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资本之王:全球私募之王黑石集团成长史

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资本之王——唯一一部透视黑石集团运作内幕的权威巨作,首度展现黑石创始人史蒂夫·施瓦茨曼叱咤风云的私募传奇 。一个财富金字塔构筑的故事:黑石从仅有三个人的小公司发展成为美国最大的上市投资管理公司。创始人史蒂夫?施瓦兹曼3.98亿美元的年薪和6.84亿美元的黑石IPO所得,究竟从何而来?
  一段创造者与掠夺者的风雨传奇:看清私募股权公司与生俱来的双重面孔,他们究竟是在猎食那些被收购的公司还是助其发展、共同增值?
  一场私募股权业并购的饕餮盛宴:黑石及其同行不仅在全球掀起并购浪潮,而且在华尔街向高盛、摩根士丹利这样的金融巨头发起挑战。黑石仅仅控制着51家公司、雇佣了50万人,然而却有1710亿美元的年销售额!

312 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2010

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David Carey

103 books11 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 225 reviews
2 reviews95 followers
January 21, 2012
The reading can get laborious at times, but it is very well-written and detail-oriented. It is NOT focused on Steve Schwarzman as much as I thought. I was expecting a little bit more of a biography of him as well as Blackstone. However, it's really about the the origination and growth of Blackstone. For anyone interested in private equity, this is a must-read because it gives a fantastic overview and history of the industry. Also, if you want to build the next Blackstone (*cough* like me *cough*), then you better get on it.
Profile Image for Tulay.
1,202 reviews2 followers
August 2, 2017
Must be read.

How rich people and companies they form can gamble with global economy. Always with the help of financial institutions and banks. While adding millions to their bank accounts, little people not only lose their jobs, their retirement savings. How they manipulate each other and tax laws. Always finding a way to get around the laws to keep them straight.
30 reviews5 followers
February 13, 2017
I knew little about the subject. It's a compelling book to read for someone like that and who has an interest in finance. The narrative though is very prosaic and not laid out very well. Paragraphs are not logical extensions. There is lack of continuity. Information can be communicated better in a tabular format with some charts in some cases; here the author just seems to go on and on. Puke-out-as-it-comes kind of writing style. I learnt a lot though. My biggest takeaway is the scale of it all in sheer dollar terms. The PE game is sooo huge!
Profile Image for Denis Vasilev.
816 reviews106 followers
March 3, 2020
История Петерсона, Шварцмана и Блэкстоун Кэпитал. Большая часть - собрание анекдотов и занимательных историй, писали журналисты. Не хватает бизнес инсайтов, практик и идей
Profile Image for Byron.
226 reviews7 followers
November 23, 2014
The King of Capital chronicles the business career of one man and his company in the context of a variety of developments in the financial world over the past 30 years. For me as a novice to this topic, this book was mostly informative. Occasionally, I found myself unable to process the nuances of different financial trends, but generally it was good to come to gain a basic understanding of the pros and cons of private equity and leveraged buyouts, and to recognize what is going on at the high money levels that most of us cannot begin to fathom.

The book is not an expose nor does it have an axe to grind. It almost completely avoids talking about the personal lives of Schwarzman and others, except as it directly influences the story, and in the end, I came away with a basic level of respect for the primary subject. The author does not seem sympathetic to Schwarzman, but he also does not try to make Schwarzman into anything more than an incredibly successful private equity financier. While talking about the bank crashes of 2008-09, the author stays on a neutral footing, and resists the temptation to launch into any attacks or diversions from his main story.

That main story is this, how starting in the 1980s, several companies began to use private equity to engineer humongous mergers and buyouts of company after company, producing gargantuan levels of profit for the investors, which in some cases probably included my own state pension plan. The story is told that again and again these buyouts had good results for the companies that were overtaken, and that while jobs were almost always lost in the short term, new jobs were usually created in the long term. Private equity was able to infuse capital into companies in a way that allowed the company to reorganize and attain financial viability.

Learning of these realities makes it clear why financial giants who makes hundreds of millions of dollars a year are able to influence American politics with that money.

There is a theme of greed here, but because the author stays factual, it doesn't take a front seat.

I would recommend this book to someone who wants to understand a bit more about the American financial/business world of the last 30 years.

371 reviews79 followers
February 15, 2012
More interesting to read this as the story about founding a new enterprise. Lots of cold calls and unsuccessful meetings at the beginning - just like any other venture, followed by 20 years of hard work. After two decades of working hard, you get "discovered" by the media, and you are an "overnight success" (20 years in the making).

In that way, basically the same as WalMart, McDonalds, or any other non-VC funded entrepreneurial venture.

Interesting history. Interesting analysis.

The weakest part of the book is the conclusion, where Morris defers to a bunch of studies by the "experts" that LBO/Private Capital do no damage, and under certain circumstances, help the businesses that they buy. I would reminder Mr. Morris that those same "experts" also rated the "top tranche" of sub-prime mortgage debt, AAA... They also said "it's a new economy". They're never right about anything, so don't bother deferring to them. Just reason through with your own logic and analysis.

