Scopedog
Muse
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2012
- Messages
- 928
Here's an article from Fortune magazine explaining it all.
http://www.examiner.com/article/the-real-reasons-hostess-went-bankrupt
I don't see anything about lenders in that article at all. I've read all the articles in this thread (and several in the Bain Capital thread) and I still don't understand how Goldman Sachs or whatever investment bank is going to get their money back and how they benefit from lending money to private equity firms to buy failing businesses, saddle them with the loan repayment, then drive them into bankruptcy. I understand that this could happen now and then but how can this work as a profitable, successful business model for the lender or private equity? There's this idea of vulture capitalists who do this for a living and I don't get it. I understand there could be a lot of short term gain for some executives at the failing company and for the PE firm but how can this be a sustainable relationship between PE and the lender? Pretend that I'm a slobbering idiot wearing pampers and a helmet and my parents have to walk me on a leash even though I'm in my 30's. Please walk me through it.
Last edited:
