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| Author: David Einhorn Creator: Joel Greenblatt Publisher: Wiley Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $16.57 You Save: $13.38 (45%)
New (35) Used (8) from $16.57
Avg. Customer Rating: 29 reviews Sales Rank: 2185
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 380 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.2 x 1.4
ISBN: 0470073942 Dewey Decimal Number: 332.620973 EAN: 9780470073940 ASIN: 0470073942
Publication Date: May 2, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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| Customer Reviews:
How is Allied Capital still alive? July 8, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Great book. Einhorn does an excellent job of laying out his bear case on ALD which, after having read the book, completely stuns me to know that this company is still a going concern. It's unfortunate to see just how biased our regulatory infrastructure is and the institutional bullishness that permeates every aspect of our capital markets is a sad development. Fooling some of the people all of the time is a good book and a fascinating read. I was amazed at some of the things Mr. Einhorn had to endure just because he dare speak his mind and back up his assertions with cold hard facts. This book affirmed many things that I've known about our capital markets, and many of those things are not pretty.
The Einhorn v ALD saga July 7, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is brief history of the dispute between David Einhorn, founder of Greenlight Capital, and Allied Capital (stock ticker ALD). Mr. Einhorn details his research into ALD that culminated in a speech he gave at a charity event. Since the speech ALD has been attacking not just Einhorn, but everyone and anyone who has said anything bad concerning their company.
Mr. Einhorn details the lack of inquisitiveness on the part of the financial reporters and stock analysts who gave, and most who continue to give, ALD passing grades without a serious look into the financials. He also tells of the lack of responsiveness from the federal government to stop BLX (Business Loan Express, a company owned by ALD) from bilking the taxpayers out of hundreds of millions of dollars in bad (fraudulent) loans. And for all of his effort Mr. Einhorn was repaid with personal attacks. Since I started reading this I have looked into this a bit and I have not been able to find a single credible source to discredit what Mr. Einhorn has said about ALD. Despite what some may believe blogs and online forums are not credible sources, they are just opinions thrown out for the masses to read.
I found this to be an excellent book. However, I would not suggest buying it for the explicit purpose of getting some investing insights into the market. That is not the intention of this book.
David Einhorn isn't fooling anyone but himself July 7, 2008 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
Overview: David Einhorn, founder of a successful Wall Street hedge fund, has written a book which describes the controversy surrounding David's hedge fund selling short Allied Capital. While David makes some very damning points about Allied's management, he does not prove his central thesis, namely that Allied engaged in fraud. Despite this flaw, the book is still a worthwhile read.
Background David's conclusion about ALD were based on his previous experience shorting Sirrom, a company that *was* a fraud and subsequently went bankrupt. Sirrom was in the same industry as Allied, namely loans to small businesses. David concluded that ALD must be a fruad since they, like Sirrom, did not write down the value of troubled assets in a timely manner and management was less than truthful when confronted with this fact (pg. 52). Referring to ALD's managers, David writes "people who are willing to lie about small things have no problem lying about big things" (pg. 64). The rest of the book, almost 300 pages, is David's attempt, unsuccessful in my estimation, to substantiate this claim.
Why "Fooling..." is Worth Reading Despite the fundamental flaw of stating a thesis that he then fails to substantiate, "Fooling..." is still a worthwhile read for four reasons: 1) David has made a lot of money, and his investment methodology is explained in detail. This is unique, and worthy of serious study. 2) The book documents the inability of regulatory authorities to protect investors from dishonest management practices. Very sobering. Allied did engage in a number of unauthorized accounting practices that victimized it's investors, and none of it's managers were ever punished. In fact, they got rich at their investors expense. 3) It shows that even superstar investors are human. On display is how a very rich man's obsession with proving he is right drove him to stick with a losing position, pouring time and resources into what became a personal crusade. I have made this mistake on a much smaller scale, and I imagine most investors have. Obviously, the book did not intend to teach this lesson, but there it is. 4) Allieds is a "Business Development Corporations" (BDC), and the book explains how BDCs operate and make their money. David opines that BDCs are similar to junk bond funds, but are riskier (pg. 48). BDCs in general are very lucrative and pay high distributions when the USA economy is doing well, and tend to lose a lot of money during a recession. There is a lot of info here that investors can put to work.
Synopsis of Events: David Einhorn, who is about as successful as a man can be on Wall Street without being Warren Buffet, concluded that Allied Capital is a fraud. He invested almost 8% of his hedge fund selling ALD short (he profits if ALD goes down, loses if it goes up). He then proceeded to try to get regulatory authorities, including the SEC and Eliot Spitzer (at the time the NY Attorney General) to investigate improper practices at Allied. For his efforts, he got investigated himself by these authorities. He recently published "Fooling Some of the People All of the Time" to prove he is right, and the rest of the world (SEC, financial press, investors, the stock market) are all wrong. David calls ALD a "ponzi scheme" (pg. 330), continually raising new capital to pay the dividend. While this claim should be easy to substantiate, no evidence or proof of any kind is offered. David predicts that eventually, ALD's fraudulent practices will cause the demise of the company. When the book was published, despite 6 years of intense effort on David's part to expose ALD, he lost money on his position (when you factor in dividends which he had to pay having shorted the stock).
Epilogue Today, 8 years after his accusation were first made, ALD is still in business. While it's stock price has under-performed the market, when you factor in the dividends (actually tax distributions) it has been a pretty decent investment. It is hard to imagine how a company that systematically defrauded it's investors could survive 8 years of constant hostile scrutiny from a smart and rich hedge fund, paying hefty dividends the whole time. If it was a ponzy scheme, it should have imploded years ago. As far as I am concerned, this fact, combined with David's lack of hard evidence, disproves his thesis.
This Is Not Nigeria July 7, 2008 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
This is a complex story of hedge fund manager, David Einhorn, vs Allied Capital. Mr Einhorn wants corporate accounting transparency; Allied wants good quarterly numbers. The rules keep changing. The SEC looks the other way. How well the company is doing depends on who you ask. It takes a clear head to follow the details of Allied's accounting but you get the point. Reading about the Detroit area operations of one of Allied's investments, BLX (Business Loans Express), sounds like a Nigerian scam. The reader wonders why no stock analyst or government agency notices this or even cares when it is brought to their attention. This isn't Nigeria, this is happening in the USA. Luckily Mr. Einhorn is persistent and hopefully for investors he will keep it up.
A Compelling Story June 27, 2008 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
First I read When Genius Failed which was about the rise and fall of Long-Term Capital Management - a hedge fund. Then I read a book about the scandalous rise and fall of Enron called The Smartest Guys in the Room. And now I have just finished this book about a business development company (BDC) call Allied Capital. This was just not any BDC, but the second largest in the country.
The things I have read in this book are truly incredible. Many times I just had to shake my head in disbelief. This is a book about a company that made, and continues to make it appears, unscrupulous loans to businesses, if that's what you can call some of the entities they loaned money to. This book details the corruption that took place in this business and its controlled company BLX. We also learn about the inaction at the Small Business Administration (SBA), and USDA loan program in the light of serious problems with the loans they backed. What is really sad about this is the hundreds of millions of dollars that these government organizations paid out, and when their reserves are exhausted, tax payer money foots the bill.
It appears that David Einhorn has spent considerable time, effort and money to bring this information to the appropriate authorities, but the result reminds me of the title of Part Three of the book: "Would Somebody, Anybody, Wake Up?" As the book's jacket cover stated, "This revealing book shows the failings of Wall Street: its investment banks, analysts, journalists, and especially our government regulators."
It was a very interesting read, and I would recommend the book.
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