The Grand Scam

How Barry Tannenbaum Conned South Africa’s Business Elite

Business & Finance, Finance & Investing, Finance
Cover of the book The Grand Scam by Rob Rose, Penguin Random House South Africa
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Rob Rose ISBN: 9781770226227
Publisher: Penguin Random House South Africa Publication: November 20, 2013
Imprint: Zebra Press Language: English
Author: Rob Rose
ISBN: 9781770226227
Publisher: Penguin Random House South Africa
Publication: November 20, 2013
Imprint: Zebra Press
Language: English

From 2005 to 2009, the heir to one of South Africa’s blue-blood families, Barry Tannenbaum, methodically constructed the largest-ever con in South African history. The Grand Scam exposes details about the brazen greed of the scammers, a bank that facilitated the shady dealings rather than alerting the authorities, and the naivety of business people who should have known better. It goes far beyond the original news stories, containing original research and material that, for the first time, answers the central question of why. Barry Tannenbaum, the grandson of the founder of one of the country’s biggest pharmaceutical firms, Adcock Ingram, offered investors stratospheric returns of more than 200 per cent a year by investing in the components used to make AIDS drugs. It was nothing more than a lie, which suckered the country’s business elite, including the former CEO of Pick n Pay, the one-time head of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange and the ex-boss of OK Bazaars. After the bubble popped in June 2009, finance minister Pravin Gordhan announced that hundreds of investors in South Africa, Australia and Europe had ploughed more than R12.5 billion into Tannenbaum’s scheme, based on the empty promise of immense riches. Dwarfing the Brett Kebble rip-off, Fidentia and the Krion pyramid scheme, it proved to be the most embarrassing financial disaster in the country’s history, and it exposed holes in a banking and financial system billed as one of the safest in the world. For Tannenbaum’s victims, the nightmare continued after the scheme collapsed, as liquidators, tax officials and criminal investigators demanded their pound of flesh. But Tannenbaum, now at large on Australia’s Gold Coast, continues to live as if nothing happened, working for an Australian insurance company. The question that hasn’t been answered until now is, how did Tannenbaum swindle so many people with such ease? And, more crucially, why did he do it? Through extensive interviews with his family, friends and numerous ‘investors’, this book provides the startling answers to those questions. For the first time, the real motivation that fuelled South Africa’s Bernie Madoff is laid bare.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

From 2005 to 2009, the heir to one of South Africa’s blue-blood families, Barry Tannenbaum, methodically constructed the largest-ever con in South African history. The Grand Scam exposes details about the brazen greed of the scammers, a bank that facilitated the shady dealings rather than alerting the authorities, and the naivety of business people who should have known better. It goes far beyond the original news stories, containing original research and material that, for the first time, answers the central question of why. Barry Tannenbaum, the grandson of the founder of one of the country’s biggest pharmaceutical firms, Adcock Ingram, offered investors stratospheric returns of more than 200 per cent a year by investing in the components used to make AIDS drugs. It was nothing more than a lie, which suckered the country’s business elite, including the former CEO of Pick n Pay, the one-time head of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange and the ex-boss of OK Bazaars. After the bubble popped in June 2009, finance minister Pravin Gordhan announced that hundreds of investors in South Africa, Australia and Europe had ploughed more than R12.5 billion into Tannenbaum’s scheme, based on the empty promise of immense riches. Dwarfing the Brett Kebble rip-off, Fidentia and the Krion pyramid scheme, it proved to be the most embarrassing financial disaster in the country’s history, and it exposed holes in a banking and financial system billed as one of the safest in the world. For Tannenbaum’s victims, the nightmare continued after the scheme collapsed, as liquidators, tax officials and criminal investigators demanded their pound of flesh. But Tannenbaum, now at large on Australia’s Gold Coast, continues to live as if nothing happened, working for an Australian insurance company. The question that hasn’t been answered until now is, how did Tannenbaum swindle so many people with such ease? And, more crucially, why did he do it? Through extensive interviews with his family, friends and numerous ‘investors’, this book provides the startling answers to those questions. For the first time, the real motivation that fuelled South Africa’s Bernie Madoff is laid bare.

More books from Penguin Random House South Africa

Cover of the book The Penguin Book Of South African Sports Trivia by Rob Rose
Cover of the book The Boy Who Could Keep A Swan in His Head by Rob Rose
Cover of the book Photographic Guide to Tracks & Tracking in Southern Africa by Rob Rose
Cover of the book The South African Illustrated Cookbook by Rob Rose
Cover of the book What’s Wrong With Management and How to Get It Right by Rob Rose
Cover of the book Don't Film Yourself Having Sex by Rob Rose
Cover of the book Giving Back Childhood by Rob Rose
Cover of the book How Many Ways Can You Say Hello? by Rob Rose
Cover of the book Katy's Kid by Rob Rose
Cover of the book What's that Tree? by Rob Rose
Cover of the book Birds – The Inside Story by Rob Rose
Cover of the book Leading Afrika by Rob Rose
Cover of the book A Handful of Earth by Rob Rose
Cover of the book Pocket Guide to Birds of East Africa by Rob Rose
Cover of the book How to Get a SARS Refund by Rob Rose
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy