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  • Birds Of A Feather Flock To Temora

    BIRDS OF A FEATHER FLOCK TO TEMORA

    Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
    September 18, 2006

    This town's the perfect spot for plane speaking, Kate Askew discovers.

    THE Riverina town of Temora had never seen a gathering like it.

    Standing in the sunshine at the Temora aerodrome on Saturday were
    the country's richest fellows, Frank Lowy and James Packer, talking
    intently to Fairfax chairman Ron Walker. Lowy got a hug from his
    close pal, the PM, who was also having a day out.

    Thankfully Lowy's eldest son, David, has thrown enough cash at Temora's
    World War II training aerodrome to ensure there was enough space for
    all the private planes to park.

    Recently departed Nine head honcho Sam Chisholm was out enjoying his
    retirement and the opening of the new runway, which is capable of
    landing a Boeing 747.

    And Temora's mayor, Nigel Judd, put in his two bobs' worth, encouraging
    the wealthy throng to buy up some land in town, or better still,
    build a shopping mall.

    Close call

    It makes absolute sense. As the dynamic duo, they have been through
    airports around the world, looked at a few ports and muddled over
    telecoms.

    The next piece of infrastructure on the list of two of Macquarie
    Bank's most loftily remunerated executives would obviously be an
    industry mouthpiece of their own making, CBD figured.

    Moss-in-waiting Nicholas Moore and his sidekick, Michael Carapiet,
    are directors of the disconcertingly named Australian Financial
    Publications.

    CBD was relieved to hear the Mordialloc-born Moore and the
    Calcutta-born Carapiet set up the company to own a slice of Peter
    Charlton's event management business cum magazine publisher, First
    Charlton Communications.

    Closer call

    Even more disconcerting is Michael Carapiet's other vehicle.

    It's called SMH Investments.

    In a fit of paranoia CBD thought that having cast an eye over Telstra,
    the voracious Macquarie bankers were casting an eye over the mastheads
    of John Fairfax.

    There's a more prosaic explanation. SMH stands for Shahen, Michael
    and Henry, the company's three directors: Shahen Mekertichian, who at
    one point had some involvement with Macquarie rival Babcock & Brown,
    Australian-Armenian businessman Henry Hacobian, who has sponsored
    the Armenian Sydney Dance Company, and Michael Carapiet himself.

    Life begins at 55

    So much networking, so little time. Being closer to 40 than 30,
    your diarist was pleased to learn - as were many others in town -
    that the secretive Young Presidents Organisation had come to a radical
    juncture in its evolution.

    Gentlemen approaching a certain age - 50, that is (though always
    known as 49-ers because they were eternally afraid of turning five-o)
    - will no longer have to graduate to the WPO, Well-Padded Oldies,
    oops, World Presidents Organisation.

    Now there will be a bunch of YPO-ers who, for another five years,
    can avoid getting the dreaded farewell present - a rocking chair.

    Sadly, such youthful and prominent entrepreneurs as Jack Cowin and
    Marcus Blackmore won't make the cut.

    They'll be WPO-ers for life.

    Enjoying the nags

    Stockmarket warriors turned horse flesh fanciers were out in droves
    at the weekend.

    Kingsgate Consolidated's Ross Smyth-Kirk was on hand down at Kembla
    on Saturday to see his five-year-old gelding Flavoursome have its
    first start and come up trumps.

    Later in the day Smyth-Kirk migrated to Rosehill, where another
    corporate type indulging in the nags was stockbroker John Bowie-Wilson,
    whose Rocking On couldn't manage a place.

    Smyth-Kirk will be hoping his luck holds for the election of the
    Australian Jockey Club committee he's standing for.

    Last-minute letdown

    Tim King walked up hill and down dale to be fit for this year's
    annual walkathon.

    But when it came time for the Deutsche Bank head of research to don
    his runners the flu had taken hold and he had to drop out of the team
    of Doug Farrell, Matthew Prior and Jamess Forrest, which had raised
    over $60,000, more than any of its competitors.

    The Oxfam Trailwalker fundraiser, by the way, is the mad hike through
    the night which usually results in bloodied toes, hallucinations and
    vows from participants never to do it again - but which helps feed
    people who simply can't afford to eat.

    And with competition for the flashest auto a driving feature of
    Planet Investment Bank, it's a wonder competition of other forms
    doesn't take hold in the same fashion.

