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[personal profile] chris_gerrib
Like the title says:

1) James Fallows is starting a series on "casino capitalism." His first article wonders if the Chinese investors who are buying the bankrupt Hawker Beechcraft corporation are going to stick the US taxpayers with the pension liabilities. He also notes that the US investors who bought the company so overleveraged it that the only way to make money on the deal was to flip it quickly. Money quote: "When the capital development of a country becomes a by-product of the activities of a casino, the job is likely to be ill-done."

2) From the always-interesting Lawyers, Guns and Money, the saint and the sociopath. We now know that Joe Paterno was covering up for child rape for over a decade. During that same decade and at least two decades prior, Paterno talked about how "Penn State football was, in his words, a “Grand Experiment” — an island of old-fashioned virtues in the sordid sea of big-time college football, where doing things the right way while building moral character and molding tomorrow’s leaders took precedence over the won-loss record." The massive ego that would commit this evil while thinking one is right will find its way into one of my books.

3) In a two-fer from Lawyers, Guns and Money, forest fires and exurban housing. The money quote: "The fundamental problem is that wealthy people have moved to the forest edge, built large homes without proper vegetation clearance to protect those homes from the common fires in dry-land western forests, don’t want to pay taxes or serve in rural western volunteer fire departments, and demand full service from the government for every little problem they have." As they say, denial isn't just a river in Egypt.

Date: 2012-07-13 04:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] daveon.livejournal.com
I've worked for a company acquired by a Private Equity firm and seen several who have been bought. The pattern is really almost always the same.

You find an existing company which may or may not be profitable. Marginally profitable is preferable as it's likely to be cheap.

You then cut costs, sack or make things so bad for expensive staff, they walk, you convert a lot of the capital balance to lending and extract the money you used to buy the company.

After a few years you sell what's left.

Date: 2012-07-13 04:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chris-gerrib.livejournal.com
Thus is revealed the difference between venture capitalism and vulture capitalism.

Date: 2012-07-13 04:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] daveon.livejournal.com
We've actually had a couple of VCs advise us to walk away from them recently as, in their own words, they'd screw up the company.

As I write this I'm actually arguing with my marketing/sales partner about raising money versus selling because he's wanting us to go for some real money - and we can't really afford to take the foot off the sales gas at this point.

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