From All Things Digital, Aug. 29, 2008: If you’re the owner of an iPhone 3G and you haven’t already updated to the iPhone 2.0.2 firmware, do so today–for your sake and that of all iPhone 3G owners. Why? Well, according to sources at AT&a
Monthly Archives: August 2008
Corzine: Ditch hybrid structure for Fannie, Freddie
The federal government should ditch the hybrid structure of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and fully back them with taxpayer funds, said New Jersey governor Jon Corzine, former CEO of Goldman Sachs.
“I don’t think we can continue with the schizophrenic view that we have today, sort of part public company, part private company, where the leaders of the company do well when things are going well but then the government and the public and the taxpayer has to bail them out when it goes bad,” he said.
This report is by Corbett B. Daly, Washington bureau chief for Thomson Reuters Markets.
MSFT Buying Research, Shopping Engine Outfit Greenfield Online, Carving It Up
From Silicon Alley Insider, Aug. 29, 2008: Microsoft is paying $486 million for Greenfield Online, which runs an Internet survey businesss and Ciao, a European comparison shopping engine. Redmond plans on immediately selling off the survey business to an
Obama Campaign Attacks Romney’s PE Resume
Mitt Romney is probably just days away from being named John McCain’s running mate, and the Democrats are already taking shots based on his time running Bain Capital. During a press conference earlier today in Denver, Obama campaign manager David Plouffe referred to the former buyout kingpin as a “job killing machine in business” who “has been proficient at using tax havens in places like the Cayman Islands that Americans have become increasingly tired of.”
It’s certainly true that Bain laid off portfolio company employees during Romney’s tenue. It’s also certainly true that Bain hired portfolio company employees during Romney’s tenue (particularly at the earlier-stage companies).
So Plouffe was only telling a half-truth, although it’s one we should expect to hear over and over again. This will be particularly true if Romney’s people keep avoiding any actual discussion of Bain Capital, as his spokesman did in response to Plouffe’s comments.
As I’ve written before, I’m thrilled by the prospect of Romney as a vice presidential candidate. Not because of my political biases, but because it gives me something to write about for the next few months. But his former private equity colleagues should be very nervous about what his candidacy would mean for their own reputations and future regulation. The industry was dragged through the mud most of last year, and has largely been forgotten ever since (except in Michigan, thanks to Cerberus/Chrysler). A McCain-Romney ticket will bring it all back with a vengeance.
Strong GDP Report ‘High Watermark’ for U.S., Not Sign of Upturn, Economist Says
Lost a bit amid vacations, stay-cations and the Democratic convention, a series of reports this week have shown the U.S. economy to be in not as terrible shape as many believed.A trio of reports Monday and Tuesday showed some
Not for sale, honest
After a New York Post article reported that Hollywood studio MGM had retained investment bank Goldman Sachs to look into a possible sale or capital raising, the studio issued a statement that it was not for sale. MGM, however, may look at “enhancements” to its long-term capital structure.
Private equity sales to strategic buyers have become a silver lining in an exit environment made difficult in part by a weak IPO market, writes the Wall Street Journal’s Deal Journal. According to Dealogic, U.S. sales to corporate buyers by PE firms are up 46 percent from a year earlier.
CNBC reported that private equity fund Kohlberg Kravis Roberts was in the lead in bidding for Neuberger Berman, beleaguered investment bank Lehman Brothers’ “crown jewel,” its asset management unit.
OTHER DEALS OF THE DAY
** Infosys Technologies, India’s No. 2 software services exporter, said it had agreed to buy UK-based consultancy services firm Axon Group Plc in an all-cash deal valued at 407.1 million pounds. ($753.1 million)
** Norwegian solar industry group Renewable Energy Corporation (REC) plans to build its next silicon materials plant in Bécancour, Quebec in Canada with a goal of starting production in 2012, REC said on Monday. A final investment decision will be made after preliminary engineering is completed, but REC’s investment in the plant is assumed to be at least $1.2 billion, Chief Executive Erik Thorsen said.
** Chip maker Broadcom Corp said it would buy Advanced Micro Devices Inc’s digital television chip business for $192.8 million in cash to enter the market for cheaper television sets. After the deal, Broadcom would be selling chips for television sets with screens of up to 20 inches priced around $200 to $300.
** Q9 Networks Inc, which provides data centers and network management services to other companies, agreed to be bought by private-equity firm Abry Partners in a cash transaction worth about C$361 million ($345 million), the companies said on Monday. Boston-based Abry, through its affiliate CDC Acquisition Corp, will buy all of the outstanding common shares of Q9 for C$17.05 each.
Adecco’s dilemma: To bid or not to bid
Adecco, the world’s largest staffing firm, now has six weeks to either make a formal offer for British rival Michael Page or walk away and leave the company in peace for at least six months.
White-collar staffing firm Michael Page has so far rejected informal offers from Adecco, which would value the group at 1.3 billion pounds, and management has stressed its desire to remain independent.
But now may be the optimal time for Adecco to snap up Michael Page as shares have lost 26 percent of their value over the past 12 months on concerns about companies cutting back on hiring as a result of slowing economic growth.
Will Adecco, which has a warchest of 1.4 billion euros ($2.06 billion), brush aside the frosty reception and make a formal offer for Michael Page? Or will it walk away?
Even if the Michael Page bid fails, Adecco still has several takeover options in Europe and the United States, analysts reckon.
