These are the plunderers: how private equity runs -- and wrecks -- America

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"Much has been written about the widening gulf between rich and poor in the United States, the pernicious effects our deepening income inequality has on the nation's well-being, and how our style of capitalism has failed to provide a living wage for so many Americans. But nothing has fully detailed the crucial role a small cohort of elite financiers has played in this dispiriting outcome over the past three decades. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and bestselling author Gretchen Morgenson, with coauthor Joshua Rosner, unmasks the small group of celebrated Wall Street financiers who use excessive debt and dubious practices to undermine our nation's economy while enriching themselves: private equity. Private equity relies on debt-and lots of it. THE PLUNDER YEARS lucidly and maddeningly traces the thirty-year history of corporate takeovers in America and private equity's increasing dominance. Morgenson and Rosner, New York Times bestselling authors of RECKLESS ENDANGERMENT, investigate some of the biggest names in private equity, from Leon Black's Apollo to Stephen Schwarzman's Blackstone, exposing how they buy companies, load them with debt, then bleed them of assets and profits. These firms say they are saviors of troubled businesses, enhancing their operations to make them more efficient, better able to serve customers, and keep workers employed. But Morgenson and Rosner reveal how, with help from federal and state governments, private equity actually acquires healthy companies and funds the purchases-and their own instant repayments-with so much debt that it sickens the business. To meet the interest payments on the debt, the firms gut the acquired company through the sale of assets or businesses, then cut costs by laying off employees and reducing worker costs like healthcare and retirement benefits. After the financiers have extracted their profits, the companies often collapse in bankruptcy; in fact, fully 20% of companies taken over by private equity file for bankruptcy-10x the failure rate of other takeovers. Companies absorbed by private equity have worse outcomes for everyone but the financiers: patients are more likely to die; renters are more likely to be evicted; companies are more likely to go bankrupt; healthcare costs are higher at private equity-owned operations; private-equity backed newspapers are less likely to report on local issues, which leads to a decline in local election participation; retirees from private industry-as well as school teachers, firefighters, medical technicians,and other public workers-have lower returns on their pensions because of the fees private equity extracts from their investments. THE PLUNDERERS investigates the greed in private equity and how its predatory practices gut industries, paychecks, and worsen the lives of everyday people. With a keen eye and astounding reporting, Morgenson and Rosner detail the many ways these billionaires have plundered our economy"--

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ISBN
9781982191283
9781797158693

Table of Contents

From the Book - First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition.

Introduction: "money-spinning machines": let the looting begin
A note to readers
"Pizza the hut": Leon Black and the art of the fleece
"Greed is good": the plunderers come for the American middle class
"Project savior": the politician who gave Leon Black his big start
"I really need to understand what you do": one woman against the machine
"The fire sale approach": how one of the greatest giveaways came about
"No boy scout": plunder's many rewards
"The real players": skating from the crime scene
"Strong enough to stand on": savaging an American powerhouse called Samsonite
"We have 2,500 families that depend on us getting it right": bleeding New Madrid, Missouri, dry
"Capitalism on steroids": no lusher target than healthcare
Call to action went unheeded: standing by while corporations practice medicine
"Like when Hitler invaded Poland in 1939": a special tax treatment that mints billionaires
"Money for nothing": investigators home in on fleecers' fees and practices
"Oppressing Indigenous people": bulldozing through our wetlands
"Hiding in the background, rarely held to account": mining for Medicare gold
"Special and symbiotic": Apollo goes back to its roots
"No evidence of wrongdoing": Leon Black makes his exit
Conclusion: who will stop the bleeding?

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Pulitzer Prize--winning journalist Morgenson, along with research-consultancy managing director Rosner, uncovers a 30-year span of private equity and its impact on American lives. Private-equity firms, the authors contend, buy companies and load them with debt while bleeding them of assets. The firms then sell the companies to new owners at a substantial profit for themselves while the companies go bankrupt. Sears and Toys "R" Us are prime examples. This causes job losses, a move away from pension compensation, and crumbling industries. When private capital comes into sectors like health care and public-service jobs like firefighting, individuals often shoulder a larger tax burden to fund those pensions. These and many more examples highlight the history of private-equity development and the destruction that this type of quasiregulated capitalist venture has caused, especially to the middle class and working poor. Readers will be drawn into the duo's storytelling, and even those who aren't financially savvy will be able to grasp the topic. It's a must-read for all for help in understanding a predacious side of capitalism.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Morgenson, senior financial reporter for NBC News, and Rosner, a financial policy consultant, follow their 2011 collaboration, Reckless Endangerment, with a blistering critique of how private equity "extracts wealth from the many to enrich the few." Damning case studies reveal how such firms as Apollo Global Management and the Blackstone Group have made billions by buying struggling enterprises and imposing drastic cost cutting to the detriment of customers and employees. The authors describe how in 2007, Apollo bought the Noranda smelting company in New Madrid, Mo., and forced it to take on hundreds of millions of dollars in debt to pay Apollo executives, cratering the region's economy when the company shuttered under the weight of its debt. Detailing how firms stymie regulation, the authors trace how Blackstone funded a fake grassroots group that ran ads against legislation that would have reined in Blackstone's practice of sending "surprise" medical bills to patients who used emergency rooms owned by the firm. Morgensen and Rosner excel at capturing the complex financial maneuverings in crisp, accessible prose, and horror stories about how buyouts shortchanged nursing home residents and life insurance policy holders drive home the callousness of the private equity business model. Fiery and incisive, this is an essential account of how Wall Street pilfers the pockets of ordinary Americans. (May)

