Word: lambert
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...Soviet Union was in the midst of disempowering the Communist Party. Germany was hurtling toward unification. Nelson Mandela was transforming the future of South Africa, and Drexel Burnham Lambert was pronouncing obsequies over the go-go greed of the '80s. But the connubial bust-up of the billionaire New Yorkers was the talk of the town. For that matter, of practically every town. Their story made the network newscasts and countless columns across the U.S., and once the split became a fait accompli, gossipists gleefully predicted that ramifications -- from a rowdy settlement battle to the wooing of new partners -- might...
...abrupt fall of the Berlin Wall thousands of miles away, the collapse suddenly confirmed what everyone in the financial world could already feel in the wind: a new era had arrived. After a desperate three-day search for cash in which it was spurned by its bankers, Drexel Burnham Lambert Group filed bankruptcy papers an hour before midnight last Tuesday...
...began sliding, and its banks cut off credit two weeks ago. The parent company, starved for cash, began to siphon money from the investment firm's coffers until Government regulators halted that maneuver. After a frantic search for a bank bailout or a merger partner, directors of Drexel Burnham Lambert Group agreed to put the company into bankruptcy proceedings...
...attempted to offer whole departments for sale, including Milken's old junk-bond operation in Beverly Hills, but rival firms turned up their noses at anything that might carry legal liabilities or the taint of scandal. The firm's stockholders will get little or nothing, most notably Belgium's Lambert Group, which owned 26% of the firm and may have to take a $92 million write-off. Creditors include Taiyo Mutual Life, a Tokyo firm with a $70 million claim, and Milken himself, who says he is owed more than $200 million in compensation...
Even in a place and time known for excess, Jeffrey Beck, a "rainmaker" who drummed up merger deals for Wall Street's Drexel Burnham Lambert, stood out as one of the most colorful takeover specialists ever to don a power tie. Nicknamed "Mad Dog" for his courage under fire, he regaled friends with tales of his jungle-patrol days in Viet Nam. He talked of his Silver Star, two Bronze Stars and four Purple Hearts. He often told colleagues that he stood to inherit a multibillion-dollar fortune from the German brewery family of the same name...