The Shari & Ari Windfall Strategies

shari redstone
The proposed Ellison deal borders on the insane and should have been rejected out of hand because it will likely end up being patently unfair to the non-Redstone shareholders of Paramount Global. Photo: Jared Siskin/Patrick McMullan/Getty Images
William D. Cohan
April 7, 2024

There are few responsibilities on Wall Street as sacredyes, sacred—as being an advisor to a special committee of the board of directors of a public company. After all, a board of directors only appoints a special committee when it recognizes that the mere specter of a conflict—a deal that involves a large shareholder or another board member or the management of the company—requires an independent advisor to adequately protect the interests of the other, non-conflicted shareholders. Back when I was an M&A banker on Wall Street, there was no assignment I enjoyed more: You had the immense power to evaluate whether a proposed transaction involving insiders was fair from a financial point of view for all shareholders, and the ability to accept it or reject it. Your word on it was pretty much final, too.