The Fed is planning to detail its “exit plan” this week, the WSJ says. This exit plan is the means by which the Fed will gradually reverse the tremendous stimulus it is still pumping into the economy and financial system.As we’ve noted oft
Daily Archives: February 9, 2010
The afternoon deal: Taxing PE
As a political move, raising the taxes on private equity firms seem a no-brainer but as Megan Davies and Kim Dixon report, gaining tax dollars from the easy target may not be a simple process.
The tax is likely to be a hot issue at one of the private equity industry’s biggest conferences, Super Return International, which starts on Tuesday in Berlin and is attracting heavy hitters from major American buyout firms such as Carlyle and Apollo.
More PE news:
- Long list of buyout firms pursuing European deals (Reuters)
- Local buy-out firms defy US groups in China (FT)
- Private equity bids for KDG: sources (Reuters)
- Bain raises $525 million for new venture fund (Reuters)
- Denmark’s ATP to up hedge funds, private equity: CEO (Reuters)
Could Google/China bust up be bad for Disney’s bus stop?
Walt Disney is leading a group effort to buy into China’s largest bus-based digital media and advertising company, Bus Online. The investment would be peanuts for Disney, but the headache could wind up being jumbo sized because one of their investors in the bus deal, sources tell us, is Google.
Google threatened to quit China only a few weeks ago and the internet search giant is finalizing a deal that will let the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) help it investigate the corporate espionage attack it thinks originated in the People’s Republic. China has warned the U.S. not to make politics out of the Google issue, but it may be too far into the saber-jangling season for that, with Barack Obama having announced fresh U.S. weapons sales to Taiwan in his State of the Union address.
Though Google’s stake in the Bus Online deal is said to be small, even smaller than the tiny investment this will be for media giant Disney, it could just be big enough to cause headaches for Mickey and Co.
Bus Online is leading China’s media and advertising charge into this busy area of mass transit. It had revenue of only about 314.5 million yuan ($46.07 million) in 2009, but is the exclusive partner of state broadcaster CCTV and the official Xinhua news agency media content in advertising on buses. Sources tell us that senior Disney executives are set to fly to Beijing to meet media regulators to discuss Mickey’s long-term development plan in China, including the Bus Online deal.
The consortium planned to buy a stake of between 30 and 40 percent in Bus Online for more than $100 million via a purchase of old and new shares to be issued by the company in private placements. In November, Disney made a breakthrough deal to build one of its signature theme parks in Shanghai, marking a major advance for Western media and entertainment companies seeking to crack the tough Chinese market. With Google aboard, though, will the wheels of that bus come to a political stop?