Last week brought more grim news on the housing front, from the widening loss at KB Homes to the cautious comments from Lennar CEO Stuart Miller.Yet the
Monthly Archives: June 2008
Yahoo Fights for Its Board, Defends Handling of Microsoft Deal, and Says Google Is Better Partner
From paidContent.org, June 30, 2008:As Yahoo
prepares for its Aug. 1 board election, the company is once again
repeating an argument: It handled the Microsoft negotiations as
best it could, and the new deal with Google is better than any partial one wi
Emerging Markets No Safe Haven: Schwab’s Sonders Debunks ‘Decoupling’
As the U.S. economy began to slow last year, the bulls declared “decoupling” would save the emerging markets. But globalization cuts both ways and international economies have proven quite vulnerable to the same forces weighing on America, nota
‘Wake-Up Call’: The Benefits of Surging Oil, Recession, and Housing Bust
With oil surging, the economy slowing, and housing in a tailspin, there’s obviously a lot of pain for investors and citizens alike these days. But there’s a long-term silver lining to all these negatives, says Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist
10 Reasons Why Oil Bubble Set to Burst
After hitting $143.67 per barrel earlier today, crude prices have since retreated but the oil juggernaut shows little signs of slowing down.On the contrary, says Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab,
Sirius-XM: $400M Post-Merger Savings in 2009
From Silicon Alley Insider, June 30, 2008:Betting that its acquisition of XM Satellite Radio (XMSR) is basically a done deal at the FCC, Sirius Satellite Radio (SIRI)
Bear Realities: Fed Rate Hike Could Aid Ailing Market, says Schwab’s Sonders
As with the debate over whether the economy is technically in recession, the discussion over whether it’s a bear market or not is academic.With the list of new 52-week highs shrinking and the
Paineful Prospects
If you are a giant Swiss bank, the one business you are supposed to do better than just about anyone is private banking. So news that UBS is considering selling Paine Webber, the heart of its U.S. wealth management business, which it bought for $10 billion nearly eight years ago, hasn’t gone down well at all. The stock sank more than 4 percent on the news. Though the name of Paine Webber disappeared from Wall St, the operations have remained more-or-less intact, making it relatively easy to hive off, analysts say. Senior bankers say the business could be an attractive buy for Bank of America or Morgan Stanley.
France Telecom has pulled its long-odds, $40 billion bid for TeliaSonera. The French suitor was restricted by its financial targets and Sweden, a big TeliaSonera shareholder, would have held out for a better price. TeliaSonera shares dropped 13 percent to 43.30 Swedish crowns, while France Telecom shares jumped 7.3 percent. The two companies held talks but TeliaSonera said the terms did not improve significantly and France Telecom said the deal-breaker was money.
Deutsche Bank launched its first special purpose acquisition company focused on Germany, Switzerland and Austria, a venture led by three high-profile executives. Germany1 Acquisition will be headed by co-Chairmen Thomas Middelhoff, chief executive of retailer Arcandor, and Roland Berger, founder of the strategy consultancy bearing his name. Florian Lahnstein, a former investment banker at Bear Stearns and UBS, is chief executive. Germany1 aims to raise 275 million euros ($432.9 million) in an offering of shares and warrants, said Deutsche Bank, which is the sole IPO bookrunner.
Other deals of the day:
* Global steel giants ArcelorMittal and POSCO have separately bought stakes in Macarthur Coal, potentially blocking each other from taking over the Australian mining company as steelmakers rush to secure stable coal supplies.
* New Zealand rural services firm PGG Wrightson said it would pay NZ$220 million ($167 million) for a 50 percent stake in meat producer Silver Fern Farms, sending its shares lower.
* Tele2 said it was selling its Polish operation to Polish phone group Netia for 300 million Swedish crowns ($50 million).
* Irish oil and gas explorer Petroceltic said that Spanish power company Iberdrola had agreed to buy a 22.64 percent stake in it for $55 million.
* New Zealand retail investment company Hellaby Holdings said it would sell its poorly-performing BBQ factory business and forecast a fall in operating earnings. The company said it would sell the business to Auckland-based private equity firm Capital Group. No price was disclosed.
* China State Shipbuilding Corp, the country’s largest ship-building group, has put its Wenchong Shipyard up for sale on the Beijing Equity Exchange for 3.04 billion yuan ($443 million), according to the exchange’s website (http://www.cbex.com.cn/).
* Del Monte Foods agreed to sell its seafood business including tuna brand StarKist to South Korean food group Dongwon for $363 million, creating the world’s top canned tuna firm.
* New Zealand dairy cooperative Fonterra and National Foods are working together on a possible joint bid for Australia’s Dairy Farmers, the dairy producer said.
* Bear Stearns Asset Management will sell its 50 percent stake in Migdal Capital Markets to a subsidiary of Migdal Insurance & Financial Holdings for $70 million, the Israeli insurer said.
* Commercial International Bank, Egypt’s largest publicly traded lender by value, said it had agreed to buy the remaining 49.9 percent of its investment banking subsidiary CI Capital. It already owns 50.1 percent.
* Indian discount food and grocery retailer Subhiksha is acquiring a majority stake in Chennai-based Blue Green Constructions and Investments, and expects to merge the two firms and list the combined entity shortly.
Why Paid Search Ads Are Not the Holy Grail
We hear about social networking, cloud computing, the iPhone and new ad models to support these trends all the time. But less talked about is how they all play off one another. Jonathan Yarmis studies “disruptive technology” for AMR Research and
When Science Fiction Writers Become Product Planners
Jonathan Yarmis is the vice president of “disruptive technologies” for AMR Research. That’s a term people throw around a lot, but Yarmis believes we are truly living in transformational times online. If you take social applications, cloud comput
Long Goodbye: ‘Haven’t Seen Last of Gates’ — or MSFT-YHOO, Swisher Says
Friday marks his last day of full-time work at Microsoft, but “I don’t know if we’ve seen the last of Bill Gates just yet,” says Kara Swisher, AllThingsD’s co-Executive Editor.Gates will remain “influential on key issues,” she says. Pr
Swisher: Yahoo Reorg Not Enough to Satisfy Major Shareholders
Yahoo unveiled its much-anticipated reorganization Thursday, and President Sue Decker says it “will help [Yahoo] deliver superior global products for users and enable faster and better decision-making.”But