Person
Person

Felix Rohatyn

5 Books5 Highlights65 Themes

Felix Rohatyn appears across 5 books, with 5 highlights.

Books

Notes

Most coverage

Who Is Michael Ovitz? has the strongest coverage in these notes.

Recurring themes

Calm as a Weapon at the Negotiation Table, Collect Relationships Like Intelligence Assets, Gifts That Outlast the Commission Check

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In the early eighties, I’d begun collecting relationships. For instance, I reached out to Felix Rohatyn, the Lazard Frères banker who had almost single-handedly rescued New York City from bankruptcy in the seventies, an…

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Answers use only the 5 books and 5 highlights on this page.

Highlights

"In the early eighties, I’d begun collecting relationships. For instance, I reached out to Felix Rohatyn, the Lazard Frères banker who had almost single-handedly rescued New York City from bankruptcy in the seventies, and who was on the board of MCA and had Lew Wasserman’s ear. I called and asked to see him, saying, “I need no more than ten minutes of your time.” On my next trip to New York, I went to his office, shook hands, and placed my watch on his desk. Then I said, “I’d love to talk to you about how you saved New York, and also how you advise Lew—to learn from the Dean. And I’d love to be helpful to you in L.A. in any way I can.” All to get him talking and to show that I knew what he’d done and that I admired it and wanted to learn from it. After ten minutes, I said, “Thanks so much,” and stood to pick up my watch. Felix—and everyone else I used this stratagem on—asked me to sit back down. In this way I got to know Herb Allen, the head of Allen & Co., and Bob Greenhill at Morgan Stanley, and I’d always drop in on them when I was in New York—as well as on Mort Janklow and fifteen other book agents, a number of figures in the art world, and our clients Meryl Streep, Mike Nichols, Al Pacino, Sidney Lumet, Bob De Niro, and Marty Scorsese. The relationships outside entertainment would prove useful to CAA in the plans I was beginning to develop. They’d be our bridges to a wider world."

Who Is Michael Ovitz?

"At that 1982 session, Joseph and the others drew up a list of the people who were the stars of the M& A world. It included Martin Siegel of Kidder, Peabody; Eric Gleacher of Lehman Brothers; Bruce Wasserstein of First Boston; Felix Rohatyn of Lazard Frères; Ira Harris of Salomon Brothers—and lawyers too, like Martin Lipton of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen and Katz, and Joe Flom of Skadden, Arps, Meagher, Slate and Flom."

The Predators' Ball

"At that 1982 session, Joseph and the others drew up a list of the people who were the stars of the M&A world. It included Martin Siegel of Kidder, Peabody; Eric Gleacher of Lehman Brothers; Bruce Wasserstein of First Boston; Felix Rohatyn of Lazard Frères; Ira Harris of Salomon Brothers—and lawyers too, like Martin Lipton of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen and Katz, and Joe Flom of Skadden, Arps, Meagher, Slate and Flom."

Predator's Ball

"This was not my first exposure to a family-owned media business. I owned a small media company headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona, in the 1970s. And in 1986, I pursued an investment in the Pulitzer Publishing Company, a very successful family-owned and -operated business. The deal was brought to me by Felix Rohatyn, a partner in the investment firm Lazard Freres. Flush with cash from the divest¬ ment of the Irvine Ranch and a major investment in the Taubman Company portfolio by the General Motors Pension Trust, I asked Felix to keep his eyes open for promising opportunities."

Threshold Resistance

""The art of Michel David-Weill was to keep Felix Rohatyn and Antoine Bernheim, who were the engines behind the firm, while restraining them from taking over his office,""

Antoine Bernheim

Themes

Calm as a Weapon at the Negotiation TableCollect Relationships Like Intelligence AssetsGifts That Outlast the Commission CheckConsensus Hiring, Two Promotes Per ImportPackage the Elements, Then Force the BidMailroom Encyclopedia Before Anyone Else WakesBe the Outlier in a Multiplayer ContestTreat Every Client as a CorporationThousand Letters a Year, Zero Left UnansweredNo Fee Letter, Just Trust—Then Name Your PriceNever Promise a Name You Can't DeliverOrchestrate the Room Before Anyone Sits DownCars in the Garage Before DawnNo Written Contracts, No Anniversary to LeaveThe Ten-Minute Watch on the DeskMirror Their Culture, Not YoursProcess of Bites, Not Grand PlansCash Flow Over Earnings as Debt Survival TestHighly Confident as Substitute for Actual CapitalInterest Deductibility as Leveraged Assault FuelNOL as Bidding War Nuclear OptionSpeed-of-Sale as Debt Survival DoctrineLawyer as Deal Principal, Not Hired GunParis Apartment DisciplineAll Debt Disguised as EquityBuy the Whole, Sell Everything But the Crown JewelBlind Pool Before the Target ExistsBribe the Gatekeeper, Storm the CastleBankruptcy's Tax Corpse as Acquisition WeaponTax Arbitrage as Structural WeaponProfessional Manager Decay Across GenerationsNever Cut Back a Committed DealMilken: Four-Thirty AM Cathedral-Builder With No OfficeVenture Capital Masquerading as DebtPeltz: Spittle-on-the-Check Persistence from Near-BrokePerelman: Borrowed $1.9M to a Boeing 727 in Seven YearsManufactured Credibility from Thin AirContra-Thinking as Default Mental Operating SystemForced Savings as Loyalty HandcuffsCash Flow Over Earnings as the Only TruthBuy the Core, Sell the Pieces, Erase the DebtKingsley: Mount Everest Desk, Twenty-Year Sounding BoardIcahn: Wrestling-a-Ghost Negotiation Until the Last PennyOwner's Equity as the Non-Negotiable DisciplineBetter Not Different Innovation DisciplineMinding the Store Acquisition RuleFashion Beyond Utility Value CreationLuxury Accessibility Market ExpansionProduct Fanaticism as Performance DriverService Revolution in Snooty IndustriesSerial Vision Space Planning RevolutionThreshold Resistance Elimination StrategyConsistent Mediocrity as Brand PromisePersonal Space Reconnaissance Tours100 Percent Locations Through Traffic EngineeringIntercede Across Borders as the Indispensable BridgeDebt to Italy as Strategic IdentityMoney as Instrument Never DestinationPower Through Ecclesiastical NetworksCardinal-Level Access as Deal CurrencyWartime Survival as Permanent WorldviewBridge Player's Complexity in FinanceDynasty Proximity as Career LaunchpadConvert Personal History Into Relational CapitalDissatisfaction as Perpetual Engine