Word: mergers
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Four corporate giants in the wildest merger whirl ever...
Instead of ending the affair, however, the Du Pont-Conoco merger announcement merely unleashed a new flurry of financial maneuvering. Within four days, Texaco quietly arranged $5.5 billion in credit from a group of banks led by Chase Manhattan. Pundits speculated that Texaco was gearing up to boost its bid for Conoco or pursue another oil company. Meanwhile Edgar Bronfman, Seagram's tenacious chairman, was mulling his own countermove. He called his board of directors into a special session. The verdict: up the ante. The new offer: $85 per share for 51% of Conoco stock...
Some economists fear, however, that what is good for the Wall Street merger makers is bad for the health of the economy. Says Walter Adams, professor of economics at Michigan State University...
...Merger managers are playing short-term games that will not create a single new job, build a single new factory or add anything to U.S. technology. The economy is likely to be hurt by merger activity that is senseless and in fact creates Brobdingnagian corporate monsters with no need to compete or push hard...
...merger binge has been a bonanza for a special breed of Wall Street investment banker who negotiates the megabuck deals. Acquisition teams at First Boston Corp., which handled Du Font's bid for Conoco, and Morgan Stanley, which advised the oil company, are expected to earn almost $15 million each from the merger...