Maxwell Communication Corporation plc

views updated May 23 2018

Maxwell Communication Corporation plc

Maxwell House
8-10 New Fetter Lane
London EC4A 1DU
United Kingdom
(071) 353-0360

Public Company
Incorporated:
1964 as British Printing Corporation
Employees: 14,360
Sales: £996.90 million (US$1.92 billion)
Stock Exchanges: London Paris Brussels Antwerp Frankfurt Toronto Montreal New York Tokyo

Maxwell Communication Corporation (MCC) is one of the worlds ten largest media groups. The group currently comprises four operating areas: information services and electronic publishing; school and college publishing; language instruction; and reference-book and professional publishing.

Since October 1987 the group has been named after its chairman, Robert Maxwell. Maxwell has also been the publisher of Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN) of the United Kingdom since 1984 and publisher of the New York Daily News since March 1991. The Maxwell family owns 65% of MCC. Maxwell has often been cited as an example of the enterprise culture promoted by the U.K.s Conservative government of Margaret Thatcher, in power from 1979-1990. Maxwell himself, however, is an active member of the opposition Labour Party and served as a Labour member of Parliament between 1964 and 1970.

Maxwell was born Jan Ludvik Hoch in the village of Slatina Solo in the Czechoslovakian province of Ruthenia in 1923. His family was part of the prewar Hungarian Jewish community that had lived in this region since the 16th century. After the outbreak of World War II Maxwell succeeded in escaping to the United Kingdom, where he enlisted in the British army. By the end of the war he had been promoted to the rank of captain and had been awarded the Military Cross for bravery. In 1946 Maxwell became a naturalized U.K. citizen. Most members of Maxwells family in Ruthenia did not survive the war and were victims of the Holocaust.

The origins of MCC can be traced to Maxwells early postwar career in occupied Berlin. Between 1946 and 1947 he was part of the Berlin Information Control Unit. In 1947 Maxwell made contact with Ferdinand Springer, who before the war had been Germanys leading publisher of scientific books. Springer had managed to retain a large number of valuable back numbers of his scientific journals. Maxwell agreed to act as Springer Verlag GmbH & Co. KGs representative outside Germany. Maxwells new U.K. company, European Periodicals, Publicity and Advertising Corporation (EPPAC), was granted the exclusive worldwide distribution rights for Springers journals and books. In 1949 Maxwell helped form a new company called Lange, Maxwell & Springer (LMS) in which the Springer interests took a 49% stake. LMS took over the distribution of Springers books outside Germany on behalf of EPPAC.

A year earlier Springer Verlag had formed a joint venture with the British publisher, Butterworth & Co. (Publishers) Ltd., under which LMS would distribute Springers scientific journals for them. However, this venture proved to be unprofitable. In 1951 Maxwell bought Butterworths stake in the joint venture. Maxwell also acquired half of the German interest in the joint venture, thus gaining 75% of the company. The former joint venture was renamed Pergamon Press Ltd., possibly after the Pergamon Museum in East Berlin. In 1954 Maxwell was forced to break with Springer. He agreed to dissolve LMS and operate under the name I.R. Maxwell & Co. Ltd. Springer gave Maxwell exclusive rights until 1959 in the British Empire, France, China, and Indonesia. Maxwell broke completely with Springer at the beginning of 1960.

In 1955 Maxwell decided to transform Pergamon into a major world publisher of scientific journals. By the end of 1957 Pergamon was publishing over 100 journals and books. During the late 1950s Maxwell also developed links with Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, securing the rights to a number of scientific journals published in this part of the world.

In 1961 Maxwell made a five-year agreement with Macmillan Inc. of New York for the exclusive distribution of Pergamon books. The arrangement was terminated in August 1964 because the books had not sold well. Maxwell was later to acquire this company. In July 1964 Pergamon became a public company, although Maxwell retained majority control. In the following year, Pergamon acquired the subscription books division of George Newnes Ltd., a subsidiary of the International Publishing Corporation, which published two well-known encyclopedias, Chambers and Pictorial Knowledge. In May 1967 Pergamon acquired a competitor in the encyclopedia business, Caxton Holdings. In August Pergamon merged its encyclopedia interests with the encyclopedia subsidiary of the British Printing Corporation (BPC). The new joint venture was called International Learning Systems Corporation Limited (ILSC). Maxwell attempted to acquire the News of the World, the U.K. Sunday newspaper, in 1968, and the Sun, the U.K. daily newspaper, in 1969, but Rupert Murdoch gained control of both publications.