The problem with LBO structures is the L - leverage. If they can come up with the investment money on their own, then so be it, but leveraging up to purchase a business, which they take control of, refinance, and have the business pay off their leverage --- that's not "creative destruction", it's just "destruction".

If they can raise the money to buy the companies, then go for it! More power too them.

If they want to take on leverage, it should be on their own balance sheet, not on the company that they're taking over.
Profile Image for Tyler Storm.
110 reviews10 followers
September 30, 2014
Pretty good and thorough history of Blackstone

Wish the author went into more detail about their investments. He just kinda gives it a cursory mention and some global details here and there. Really wish I could learn how the firm did a turnaround of their various investments. They invested in cyclical companies at the right time or turnaround companies that were undervalued. The author gives some mention but I really want to find out what exactly they did.

Overall, its the best of the bunch and gives the reader what they ultimately desire, a history of Blackstone and some insight into the Private Equity industry.
Profile Image for Prateek Gupta.
20 reviews15 followers
March 13, 2016
This is a decent book on the history of Blackstone which succintly outlines the contribution of key players over the course of the firm's growth and discusses the make-or-break moments as Blackstone became a leading global PE player. Jury is still out on whether PE players are a net benefit to the economy with their focus on improving businesses to generate high returns or short term opportunists leveraging companies to the hilt & saddling them with inserviceable debt when the cycle eventually turns. I have personally seen both these scenarios play out but suffice it to say that too much of greed is their undoing as has been seen time and time again in financial markets.
Profile Image for Mike R.W. .
75 reviews142 followers
June 2, 2021
(insert review here)

Quick notes:

I thought I'd learn much more about Schwarzman, but there's really nothing here that you couldn't find in his interviews.

The Blackstone information is pretty detailed and provides an interesting read. The book surprised me with all of the non-Blackstone related private equity detail. Nonetheless, still very interesting if you don't mind reading a bit about cash flows, debt vs. equity and the deal making process.
Profile Image for Dennis Wong.
9 reviews2 followers
January 5, 2022
If you like reading Wikipedia, you'll like this book. The book is at once dense yet lacking in any personality, Schwarzman's thought process, negotiation strategy, and the actual nitty gritty of turning around companies (relegating this analysis to the last few pages of the book). The end result is an unsupported thesis about the bona fides of private equity.
Profile Image for Jack Nolan.
125 reviews2 followers
June 6, 2020
An easy and engaging read. Provides a good overview of the PE industry and how it developed. Less of a focus on Schwartzman or Bx than I expected. Surprisingly good amount of detail on specific LBO profits, IRRs etc. Ends a bit abruptly but accurately predicts the Hilton returns being massive.
Profile Image for Priscilla Reiss.
114 reviews
June 4, 2022
This is a book about private equity, using Blackstone as a vehicle. I was expecting more of a biography of Schwarzman, whose life is intimately tied to Blackstone (I was planning to read the book he authored after finishing this one).

Although it did not meet that expectation, I still found it to be an illuminating read. David Carey and John Morris are great at explaining the industry in a way that makes the book accessible to any level of familiarity/unfamiliarity with the world and culture of finance. Having read “Barbarians at The Gate” (highly recommend!! Amazing book) and a few other business books, I enjoyed the crossover in names, situations, and atmospherics. What’s missing here is drama - and I don’t think that is for lack of there being any dramatics involved. Schwarzman is a character in his own right, and Blackstone has become one of the biggest industry titans to ever exist. There are definitely some colorful stories to be told! Because the writers focus strictly on the history of Blackstone and an overview of private equity as a whole, while largely ignoring the behind-the-scenes theatrics involved in the industry, the book feels a bit lacking.
Profile Image for Benny.
186 reviews17 followers
April 8, 2020
The book is not only about Schwarzman and Blackstone. It also captures the zeitgeist of the LBO/PE industry from the 80's to post GFC. KKR, Carlyle, Apollo are more than supporting characters in this non-fictional account of the rise of Blackstone, one of the most formidable private equity asset managers in the world.

There are some facts that are eye-opening, such as the ultra low amount of equity that PE firms are required to put down in a leverage buyout deal in the 80's and 90's. The conglomerate premium, once used to be the norm, was the enabler to the conglomerate structure that was embraced by numerous corporates in America. When the market stopped believing in the conglomerate business model, companies divested non-core business to PE firms, who were the willing buyers at the time. Coupled with lenders who are willing to lend at high debt-to-equity ratios, PE firms were able to reap profits by deploying leverage and improving business margin at the same time. This spurt would last till late 2006 when the GFC brought the PE industry to a juddering halt. Yet, PE firms have since then recuperated from their losses and are now even more institutionalised and diversified than they were in the 80's.
Profile Image for S Prakash.
162 reviews10 followers
January 17, 2020
A good read for all of those who are in the business world and who aren't well versed with the world of Private Equity. The journey of Blackstone, one of the worlds leading PE firms, over the last 3 plus decades is a good way to know and understand as to how various forms of financing have evolved.

