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To Buy A Business

Posted By: AlexGolova
To Buy A Business

To Buy A Business by B J Thornton
English | November 21, 2012 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B00ABP5MR0 | 21 pages | MOBI | 0.24 MB

To Buy a Business using the Leverage Buy Out System. LBO Practitioners thrive in Recessionary or Poor Economic conditions. This is our time to fly.
When stressful conditions prevail these are the exact conditions in which LBO thrives. This is because LBO is a reverse logic methodology because when everyone else is trying to leave in panic, a Leverage Buyout Practitioner is endeavouring to sneak in and take everything over for pennies in the pound.
The man who enunciated the system was Baron De Rothschild when he said “we buy when there is blood running in the streets”. In 1805 when he made that statement, there was literally and figuratively blood running in the streets due to the ongoing Napoleonic wars in Europe. Blood was running everywhere in Europe at the time, however his action, no matter how innocently done, eventually caused an economic panic in London that he benefited from.
It’s the Pigeon that did it!

This is how it happened. The Baron had a pigeon dispatched from the battlefield located at Waterloo in Belgium. The note attached to the pigeons leg advised of how things were going. The message carried by the pigeon was the statement by Wellington confirming that “things were going badly”. This negative judgement was mainly based on the fact that he was having trouble welding his many divergent allies with different languages, equipment, training and systems into a cohesive fighting force that was able to convincingly take on Napoleon and his well trained French army which was proving a difficult task.
The Rumour Mill started an avalanche

After the Pigeon arrived in London and the message was circulated in 1805 it ultimately caused a panic. The rumour mill in London, having no radios in their day relied on news from sailing ships coming across the channel. Cut off from the war in Belgium the citizens of London could only get reports days later by a fast packet which was a sailing ship. They guessed, listened to rumours and thought the worst.

This message went from “things are going badly” to “we have lost the war”. Panic ensued. Probably people were mistakenly reading more into the message than was intended. Property and share prices crashed causing the figurative blood bath in Britain. The Baron went round picking up valuable assets and businesses that included the Bank of England for pennies in the pound. Hence his statement “we buy when there is blood running in the streets” was true.

Of course a few days later the fast packet (ship) arrived with the glad tidings that Wellington had won and values reverted to what they were, but with a different owner who was now worth in today’s money many Јtrillions. Remember the Baron had taken over the Bank of England and the issue of all British and Empire currency.
A System for Bad or Good times

Sounds confusing. But when it comes to LBO as you can see from the above real life example of how the Baron took over the British financial system till this day, it could only happen when panic reigned.