    The cheque from Switzerland must be in the post for the Slightly Warm
    Turkey team from UBS which pledged $25,000 plus but has yet to crack
    the $2000 mark.

    Knowing how generous UBS usually is, CBD notes it is yet to match
    the raisings from other finance outfits like Allco and one of its big
    clients, Telstra, whose Holgate's Heroes raised a whopping $34,000-odd.

    State Street also deserves a mention for sponsoring the Trailwalker
    year in, year out and giving sporty types the chance to stub their
    toes on their midnight ramble - not to forget giving other people
    the opportunity to eat.

    Oh, that loss

    Your diarist was terribly remiss in not finding Quickflix's full-year
    loss of a whopping $2.6 million buried in a bunch of dot points in
    a press release.

    Quickflix, if anyone missed it, is the latest stockmarket interest
    of Lachlan Murdoch.

    Just so you can get a feel for Quickflix's exceedingly happy
    perspective on its loss-making result, here's an excerpt from its
    press release:

    "Quickflix today announced that it had increased revenue by 134.5
    per cent and stabilised costs for the 2005-06 financial year while
    establishing a platform for continued growth and enhanced services
    over the coming years.

    "The leading independent provider of online movie rental services
    also announced that its total paying subscribers will this month
    exceed the 10,000 milestone."

    "Quickflix chief executive officer Stephen Langsford said that over
    the past year the company had consolidated its position as the second
    largest online movie rental subscription service in Australia."

    Again, in case anyone missed it, the leading independent provider of
    online movie rental services reported a full-year loss of $2.6 million.

    Two new babies

    And before handing the reins back to your regular diarist, Michael
    Evans, let's finish a tale begun last week ...

    After racing off from the Silliac dinner at Sydney University where
    he was keeping company with legendary academic Harry Messell, Lee
    Ming Tee, aka Gleaming Teeth, welcomed a granddaughter to the Lee
    dynasty on Wednesday.

    We can only assume that his driver that night, Albert Wong, was racing
    home to put the finishing touches on what we hear is the prospectus
    for his latest stockmarket plaything, Pluton, which joins a stable
    of past and present companies including resources stock Zelos.

    Kate Askew has a tiny stake in John Fairfax Holdings.

    This town's the perfect spot for plane speaking, Kate Askew discovers.

    THE Riverina town of Temora had never seen a gathering like it.

    Standing in the sunshine at the Temora aerodrome on Saturday were
    the country's richest fellows, Frank Lowy and James Packer, talking
    intently to Fairfax chairman Ron Walker. Lowy got a hug from his
    close pal, the PM, who was also having a day out.

    Thankfully Lowy's eldest son, David, has thrown enough cash at Temora's
    World War II training aerodrome to ensure there was enough space for
    all the private planes to park.

    Recently departed Nine head honcho Sam Chisholm was out enjoying his
    retirement and the opening of the new runway, which is capable of
    landing a Boeing 747.

    And Temora's mayor, Nigel Judd, put in his two bobs' worth, encouraging
    the wealthy throng to buy up some land in town, or better still,
    build a shopping mall.

    Close call

    It makes absolute sense. As the dynamic duo, they have been through
    airports around the world, looked at a few ports and muddled over
    telecoms.

    The next piece of infrastructure on the list of two of Macquarie
    Bank's most loftily remunerated executives would obviously be an
    industry mouthpiece of their own making, CBD figured.

    Moss-in-waiting Nicholas Moore and his sidekick, Michael Carapiet,
    are directors of the disconcertingly named Australian Financial
    Publications.

    CBD was relieved to hear the Mordialloc-born Moore and the
    Calcutta-born Carapiet set up the company to own a slice of Peter
    Charlton's event management business cum magazine publisher, First
    Charlton Communications.

    Closer call

    Even more disconcerting is Michael Carapiet's other vehicle.

    It's called SMH Investments.

    In a fit of paranoia CBD thought that having cast an eye over Telstra,
    the voracious Macquarie bankers were casting an eye over the mastheads
    of John Fairfax.

    There's a more prosaic explanation. SMH stands for Shahen, Michael
    and Henry, the company's three directors: Shahen Mekertichian, who at
    one point had some involvement with Macquarie rival Babcock & Brown,
    Australian-Armenian businessman Henry Hacobian, who has sponsored
    the Armenian Sydney Dance Company, and Michael Carapiet himself.

