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2 Reviews
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Handbook for Managers, not investors,
By Atherton Reader (Atherton, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Corporate Bankruptcy: Tools, Strategies, and Alternatives (Hardcover)
Although helpful and well written, the book appears more appropriate for executives or managers of operating companies that may be faced with bankruptcy prospects. A good overview of how the process unfolds, players, objectives, legal issues, and procedures is provided. Managers at a financially distressed operation typically carry a different toolbox of experience and skills, and therefore, this book would be well worth the introduction to the topic.
However, for investors this book is somewhat superficial and lacks the roll-up-your-sleeves education neccessary for investing. In most cases, senior management is sacked because creditors understandably have little confidence in those who may have mismanaged or were responsible for the business's failure in the first place. Thus, the audience that I presumed above may not be appropriate nor the majority of individuals who surface after a Plan. For investors or external parties, I urge you to consider: "Distressed Debt Analysis: Strategies for Speculative Investors" by Stephen G. Moyer. It is more expensive, but its a much better book on this topic. Moyer is a stronger writer and seems to be more experienced in the matter than G. Newton. Both books do not include the 2005 Bankruptcy Code reforms, so you may wish to brush up on that separately.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very practical reference, "thin" on theory and case studies,
By A Customer
This review is from: Corporate Bankruptcy: Tools, Strategies, and Alternatives (Hardcover)
Very useful and convenient reference guide for restructuring bankers / distressed debt investors. Probably too generic for experienced bankruptcy attorneys. The text and examples are efficiently presented and the author does a superb job of distilling the bankruptcy code into an easy-to-read format. The chapter on valuation is nothing more than the common stuff you read in any corporate finance book. A case study and a more extensive discussion on bankruptcy term sheets and negotiation tactics would have made this book more praiseworthy.
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Corporate Bankruptcy: Tools, Strategies, and Alternatives by Grant W. Newton (Hardcover - January 17, 2003)
$54.95
In Stock | ||