Entity Dossier
Person

George Roberts

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Signature MoveSavén: Educate the Market Before You Can Sell To ItOperating PrincipleClear-Cut Forestry vs Regrowth CapitalismSignature MoveJonsson: Wallenberg Network as Entry TicketSignature MoveMix: Shotgun Weddings Then Velvet-Rope FundraisingStrategic PatternDeregulation as Deal-Flow Gold RushCapital StrategySecondaries: Passing Companies Between PE FundsCornerstone MoveDouble Profitability or Don't EnterCornerstone MoveHunt Corporate Orphans After DeregulationCompetitive AdvantageCanadian Pension Model: Kill the MiddlemanIdentity & CultureSwedish Hero Immunity for Visible FoundersSignature MoveKarlsson: Ratos as the Anti-Fund — Hold Seventeen Years If NeededRisk DoctrineShort-Termism Trap: Five-Year Horizon vs Ten-Year PayoffSignature MoveDahlström: Low Leverage, Family Businesses, Patient CapitalCornerstone MoveDebt as the Engine, Company Pays Its Own RansomSignature MoveAhlström: Copenhagen Office to Dodge Swedish Capital ControlsCornerstone MoveFee Airbag: Get Paid Win or LoseRelationship LeveragePay Consultants to Open DoorsSignature MoveGood Cop While Gibbs Plays Bad CopCompetitive AdvantageMonopoly Infrastructure as ChokepointCapital StrategyHidden Cost of Frivolous SpendingCornerstone MoveSell Before the Floor, Buy the Next ThingSignature MoveNever Consider Failure as a Possible OutcomeRisk DoctrineBrierley's Bluff-Bid Brinkmanship LessonCornerstone MovePhone Call to the Top, Then Show Up AnywaySignature MoveStagger Contracts to Break Supplier CartelsCornerstone MoveExclusive Rights as Subscriber MagnetSignature MoveResign from Everything When Time Becomes the PrioritySignature MoveCut-Throat Competition Even at the Dinner TableDecision FrameworkRide Winners, Cut Losers at Ten PercentIdentity & CulturePhone Stops Ringing Test of FriendshipStrategic PatternState Broadcaster Arrogance as OpeningOperating PrincipleLucky Timing as Honest AccountingCapital StrategySubscriber Economics Over AdvertisingRisk DoctrineAnimal Intuition to Exit

Primary Evidence

"From there, he moved on to the investment bank Bear Stearns’ “corporate finance” department, dealing with corporate transactions, where his cousin George Roberts worked. The head of the department was Jerome Kohlberg, and as the eldest of the three, he would become the first K in KKR. While they were still at Bear Stearns, they developed a form of business that was named “leveraged buyout,” or purchase with financial leverage. The leverage was the loan, which made it possible to buy a larger company and thereby generate greater profit. Leveraged company purchases had been done before in various ways, but never in this structured way or with such a high proportion of debt. The reason why it is more effective to use borrowed money than your own capital is that interest on debt is tax-deductible."

Source:The Finance Princes - The Story of the Swedish Venture Capitalists

"George Roberts and Jerome Kohlberg were significantly less extroverted, and they went home to their families when the day’s work was over. Kravis was also the most aggressive in business. He pushed forward when KKR in 1988 entered the legendary battle for RJR Nabisco, a large publicly listed corporate group that, among other things, sold cookies and cigarettes. At that time, KKR was the largest of the buyout firms and paid a record price of 25 billion dollars, a sum that would take ten years before anyone surpassed it."

Source:The Finance Princes - The Story of the Swedish Venture Capitalists

"Again, Heatley reached for the phone. He got through to George Roberts, one of the world’s foremost names in leveraged buyouts. The pair had never met, but Heatley said he would like to fly to Roberts’ San Francisco office and sit down with him to talk about the possibility of Rainbow buying a stake in Woolworths Australia. Roberts agreed but told Heatley he could promise him only 10 minutes. He was polite but not encouraging. ‘If you want to come all this way, well, okay.’ Then he added, ‘I wouldn’t make the trip if I were you.’"

Source:No Limits: How Craig Heatley Became a Top New Zealand Entrepreneur

Appears In Volumes