In January 1969 Maxwell began talks with Saul Steinberg, chairman of Leasco Data Processing Equipment of the United States, about the possible merger of Pergamon with Leasco, in June 1969, Maxwell and Steinberg signed an agreement whereby Leasco would launch a formal bid for Pergamon subject to Maxwells permitting a team of accountants appointed by Leasco to have full access to all of the Pergamon business records. Maxwell was to become president of Leascos European division. On August 21 Leasco withdrew its bid because of doubts about Pergamons accounts and ILSC. Maxwell disputed Leascos right to take this course of action and had the dispute referred to the Takeover panel. On August 27 the panel decided Leasco had the right to withdraw and recommended a full Board of Trade inquiry over the objections of Maxwell. A shareholders meeting was called at Pergamon for October 10. The meeting voted to dismiss Maxwell as company chairman and remove him from the board. Leasco gained control of Pergamon with 61 % of the vote. However, Leasco decided not to proceed with its takeover bid, but retained its 38% stake in the company.

Maxwell retained control of Pergamons U.S. subsidiary, Pergamon Press Inc. (PPI), even though the U.K. parent company controlled 70% of its stock. In April 1971 he ended a dispute with Leasco over PPI with an agreement to employ him as a consultant at Pergamon and to appoint him to its board as a non-executive director.

In July the Board of Trade issued its report on Pergamon. The board alleged that there had been irregularities in the accounting practices of the company, and in particular in its subsidiary, ILSC. It concluded that notwithstanding Mr. Maxwells acknowledged abilities and energy, he [was] not in [their] opinion a person who can be relied on to exercise proper stewardship of a publicly quoted company. However, Maxwells subsequent business career has completely disproved the Board of Trades much quoted conclusion. The reports publication coincided with the date that Maxwell was due to return to the Pergamon board. That was no longer possible.

Maxwell never accepted the findings of the Board of Trade as a true record of his conduct of Pergamons affairs, and unsuccessfully took legal action to get the report overturned. Between 1971 and 1973 he worked hard to regain control of Pergamon. In 1973 he enlisted the support of some of the most prominent editors of Pergamons scientific journals. He persuaded the chairman of Pergamon to hold a special shareholders meeting on November 20. In the light of Pergamons falling profits and the loyalty of the scientific journal editors to Maxwell, he was appointed as an alternate director to John Silkin. A formal move to re-elect him as a full director was adjourned until January 8, 1974, by which time the Pergamon board hoped to assemble enough current information to enable Leasco, now renamed Reliance, to press ahead with a full bid. Although he failed to become a full director, on January 9 Maxwell launched a £1.5 million takeover bid for Pergamon. On January 23 he won the support of Pergamons board, and by late February Reliance had agreed to sell its 38% holding in Pergamon to Maxwell for £0.12 a share, receiving just over £600,000 in return for its original £9 million investment. Maxwells new U.S. company, Microform International Marketing Corporation, now owned 90.7% of Pergamon. Maxwell subsequently purchased the remaining Pergamon shares.

Between 1974 and 1977 Maxwell restored the fortunes of Pergamon. In 1977, Pergamon employed 3,000 people and was publishing 360 scientific journals and 1,000 books a year. Its sales had risen from £7 million to £20 million and its net annual profits had increased from £27,000 to £3.3 million.

In 1980 Maxwell, in common with other proprietor-entrepreneurs, began a major expansion program. He began to purchase shares in the once-powerful U.K. printing company BPC, his former partner in ILSC. BPC had been formed in February 1964 from the merger of Purnell & Sons Ltd. with Hazell Sun Ltd. Purnell & Sons had been established in 1849.

In July 1980 Maxwell launched a dawn raidthe acquisition of a large number of shareson BPC and acquired 29.5% of its shares. In February 1981 Maxwell launched a takeover bid for BPC with the agreement of the National Westminster Bank, BPCs most important creditor. Later in the month the Pergamon Press agreed to inject £10 million into BPC in return for a controlling interest in BPC. Maxwell became deputy chairman and chief executive of BPC. By May 1981 Pergamon owned 77% of BPC and Maxwell had become chairman.