In for a penny…
Singapore’s Temasek made clear how bullish it is on Merrill Lynch in a Bloomberg TV interview, expressing great confidence in CEO John Thain. The news service reported that the Singapore wealth fund has U.S. clearance to raise its stake in the brokerage to as much as 14 percent. That would be worth roughly $1.7 billion on the open market. Though less if they issued new shares, it would certainly help Merrill deal with the $5.7 billion in write-downs it said it would take in the third quarter, and would probably be worth even more as a sign of steady capital support from its biggest share holder.
Such lifelines are likely to keep pumping funds into struggling Western banks, according to a regional executive at one of the world’s biggest institutional money managers. Hon Cheung, regional director of the Official Institutions Group in Asia at State Street Global Advisors said he expects the funds increasingly to adopt passive investment approaches, given the need to move large amounts of money without disrupting markets. “Their purpose is not to support the U.S. taxpayer or the U.S. economy or to ensure stable global markets. If by doing that, they get a side benefit that’s great. But their principal job is to benefit the stakeholders,” said Cheung. And as these sovereign wealth funds aren’t even really beholden to share holders, they may have stomach for even more stunning losses.
Lehman Brothers has asked three private equity firms to remain in the bidding for its asset management arm even though the investment bank has yet decide on whether to sell the unit, the Financial Times reported. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, Hellman & Friedman and Bain Capital have been told by Lehman that their bids are high enough to go forward, the paper said, citing people familiar with the matter. Although Lehman has not reached a decision, it has been soliciting bids from private equity firms to gauge interest in its asset management arm, which includes Neuberger Berman, the fund manager, and minority stakes in several hedge funds.
Other deals of the day:
* Steelmaker POSCO and Hyundai Heavy Industries officially expressed interest in acquiring a majority stake in world No. 3 shipyard Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering estimated at up to $8 billion.
* ConocoPhillips is expected to sell the remainder of its 600 company-owned gasoline stations to PetroSun West for $800 million, the Wall Street Journal said.
* Danish shipping and oil group A.P. Moller-Maersk said it was launching a bid worth 3.62 billion Swedish crowns ($569 million) for shipping company Brostrom.
* Sweden-based private equity firm EQT said it had sold its remaining stake in paper products maker Duni AB for an undisclosed sum.
* British market research group Taylor Nelson Sofres said it continued to oppose a hostile takeover bid from WPP despite preferred suitor GfK giving up its takeover attempt.
* Commonwealth Bank of Australia, the country’s second largest bank by assets, was unlikely to buy Indonesia’s Bank Ekonomi Raharja, an industry source told Reuters.
* Leading Turkish conglomerate Sabanci Holding wants to find a partner for its insurance unit Aksigorta rather than selling it, said group chairwoman Guler Sabanci.
* AIM-listed Proventec Plc, which provides specialist steam cleaning and coatings technologies, said it has acquired a 60 percent stake in German engineering company Frank for an undisclosed sum.
* Singapore-based KOP Capital, controlled by the emirate-owned Dubai Group, will buy a 50 percent stake in European hotel chain Stein Group for $250 million, and spend about the same amount on new hotels in Asia.
* Private equity firm 3i Group may invest 8-10 billion rupees ($183-$229 million) in a south Indian port operator for a stake of up to 26 percent, the Mint newspaper said, citing an official at the Indian firm.
* New Zealand grocery co-operative Foodstuffs will not appeal a court-imposed ban on it bidding for New Zealand’s largest-listed retailer, The Warehouse Group, the company said.
‘You Can’t Go Wrong’: Stocks Still Cheap, James Altucher Says
Stocks jumped Thursday thanks to a strong second-quarter GDP report and another drop in oil prices. The rally left the Dow up 213 points at 11,715, within striking distance of a weekly (and monthly) close above its 200-week simple moving average of 11,740
Corzine: Ditch hybrid structure for Fannie, Freddie
The federal government should ditch the hybrid structure of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and fully back them with taxpayer funds, said New Jersey governor Jon Corzine, former CEO of Goldman Sachs.
“I don’t think we can continue with the schizophrenic view that we have today, sort of part public company, part private company, where the leaders of the company do well when things are going well but then the government and the public and the taxpayer has to bail them out when it goes bad,” he said.
This report is by Corbett B. Daly, Washington bureau chief for Thomson Reuters Markets.
Dell Q2 Sales Huge, Profits Lousy
From Silicon Alley Insider, Aug. 28, 2008: I.T. Spending Weakness “Extending”A mixed quarter for Dell: The computer maker reported higher than expected sales, but profits missed by a long shot. And Dell said conservatism in I.T. spending is spre
Obama Campaign Attacks Romney’s PE Resume
Mitt Romney is probably just days away from being named John McCain’s running mate, and the Democrats are already taking shots based on his time running Bain Capital. During a press conference earlier today in Denver, Obama campaign manager David Plouffe referred to the former buyout kingpin as a “job killing machine in business” who “has been proficient at using tax havens in places like the Cayman Islands that Americans have become increasingly tired of.”
It’s certainly true that Bain laid off portfolio company employees during Romney’s tenue. It’s also certainly true that Bain hired portfolio company employees during Romney’s tenue (particularly at the earlier-stage companies).
So Plouffe was only telling a half-truth, although it’s one we should expect to hear over and over again. This will be particularly true if Romney’s people keep avoiding any actual discussion of Bain Capital, as his spokesman did in response to Plouffe’s comments.
As I’ve written before, I’m thrilled by the prospect of Romney as a vice presidential candidate. Not because of my political biases, but because it gives me something to write about for the next few months. But his former private equity colleagues should be very nervous about what his candidacy would mean for their own reputations and future regulation. The industry was dragged through the mud most of last year, and has largely been forgotten ever since (except in Michigan, thanks to Cerberus/Chrysler). A McCain-Romney ticket will bring it all back with a vengeance.
