From The Business Insider, June 29, 2009:The book is thrown.
The Ponz-father Bernie Madoff has been sentenced to 150 years in prison.
There was never much chance that Bernie Madoff would get anything
other than life. And in fact he got life and then so
Monthly Archives: June 2009
Madoff Prosecutors Ask for 150 Years, Pardon Board Recommends 50 Years
From The Business Insider, June 29, 2009:Nine of Bernie Madoff’s victimes will speak at his sentencing today.
The first victim has just begun. He is a retired New York City
corrections officer, which is exactly the last person you’d ever want
to
Todd Harrison’s 5 Keys to the Market
There are an endless number of factors that could potentially move the market on a daily basis. But Todd Harrison, CEO of Minyanville.com, says there are five major keys investors should be focused on:Treasury yields: The 10-year yield
“We Are Not a Vengeful Mob”: Madoff Investor Speaks Out
Former Ft. Lee, N.J. mayor and current DailyBeast contributor Burt Ross lost $5 million investing with Bernie Madoff, but he considers himself a “survivor” of the massive fraud, rather than a victim.”We are not a vengeful mob. We are people
Madoff Beats Out History’s Greatest Con Men
Bernard Madoff, mastermind of the largest investment scam, will soon learn his fate. The 71-year-old could get as much as 150 years under federal sentencing guidelines, The WSJ reports. His attorney, Ira Sorkin is asking for 12-years at today’
Blow for blow
Hostile deals – and there are a few going on – have one unintended consequence: too many press releases.
Every side feels compelled to correct a rival’s spin as things heat up, which means almost every press statement has an equal and opposite reaction.
In Bermuda, a three-way battle between IPC, Validus and Max Capital flooded the wires for weeks with innumerable press releases, as each side tried to make a case for why their deal was better. (Shareholders voted down an IPC-Max deal, but the fight is not over yet.)
Sometimes the new point is, well, a rather fine point.
Consider this statement put out by Agrium, which is battling to take over rival CF.
Mike Wilson, Agrium’s CEO:
“Following a successful stockholder referendum on Agrium’s offer and after we reached out to CF and its advisors, CF’s Chairman and CEO Steve Wilson told me that CF would not meet with Agrium. Contradicting recent public comments that CF is prepared to engage, he stated to me that ‘there is no reason to meet because nothing has changed.’ Steve Wilson said he called since stockholders wanted him to engage with Agrium. I do not consider returning my phone calls to say that CF refuses to meet to be engagement and I don’t think CF stockholders will either.”
This time, though, CF did not rush out its own statement to address the allegation by Agrium’s Wilson that CF’s Wilson was contradicting his recent public comments.
CF spokesman Charles Nekvasil, when reached by phone, said the company did not “wish to engage in duelling press releases or press statements.”
And then he added: “Our position is that — as we spelled out last week when our CEO did an interview — nothing has changed from the perspective of the Agrium offer. We have indicated that given that situation we are willing to listen but nothing new is on the table.”
Investors worry about Towers Watson
Watson Wyatt and Towers Perrin executives are excited about their deal to create Towers Watson, but investors are not cheering as much.
Watson Wyatt’s shares plunged nearly 10 percent in Monday morning trading, as investors woke up to the all-stock deal valued at about $3.5 billion, announced Sunday.
A Citi analyst downgraded the Watson Wyatt, which is publicly held, to “hold” from “buy”, calling the companies’ three-year integration plan a “major risk.”
Among the concerns: integration and deal costs may lower earnings, and rivals like Hewitt and Mercer could grab people and other opportunities in the interim.
It will take three years to achieve savings of $80 million through job cuts and the streamlining of overlapping operations. The companies also expect one-time costs of $80 million from the merger and “significant noncash expenses” for the first two years.
“The merger will create a global leader, but the three-year path to accretion could imply a difficult integration,” Citi analyst Ashwin Shirvaikar wrote in a research note.
Live coverage of Bernie Madoff sentencing
Welcome to our live coverage of the Bernie Madoff sentencing. Reuters journalists are outside and inside the Manhattan court where the admitted thief will hear his punishment for running Wall Street’s biggest and most brazen investment scheme. Reuters.com’s intern, Franz Strasser, is sending us updates from the scene that you can follow in the live headline box below.
(Editor’s note: Readers’ comments will appear in a smaller font.)
Deals du Jour
TMT is heating up. Vodafone, the British mobile phone operator, is pondering a bid for T-Mobile UK, while Microsoft has hired Morgan Stanley to sell its digital agency Razorfish. Both stories are in the Financial Times. Private equity group Candover says it has ended talks with potential acquirers, confident it can meet debt covenants. For all Reuters Deals news, click here.
And here’s what other media are writing today.
* Anglo American (AAL.L) is building its defences against a 41 billion pound ($67.74 billion) merger approach from Xstrata (XTA.L) by plotting talks about a major Chinese investment, the Sunday Telegraph reported.
* Switzerland’s UBS (UBSN.VX) is to pay 3 to 5 billion Swiss francs ($2.77-$4.62 billion) in the next two weeks to settle a U.S. tax probe into the bank, Swiss newspaper Sonntag reported on Sunday.
* China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC) (0883.HK) and Petrochina are planning bids for a stake in Canadian oil firm InterOil Corp’s (IOC.N) natural gas project that could be worth up to $500 million, the South China Morning Post reported on Monday.
* The potential buyer of General Motors Corp’s (GMGMQ.PK) Hummer division will begin formal talks with Chinese regulators on Monday in an effort to win approval for its acquisition, The Wall Street Journal said on Saturday.
* British train and bus operator National Express Group Plc <NEX.L> has rejected an unsolicited takeover bid from rival FirstGroup Plc <FGP.L>, the Financial Times reported on Monday, without citing sources.
Madoff’s Sentence Won’t Repair Ruined Lives
By the time the sun sets Monday, disgraced money manager Bernard Madoff will know how much time he’ll face behind bars for perpetrating one of the largest financial scams in history. U.S. District Judge Denny Chin cou
Silicon Valley Hotshot Turns Prius Into High-Tech Batmobile
Say you’re a successful entrepreneur and venture capitalist who wants a one-of-a-kind, show-stopping electric car. What do you do? If you’re the very playful Satish Darmaraj, you build your own!After selling his most recent company, Zimbra, to Yahoo for a
Palm: Execution Is Everything
From All Things Digital, June 26, 2009: Palm shares are on a tear Friday, rallying on the company’s fourth-quarter financials and the promise of its new Pre handset. Palm is trading at $15.30 as I write this, up more than nine percent in