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Does anybody have the lowdown on them???
It seems like they are making a killing buying and selling the old now defunct Japan Inc.
Info please.
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Do an FG search for 'Ripplewood'.. You'll find a couple threads devoted to Ripple..Skankster wrote:Info please.
Founded in 1995, Ripplewood has a strong track record of adding value to acquired companies and supporting their growth as global competitors. To date, the firm has invested nearly two billion US dollars in 39 companies located around the world....
Ripplewood, a manager of private investment funds established in 1995, makes direct investments in select industries that provide opportunities for significant growth, consolidation, and rates of return. With its Industrial Partners, Ripplewood typically buys platform companies as core holdings, then pursues predefined strategies to support the operating management and enhance the value of the businesses. Ripplewood manages approximately $2.8 billion of capital and currently has eight partnerships in automotive parts and retailing, banking, consumer products, food manufacturing and distribution, wireless technology, industrial manufacturing, chemicals, and educational publishing and training. In addition, Ripplewood led a consortium of investors in purchasing the Shinsei Bank of Japan (formerly the Long Term Credit Bank of Japan) in 1999. Ripplewood was the first foreign investor permitted by the Japanese Government to purchase a Japanese lending institution.
Mulboyne wrote: LTCB/Shinsei was Ripplewood's first foray into Japan and the real star of that takeover was Christopher Flowers, an ex-Goldman Sachs banker.
Refco, Inc. announced today that it is in advanced negotiations with a group of investors led by J.C. Flowers & Co. for the sale of the Company's futures brokerage business conducted through Refco LLC, Refco Overseas Ltd., Refco Singapore Pte. Ltd., and certain related subsidiaries and other assets.
With the nation's economy improving, foreign investment funds are finding slim pickings in bottom fishing. Once seen as vultures cashing in on moribund companies, the funds are now focusing on viable enterprises with strong growth potential. They are also concentrating on longer-term strategies to improve business performances. Timothy Collins, chief executive officer of RHJ International [Ripplewood], said the business of buying ailing companies on the cheap and selling them for quick profits will not grow anymore. RHJ International listed its shares on the Brussels stock exchange in March to augment its credibility and win confidence from companies in good standing, its potential targets. [That is stretching the truth - they listed to get out of difficult investments like Seagaia]
...In the 1990s, many Japanese companies fell into bankruptcy when lenders, burdened with bad loans, cut off credit to risky borrowers. In the past year or so, however, the number of companies needing rescue from investment funds has declined sharply. Japanese managers, who tend to shun outsider involvement, are increasingly accepting participation by foreign investment funds. Gakusei Engokai Co., a 49-year-old Tokyo publisher known for its job information magazine, is one example. In September, the management bought the company with investments from Carlyle Group of the United States...Resistance to a foreign fund had substantially diminished within the company partly because many Japanese businesses had been purchased by foreigner
...By spring, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., of RJR Nabisco fame, will open an office in Japan. Others, such as Bain Capital and Blackstone Capital, are considering setting up shop, sources said. A KKR executive said competition in Japan is less intense than in the United States and Europe.
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