Word: tisch
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Loews, where his family controls 24% of the stock, Tisch operates hotels from Manhattan to Monte Carlo and owns subsidiaries that sell cigarettes, insurance and watches. This motley collection of businesses last year earned $589 million on sales of $6.7 billion. In addition to its stake in Loews, the Tisch family owns real estate scattered across the country and a vast stock and bond portfolio. Though the domain sometimes seems too enormous to comprehend, much less oversee, Tisch is rarely fazed by his responsibilities. He told TIME last week, "I find business very relaxing. I look forward every...
...Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, his head permanently cocked toward his Quotron terminal. Bob, 60, an equal partner, a gregarious man with an exceptional command of details, has been the hands-on operator. The unusual alliance has not been broken in 40 years. "We have never had an argument," Larry Tisch claims. "There's no reason to show temper. I don't get mad." When Bob became Postmaster General last month, the partnership was temporarily scuttled. Many of the Loews president's responsibilities will probably be assumed by the next generation of Tisches: one of Bob's sons and three...
...Tisch empire was built by buying good businesses at even better prices. Many Wall Street investors call themselves "value-oriented" and "contrarian," but those buzz words often translate into an investment philosophy no more profound than "Buy low, sell high." Larry Tisch is the real thing, earning his stripes over and over again...
...triumph as often as he has, Tisch has thumbed his nose at conventional wisdom. He buys companies or stocks when they are wildly unpopular and shuns anything that is remotely in vogue. "I'm always looking for companies that have real value," he says, "companies that we would be proud to own." Says E. John Rosenwald, an executive at Bear Stearns, a New York brokerage firm, and a Tisch family friend: "He's not a herd follower." Last year, for example, Tisch bought seven oil supertankers for a fraction of what it would have cost to build them...
...investor, Tisch has a talent for controlling his emotions, which enables him to resist most popular waves of fear or greed. He can be utterly unsentimental when money is involved. Last year, for example, he sold off the company's chain of movie theaters, the original heart of Loews...