WASHINGTON (AP) -
A new financial report from GOP presidential
candidate Mitt Romney shows that his personal fortune remains near $250
million, about the same as last year even after a mass sell-off of
stocks from his vast investment portfolio.
Romney's campaign said
Friday that his assets ranged between $190 million and $250 million, and
a tally by The Associated Press put the figure at the high end of that
range.
The new financial report
from Romney describes sales over the past year of a large amount of
stocks that had been managed through his blind trust. The stocks sold
included such familiar corporate entities as Boeing, Volkswagen and
Pepsico.
The stock sales also
included several notable firms whose interests had conflicted with
Romney's stances - among them China-based businesses Hang Lung and
Komatsu. Romney has advocated toughened dealings with China's government
over its expanding economic interests.
Romney campaign spokeswoman
Andrea Saul stressed Friday that the investment decisions for Romney
and his wife, Ann, were made under a blind trust administered by a
Boston-based lawyer who has long worked with Romney. "Governor and Mrs.
Romney's assets are managed on a blind basis," Saul said. "They do not
control the investment of these assets, which are under the control and
overall management of a trustee."
In 2007 during his first
presidential run, Romney had assured critics that the trustee, R.
Bradford Malt, would see that his investments would not clash with his
positions or Republican party stances. But the new 2012 disclosure -
along with other Romney financial documents released earlier this year -
showed that the Romneys held onto some of those investments well past
2007.
The annual financial
disclosure report that Romney turned over Friday to the Federal Election
Commission showed a slightly wider range - between $83 million and $255
million - than the narrower asset range released by the Romney
campaign. A Romney campaign official who spoke on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to discuss the candidate's finances said
that the campaign's figures were slightly more accurate because of
differences in valuation.
The new financial
disclosure shows that even after his stock sales, Romney still made
millions of dollars over the past year in lucrative bank notes and
investment funds, including nearly 40 different funds associated with
his former company, Bain Capital.
Those assets include at
least two investments that had not been previously disclosed in Romney's
2010 financial report. Both were described as "Bain Capital Inc."
funds. One was valued at nearly $2 million; the other slightly more than
$3,500.
In notes provided Friday
with the disclosure, Romney's trustee explained that the income from
those investments and others cited in the disclosure were part of
Romney's retirement agreement with Bain Capital. Romney's 2010 financial
disclosure did not provide any details about his retirement agreement.
The specifics of that agreement - which provided Romney with steady
income in the 13 years since he left Bain Capital in 1999 - have never
been made public.
The notes explain that the
two "Bain Capital Inc." funds are from expired entities that "formerly
operated investment advisory businesses." The notes say that the income
was provided to Romney under "true-up payments" - in essence, catch-up
payments - to make up for payments not made before the entities ceased
operation. Romney campaign officials were not immediately available to
further explain those payments.
Romney also reported owning
as much as $500,000 in gold - a holding similar to what he owned last
year. He also reported $260,000 in stock retainer distributions from the
Marriott Corporation, where he served on the board of directors until
early 2011. Romney's father, George Romney, was close to the Marriott
family, and the firm's current chairman, J.W. "Bill" Marriott is a
prominent fund-raiser and has donated $500,000 to a pro-Romney political
committee.
Romney made $190,000 in
speaker's fees for speeches at Emory University, Barclay's Bank, the
International Franchise Assn. and the Intercontinental Real Estate Fund.
He also received as much as $100,000 from proceeds from his
campaign-themed book, "No Apology."
Romney's stock sales
unloaded dozens of investments that had been managed under his blind
trust by several investment management companies. The campaign did not
explain the rationale behind the stock sales, but tax forms released by
the Romney campaign earlier this year showed that both the blind trust
overseeing his and his wife's investments began shedding many stocks in
2010, just before he geared up his presidential campaign.
Among the stocks that
Romney sold, according to Friday's disclosure, included Wal-Mart's
Mexican operation, which has been roiled by payoff allegations, and
British Sky Broadcasting, the television operation sought by media
magnate Rupert Murdoch.
Other sold stocks included
Komatsu and Schlumberger, firms that have been targeted in the past for
doing business in Iran. The blind trust also shed an investment in
Fresenius Medical Care, a German company that has done work in stem cell
research, which Romney has said he opposes.
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