Entity Dossier
Company

Loews

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Signature MovePerot: Obscene Demands Until They Stop Saying NoSignature MoveBuffett: Insurance Float as a Super Margin AccountSignature MoveHuizenga: Close in the Stench Until They Say YesCornerstone MoveSteal the Playbook, Then Outrun the AuthorRisk DoctrineLuck Acknowledged Then Ruthlessly ExploitedIdentity & CultureJoy in the Chase Not the PrizeCapital StrategyHold Your Equity Until It Compounds Past Nine FiguresIdentity & CultureThick Skin Inherited or Forged by FireCornerstone MoveConsolidate Fragmented Industries at Blitzkrieg SpeedCornerstone MoveNobody Got Rich Watching from the StandsStrategic PatternHigh-Growth Industry as the Only On-RampCapital StrategyInsurance Float as Empire FoundationSignature MoveKerkorian: Sell Before the Peak, Never Pick the Bone CleanRelationship LeveragePolitical Access as Wealth Multiplier Not Wealth CreatorCornerstone MoveKeep the Back Door Open on Every BetOperating PrincipleFrugality as Permanent Competitive MoatSignature MoveWalton: Spy on Every Competitor Then Outwork Them AllSignature MoveRockefeller: Silent Desk, Then Swivel-Chair KnockoutCornerstone MoveHidden Value Asset PlaySignature MoveLiquidity as Strategic ShieldIdentity & CultureOwner’s Mentality Over Manager’s EgoStrategic PatternDiversification for Cycle ResilienceCornerstone MoveBuy Low, Fix Fast, Exit SlowDecision FrameworkActivist Investor When NeededSignature MoveQuestion-Driven DisciplineStrategic PatternContrarian Patience in Asset MarketsOperating PrincipleSpeed Beats OverplanningRisk DoctrineEthics-First Boardroom InterventionsCornerstone MoveStructural Tax Advantage EngineeringSignature MoveManagement Autonomy, Command When NeededSignature MoveConviction Without CompromiseOperating PrincipleFree Cash Flow as Decision Lens

Primary Evidence

"In March 1974, for example, Loews purchased a 5 percent stake in CNA Financial, disavowing any plans for a hostile takeover. By May, however, Tisch said he would seek a controlling interest, explaining that he had belatedly identified mismanagement as the source of the insurance company’s undervaluation. He succeeded in acquiring a majority stake, after first dropping his initial bid when CNA’s earnings deteriorated. Once in place, Tisch swiftly fired the company’s chairman and eventually cut employment by 12 percent. He closed down CNA’s three floors of lavish executive suites and downsized or dumped poorly performing busi¬ nesses that management had previously acquired in an effort to diversify. By the end of 1975,Tisch’s shock treatment had transformed a $207 mil¬ lion annual loss to a $110 million profit.38"

Source:How to Be a Billionaire : Proven Strategies From the Titans of Wealth

"on stocks in the Loews portfolio as well. Tisch’s style was not to take profits at the top of a market; it was to seek a haven—high-yielding bonds—before the whole world decided to do the same thing. Tisch had not achieved success by running with the herd."

Source:The King of Cash: The Inside Story of Laurence Tisch

"this latest target’s assets. The criticism was understandable. Tisch fre^ quently sought to convert assets into cash, but his purpose wasn’t siim ply to raise cash. The assets earmarked for sale were always those that didn’t yield a decent return and held little potential for doing so in the near future without a costly overhaul. Lorillard was no different. The candy and petTood lines didn’t meet Tisch’s requirements for cash flow. Ultimately, they would go. In time, Loews would come to depend heavily on the cigarette business for much of its earnings."

Source:The King of Cash: The Inside Story of Laurence Tisch

"a tax saving of $1,235, assuming a 50 percent tax rate. That would make the after-tax interest cost $1,235 a share. Subtract that cost from the $1.66 after-tax income from the dividend, and Loews would end up with an after-tax profit from the Commercial Credit dividend of 42.5 cents a share. The effect would be a takeover completed with interest-free debt and a built-in price discount on the share purchase. —"

Source:The King of Cash: The Inside Story of Laurence Tisch

"The key to the Tisches’ success was hands-on-management. As one former executive put it: “Loews people usually know within a week if anything happens in any of their companies. They have taken away all bureaucracy, all impedimenta.”"

Source:The King of Cash: The Inside Story of Laurence Tisch

"A few days after Derow was fired, Tri-Star Pictures, the film ven- ture CBS had recently abandoned, bought Loew’s Theatre Manage- ment Corp. from Jerrold Perenchio for nearly twice what he had paid Loews a year earlier. Tisch’s critics later pointed to the deal as evi- dence that he frequently sold assets too cheaply. But whether selling stocks or corporate assets, it wasn’t Tisch’s aim necessarily to make a killing—he just wanted at least a return that made the investment suf- ficiently profitable. Better to sell something that turns out to be even more valuable than to have a buyer who ends up feeling cheated."

Source:The King of Cash: The Inside Story of Laurence Tisch

"“Loews is entrepreneurial,” Pollack said at the time, “[operated by] good businessmen who understand diverse industries and can apply management techniques to a varied group of companies.”"

Source:The King of Cash: The Inside Story of Laurence Tisch

"Jonathan Tisch had said earlier that year. “I was somewhat frustrated in the late 1980s when we weren’t doing deals like everyone else. They kept saying, ‘Let’s wait.’” Loews waited and, as a result, it sat in the middle of an overbuilt hotel market with plenty of cash and with plenty of desperate developers willing to sell properties at less than what it had cost to build them. In 1991, the average hotel property sale, on a per-room basis, had plunged 40 percent."

Source:The King of Cash: The Inside Story of Laurence Tisch

Appears In Volumes