Alan Schwartz News
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When Mark Walter, the chief executive officer of Guggenheim Partners LLC, ran Chicago investment firm Liberty Hampshire Co., a junior associate asked in 1996 why he decided to accept money from outside investors.
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Guggenheim Partners LLC’s Alan Schwartz speaks with Bloomberg Television special correspondent Willow Bay about the two billion dollar Dodgers deal at the Milken Institute 2012 Global Conference in Los Angeles. They speak on Bloomberg’s special programming “Milken: Ideas & Action.” (Source: Bloomberg)
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Alan Schwartz, the former chief executive officer of Bear Stearns Cos., said the company collapsed because of rumors and a lack of transparency on the value of its assets.
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James “Jimmy” Cayne , the former chairman and chief executive officer of Bear Stearns Cos. , blamed market forces and investors betting against his firm for its collapse in 2008.
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Guggenheim Partners LLC, the U.S. firm seeking to acquire Deutsche Bank AG’s asset management businesses, would quintuple in size with the deal, enabling it to better compete against the biggest global investors.
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Guggenheim Partners offered to buy Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. ’s stake in Taro Pharmaceuticals Industries Ltd. on behalf of clients for about $215 million.
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Proposals by an Israeli government- appointed committee on increasing competitiveness in the economy are “unwise” and “seriously misguided,” Ronald Gilson, a professor at Columbia Law School and Stanford Law School, said in an interview in Jerusalem.
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As should be abundantly clear by now to anyone who has taken the time to study things carefully, there were many factors that contributed to the calamitous financial crisis of the last three years.
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Guggenheim Partners LLC, the U.S. firm seeking to buy Deutsche Bank AG’s asset management business, hired Henry Silverman, the former chief operating officer of Apollo Global Management LLC, to advise on expansion.
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The global rebound in mergers and acquisitions stumbled in the third quarter as takeovers by U.S. and Asian acquirers failed to compensate for a 42 percent decline in purchases by European companies.
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