Maxwell proceeded to deal with BPCs chief problems, overmanning and low productivity. Although the trade unions signed an agreement with Maxwell to reorganize working practices as part of his survival plan for BPC, the workers at the Park Royal printing works conducted two years of strikes between 1981 and 1983. In November 1983 Maxwell dismissed all the workers at Park Royal and transferred production to East Kilbride and Leeds. Maxwell also contributed to the rationalization of the U.K. printing industry in a deal with Reed International in December 1982, which resulted in the closure of Reeds Odhams factory and its absorption into the nearby Sun works, also at Watford. In 1984 Maxwell bought Reeds national newspapers. Maxwell took full advantage of the trade union reforms introduced by the Thatcher government, and they contributed to his success during the 1980s.

Meanwhile Maxwell had changed BPCs name to the British Printing and Communications Corporation (BPCC) in March 1982. This change reflected his wish to expand into cable and satellite television, computers and data banks, electronic printing, and communications high technology that were being developed in the 1980s. In 1986 Maxwell began a further expansion of BPCC. He began with the takeover of Pergamons crown jewels, its 361 scientific journals, for £238.65 million in March 1986. In October 1987 BPCC changed its name to Maxwell Communication Corporation; Maxwell felt BPCC had an unfavorable image in the United States, where people mistakenly believed it was a nationalized industry. The name BPCC was reassigned to one of MCCs subsidiaries. In December MCC completed another reverse takeover, this time of Pergamons books division for £100 million.

In 1987 Maxwell attempted to transform BPCC into a major publisher in the United States, as part of his plan to make BPCC one of the top ten international media and communications corporations. In May 1987 BPCC had launched a US$2 billion hostile cash bid for Harcourt Brace Jovanovich (HBJ), the leading American publisher of school textbooks. HBJ responded with a comprehensive US$3 billion recapitalization plan in order to defend itself against BPCC. BPCC pursued legal action in support of its takeover bid for HBJ. However, the failure of several lawsuits in the U.S. courts led BPCC to withdraw its takeover bid in late July. Maxwell also failed in 1987 with his bid to acquire 50% of Bell & Howell, the U.S. educational publisher and manufacturer of information storage equipment.

The following year Maxwell achieved his plan for MCC in the United States. On July 21, 1988, MCC launched a bid for Macmillan Inc., a large U.S. publishing group. MCC offered US$80 per share for Macmillan. On September 13, Macmillan, which was opposed to MCCs bid, proposed a management-led leveraged buyout, worth marginally more than MCCs revised US$84-a-share offer, organized by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. (KKR), a leading Wall Street leveraged buyout firm. MCC responded by raising its bid to US$86.80 a share, which was slightly higher than KKRs bid. On September 22 Macmillan rejected both MCCs revised bid and KKRs bid.

On September 27 Macmillan accepted an improved offer of US$90.05 from KKR. However, MCC claimed that it was really only worth US$86 a share, US$3 less than MCCs offer of US$89 a share. KKRs agreement with Macmillan contained a poison pill provision. Under it, KKR had the right to buy for US$865 million four of Macmillans key businesses, which would significantly reduce the value of the corporation, if its takeover offer failed in the face of a higher bid or other obstacles.

Maxwell began legal action against Macmillans poison pill provision and increased his bid to US$90.25 a share. On November 2, MCC was victorious in the Delaware Supreme Court, when it issued a preliminary injunction against Macmillan, preventing it from granting the poison pill provision to KKR. On November 4, MCC acquired Macmillan for US$2.6 billion. A few days earlier MCC had also acquired the Official Airline Guides division (OAG) of Dun & Bradstreet, a leading provider of airline schedule information and related services in North America, for $750 million.

In order to finance MCCs U.S. acquisitions, Maxwell decided to abandon most of the printing side of MCCs business to concentrate on publishing. In January 1989 MCC began to dispose of over US$1.4 billion worth of MCCs printing and non-core subsidiaries. In September 1989 MCC secured US$3 billion in medium-term debt to refinance the borrowings taken on at the time of the purchase of Macmillan and OAG. MCC used some of the borrowings to acquire Merrill Publishing, the U.S. educational books group, for $260 million in the same month. At the same time MCCs disposals continued with the flotation of 44% of Macmillans former language instruction subsidiary, Berlitz International, in December 1989, raising $130 million.