It's more than a biographical piece on Steve Schwarzman. It's about an Investment Industry which has turned the fortunes of many a number of Industries both ways. Cursed by the employees mostly whose companies were bought out and revered by the investors who made multiple time profits from their investments.
Profile Image for Connor Turley.
20 reviews
January 2, 2025
This book provides a look into the world of private equity, detailing the strategies and philosophy behind one of the industry’s leading firms. While parts of the book are tough to get through, the depth of analysis on value creation and improving companies, rather than the public perception of PE being solely a cost cutter, offers a fresh perspective on PE’s role in business. A solid read for anyone curious about modern finance.
Profile Image for Нестор.
592 reviews5 followers
November 21, 2023
Очень интересно если вы читали учебник финансового менеджмента. Цифры и формулы и методы работы на рынке обретают кровь, плоть и интригу.

И очень занудно, если этого учебника у вас в жизни не было. Потому что перед вами куда-то мчатся какие-то люди непонятно чем и как занимающиеся с руками по локоть в крови и по колено в долларах и другой валюте.

Рекомендую.
Profile Image for Phuong Thanh.
19 reviews
February 1, 2020
Though the title may promise some sort of a thriller here, this book needs better storytelling. There are too many distracting characters and overlapping events, which is a shame because the authors explain the concepts very well and inject many insights along the timeline of the PE industry.
2 reviews
September 2, 2025
At times can be a slog but overall I really enjoyed hearing about the PE industry and its origins. Really well written.
Profile Image for kien nguyen.
6 reviews
July 17, 2021
No one is perfect to have a long standing through a full development cycle of any business. The key thing is to create a compass to nurture and keep it alive
Profile Image for Richard.
182 reviews3 followers
November 19, 2023
Fantastic book - all the accessible insight of Barbarians At The Gate, but through an updated lens on the PE space. Interesting and readable.
46 reviews5 followers
January 10, 2016
This seemed like a fair appraisal of the history of Blackstone. It doesn't paint Schwarzman as a god, more as a very focused and hard-working young man who did a good job of gathering people around him that knew what they were doing. It also did a fair job assessing the private equity industry as a whole, bucking the general shallow perception of private equity as greedy investors looking to destroy a company for personal gain.

The last chapter seemed was the most intriguing to me. The author tries to provide some context by giving a collective perspective on the history of private equity and its future. In it, he quoted an executive at a mid-level PE firm as stating that almost all of private equity's returns are simply explained by the decline in interest rates since its inception in the late 70s. If this is really true, it raises some very thought provoking questions about the future of PE and investing as a whole in a world where interest rates are 0.
18 reviews
February 3, 2025
Carey's account of Blackstone's history to 2012 is well-researched, thoughtfully penned and sufficiently detailed, but at the same time is perfectly comfortable with not challenging the status quo. It serves almost as a summary of deal tombstones of Blackstone's successes and failures - certainly its characters are not the focus, as most passing characters are lucky to get a couple paragraphs' worth of background, while Tony James for his contribution gets a whole three pages in a 300-odd page book. And Blackstone's operating performance is certainly not the focus, given that even Carey seems to have been kept in the dark regarding Blackstone's pre-IPO financials, though that could hardly be classified as a surprise. The book accomplishes what it sets out to do, but follows the road most travelled. A fascinating lesson in what may result from the clever use of leverage and a bit of good (or poor) timing.
Profile Image for Lan.
22 reviews
August 21, 2015
You know what I learned from this book? Plenty of money exists in the world, and some people are much better at finding them, Schwarzman and Blackstone in this case, and make enormous profit and benefit from it. I wouldn't go out and say that Private Equity is all good for businesses and the economy as a whole, but it is a driving force in most cases for innovation and efficiency in financial engineering, from Syndicated Loans to Junk Bonds to CDOs.

Would I go out and worship Schwarzman after this? Likely, very likely. Should you? Maybe read the book and find out for yourself.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Kelly.
597 reviews3 followers
October 31, 2015
A history of Blackstone that focused on the deals and their outcomes and not so much on Schwarzman, Petersen, et. al. I liked that aspect of it and how it included the broader macroeconomic and PE industry contexts.
135 reviews
May 6, 2016
This book provides an overview of the private equity industry.

I think you can take a lot of value out of this book by reading the very last chapter which summarizes the current state of the industry and provides predictions about what will happen in the future.
20 reviews
December 23, 2013
Great summary of the history of the current players in private equity. entertaining and informative read!
Profile Image for Gmendra Lau.
91 reviews6 followers
March 31, 2015
OKAY HISTORY OF BLACKSTONE.
Lunch time fastfood.
YUMMMMM
Profile Image for Ed Zhu.
2 reviews2 followers
May 31, 2015
A very readable book. I enjoyed the balanced context about the evolution of the PE industry, deal sourcing and structuring, and investment outcomes.
132 reviews2 followers
June 1, 2015
It was ok. No really inside grittiness of the deal or the goings-on in Private Equity. Very few great stories of the life in Private Equity. The birthday party at the beginning was the best.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 225 reviews

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