The Vulture Investors Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

The Vulture Investors Book

Just as night follows day, a fall inevitably trails a stock market rise. As the Internet share frenzy reaches its nadir and bankruptcies loom, the vultures start circling. Hilary Rosenberg's delightful Vulture Investors details the work of investors who pick through the carcasses of busted companies. She describes in colourful detail the efforts of Michael Price buying defaulted bonds of Storage Technology Corporation in the mid-1980s. We learn about the early training of junk bond-corporate raider Michael Milken, trading in bankrupt and near-bankrupt companies. This is an updated edition of a book that Rosenberg first published in 1992. She worked for Institutional Investor, the American Vogue magazine for corporate financiers. She skilfully imbues what is basically a dull and sad process into tales of pitched battles between financiers and investors, commenting, "Vultures are a rare breed of investor. They are willing to fly headlong against a blizzard of prevailing opinion, betting that a company on its knees will once again stand up and resume walking. In some cases, they bet that the company will be worth much more dead than alive, and that they will profit when it is sold off in pieces." Vulture Investors describes many bankruptcies and the processes by which investors have profited. We learn about the saga of the Public Service Company of New Hampshire, which had unfortunately decided to build the Seabrook Nuclear plant just as the tide of public opinion was turning in the early 1980s. Drexel Burnham, the junk-bond specialist, had been called in to raise $150 million in capital to keep the utility ticking along. Rosenberg says that "vulture investor Marty Whitman had concluded that the deal was not viable. It was a ridiculous attempt by Drexel to stave off the inevitable. The $150 million offering, said the veteran vulture in his gritty voice, "was like spitting in the ocean. When the placement memo landed on his desk, it was like a green light flashing, 'Go invest'". Readers will learn why. The book does not offer insight as to where the next arena for vulture investing will occur, and is more useful as an interesting read about characters in the US, and the tricks, techniques and negotiating tactics that worked well in the last decade, but nevertheless, for that alone, it is highly recommended. --Bruce McWilliamsRead More

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  • ASDA

    This work examines the arcane yet dramatic world of investing in distressed companies and introduces the singular risk-taking characters who populate it. It aims to leave the reader with a sense of the motivations and methods of these investors and their role aiding an economic recovery.

  • Blackwell

    Hilary Rosenberg takes us on a journey through some of the major bankruptcies of the 1980s and 1990s - and brings to life the infamous, talented arbiters at the heart of their recovery. Meet the vulture investors who cast their sights on...

  • Pickabook

    Robert H. Haveman, Kenyon A. Knopf

  • 0471361895
  • 9780471361893
  • Hilary Rosenberg
  • 16 February 2000
  • John Wiley & Sons
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 416
  • Revised edition
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