Word: investors
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...poured $2.1 billion into the plant. Strapped for cash, Public Service last week did something that utilities virtually never do: it defaulted. The company deliberately missed a $37.5 million semiannual interest payment on nearly a third of its $1.5 billion debt. Not since the Great Depression had a major investor-owned utility failed to meet its bond commitments. "We are in a heap of trouble," admits Robert Harrison, Public Service's president...
That will bring no immediate help for Public Service, which is battling with dissident creditors over rescue plans. A group of bond owners (estimated holdings: $200 million) led by New York City Investor Martin Whitman is proposing to spin off Public Service's share in Seabrook into a separate company, thus leaving the utility less encumbered by debt. Losing Seabrook, however, is anathema to the utility, which still hopes to reap the hefty return that an operating nuclear plant can deliver. Public Service's Harrison proposes to restructure the debt, slash the utility's costs and raise electric rates...
...Schwab, Randy Smith owns a successful securities firm. But unlike those two familiar financial pitchmen, the head of Manhattan's R.D. Smith & Co. would never think of hawking his services on TV. Reason: R.D. Smith deals in stocks and bonds that would seem far too risky to the typical investor...
...business world. There is nothing fanciful about his vision of assembling a financial empire in the Pacific Basin. In fact, Simon has helped mold a multibillion-dollar conglomerate that includes the largest savings and loan association in Honolulu and a merchant bank in Los Angeles. Last week an investor group led by Simon agreed to pay $157 million for Western Federal Savings & Loan, the fifth California thrift the group has tried to acquire within a year. Says Simon: "California is the gateway to the dynamic growth markets of the next century, in Australia, Hawaii and the Far East...
...this," says Donald Stone, a member of the New York Stock Exchange since 1950 and one of its vice chairmen. "The market has spiked up without any meaningful correction; it won't even pause to catch its breath." Peter Cohen, a New York City real estate broker and large investor, muses, "Even in the sizzling '60s, it was an article of faith that what goes up must come down. But those who have played by this rule now have left huge amounts of profit on the table. I have sold at a profit, then bought the same stock...