• e-ARC distribution to trade and consumer media, traditional and
online.
• Targeted outreach to financial/economic industry organizations,
websites, podcasts, and publications.
• Social media marketing on Facebook, Twitter, and Goodreads
giveaways.
• PR Campaign with print, radio, and digital interview targets,
including NPR and national TV.
Sujeet Indap is the U.S. editor of the Lex Column at the
Financial Times, where he contributes stories across the paper. He
has written extensively on the intersection of corporate finance
and corporate law. Indap was previously an investment banker before
he joined the Financial Times in 2013. He is a graduate of Pomona
College and the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.
Indap lives in Manhattan, NY, with his wife.
Max Frumes leads a news team at Fitch Solutions covering
corporate debt and restructuring. He previously was the founding
editor of a leading publication covering corporate bankruptcy, and
before that reported for S&P’s Leveraged Commentary & Data
and The Deal. Frumes received his undergraduate degree
from the University of California, Berkeley, and an MSJ from
Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism. He lives in Brooklyn
with his wife and daughter.
Praise for The Caesars Palace Coup
The strength of [The Caesars Palace Coup] is its vivid,
behind-the-scenes footage of the insiders who now dominate the
largest corporate bankruptcy cases, vignettes that will enliven
many a law or business-school class in the next decade.
—Wall Street Journal
The Caesars Palace Coup recounts in exquisite detail the
extraordinary lengths that Marc Rowan and David Sambur, his Apollo
partner, went to stave off the inevitable bankruptcy filing of
Caesars in 2015, and the extraordinary lengths they went to during
the two-year bankruptcy process to try to salvage their
investment.
—Vanity Fair
An investigative deep-dive into an old-fashioned casino heist,
which includes a $31 billion leveraged buyout and a string of
financial engineering transactions by Apollo Global Management and
TPG Capital—all in the midst of the post–Great Recession slump,
pitting private equity firms and distressed-debt hedge funds
against each other in an ultimate poker match.
—Fortune
A casino caper and legal thriller rolled into one.... An eccentric
Illinois judge, whose final ruling ultimately stunned bankruptcy
aficionados, and the rantings from the Masters of the Universe make
the book entertaining, maybe essential, reading across Wall
Street.... The Caesars Palace Coup helps make clear what such Wall
Street clashes are really about: men with big egos swinging their
lacrosse sticks.
—Reuters Breakingviews
Lawyers and bankers duke it out in this thorough if dry history of
the downfall of the Caesars Entertainment empire.... a welcome
respite from stodgier case studies.
—Publishers Weekly
The Caesars Palace Coup is a superb inside account of what modern
high finance is actually like—the strategies, the personalities,
the relationships, the stress, and the shouting. Fascinating,
suspenseful, and comprehensive, it is the Barbarians at the Gate of
distressed debt.
—Matt Levine, Money Stuff columnist, Bloomberg Opinion
No story better captures early 21st century Wall Street like the
bankruptcy of Caesars Entertainment. The Caesars Palace Coup is a
well-researched, engaging modern-day corporate thriller, filled
with epic courtroom and boardroom battles and the kinds of colorful
characters that only exist on the buy-side. This is the fascinating
inside story of a clash of the titans—the who's who of distressed
hedge funds battling each other and private equity giants Apollo
and TPG for their piece of the Las Vegas casino conglomerate. . . .
[A] must read for anyone who loves the deals and the drama that so
often characterize the ins and outs of Wall Street and corporate
restructuring.
—Kristin Mugford, Harvard Business School
In The Caesars Palace Coup, two of Wall Street's most plugged-in
journalists take us deep inside corporate raiding, 21st century
style. Exploiting distressed debt instead of undervalued stock,
buccaneer hedge funds and other vulture investors pay seventy,
sixty, sometimes less than fifty cents on the dollar to scoop up
controlling stakes in troubled companies. This breathtaking
narrative culminates in bitter financial and courtroom warfare as
Apollo Global Management, its allies, and its high-powered lawyers
and lobbyists maneuver relentlessly against equally savvy investors
to freeze them out of the resulting rise in profits and force them
to accept a ‘cramdown' settlement of their stakes in the
company.
—Paul Steiger, former Wall Street Journal managing editor and
founding editor of ProPublica
The distressed debt markets are the most rough-and-tumble corner of
Wall Street, and Indap and Frumes have written the best book yet on
the machinations, power moves, and personalities of the investors
who make fortunes rolling the distressed debt dice.
—Jared A. Ellias, Bion M. Gregory Chair in Business Law, the
University of California, Hastings
There is so much to like in this book. Its primary strength is its
Law & Order backstory, peeling back the onion of every major
player...Four years of painstaking personal interviews have paid
off handsomely in this fascinating account of the inner workings of
big money and big law reorganization practice.
—Jason Kilborn, Credit Slips
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