Quote from Thunderdog:
Forgive me, but then I think you may have read a copy of the book that was written in a parallel universe.
Whatever. Why don't you tell us what
the book accuses Milken of doing since
you keep mentioning it as if it's the bible? Most of the book doesn't even focus on him, it focuses on others such as Boesky and Levine, both of whom were clearly guilty of insider trading.
Milken made his money by selling junk
bonds to institutions (such as soon to
be bankrupt S&Ls) who were greedy/naive enough to buy Drexel's sales pitch that historical default rates for junk could be extrapolated into the future.
Was this ethical on Milken's part? No. Was this illegal on Milken's part? No.
But it did make him a lot of enemies,
since the money raised was used by
takeover artists to threaten to buy
America's largest companies. Also, the
government needed someone to blame
for the S&L fiasco.