Fooling Some of the People All of the Time: A Long, Short Story

Hardcover
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Author: David Einhorn

ISBN-10: 0470073942

ISBN-13: 9780470073940

Category: Businesspersons & Entrepreneurs - Biography

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In 2002, David Einhorn, the President of Greenlight Capital, gave a speech at a charity investment conference to benefit a children's cancer hospital. He was asked to share his best investment idea, so he did. He described his reasons why Greenlight had sold short the shares of Allied Capital, a leader in the private finance industry. Greenlight bet that the stock would decline because the company's business was in trouble and its accounting was corrupt. Einhorn's speech was so compelling that the next day, when the New York Stock Exchange opened for trading, Allied's shares remained closed. So many investors wanted to sell or short the stock that the NYSE could not balance all the sell orders to open Allied’s trading in an orderly fashion. What followed was a firestorm of controversy. Allied responded with a Washington, D.C.–style spin-job— attacking Einhorn and disseminating half-truths and outright lies. Rather than protect investors by reviewing Einhorn's well-documented case against Allied, the SEC—at the behest of the politically connected Allied— instead investigated Einhorn for stock manipulation. Over the ensuing six years, the SEC allowed Allied to make the problem bigger by approving more than a dozen additional stock offerings that raised over $1 billion from new investors. Undeterred by the spin-job, lies, and investigations, Greenlight continued its research after the speech and discovered Allied’s behavior was far worse than Einhorn ever suspected— and, shockingly, it continues to this day. Fooling Some of the People All of the Time is the gripping chronicle of this ongoing saga. Page by page, it delves deep inside Wall Street, showing how the $6 billion hedge fund Greenlight Capital conducts its investment research and detailing the maneuvers of an unscrupulous company. Along the way, you'll witness feckless regulators, compromised politicians, and the barricades our capital markets have erected against exposing misconduct from important Wall Street customers. You will also discover the immense difficulties that prevent the government from sanctioning politically connected companies—making future Enrons inevitable. This revealing book shows the failings of Wall Street: its investment banks, analysts, journalists, and especially our government regulators. At its most basic level, Allied Capital is the story of Wall Street at its worst. But the story is much bigger than one little-known company. Fooling Some of the People All of the Time is an important call for effective law enforcement, free speech, and fair play.

Allied Capital Stock Price ChartWho's WhoIntroduction: The Spark of a SpeechPt. 1 A Charity Case and Greenlight CapitalCh. 1 Before GreenlightCh. 2 Getting the "Greenlight"Ch. 3 Greenlight's Early SuccessCh. 4 Value Investing through the Internet BubbleCh. 5 Dissecting Allied CapitalPt. 2 Spinning So Fast Leaves Most People DizzyCh. 6 Allied Talks BackCh. 7 Wall Street AnalystsCh. 8 The You-Have-Got-to-Be-Kidding-Me Method of AccountingCh. 9 Fact - Or Maybe NotCh. 10 Business Loan ExpressCh. 11 Disengaging and Re-engagingCh. 12 Me or Your Lyin' Eyes?Ch. 13 Debates and ManipulationsCh. 14 Rewarding ShareholdersCh. 15 BLX Is Worth What, Exactly?Pt. 3 Would Somebody, Anybody, Wake Up?Ch. 16 The Government InvestigatesCh. 17 A Tough MorningCh. 18 A Spinner, a Scribe, and a ScholarCh. 19 Kroll Digs DeeperCh. 20 Rousing the AuthoritiesCh. 21 A $9 Million Game of Three-Card MontePt. 4 How the System Works (and Doesn't)Ch. 22 Hello, Who's There?Ch. 23 Whistle-BlowerCh. 24 A Naked AttackCh. 25 Another Loan Program, Another FraudCh. 26 The Smell of PoliticsCh. 27 Insiders Getting the Money OutPt. 5 Greenlight Was Right ... Carry OnCh. 28 Charges and DenialsCh. 29 Charges and AdmissionsCh. 30 Late InningsCh. 31 The SEC Finds a Spot under the RugCh. 32 A Garden of WeedsCh. 33 A Conviction, a Hearing, and a DismissalCh. 34 Blind Men, Elephants, Mobius Strips, and Moral HazardsGlossaryAbout the AuthorIndex