Word: walls
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...This is the sort of excess that investment bankers have worried about for years," said economist Robert Reich of Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government, "because it so clearly exposes the greed and rapaciousness of so many of these takeovers." Martin Weinstein, managing director of Kubera, a Wall Street arbitrage firm, concurred: "Do I sense fear? Yes. At some point there is going to be a rebellion against greed...
...dinner at the Waverly Hotel. Appalled by the gall shown by Johnson, whom one director called a "raider from the inside," a committee of five directors three weeks ago opened the bidding to all comers. First to accept the invitation were the most aggressive LBO artists of all, the Wall Street firm of Kohlberg Kravis Roberts. Headed by Henry Kravis, 44, and George Roberts, 45, KKR pioneered the leveraged buyout in the 1970s and nurtured it into one of the best-paying financial arrangements of the decade...
...Many Wall Street insiders thought the KKR bid was as self-serving and hasty as Johnson's offer had been. "They broke the golden rule by injecting their egos into a business decision," said one financier who knows KKR well. "They went after RJR Nabisco to protect their franchise as the largest dealmaker...
Leveraged buyouts seemed like a small-time, unglamorous financial gimmick when KKR began hawking them on Wall Street in the mid-1970s. But the arrangements were an immediate hit with managers who saw the wisdom of taking their companies private to escape corporate raiders. LBOs were also a boon to promising firms that wanted to grow outside Wall Street's harsh spotlight...
Washington's reformers concede that the stock market is still edgy after its collapse. Wall Street showed just how nervous it was when stocks dropped nearly 79 points in the week that George Bush was elected President. "Nobody wants to be blamed for setting off another stock market crash," says a brokerage-house lobbyist. Legislators are still haunted by charges that proposals to restrain takeovers last year helped cause Black Monday. Many Wall Street insiders are now convinced that buyouts and mergers are among the market's few remaining props...