Reverse Mergers

David FELDMAN
Taking a Company Public Without an IPO
£42.50 £38.25 Special Offer-Save 10%
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ISBN: 9781576602317
Published date: December 2006
Hardback
Publisher: Bloomberg Press

Reverse mergers are a method of going public that is vastly more versatile, if not as well known as, the IPO. This is the first book to explain how reverse mergers work, from the business and legal points of view.

When companies want to grow, they often go public. The reverse merger is a method for going public that is vastly more versatile than, if not as well know as, the IPO. Reverse mergers grow steadily more popular and have been used by companies including Ebay, The New York Stock Exchange, and Blockbuster, as well as many smaller companies. Written for CEOs, CFOs, and the investment bankers, lawyers, and auditors who advise them, this is the first book to explain how reverse mergers work, from the business and legal points of view. Topics covered include: the pros and cons of going public; deal structures; financing; due diligence; and the regulatory environment.

BOOK DETAILS :

Hardback, 272 Pages, Dimensions 234 x 156 MM Language English.

CONTENTS INCLUDE :

Topics covered include:

the pros and cons of going public,

deal structures,

financing,

due diligence,

and the regulatory environment.

About Authors
David Feldman

David N. Feldman is one of the US's leading experts on reverse mergers, self-filings, and other alternatives to initial public offerings. He is the founder and managing partner of Feldman Weinstein & Smith LLP in New York with a staff of twenty-three attorneys. The firm has advised hundreds of companies on how to go public, whether by reverse merger or other means.

Feldman, a securities lawyer, is a frequent public speaker, seminar leader, and counsel on issues related to the implementation of these transactions. He received a BS in economics from the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania in 1982 and his JD in 1985 from the University of Pennsylvania Law School. Feldman is worldwide chairman emeritus of the Wharton School’s alumni association.

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