Creating Value Through Corporate Restructuring: Case Studies in Bankruptcies, Buyouts, and Breakups | 
enlarge | Author: Stuart C. Gilson Publisher: Wiley Category: Book
List Price: $85.00 Buy New: $46.88 You Save: $38.12 (45%)
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Rating: 32 reviews Sales Rank: 182883
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 528 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.2 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.1 x 1.7
ISBN: 0471405590 Dewey Decimal Number: 658.16 EAN: 9780471405597 ASIN: 0471405590
Publication Date: July 20, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Product Description Praise for Creating Value through Corporate Restructuring "A helpful reference guide for managers facing the complex operational and financial issues raised in today's competitive environment. Gilson's case studies provide a real-world context against which corporate leaders can plan their restructuring strategies."-Arthur B. Newman, Senior Managing Director, The Blackstone Group "Stuart Gilson's analytical case studies have demystified the battle of enterprise valuations in financial distress and buyout situations. It is a must-read for understanding the restructuring and buyout arena. I highly recommend this book."-Harvey R. Miller, Senior Partner and Chair of the Business, Finance, and Restructuring Department, Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP "The economically pivotal process has never before received such a rigorous and well-rounded treatment. Gilson goes far beyond the legal framework of bankruptcy resolution to show how industry-specific factors, conflicting creditor claims, and negotiating stratagems all determine a financially strained company's fate. Readers of Creating Value through Corporate Restructuring will gain wisdom that could otherwise be obtained only through many years of direct experience in the field."-Martin S. Fridson, Chief High-Yield Strategist, Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. "Creating Value through Corporate Restructuring ably describes the importance and difficulty of designing, executing, and marketing restructuring strategies. The case study format offers the reader an inside look at the real world of corporate restructuring. With this book, Gilson provides a useful blueprint for tackling restructuring challenges."-Jay Alix, Founder and Principal, Jay Alix & Associates "Stuart Gilson has created a much-needed book for practitioners and professors alike. It should be required reading for MBA and PhD students who need to understand corporate reorganization and crisis management."-Sanford Sigoloff, Chairman, President, and CEO, Sigoloff & Associates, Inc.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 27 more reviews...
Finance with Negative Signs January 23, 2004 X (Palookaville) 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Someone (perhaps it was I) has said that bankruptcy is corporate finance with negative signs. This has always been true but it is amazing how far mainstream finance has gone to try to resist the comparison. The resistance must be, must have been more cultural than economic, because it is axiomatic that anything is a bargain at the right price, and that there is no more or less money to be made in "distress investing" than in any other. Two generations ago, there seems to have been only one person in American that really understood this point - the late Max Heine, who made his grubstake by investing in out-of-favor railroad bonds in the Great Depression, and then riding the wave of prosperity that emerged in World War II. In the same vein, 40 years ago just about any bankruptcy judge would have looked on an "assigned claim" as some kind of monster.Times have changed. Now everybody's an arbitrageur. The "vulture investors" have their conferences, their social clubs, and for all I know, their own softball team. Stuart C. Gilson"s "Corporate Restructuring" symbolizes the sea change from the old attitude to the new. It adds the imprimatur of the Harvard Business School to the notion that vulture investing is just another way of making money. As others have noted, this isn't a work of high theory - indeed it has a kind of slapdash, direct-off-the-photocopier feel that is remarkably common in business publications. For fancy theory, you look elsewhere - in law to the likes of Douglas Baird or Lucian Arye Bebchuk; in finance to the developing lore of "real options." But the case studies are an excellent device for getting a sense of the texture and possibilities of vulture investing. It can be read with profit alongside Hilary Rosenberg's "The Vulture Investors." Ambitious students who want the full theoretical framework will match it with David G. Luenberger's "Investment Science." But Gilson's work has merit on its own as one kind of introduction to this revolution in investment thinking.
Only usefull for students March 3, 2003 R. Bjorkmann (Oslo Norway) 11 out of 15 found this review helpful
What a waiste of money.... The writer has not included any anlyses or real solutions to the cases that a provided. Unless you are a student in a class that use this book, this book gives you absolute nothing.
Good book but needs a companion text February 18, 2003 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
This is a very good case book, complete with intricate case studies illustrating numerous aspects of challenges often faced in restructuring in bankruptcy. However, the book assumes a level of knowledge about M&A concepts that many readers may not have. Consequently, I would recommend using this book in conjunction with another excellent text by DePamphilis entitled Mergers and Acquisitions: Integrated Approach. There are two editions. The second edition is more complete and up to date. It also tackles some of the problems illustrated in this book.
Just a collection of old cases January 30, 2003 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
This book is a complete waste of time. It is just a collection of case studies bundled together and resold. There is no analysis done. The cases are merely reprinted word for word from the original HBS cases. There are three short intros to the different sections, but once again nothing useful. Great marketing ploy, lousy book.
Corporate Restructuring: It's Not Just for Lawyers Anymore December 4, 2002 Matthew McBrady (Philadelphia, PA) 4 out of 7 found this review helpful
You'd be surprised by how few business schools offer courses on bankruptcy and restructuring. I know that I was. I came to Wharton this year to teach "Advanced Corporate Finance" in the MBA program. In preliminary "due diligence," I discovered there were no finance electives on bankruptcy and restructuring. To bridge the gap, I decided to conclude my course with two modules, one on Corporate Restructuring and the other on Bankruptcy.Material for both modules came straight from Gilson's book. Students relished the case studies. They fueled many of the most lively and engaging discussions we enjoyed all term. Students are worried about the economy. For the first time, many also sense career opportunities in the area of distressed debt. When I planned the course, I counted on both to spur interest in the modules. What I didn't count on was how well Gilson's cases would frame virtually all other material that I covered. Key lessons resurfaced from all modules: Financial Analysis and Forecasting, Capital Structure Policy, Capital Budgeting, and Mergers and Acquisitions. In each case, revisiting the ideas in the context of bankruptcy and restructuring threw them into high relief. So much so that I was able to substitute restructuring cases for those I had intended as "comprehensive" case discussions. As important for educators, Gilson's cases provide all necessary background information about how key legal and procedural aspects of the Bankruptcy Code influence managers' decisions. In Gilson's cases, the decisions featured are crucial to determining how to maximize value in distressed situations, as well as how to distribute it when all is said and done. In the final analysis, aren't these *exactly* the issues that MBA courses in corporate finance should address? My students at Wharton this term sure thought so. In the spring, my two sections are also already full. I've been told the "buzz" is mostly due to Gilson's restructuring material. Hopefully, some value was created in the delivery. Nonetheless, I couldn't recommend any material more highly for anyone planning to teach a spring term corporate finance course.
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