HOUSE OVERSIGHT 029346 1,000:000 1,800:000 1;600;000 1,400;000 1,200:000 1,000:000 800:000 600:000 400:000 200;000 0 11 —Om mi— 11 12 13 16 17 18 19 — I 20 23 24 25 Date (June 2014:1 •Foundation sales 1. Day's volume •Previous sverge volume Source: Foundation filings, Bloomberg The foundation's sales over the last two weeks or so accounted for over half of the volume, on average, each day. And the foundation's average sale on each of those days was more than five times the average volume over the previous six months. From Jan. 1 to June 10 of this year, more than five months, Valhi traded a total of 4.6 million shares. From June 11 to June 25, just over two weeks, it traded a total of 4.8 million shares -- more than half of them sold by the Harold Simmons Foundation. You might expect that to drive down the stock a bit? Actually the stock performed surprisingly well, all things considered; it closed on June 10 at $6.42 and on June 25 at $5.81, down just 9.5 percent. But just that change, from $6.42 per share to $5.81, would save Simmons's heirs almost $80 million in estate taxes.9 The foundation sold the last of its shares on June 25 (this Wednesday). Without any more shares to sell, the foundation -- oh, wait, no, never mind, the foundation found some more shares to sell! On Wednesday, the day that it finished selling its 2.5 million shares, it received a "Gift from Affiliate" of another 900,000 shares. Those shares were gifted to the foundation by the Valhi Holding Company, the vehicle through which Simmons's heirs own their 318.2 million shares:0 The Foundation immediately filed a plan to sell those shares too, with an "approximate date of sale" of June 26 (yesterday)." As of 1 p.m. today, I see Valhi trading in the $5.80s. Isn't that neat? Honestly, I have no idea what's going on here.12 But if you did want to minimize your estate taxes on a multi-billion-dollar controlled public corporation with an illiquid stock, a good