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by morgante
3790 days ago
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> But a banker's role is really to provide advice on the deal and work in the best interests of the client. In this case, they strongly recommended that the clients hire an external accountant who would be more skilled in investigating cash flow fraud. Forensic accounting is out of the scope of the banker's engagement, but recommending that they hire someone to do it was serving the client. It really seems like Dragon was pushing the transaction to go faster, against Goldman's recommendation. > Goldman says the all-stock deal was approved without their presence; Baker says they didn't show up. So they both agree that the Bakers accepted an all-stock deal without Goldman's recommendation. While Goldman comes off looking lazy here, it doesn't make them liable. |
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It's also not about forensic accounting. A 5 person deal team is quite tiny especially if they're mostly junior. The acquiree should absolutely have access to internal documents in an all stock deal; your future is at stake here. Something like already factored receivables somehow requiring payments to be made in future periods makes no sense and would jump out immediately to anyone half competent who bothered to look.
Not showing up for a meeting is not the same as saying after the fact, 'ok guys let's close this'. I can guarantee you Goldman signed off on it. You don't sign merger documents at the meeting itself. GS likely said "fuck it all stock it is". They get paid anyway, in cash.