|
Friday 28th April 2000 |
Text too small? |
NOT SURPRISED: Theresa Gattung
|
Telecom chief executive Theresa Gattung: "In New Zealand there's this huge divide, particularly about business and non-business, and about small business and big business. Small business is good, big business is bad.
"That report [the ANZ EVA report] that a lot of companies have destroyed shareholder value ran for a couple of days in the New Zealand papers and then disappeared off the radar screens. It had no legs.
"And you'd have to say that's because [newspapers] think their market, their customers, aren't interested. And you say, 'How could that be? How could it be that people don't understand?'
"They understand in their own sense. I come from a family of small businesspeople. People understand in an intimate way in relation to their own situation but there just seems to be this gap in terms of understanding it in a wider community sense. And I've never really figured that out.
"The closest I can get to understanding is that I believe New Zealand was peopled with immigrants from the British Isles who were coming away from elitism and a class system.
"We're so desperate to make sure it doesn't happen again here that the linkage in terms of big business and wealth creation 'for a few' means there's just a sort of anathema to it.
"I do think shareholder value in terms of wealth creation is not regarded as a social good in this country, so it doesn't surprise me that CEOs haven't been focused on that by their boards."
No comments yet
GNE - Resignation of Chief Financial Officer
PFI - Property for Industry Limited Launches Bond Offer
March 30th Morning Report
HGH Ltd Results for the 6 months ended 1 February 2026
March 27th Morning Report
CDC investor presentation and guidance update
PFI - Potential Bond Offer by PFI
MCY - Mercury Green Bond offer - interest rate set
March 25th Morning Report
AFT - Chief Financial Officer update