By October 1990 MCC had managed to reduce its debt to US$1.9 billion. MCC decided to further reduce its debt with over US$400 million more disposals of corporate assets. MCC used the proceeds of the disposals, the redemption of loan stock in MGN, and a short-term bridging loan to repay US$415 million in debt due on October 23, 1990. MCC faces no further obligations regarding debt repayment until October 1992, when US$750 million are due, and the final repayment of $1.26 million has to be made in October 1994.

Between 1981 and 1990 Maxwell increased MCCs turnover from £198 million to £1.24 billion and turned a net loss of £14 million into a net profit of £101 million. MCC was given two key objectives by Maxwell for the early 1990s. The first was the elimination of its corporate debt. The second was to build on the achievements of the 1980s to take it into the middle ranks of the top ten world media corporations. By 1987 MCC was international, with publishing businesses in more than 15 countries. By 1989 the MCC group had a 50% interest in the Macmillan-McGraw-Hill joint venture, the second largest elementary and high school publisher in the United States.

In 1991 Maxwells son Kevin became chief executive officer. Kevin had served as a director of MCC since 1986 and as joint managing director with Ian Maxwell since 1988. An agreement was made at the end of March 1991 to sell MCCs subsidiary, Pergamon Press, to Elsevier for £440 million. Elsevier is one of the largest publishing groups in the Netherlands. The sale of the original heart of the Maxwell familys business interests marks a further shift in the balance of MCC away from the United Kingdom to the United States.

Principal Subsidiaries

Macmillan Inc.; Official Airline Guides, Inc.; Berlitz International Inc.

Further Reading

Haines, Joe, Maxwell, London, Macdonald, 1988; Snoddy, Raymond, Monday Interview, Financial Times, August 6, 1990.

Richard Hawkins

Maxwell Communication Corporation Plc

views updated Jun 08 2018

Maxwell Communication Corporation Plc

33 Holborn
London EC1N 2HB
United Kingdom
(071) 822-2345
Fax: (071) 353-3398

Public Company
Incorporated: 1964 as British Printing Corporation
Employees: 14,360
Sales: £996.90 million (US$1.45 billion)
Stock Exchanges: London Paris Brussels Antwerp Frankfurt Toronto Montreal New York Tokyo
SICs: 2711 Newspapers: Publishing, or Publishing & Printing; 2721 Periodicals: Publishing, or Publishing & Printing

Maxwell Communication Corporation pic (MCC) was formerly one of the worlds ten largest media groups, with interests in information services and electronic publishing, school and college publishing, language instruction, and reference book and professional publishing. An aggressive, controversial player in the international business world throughout its history, the companys dissolution in the early 1990s was an astonishing one. The mysterious death of MCCs founder and chairman, Robert Maxwell, in 1991 triggered one of the most spectacular corporate collapses in modern-day business history.

Maxwell was born Jan Ludvik Hoch in the village of Slatina Solo in the Czechoslovakian province of Ruthenia in 1923. His family was part of the prewar Hungarian Jewish community that had lived in this region since the 16th century. After the outbreak of World War II, Maxwell succeeded in escaping to the United Kingdom, where he enlisted in the British army. By the end of the war he had been promoted to the rank of captain and had been awarded the Military Cross for bravery. In 1946 Maxwell became a naturalized U.K. citizen. Most members of Maxwells family in Ruthenia were victims of the Holocaust.

The origins of MCC can be traced to Maxwells early postwar career in occupied Berlin. Shortly after the war Maxwell made contact with Ferdinand Springer, who before the war had been Germanys leading publisher of scientific books. Maxwell agreed to act as Springer Verlag GmbH & Co. KGs representative outside Germany. Maxwells new U.K. company, European Periodicals, Publicity and Advertising Corporation (EP-PAC), was granted the exclusive worldwide distribution rights for Springers journals and books. In 1949 Maxwell helped form a new company called Lange, Maxwell & Springer (LMS) in which the Springer interests took a 49 percent stake. LMS took over the distribution of Springers books outside Germany on behalf of EPPAC.

A year earlier Springer Verlag had formed a joint venture with the British publisher, Butterworth & Co. (Publishers) Ltd., under which LMS would distribute Springers scientific journals for them. This venture proved to be unprofitable. In 1951 Maxwell bought Butterworths stake in the joint venture. Maxwell also acquired half of the German interest in the joint venture, thus gaining 75 percent of the company. The former joint venture was renamed Pergamon Press Ltd. In 1954 Maxwell was forced to break with Springer. He agreed to dissolve LMS and operate under the name I. R. Maxwell & Co. Ltd. Springer gave Maxwell exclusive rights until 1959 in the British Empire, France, China, and Indonesia. Maxwell broke completely with Springer at the beginning of 1960.

