Due Diligence for Global Deal Making is an invaluable guidebook for companies trying to capitalize on the opportunities in both developed and emerging cross-border markets.
Companies of all sizes have been initiating international
transactions—mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures, strategic
alliances, and private placements—in record numbers. Targeted due
diligence is crucial to effectively research, value, and complete these
complex deals. With an evolving climate of uncertainty and new,
unpredictable threats to business, it is more essential than ever before.
Due Diligence for Global Deal Making is an invaluable guidebook for
companies trying to capitalize on the opportunities in both developed
and emerging cross-border markets. All too often global transactions
fail to meet the parties’ expectations, and the leading culprit is
inadequate due diligence. Especially when the target partner lacks a
financial performance track record and significant assets, expanding
businesses must answer difficult questions, such as: Why (if at all)
should we do this deal? What are the rules going in, and what happens if
things go wrong? Where are the tax, legal, financial, and operational
traps, and what are the opportunities? This book provides what’s needed
to avoid devastating mistakes and to master the steps that ensure
success:
Hardback, 368 Pages, Dimensions 234 x 156 MM Language English.
Due Diligence in the Global Economy
Strategic Due Diligence
Operational Due Diligence
Financial and Accounting Due Diligence
Legal Due Diligence
Tax Due Diligence
People and Organizational Due Diligence
Due Diligence Investigative Technology and Know-How
Arthur Rosenbloom is managing director of CFC Capital Corp. and former chairman of the board of Patricof & Co. Capital Corp. His contributions on investment banking-related topics have appeared in Forbes, BusinessWeek, the Harvard Business Review, and the National Law Journal. An adjunct professor of finance at the Stern Graduate School of Business at New York University and NYU Law School, he also is a trustee of New York’s Citizens Budget Commission, a member of its Competitiveness Subcommittee, and an active member of the panel of arbitrators of the American Arbitration Association and the New York Stock Exchange.