Your review is Submitted Successfully. ×
4.0

Summary

Merger - Sanjay Sanghoee
Avinash Sagar@sagaravinash
Nov 30, 2007 06:37 PM, 1349 Views
White Collar Crime...The Details

When I picked up this book, I referred to the credits on the back cover and the

one that caught me was: "I thought a lot of the merger mania was madness before,

but I didn’t know how murderous it could be until I read Merger. The Firm meets

Wall Street in this explosion of merger mayhem!" - Walter Wager, Edgar

Award-winning author of Die Hard 2 Being a John Grisham fan and having gathered

some imagination of the legal world, attorneys, counsels, I now wanted to gauge

how exciting this must be if the “The Firm” ACTUALLY met “The Wallstreet.” It

WAS exciting! The book starts with a formation of a merger deal and around it

is a lot of investment banking truths and unprovable crimes, manipulations by

law firms, forgery, and a gruesome murder. High-speed and racy on-the-edge

events that will not allow you to put down the book. Since the book is written

by an investment banker, it provides a lot of insider information into insider

trading, how ESOPs are used as a tool, stock price manipulation etc. There are

five pivotal characters in the book- Vik Suri the acquirer CEO, Amanda Fleming-

the Times investigative journalist, Tom Carter-the banker, Craig Michaels—the

target CEO, Jack Ward—the FBI. The author describes each character IN DETAIL,

which at times gets boring. However, explanations of the pivotal character

Vikram Suri is done to perfection. His knack of smartly using and misusing his

pawns, greed that matches his ability has been described supremely well. The

plot as a case study: Trinet wants to buy Luxor for business purposes. A certain

amount for the deal is agreed upon by the two boards. The two CEOs have a

private meeting, eventually the deal is disapproved. Deliberate information leak

to the media by one company to manipulate the share price of the other. The two

CEOs again strike a hush-hush deal duping all stakeholders, bankers,

shareholders, legal counsel, etc. But, not all of this is voluntary between the

two CEOs. One of them is the murderous manipulator, and the other is a

chicken-hearted cheapster. The best part of the book, apart from the plot is the

author’s ability to portray boring merger deals in a simple but interesting

language. Also, a section where the author describes the reasons for Dubai

rising to being favorite among businessmen to conduct legal and not-so-legal

transactions is quite entertaining. A must read for MSians with interest in

banking, legal affairs, M&As.

(4)
VIEW MORE
Please fill in a comment to justify your rating for this review.
Post

Recommended Top Articles

Question & Answer