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Dodging Bullets: Changing U.S. Corporate Capital Structure in the 1980s and 1990s
 
 
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Dodging Bullets: Changing U.S. Corporate Capital Structure in the 1980s and 1990s [Hardcover]

Robert N. McCauley (Author), Frank Iacono (Author), Judith S. Ruud (Author)

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Book Description

0262133512 978-0262133517 December 3, 1999 1st

The late 1980s saw a huge wave of corporate leveraging. The U.S. financial landscape was dominated by a series of high-stakes leveraged buyouts as firms replaced their equity with new fixed debt obligations. Cash-financed acquisitions and defensive share repurchases also decapitalized corporations. This trend culminated in the sensational debt-financed bidding for RJR-Nabisco, the largest leveraged buyout of all time, before dramatically reversing itself in the early 1990s with a rapid return to equity.This entertaining summary of the broad reshaping of U.S. corporate finance in the last decade and a half looks at three major issues: why corporations leveraged up in the first place, why and how the leverage wave came to an end, and what policy lessons are to be drawn.Using the Minsky-Kindleberger model as a framework, the authors interpret the rise and fall of leveraging as a financial market mania. In the course of chronicling the return to equity in the 1990s, they address a number of important corporate finance questions: How important was the return to equity in relieving corporations' debt burdens? How did the return to equity affect the ability of young high-tech firms to finance themselves without selling out to foreign firms?


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"This is a brilliant book." J. Fred Weston , Professor Emeritus, The John E. Anderson Graduate School of Management at UCLA"An excellent case history detailing the leverage excesses of the late1980s and subsequent return to equity in the 1990s. Dodging Bulletsappeals to both the academic searching for an alternative views of theperiod and the practitioner interested in lessons on managing financialcrises." Stephen C. Vogt , Department of Finance, DePaul University and MesirowFinancial, Inc.

About the Author

Robert N. McCauley is a Senior Economic and Financial Representative with the Asian Office of the Bank for International Settlements in Hong Kong. Judith S. Ruud is a Principal Analyst at the Congressional Budget Office, Washington, DC. Frank Iacono is a Vice President at Chase Securities, Inc., in New York City.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The end of the 1980s brought big news in U.S. corporate finance no less than in international affairs. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
net equity issuance, net repurchasers, leveraging wave, corporate leveraging, underwriter price support, corporate refinancing, leveraging business, leveraged bank loans, fair price statutes, corporate debt crisis, net issuers, leveraged lending, junk bond mutual funds, junk bond holdings, junk bond buyers, leveraged loans, corporate interest payments, reverse leveraged buyouts, cheap equity, junk bond issuers, leveraged deals, corporate specialization, junk bond market, leveraged firms, equity retirement
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Philip Morris, Federal Reserve, Wall Street, United States, Hong Kong, New York, First Boston, Flow of Funds, Merrill Lynch, General Motors, Salomon Brothers, United Air Lines, Bank of Japan, Drexel Burnham Lambert, General Dynamics, Gulf War, Philip Moms, American Express, Federated Department Stores, General Instrument, Main Street, Marlboro Friday, Morgan Stanley, Shaman Pharmaceuticals, Total Return Index
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