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Kirkus Book Review

The troubled story of private equity, which is anything but equitable. Private equity, write financial journalists Morgenson and Rosner, typically builds nothing. Instead, it leverages troubled companies, loots what assets they have, trims expenses to the bone, and often leaves acquisitions in bankruptcy or ruin. One philosopher the authors quote calls it "asshole capitalism," and while the authors are a touch more genteel, they don't hesitate to call the practitioners of "this rapacious form of capitalism" pirates and worse. By way of example, they look into the private-equity acquisition of nursing homes, a favorite target. In those cases, equity ownership equates to a far higher death rate, more visits to emergency rooms, and increased Medicare costs. Private equity has also absorbed huge chunks of the medical sector, laying off doctors and cutting out essential services even at the height of the coronavirus pandemic. On that note, the authors observe, private owners took great pains to use the cheapest possible ventilators for Covid-19 patients in critical care, which finally resulted in a federal fine of $40.5 million, a fraction of what they made. As Morgenson and Rosner clearly show, the pirates are flourishing; while there were but three "debt-fueled billionaires" in 2005, there were 22 in 2020. Much of this wealth comes from self-dealing, for apart from owning medical providers, private equity is also heavily invested in insurance, ripe with the possibilities of conflict of interest. No matter what the sector--and equity is now moving rapidly into education--the modus operandi is the same: "slash costs, eliminate higher-paid union workers, and reduce employee benefits; shut down less profitable divisions; or acquire competitors to bolster the pricing power of the company they own." In addition, these firms, which have doubled in number in the last decade--are well protected in Congress. A well-documented, maddening book that cries out for legislative reform and regulation. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Morgenson, along with research-consultancy managing director Rosner, uncovers a 30-year span of private equity and its impact on American lives. Private-equity firms, the authors contend, buy companies and load them with debt while bleeding them of assets. The firms then sell the companies to new owners at a substantial profit for themselves while the companies go bankrupt. Sears and Toys "R" Us are prime examples. This causes job losses, a move away from pension compensation, and crumbling industries. When private capital comes into sectors like health care and public-service jobs like firefighting, individuals often shoulder a larger tax burden to fund those pensions. These and many more examples highlight the history of private-equity development and the destruction that this type of quasiregulated capitalist venture has caused, especially to the middle class and working poor. Readers will be drawn into the duo's storytelling, and even those who aren't financially savvy will be able to grasp the topic. It's a must-read for all for help in understanding a predacious side of capitalism. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
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PW Annex Reviews

Morgenson, senior financial reporter for NBC News, and Rosner, a financial policy consultant, follow their 2011 collaboration, Reckless Endangerment, with a blistering critique of how private equity "extracts wealth from the many to enrich the few." Damning case studies reveal how such firms as Apollo Global Management and the Blackstone Group have made billions by buying struggling enterprises and imposing drastic cost cutting to the detriment of customers and employees. The authors describe how in 2007, Apollo bought the Noranda smelting company in New Madrid, Mo., and forced it to take on hundreds of millions of dollars in debt to pay Apollo executives, cratering the region's economy when the company shuttered under the weight of its debt. Detailing how firms stymie regulation, the authors trace how Blackstone funded a fake grassroots group that ran ads against legislation that would have reined in Blackstone's practice of sending "surprise" medical bills to patients who used emergency rooms owned by the firm. Morgensen and Rosner excel at capturing the complex financial maneuverings in crisp, accessible prose, and horror stories about how buyouts shortchanged nursing home residents and life insurance policy holders drive home the callousness of the private equity business model. Fiery and incisive, this is an essential account of how Wall Street pilfers the pockets of ordinary Americans. (May)

Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly Annex.

Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly Annex.
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