talking about his political views Koch is really trying to save the country by promoting limited government and free markets. He talks about cronyism and the barriers to entry (taxi medallions or required schooling for hairdressers). Koch does correctly point out that make it harder for poor people to advance "for disadvantaged people trying to get started, its unconscionable in my view". Honestly, it seems clear the Charles Koch does want to help poor people. Thomas Sowell once said that the difference between Democrats and Republicans is that Democrats want to give the poor money while they are poor and Republicans want to help poor people stop being poor. Koch talks about long-term interest instead of short-term interests. Since Koch is private they don't have to worry about analyst meetings or quarterly earnings. In this interview from 2007 Koch said "a public company has to cope with the extreme focus of the analysts and the equities market on quarterly earnings. Someone misses quarterly earnings projections by a penny, and their stock goes down 10 percent". Most people actually incorrectly believe that companies are just into the bottom line for the short term. However, if you constantly make bad decisions in the short run you won't be around for the long run. Koch points out that "people should only profit to the extent they make other peoples lives better. You should profit because you created a better restaurant and people enjoyed going to it. You didn't force them to go, you don't have a mandate that you have to go to my restaurant on Tuesdays or Wednesdays or you go to prison". Gee, for some reason I have this feeling if I don't purchase healthcare I get some time of penalty. When talking about political contributions and his interests it should be noted that Charles Koch, David Koch, and Koch Industries are subjected to death threats, cyberattacks (speaking of which a 24 year old Iowa man got busted for trying to launch a cyberattack on the Koch website). I saw someone from Young Turks explaining how it was nice that young people were realizing that Koch Industries was a bad an evil corporation and even liberals should feel a little proud when the company gets hacked.

It was interesting to see the Charles Koch Foundation is working with Michael Rowe from  "Dirty Jobs" in order to explain to people they don't need to get a liberal arts degree and that some people who have certain talents can make very good money my satisfying needs and wants of people.

A nice feature of the article is when former Koch employees reflected on there time at Koch. Nearly all of them said it shaped how they thought and had a positive effect on who they become as business people. Former employee Patrick Ahern said that in one year he learned so much he would have paid to work at Koch Industries.

According to reports Koch Industries decided at the last minute not to allow video during the interview (probably for security reasons). It is pretty clear that Charles Koch and his brother David Koch unfortunately have to have armed guards 24/7 to protect them because people fundamentally don't agree with their ideology. The ironic thing is that these people who complain are most likely using a Koch Industries product. If they use the toilet they most likely used Georgia Pacific toilet paper. If they dried their hands they used a paper towel from Georgia Pacific. After the purchase of Molex, if anyone has a iPhone it was created partly by Koch Industries. The list goes on and on of products that Koch creates that every day people use (probably without even realizing it). What is even more interesting is that Koch to my knowledge doesn't explore for gas like actual companies (Chevron, ExxonMobil, and the rest).


1984-2014 Charles and David Koch Historical Net Worth & Bill Koch Loses $200 Million in Net Worth


Forbes came out with their ranking of billionaires today. Charles and David Koch are each worth $40 billion. I have followed the net worth of the Koch's for some time now (30 years worth of data. What is interesting though is that the compound annual growth rate of Charles and David Koch's net worth is close to 17%/year which is much better than the market.

If Koch were a publicly traded stock it would be outperforming the S&P 500! However, the standard deviation is 44% which is vastly much higher than the stock market which has a standard deviation of a large fraction of that. Koch prefers to remain private because they don't like to have to be meet quarterly numbers or care what Wall-Street analysts think and instead rely on the long-term view. Koch does invest 90% of their earnings back into the company (which I estimate to be about $5.5 billion/year). Most corporations pay a dividend and buy back shares (in order to provide a return to shareholders). Bill Koch once remarked (when he was a shareholder) that Koch Industries was so low he couldn't afford to purchase a nice house. Speaking of Bill Koch his net worth actually went down from $4 billion to $3.8 billion. Yes, a Koch brother did lose $200 million in one year! What is even more interesting is that Oxbow Energy (founded by Bill Koch claims returns of 30%/year while Charles Koch declared a 12% annual return in their 2014 January Discovery newsletter.  Interesting how 3 out of 4 brothers from one family are billionaires. What happened to Frederick Koch?