In the meantime, Maxwell had decided to transform Pergamon into a major world publisher of scientific journals. By the end of 1957 Pergamon was publishing over 100 journals and books. In 1961 Maxwell sealed a five-year agreement with Macmillan Inc. of New York for the exclusive distribution of Pergamon books. The arrangement was terminated in August 1964 because of disappointing sales. In July 1964 Pergamon became a public company, although Maxwell retained majority control. In the following several years, Pergamon acquired a number of diverse publishing firms and merged its encyclopedia interests with the encyclopedia subsidiary of the British Printing Corporation (BPC). The new joint venture was called International Learning Systems Corporation Limited (ILSC).

In January 1969 Maxwell reached an agreement with Saul Steinberg, chairman of Leasco Data Processing Equipment of the United States, whereby Leasco would launch a formal bid for Pergamon subject to Maxwells permitting a team of accountants appointed by Leasco to have full access to all of the Pergamon business records. Maxwell was to become president of Leascos European division. On August 21 Leasco withdrew its bid because of doubts about Pergamons accounts and ILSC. Maxwell disputed Leascos right to take this course of action and had the dispute referred to the Takeover panel. On August 27 the panel decided Leasco had the right to withdraw and recommended a full Board of Trade inquiry over the objections of Maxwell. A shareholders meeting was called at Pergamon for October 10. The meeting voted to dismiss Maxwell as company chairman and remove him from the board. Leasco gained control of Pergamon with 61 percent of the vote. However, Leasco decided not to proceed with its takeover bid, but retained its 38 percent stake in the company.

Maxwell retained control of Pergamons U.S. subsidiary, Pergamon Press Inc. (PPI), even though the U.K. parent company controlled 70 percent of its stock. In April 1971 he reached an agreement with Leasco over PPI, thus ending their dispute.

In July the Board of Trade issued its report on Pergamon. The board alleged that there had been irregularities in the accounting practices of the company, and in particular in its subsidiary, ILSC. It concluded that notwithstanding Mr. Maxwells acknowledged abilities and energy, he [was] not in [their] opinion a person who can be relied on to exercise proper stewardship of a publicly quoted company. Stung by the report, Maxwell unsuccessfully took legal action to get the report overturned.

Frustrated in his attempts to regain full control of Pergamon, on January 9, 1974, Maxwell launched a £1.5 million takeover bid for Pergamon. On January 23 he won the support of Pergamons board, and by late February Reliance (formerly called Leasco) had agreed to sell its 38-percent holding in Pergamon to Maxwell for £0.12 a share, receiving just over £600,000 in return for its original £9 million investment. Maxwells new U.S. company, Microform International Marketing Corporation, now owned 90.7 percent of Pergamon. Maxwell subsequently purchased the remaining Pergamon shares. By 1977 Pergamons sales had risen from £7 million to £20 million and its net annual profits had increased from £27,000 to £3.3 million.

In 1980 Maxwell began a major expansion program. He began to purchase shares in the once-powerful British Printing Corporation, his former partner in ILSC. BPC had been formed in February 1964 from the merger of Purnell & Sons Ltd. with Hazell Sun Ltd. Purnell & Sons had been established in 1849. In July 1980 Maxwell launched a dawn raidthe acquisition of a large number of shareson BPC and acquired 29.5 percent of its shares. In February 1981 Maxwell launched a takeover bid for BPC with the agreement of the National Westminster Bank, BPCs most important creditor. Later in the month the Pergamon Press agreed to inject £10 million into BPC in return for a controlling interest in BPC. Maxwell became deputy chairman and chief executive of BPC. By May of 1981 Pergamon owned 77 percent of BPC and Maxwell had become chairman.

Maxwell battled early and often with the BPC trade unions. Although the trade unions signed an agreement with Maxwell to reorganize working practices as part of his survival plan for BPC the workers at the Park Royal printing works conducted two years of strikes between 1981 and 1983. BPC closed facilities and transferred production as part of this struggle and took full advantage of the trade union reforms introduced by the Thatcher government during the 1980s.

