getAbstract

Advanced Search
Blog Blog | RSS Feeds RSS Feeds | Free Free Summaries
back  Zurück zur Kategorie Soziologie

Reverse Mergers

Taking a Company Public Without an IPO

by David N. Feldman and Steven Dresner

Bloomberg Press, 2006

Category: Finance

Reverse Mergers

Get the summary

Subscribe today and dramatically increase your business knowledge in your own time and at an affordable rate. Our summaries will update your skills, jump-start your career and put you ahead of the pack. Learn how to thrive in every aspect of your professional life.

Subscribe
Subscribe

Sign up now and receive immediate full access to this summary.

Free Sample Summaries
Free sample summaries

Get summaries of two business bestsellers.

             

getAbstract rating

Overall (?)

rating 8 (8)

Applicability

rating 9 (9)

Innovation

rating 6 (6)

Style

rating 7 (7)

Level of Expertise (?)

rating 8 (8)

User rating

(8.0)

In this summary you will learn

  • What costs you incur by going public
  • What benefits you reap
  • Why a reverse merger may be a better way to go public than an initial public offering (IPO)
  • How reverse mergers work
  • What happens after your reverse merger

Why you should read Reverse Mergers

Only a few years ago, it seemed that nearly every company was going public with an IPO. Now many quality companies are locked out of the IPO market, but companies have other ways to go public. One of the most popular paths is a "reverse merger." In this transaction, your private company merges into a public company (often a "shell") and controls it, giving you a public stock with which to raise capital. This may sound shady, but it’s not: many well-known companies have gone public through reverse mergers, including Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, Turner Broadcasting System, Occidental Petroleum and Blockbuster Entertainment. Experienced Wall Street securities attorney David N. Feldman takes you through the reverse merger process in detail. The book is wonderfully clear and thorough, and should become the definitive textbook on reverse mergers. It is, however, a dry read. A profusion of technical rules and especially acronyms (SPAC, SOX, Form 10-B, Rule 419, Regulation A, SB-2, PIPE) make the book slightly MEGO (My Eyes Glaze Over) for the uninitiated - but then, they are not its target audience. getAbstract enthusiastically recommends this book to sophisticated investors, lawyers, accountants, investment bankers and executives who want all the details on this increasingly popular financing technique.

About the authors

David N. Feldman is a securities lawyer, and the founder and managing partner of a New York City law firm. Contributor Steven Dresner is the founder of a media company, and the co-author and editor of PIPEs: A Guide to Private Investments in Public Equity.

inivs
inivs
inivs
inivs
 
Welcome | How It Works | Browse | Corporate Solutions | Subscribe

Accessibility | Publishers | About Us | Careers | Press Corner | Testimonials | Shvoong | Bloomberg | Book Award | Gift Subscriptions | Contact | Blog

Disclaimer | Privacy Statement | Affiliate Program | Operating Agreement | © 1999-2010, getAbstract