Entity Dossier
Person

May

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

"Peltz appeared to share little of his bankers’ anxiety. In mid-1985 he purchased through Triangle a $ 2 million apartment in Paris. “Mike made him put it on the market,” commented one Drexel investment banker, “which was the right thing to do. We have a responsibility to our bondholders. What’s he going out and spending the company’s money like that for, when he’s got this mountain of debt?” By the beginning of 1986, however, the first good news was in (and Peltz took the apartment, still unsold, off the market). National Can had had a record year in 1985; its earnings (for April 17 through December) were $ 162 million, up from $ 68,775 the year before; Triangle’s stock had quadrupled, making it the third-best performer on the New York Stock Exchange. With interest rates down, Peltz and May were refinancing the company’s acquisition debt, meaning they were paying down that debt and replacing it with newer debt at lower interest rates. And their combined personal stakes in the company had gone from a market value of roughly $ 8–9 million when they purchased the controlling block of Triangle stock, in 1983, to about $ 34 million. Adding in a premium for control, which would have been present if they were to sell their block, it was now worth more than $ 40 million."

Source:The Predators' Ball

"In April 1983, Peltz and May (in a two-thirds/ one-third partnership) purchased Goldberg’s block, 29 percent of Triangle’s shares, for about $ 14 million. Two million was lent to Trafalgar; twelve million was lent to Peltz and May, from Manufacturers Hanover and Bankers Trust. Bankers Trust took the stock as collateral; Manufacturers Hanover took Peltz’s and May’s signatures and a lien on Peltz’s house in Quogue. Peltz recalled that it took all his powers of persuasion at the bank, and that when he finally walked out of Bill Rykman’s office at Manufacturers Hanover with the certified check in hand and met Goldberg, Goldberg told him that he couldn’t do the deal after all, because the Triangle board would not approve the change of control. “I literally ran the check under his nose, the spittle started to come out of his mouth, he was dying to put his arms around the money,” Peltz declared. “I said, ‘Let me try, let me talk to the board, let me show them I don’t have horns.’"

Source:The Predators' Ball

"In April 1983, Peltz and May (in a two-thirds/one-third partnership) purchased Goldberg’s block, 29 percent of Triangle’s shares, for about $14 million. Two million was lent to Trafalgar; twelve million was lent to Peltz and May, from Manufacturers Hanover and Bankers Trust. Bankers Trust took the stock as collateral; Manufacturers Hanover took Peltz’s and May’s signatures and a lien on Peltz’s house in Quogue. Peltz recalled that it took all his powers of persuasion at the bank, and that when he finally walked out of Bill Rykman’s office at Manufacturers Hanover with the certified check in hand and met Goldberg, Goldberg told him that he couldn’t do the deal after all, because the Triangle board would not approve the change of control. “I literally ran the check under his nose, the spittle started to come out of his mouth, he was dying to put his arms around the money,” Peltz declared. “I said, ‘Let me try, let me talk to the board, let me show them I don’t have horns.’ ”"

Source:Predator's Ball

"Peltz appeared to share little of his bankers’ anxiety. In mid-1985 he purchased through Triangle a $2 million apartment in Paris. “Mike made him put it on the market,” commented one Drexel investment banker, “which was the right thing to do. We have a responsibility to our bondholders. What’s he going out and spending the company’s money like that for, when he’s got this mountain of debt?” By the beginning of 1986, however, the first good news was in (and Peltz took the apartment, still unsold, off the market). National Can had had a record year in 1985; its earnings (for April 17 through December) were $162 million, up from $68,775 the year before; Triangle’s stock had quadrupled, making it the third-best performer on the New York Stock Exchange. With interest rates down, Peltz and May were refinancing the company’s acquisition debt, meaning they were paying down that debt and replacing it with newer debt at lower interest rates. And their combined personal stakes in the company had gone from a market value of roughly $8–9 million when they purchased the controlling block of Triangle stock, in 1983, to about $34 million. Adding in a premium for control, which would have been present if they were to sell their block, it was now worth more than $40 million."

Source:Predator's Ball

Appears In Volumes