Giving Thanks at the Diamond Dealers Club
December 02, 04 Conferences are good business. The recent Diamond World Congress in New York turned out to have been exceptionally good business. When the money of all the sponsors was in and counted, the Diamond Dealers Club (DDC) – which acted as host to the Congress – found itself with some $270,000 surplus. Not bad. The DDC quickly used the very next Board of Directors meeting to decide what to do with the unexpected windfall. It almost unanimously decided that a $50,000 personal “bonus” was due to the bourse’s amic This issue was not an advance agreed official agenda item for the November 18 Board Meeting. Most of the rank and file members of the Club were not aware of this gift. They are now. At the relevant board meeting, one week before Thanksgiving, a member – spontaneously -- brought up the payment to Banda. “Was it really spontaneous?” wondered one board member. In a business in which confidence, ethics, principles, good governance, trust etc. are of paramount importance, the position of the President of the Diamond Dealers Club raises some intriguing questions. A lengthy and heated discussion followed in which different amounts, up to a maximum of $100,000, were mentioned as the appropriate level of gift to Banda. One participant made the suggestion that Banda should excuse himself and not be present at the discussion. Jacob Banda refused to move from his seat. He was present during the entire deliberation. At some point – after it was clear that Banda was going to get money – it was decided to have a “secret” vote. The vote was not on the principle involved, but rather on the amount. Moreover, a “zero sum” was not an option, even though one board member elected not to participate in the vote. The board members were given the choice to indicate whether Banda should receive $50,000, $75,000 or $100,000. “If the vote would have been open with hands needing to be raised, I would have left the room,” Banda said to us last night, in reply to our question why he didn’t leave the room during the entire discussion. Out of the 18 board members present, Banda says there were only two DDC board members who were against giving money to the President. As to what happened next the reports are not unanimous. Before going into further details we want to disclose that the DDC President had been the subject of an earlier IDEX article that we had spiked (i.e. decided not to publish) – but it is relevant in the present context. In April 2004, we had drafted an article Ten times a year, a group of New York buyers, selected by Jacob Banda, go to Antwerp where they can purchase both regular DTC, and also earmarked “Banda” goods, at Diamdel. So a regular New York buyer, who has come to Diamdel for many years, may find that he is offered a few boxes and on some of those the name “Banda” appears in black ink. When purchasing these boxes, the New York client takes into account that commission is due to Jacob Banda. At the request of WDC Chairman (and ex-DDC President) As Diamdel doesn’t comment on clients, De Beers spokeswoman Lynette Hori confirmed to us that “Diamdel in Antwerp does supply some of its clients represented by Jacob Banda, but Diamdel tell us that these clients are considered in exactly the same way as all their other clients. We understand from Diamdel that there is no benefit to these clients in being represented by Banda insofar as allocation of goods by Diamdel is concerned. We also understand from Diamdel that there is no commission or The concern in the market isn’t with Diamdel but rather on the dividing line between the public duties of an elected official and his private business. Getting $50,000 for being part of the organizing committee of the World Diamond Congress turns the “Banda-box Another DDC member expressed concern At the Antwerp Diamond Conference held last month, the HRD proudly When we started to ask questions (by e-mail) The first alleged “talk” There are different views on when and why the decision was made to give the $50,000 to charity. Banda said to us that he had told a few officers of the board of this decision on the Monday morning following the Thursday vote. What we found was that, as of last night - some two weeks after the vote -- some board members were not aware that he had made such a decision, Banda shrugged that off by him “not being responsible for what they know or don’t know.” There are anecdotal reports The exact timing of the decision to turn the Banda “bonus” into a “charity gift” is not really relevant – and we don’t wish to dwell on it. The disturbing fact remains that a Board of Directors meeting of the DDC decided to financially reward its President for his work in making the Congress a success; that the President of the DDC did not immediately stop such deliberations in a board meeting over which he himself presided. What is even more disturbing is that the only “secret” vote was on the amount to be given to Banda. If anyone had thought then that the money would go to charity, there would have been no reason for a secret vote. And the amount might have been higher – and it would have been unanimous. What is unsettling is the bourse culture – the environment -- against which this is all taking place and that connects us to “Banda boxes” and, maybe, other issues. Why do the members of the DDC board of directors feel that a President is entitled to financial benefits, bonuses, commissions, etc. for looking after the best interest of its members? Since when does the DTC think that a bourse President that secures rough allocations for (mostly young) diamantaires ought to be entitled to charge a personal commission? And the question which the DDC members themselves ought to ponder is whether there aren’t far more honor