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by leroy_masochist
3789 days ago
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> GS likely said "fuck it all stock it is". They get paid anyway, in cash. Massive category-mistake here. Investment banks don't have sign-off authority on these kinds of transactions, they serve as a advisors. And in this particular case, GS's defense was based on the fact that Dragon didn't follow their advice. Both in terms of the consideration and in terms of Dragon's option to hedge the stock they received as consideration. By the way -- GS got 1% on this deal, when it's normally up around 2 or 3. The engagement letter didn't even make them advisors to the board, just to management. That's a much lower standard of care. If I had to guess, I'd say that the Bakers were trying something along the lines of, "Potential buyers won't fuck us over if we hire Goldman. What's the cheapest we can hire Goldman for?" They hired the firm on an extremely limited mandate at a time when the tech M&A market was going haywire. They got a junior team that, while it provided substantively good advice, did not do remotely enough to protect the client from its own brash stupidity (this is not a formal responsibility, but is the kind of thing that partners like Gene, who was nominally on the deal but couldn't even remember it under oath, are good at). FWIW, I agree that GS does not come across well in this particular episode. |
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And yea the Bakers definitely should have gone with a smaller bank given the deal size. But hey, BODs make that mistake all the time too. Also given the size of the Bakers stake (50+%), not much difference between board advisory and management advisory is there? Theirs is the deciding vote.
Agreed with you on the last point. Been on more than one deal team where we've had to talk clients out of shooting themselves in the foot. But that's part of the game. No engagement letter covers that but a sensible client would expect that from their banker. Legally GS was always in the clear.