Word: kohlberg
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Wall Street firm Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts and Company, using funds from more than 70 investors has offered $20.3 billion for the tobacco and food company...
Shortly afterwards, the Green Berets of the financial world at Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts (or KKR, as the company which introduced "leveraged buyouts" to the world is known) announced a $20 billion...
...Bloomingdale's (Federated Department Stores) have come under attack. One reason for the buyout binge is the amount of money available for acquisitions. Private investors have guaranteed more than $30 billion in capital to large takeover funds, providing would-be raiders with the capital to mount their attacks. Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts, an investment firm with $5.6 billion for use in takeovers, is a leader in the field. Since the takeover funds can borrow against their capital, they have the potential to raise as much as $300 billion. In a practice known as merchant banking, Wall Street firms, including KKR, Shearson...
Four days after the Hafts offered to buy the Cincinnati-based company (1987 revenues: $17.7 billion) two weeks ago, Kroger's board approved a sweeping $4.6 billion restructuring plan. Spurning the $4.4 billion Haft bid, as well as a follow-up $4.6 billion offer from Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, a New York City investment firm, Kroger's management proposed to sell off dozens of properties, slash costs and offer its stockholders cash and bonds worth up to $60 a share. Says Kroger CEO Lyle Everingham: "The company is not for sale...
...fall fizzled when the stock market crashed. Like other raiders caught in the middle of takeover attempts, the Hafts took heavy losses ($104 million), selling off their Dayton Hudson shares at a sharply lower price. But they were on the trail again by January, closing in on Stop & Shop. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts stepped in, as it had with Safeway, to help engineer a leveraged buyout, but the Hafts made $17 million dumping their stock as the price rose. Wall Street wags joked that Kohlberg should pay Dart a finder's fee for clients...