Maxwell changed BPCs name to the British Printing and Communications Corporation (BPCC) in March 1982. This change reflected his wish to expand into areas such as cable and satellite television, computers and data banks, electronic printing, and communications high technology that were being developed in the 1980s. In 1984 he became the publisher of the United Kingdoms Mirror Group Newspapers Ltd. In 1986 Maxwell began a further expansion of BPCC. He began with the takeover of Pergamons crown jewels, its 361 scientific journals, for £238.65 million in March of 1986. In October 1987 BPCC changed its name to Maxwell Communication Corporation; the name BPCC was reassigned to one of MCCs subsidiaries. In .December MCC completed another reverse takeover, this time of Pergamons books division for £100 million.

In 1987 Robert Maxwell attempted to transform MCC into a major publisher in the United States as part of his plan to make the company one of the top ten international media and communications corporations. At that point the company already had publishing businesses in more than 15 countries. In May 1987 Maxwell launched a US$2 billion hostile cash bid for Harcourt Brace Jovanovich (HBJ), the leading American publisher of school textbooks. HBJ responded with a comprehensive US$3 billion recapitalization plan in order to defend itself against MCC. MCC pursued legal action in support of its takeover bid for HBJ. The failure of several lawsuits in the U.S. courts, however, led the company to withdraw its takeover bid in late July. Maxwell also failed in 1987 with his bid to acquire 50 percent of Bell & Ho well, the U.S. educational publisher and manufacturer of information storage equipment.

On July 21, 1988, MCC launched a bid for Macmillan Inc., a large U.S. publishing group. Macmillan and its attractive assets became the object of a bidding war eventually won by MCC after three months of struggle. On November 4 MCC acquired Macmillan for US$2.6 billionabout $1 billion more than the company was generally thought to be worth. A few days earlier MCC had also acquired the Official Airline Guides division (OAG) of Dun & Bradstreet, a leading provider of airline schedule information and related services in North America, for $750 million.

In order to finance MCCs huge U.S. acquisitions, Maxwell abandoned most of the printing side of MCCs business to concentrate on publishing. In January 1989 MCC began to dispose of over US$1.4 billion worth of MCCs printing and noncore subsidiaries. In September 1989 MCC secured US$3 billion in medium-term debt to refinance the borrowings taken on at the time of the purchase of Macmillan and OAG. MCC used some of the borrowings to acquire Merrill Publishing, the U.S. educational books group, for $260 million in the same month. At the same time MCCs disposals continued with the flotation of 44 percent of Macmillans former language instruction subsidiary, Berlitz International, in December 1989, raising $130 million. An agreement was made at the end of March 1991 to sell Pergamon Press to Elsevier for £440 million. The companys efforts to reduce its debts, which had reached serious proportions, continued into the beginning of the next decade.

Maxwell Communication Corporations debt load, exacerbated by its appetite for acquisition and expansion as well as the economic climate, was known to be significant. But it was not until Maxwells death in November 1991 that the true dimensions of MCCs fiscal sickness became known.

The recession, coupled with widespread skepticism among brokers about the ability of MCC to pay its debt, depressed the companys share price. Maxwell thus set in motion a series of increasingly desperate maneuvers to push the stock price back up. He bought massive amounts of MCC stock, which he was using as credit collateral, via a plethora of trusts and holding companies owned or controlled by Maxwell family concerns. He also raided the bank accounts and pension funds of MCC and Mirror Group Newspapers Ltd., his other publicly traded company, to make further purchases of MCC stock, all to no avail. Estimates of the amount stolen by Maxwell from his public companies now range as high as $1.4 billion.

On November 5, 1991, Maxwell was found dead, floating off the stern of his yacht. Creditors, already suspicious of MCCs fiscal health, soon discovered that the company was in utter financial ruin. Authorities are engaged in sorting through the labyrnthine remains. MCC was placed under the joint administration of United States and English bankruptcy courts acting with the help of Price Waterhouse. Of MCCs subsidiaries, Macmillan and Official Airline Guides are likely to be sold more or less intact by the bankruptcy administrators. MCC itself was hopelessly insolvent and will be liquidated to repay some of its $2.5 billion in debt.

Further Reading

Raines, Joe, Maxwell, London, Macdonald, 1988; Snoddy, Raymond, Monday Interview, Financial Times, August 6, 1990; Maremont, Mark, and Mark Landler, An Empire Up for Grabs, Business Week, December 23, 1991; Bower, Tom, Maxwell: The Outsider, New York, Viking, 1992.

Richard Hawkins

updated by Jonathan Martin

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