Entity Dossier
Company

Cohen-Hatfield

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Strategic PatternProcess of Bites, Not Grand PlansDecision FrameworkCash Flow Over Earnings as Debt Survival TestRelationship LeverageHighly Confident as Substitute for Actual CapitalCapital StrategyInterest Deductibility as Leveraged Assault FuelCompetitive AdvantageNOL as Bidding War Nuclear OptionSignature MoveSpeed-of-Sale as Debt Survival DoctrineSignature MoveLawyer as Deal Principal, Not Hired GunSignature MoveParis Apartment DisciplineSignature MoveAll Debt Disguised as EquityCornerstone MoveBuy the Whole, Sell Everything But the Crown JewelCornerstone MoveBlind Pool Before the Target ExistsCornerstone MoveBribe the Gatekeeper, Storm the CastleCornerstone MoveBankruptcy's Tax Corpse as Acquisition WeaponCompetitive AdvantageTax Arbitrage as Structural WeaponOperating PrincipleProfessional Manager Decay Across GenerationsRisk DoctrineNever Cut Back a Committed DealSignature MoveMilken: Four-Thirty AM Cathedral-Builder With No OfficeCapital StrategyVenture Capital Masquerading as DebtSignature MovePeltz: Spittle-on-the-Check Persistence from Near-BrokeSignature MovePerelman: Borrowed $1.9M to a Boeing 727 in Seven YearsCornerstone MoveManufactured Credibility from Thin AirDecision FrameworkContra-Thinking as Default Mental Operating SystemIdentity & CultureForced Savings as Loyalty HandcuffsCornerstone MoveCash Flow Over Earnings as the Only TruthCornerstone MoveBuy the Core, Sell the Pieces, Erase the DebtSignature MoveKingsley: Mount Everest Desk, Twenty-Year Sounding BoardSignature MoveIcahn: Wrestling-a-Ghost Negotiation Until the Last PennyCornerstone MoveOwner's Equity as the Non-Negotiable Discipline

Primary Evidence

"Asked when he conceived of the megaleap he made with Revlon, Perelman replied that it was “a process of bites.” No, he did not have this trajectory in mind when he started out in 1978 to buy the jewelry company, Cohen-Hatfield. “Go back to 1978: even if we’d defined it, we couldn’t have funded it,” said Perelman, who refers to himself in the first person plural. “This could not have been done without Drexel.”"

Source:The Predators' Ball

"Asked when he conceived of the megaleap he made with Revlon, Perelman replied that it was “a process of bites.” No, he did not have this trajectory in mind when he started out in 1978 to buy the jewelry company, Cohen-Hatfield. “Go back to 1978: even if we’d defined it, we couldn’t have funded it,” said Perelman, who refers to himself in the first person plural. “This could not have been done without Drexel.”"

Source:Predator's Ball

Appears In Volumes