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H.L. Hunt's Boys and the Circle K CowboysLarry LaBorde Back in the 1980's some of you may remember that a Texas oil dynasty tried to buy a little silver in between their oil deals. The tale of H.L. Hunt and his family (at one time possibly the richest family in the US) is the stuff of legends in the South. While this is the story of the silver deals of the sons of the 1st family a little family background makes for a better story. Mr. H.L. Hunt was born in Illinois where his father moved after the Civil War (or War of Northern Aggression as we like to call it) to escape the hardships of reconstruction. H.L.'s father was becoming quite prosperous in Illinois but H.L. hit the road and traveled out West at about age 16. He worked as a dishwasher, a mule team driver, a logger, a farm worker, tried out for semi-pro baseball, poured concrete on a construction crew but most of all gambled at cards. H.L.'s father died when he was 22 years old. He went home, collected his inheritance and shortly thereafter moved to Southeast Arkansas to try his luck with cotton farming. The Lake Village, Arkansas days turned from farming to land speculation and more gambling. He met and married his first wife there, Lyda Bunker. Shortly afterwards news of the Smackover Oilfield in nearby El Dorado, Arkansas reached Lake Village and H.L. promptly took advantage of the boom times. As soon as he got off the train and looked around he told his companions, "All I need is a deck of cards and some poker chips." H.L. made money gambling at cards and eventually started drilling for oil. His first well was successful. He eventually moved his wife Lyda and small family to El Dorado and began building up his "poor boy" drilling company. Always the gambler, H.L. was never afraid to "push all his chips out on the table at once." In 1925 the boom times in El Dorado were winding down, H.L. sold all his production and traveled to Florida to try his luck in the current real estate boom. There he met and married his second wife, Frania Tye (yes he was still married to his first). She married his as "Franklin" Hunt. H.L. and Frania honeymooned in New Orleans during Mardi Gras and then set up residence in Shreveport, Louisiana and began a family there. He shuttled back and forth between both families in El Dorado and Shreveport providing for them both. He opened an oil office in El Dorado and operated out of the Washington -Youree hotel in Shreveport. On any given day over 100 oil men operated in the great marble lobby of the Washington-Youree hotel swapping oil leases, making drilling deals and spreading rumors. H.L. was finally in his element working the oil fields of South Arkansas and North Louisiana with Jick Justiss, Charlie Hardin and Old Man Bailey. In 1930 H.L. moved his second family to Dallas while his first family remained in El Dorado (both of them were still growing in numbers at the time). Then the most significant financial event of his life occurred when a friend from El Dorado passed along some inside information about a little test well in East Texas. Before it was all over H.L. became a leading independent producer in the largest oilfield ever found to date, the great East Texas oilfield near Kilgore, TX. During the great depression this area of the country never suffered. It was the biggest boom of all the oil booms to date. Oil was selling at over $1.00/bbl and fell to $.15/bbl after the field was discovered and brought on line because of the oversupply that it created. H.L. entered his East Texas deal at a time he was short on cash. With a haberdasher bachelor friend from El Dorado H.L. sold a 20% interest to for $30,000 - H.L. proceeded to close one of the biggest oil deals in history without any of his own money. He paid for the deal with production from the very field he purchased. He tried to borrow money from the Shreveport banks to develop his East Texas leases but they would not loan money on in ground reserves. He then went to the First National Bank in Dallas and obtained the needed loans to drill and bring his production on line. A banking relationship for the next 50 years was cemented in Dallas that day. Hunt was dogged for years in and out of court in East Texas by Dad Joiner and others who claimed H.L. cheated them out of their leases but when it was all over H.L. came out on top. He moved his first family to Tyler, TX for a few years and then moved them onto Dallas. Shortly thereafter H.L.'s notoriety revealed to Frania that Franklin Hunt was indeed H.L. Hunt. The relationship broke up and H.L. set up trusts for his children with Frania and agreed to provide for Frania as well. H.L. continued to prosper and build his oil empire. He also moved into the food and cosmetic industry with disastrous results. I remember personally meeting him at the Louisiana State Fair where he was hawking his HL food products in the 1960's. In 1955 his first wife, Lyda died. Shortly thereafter he married his third wife, Ruth Ray with whom he already had 4 children with while still married to Lyda. (In all, he had 15 children with these 3 women.) While Ruth tried to bring everyone together, there were hard feelings between the three separate families of H.L. Of these children our story starts with the 3 youngest children from the first family, Bunker, Herbert and Lamar along with a brother in law, Randy Kreiling, from the third family. The eldest Hunt son was Hassie. He amassed quite a fortune on his own before he was 25 years old in the oil business after a falling out with his father. Through a strange and terrible twist, Hassie developed a mental condition that eventually led to a frontal lobotomy and his incapacitation early in life. Ironically his personal oil business that he started continued to grow and prosper even after his incapacitation into a rather large business in its own right. Bunker, being the next oldest male child fell heir to the kingdom. Bunker, Herbert and Lamar owned and operated Penrod Drilling Company. All six of the first family children owned Placid Oil Company. Hunt Oil was owned by H.L. himself (later it was parceled out to his 14 surviving children). Bunker started out by drilling a string of dry holes in Pakistan losing over $11 million dollars. He then went head to head against the major oil companies and bid on leases in Libya. He obtained tracts #2 and #65. By then he was in such financial straits as a result of his dry holes that he sold an interest in tract #65 to BP. In 1961 the largest oilfield in Africa to date was discovered on tract #65. Bunker's interest was valued at about $7 billion dollars making him the richest private individual in the world at age 35. He was also a little short on cash and had to borrow $5 million from H.L. to hold him over until he could get his production in Libya on line. While Bunker was out on his own, Herbert ran Hunt Oil and quietly built up the company's oil reserves as well as invested in real estate North of Dallas during the 1960's. At the same time Lamar was organizing the AFL and his Kansas City Chiefs. During the 1970's Bunker was still the heavy hitter betting on one big business deal after another including oil, real estate (5 million acres throughout the world), cattle, sugar and pizza parlors. His Libyan oil leases in the late 1960's and early 1970's were bringing in $30 million/year in revenues (even at $3/bbl). In 1970 when silver was at $1.50/oz Bunker decided to invest there as well. At that time it was illegal for US citizens to own gold so silver was a natural second choice. Inflation was starting to gain steam, Vietnam was causing doubts about our government and riots in our country, the Middle East was a powder keg and Libya (along with his valuable oil field) was in transition. Bunker personally believed that the worldwide situation was going to get worse and as a result decided to hedge his assets. But with the usual Hunt flair for "pushing all the chips out on the table" it did not take long for a hedge to become a very large position. Between 1970 and 1973 Bunker and Herbert purchased 200,000 oz or so and saw their silver increase from $1.50/oz to $3.00/oz. At the same
time Col. Qaddafi in Libya shut out BP and then nationalized
Bunker's wells. The major oil companies soon afterwards caved
in. The first to break with the major oil companies was Armand
Hammer at Occidental Petroleum when he gave into Qaddafi's demands
for a 51% royalty payment. After Hammer the other major oil companies
lined up and gave in as well. The results were an empowerment
over the major oil companies the middle east countries had never
before experienced that emboldened them to form OPEC and embargo
oil in 1973. With inflation eating at his Libyan profits and no more to come Bunker started buying silver in a big way with his brother Herbert. In 1973 they started buying and by early 1974 they had accumulated silver contracts totaling 55 million oz or about 8% of the world's silver supply at that time. The brothers then took delivery of all 55 million oz of silver. Bunker was concerned about government confiscation of his silver. He could not bring it to Texas without paying a 5% franchise tax to the State. The brothers decided to pick up the silver and drop it off in Switzerland for safekeeping. Meanwhile, back at the ranch, (the Circle K Ranch in Texas) brother in law Randy Kreiling and his brother Tilmon held a shooting contest amongst the cowboys to find the best marksmen. The dozen best marksmen were hired for a special assignment to ride shotgun on one of the largest private silver transfers in history. The Circle K cowboys flew on 3 specially chartered 707 jets to Chicago and New York where they were met by a convoy of armored trucks during the middle of the night. Forty million oz of silver was loaded onto the planes and they immediately flew to Zurich where they were met by another convoy of armored trucks. The cowboys loaded the trucks and silver was dispersed to six different storage locations in Switzerland. The transfer cost Bunker and Herbert $200,000. The storage costs for the 40 million oz in Switzerland and the 15 million oz still in the US amounted to $3 million/year. By the spring
of 1974 silver rose to over $6/oz and rumors were flying that
the Hunts were trying to corner the silver market. At the time
annual production was 245 million oz and annual demand was 450
million oz. The Hunt brothers had just taken delivery of 55 million
oz. The big question was how much silver was out in private hands?
Of the estimated 700 million ounces of silver only about 200
million ounces was available for delivery against futures contracts.
That same Spring Bunker appeared on the floor of COMEX in New
York for the first time and declared that "almost anything
is better than paper money" and "any fool can run a
printing press." The silver market dropped down to the $3
to $4 range after that but Bunker and Herbert just held on and
worked other deals. Herbert's real estate deals in North Dallas
paid off handsomely during the 1970's while Bunker's racehorse
business did well. Penrod Drilling was expanding all over the
world and quickly moving to offshore rigs. Hunt Oil's other holdings
were also buoyed as the worldwide price of oil escalated. Then
in 1974 at the age of 85 H.L. Hunt died. Late in 1979
the CBOT changed the rules and stated that no investor could
hold over 3 million oz of silver contracts and the margin requirement
were raised. All contracts over 3 million oz per trader must
be liquidated by February of 1980. Bunker accused the COMEX and
CBOT board members of having a financial interest in the silver
market themselves. Investigations later found that many had substantial
silver short positions. Bunker knew that a shortage now existed
or they would not be screaming so loudly. He bought even more.
The price on the last day of 1979 was $34.45/oz. At this point
Bunker and Herbert held 40 million oz in Switzerland and 90 million
oz of bullion they jointly owned through International Metals.
In addition to all that, International Metals had contracts on
another 90 million oz due for delivery that March from the COMEX.
The younger brother, Lamar had even entered the arena and had
taken a $300 million dollar silver position by the end of 1979. The Hunt's
brokers promptly sold $100 million dollars worth of silver that
day. Their account only had $90 million dollars worth of equity
and they were expected to loose all that the next day. The CFTC
chairman, Chairman of the Federal Reserve and US Treasury Secretary
began an around the clock silver monitoring session. Larry LaBorde |