TheDeal.com executive editor Yvette Kantrow writes in her Media Maneuvers column that recent stories by the New York Times looking into allegations that Morgan Stanley CEO Stanley Mack was involved in insider trading with hedge funds and BusinessWeek looking into shenanigans by private equity firms both lack the facts that support their arguments.
“As the Times leads a jihad against the evil of hedge funds, BusinessWeek continues its crusade against
“Inside is the usual smorgasbord of complaints about how buyout shops do business, from how much debt they lay on their companies to the ‘dubious’ fees they charge to the record dividends they ‘extract.’ ‘Some private equity firm executives are being investigated for outright fraud,’ the magazine adds. Whom is it referring to? John A. Orecchio of AA Capital Partners Inc., a Chicago firm with $194 million under management. Not exactly Henry Kravis and his ilk.
“Still, an indictment is an indictment. The problem is, BusinessWeek, like the Times in the Mack case, can blow lots of charges into the air, but it can’t begin to close the case. Yes, multiples are rising. True, buyout deals have gotten bigger. But even BusinessWeek feels compelled to qualify nearly every sensational charge. The story leaves the impression that BusinessWeek, like the Times, just wants to position itself for when, inevitably, something bad does happen.”
Read more here.
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