Q&A with Wilbur Ross
In
the annals of private equity distressed investing, there is no one quite like
Ross. His risky, seemingly quixotic ventures into ragged Rust Belt industries
such as steel, coal, textiles and auto parts have attempted to reinvent
segments of the economy left for dead. His earliest gamble, amalgamating
Bethlehem Steel Corp., LTV Corp. and other ailing companies into International
Steel Group starting in 2002, appeared grandiose in its ambitions and was
highly controversial. But its outcome, bestowing what amounted to a spectacular
1,100% profit for Ross when the business was sold to Indian mogul Lakshmi
Mittal's LNM Group in 2004 for $4.5 billion, was enough to prove that Ross
wasn't in fact, as some media outlets suggested at one point, entirely
"crazy."