    Life begins at 55

    So much networking, so little time. Being closer to 40 than 30,
    your diarist was pleased to learn - as were many others in town -
    that the secretive Young Presidents Organisation had come to a radical
    juncture in its evolution.

    Gentlemen approaching a certain age - 50, that is (though always
    known as 49-ers because they were eternally afraid of turning five-o)
    - will no longer have to graduate to the WPO, Well-Padded Oldies,
    oops, World Presidents Organisation.

    Now there will be a bunch of YPO-ers who, for another five years,
    can avoid getting the dreaded farewell present - a rocking chair.

    Sadly, such youthful and prominent entrepreneurs as Jack Cowin and
    Marcus Blackmore won't make the cut.

    They'll be WPO-ers for life.

    Enjoying the nags

    Stockmarket warriors turned horse flesh fanciers were out in droves
    at the weekend.

    Kingsgate Consolidated's Ross Smyth-Kirk was on hand down at Kembla
    on Saturday to see his five-year-old gelding Flavoursome have its
    first start and come up trumps.

    Later in the day Smyth-Kirk migrated to Rosehill, where another
    corporate type indulging in the nags was stockbroker John Bowie-Wilson,
    whose Rocking On couldn't manage a place.

    Smyth-Kirk will be hoping his luck holds for the election of the
    Australian Jockey Club committee he's standing for.

    Last-minute letdown

    Tim King walked up hill and down dale to be fit for this year's
    annual walkathon.

    But when it came time for the Deutsche Bank head of research to don
    his runners the flu had taken hold and he had to drop out of the team
    of Doug Farrell, Matthew Prior and Jamess Forrest, which had raised
    over $60,000, more than any of its competitors.

    The Oxfam Trailwalker fundraiser, by the way, is the mad hike through
    the night which usually results in bloodied toes, hallucinations and
    vows from participants never to do it again - but which helps feed
    people who simply can't afford to eat.

    And with competition for the flashest auto a driving feature of
    Planet Investment Bank, it's a wonder competition of other forms
    doesn't take hold in the same fashion.

    The cheque from Switzerland must be in the post for the Slightly Warm
    Turkey team from UBS which pledged $25,000 plus but has yet to crack
    the $2000 mark.

    Knowing how generous UBS usually is, CBD notes it is yet to match
    the raisings from other finance outfits like Allco and one of its big
    clients, Telstra, whose Holgate's Heroes raised a whopping $34,000-odd.

    State Street also deserves a mention for sponsoring the Trailwalker
    year in, year out and giving sporty types the chance to stub their
    toes on their midnight ramble - not to forget giving other people
    the opportunity to eat.

    Oh, that loss

    Your diarist was terribly remiss in not finding Quickflix's full-year
    loss of a whopping $2.6 million buried in a bunch of dot points in
    a press release.

    Quickflix, if anyone missed it, is the latest stockmarket interest
    of Lachlan Murdoch.

    Just so you can get a feel for Quickflix's exceedingly happy
    perspective on its loss-making result, here's an excerpt from its
    press release:

    "Quickflix today announced that it had increased revenue by 134.5
    per cent and stabilised costs for the 2005-06 financial year while
    establishing a platform for continued growth and enhanced services
    over the coming years.

    "The leading independent provider of online movie rental services
    also announced that its total paying subscribers will this month
    exceed the 10,000 milestone."

    "Quickflix chief executive officer Stephen Langsford said that over
    the past year the company had consolidated its position as the second
    largest online movie rental subscription service in Australia."

    Again, in case anyone missed it, the leading independent provider of
    online movie rental services reported a full-year loss of $2.6 million.

    Two new babies

    And before handing the reins back to your regular diarist, Michael
    Evans, let's finish a tale begun last week ...

    After racing off from the Silliac dinner at Sydney University where
    he was keeping company with legendary academic Harry Messell, Lee
    Ming Tee, aka Gleaming Teeth, welcomed a granddaughter to the Lee
    dynasty on Wednesday.

    We can only assume that his driver that night, Albert Wong, was racing
    home to put the finishing touches on what we hear is the prospectus
    for his latest stockmarket plaything, Pluton, which joins a stable
    of past and present companies including resources stock Zelos.

    Kate Askew has a tiny stake in John Fairfax Holdings.
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