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Hertz Said to Be Close to Buying Dollar Thrifty

Hertz Global Holdings is near a deal to acquire the Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group for nearly $2.5 billion, according to a person briefed on the transaction, ending a fierce and protracted merger battle among the nation's largest car rental companies.

Under terms of the deal, which could be announced Monday, Hertz would pay $87.50 a share for Dollar Thrifty, according to this person, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

That would be a premium of about 7.5 percent to Dollar Thrifty's current share price. On Friday, shares of Dollar Thrifty, which is based in Tulsa, Okla., rose $1.32, or 1.7 percent, to $81.

Hertz, based in Park Ridge, N.J., has been pursuing Dollar Thrifty for more than two years.

The merger talks remain fluid and the deal could still fall apart, the individual briefed on the talks said. Discussions are expected to continue through the weekend.

Spokesmen for the two companies were not immediately available for comment.

A Hertz-Dollar Thrifty combination would end a merger battle in which the Avis Budget Group also tried to acquire Dollar Thrifty.

In 2010, Hertz tried to buy the company for $1.2 billion, but Dollar Thrifty shareholders rejected the bid. Hertz came back to the negotiating table this year as Dollar Thrifty's financial results sharply improved.

Hertz's performance has also been strong. Its stock, which has a market value of about $5.5 billion, has risen about 50 percent since October.

A deal in the rapidly consolidating rental car industry could raise concerns among antitrust regulators. To preemptively address those concerns, Hertz has said it was seeking approval from the Federal Trade Commission in Washington before striking a deal with Dollar Thrifty.

Both Hertz and Thrifty were once owned by the Detroit automakers. Ford owned Hertz and spun the unit off in a 2005 initial public offering. That same year it was acquired by a private equity conso rtium led by the Carlyle Group. In 2006, the private equity group again took Hertz public.

Chrysler once owned Thrifty and, in 1990, combined it with Dollar Rent A Car. The joint company was spun off in 1997.



Crowd-Funding Merger Points to Ambitions in Latin America

SAO PAULO - Buenos Aires-based crowd-funding site Ideame has acquired Brazilian company Movere, in a deal that may prompt more consolidation in this sector in Latin America.

One-year-old Ideame said it had acquired 100 percent of Movere's shares in exchange for 15 percent of Ideame's total stock value, approximately $ 2.5 million. Movere, based in Rio de Janeiro, is thought to be Brazil's second largest crowd-funding site.

While most Latin America's crowd-funding sites are country-specific, Ideame is trying to become a top player for the entire region. It started at the same time in Argentina, Chile, and Mexico.

The Ideame acquisition comes as the popularity and success of Kickstarter in the United States has been fueling the development of similar sites throughout the world.

Kickstarter, backed by Union Square Ventures, recently said that it would expand to Britain this year but for now it operates only in the United States. While anyone in th e world can fund projects on the site, only United States residents can create them because of the requirements of the payment provider, Amazon.com.

Kickstarter declined to comment if it had plans to expand to Latin America.

Ideame registered 117,000 total unique visitors in July, according to comScore data. (The company did not exist last July.) Brazil's leading crowd-sourcing site, Catarse, notched 104,000 from 21,000 in July 2011. In comparison, Kickstarters' Web traffic in Latin America grew to 194,000 last month, from 31,000 total unique visitors in July 2011.

Ideame was founded in 2011. One of the founders, Mariano Suarez Battan, previously founded Buenos Aires-based Three Melons, which was sold to Playdom in 2010 before The Walt Disney Company acquired Playdom. Another founder, Tiburcio de la Carcova co-founded Chile-based Atakama Labs, sold to Japan's DeNA last year.

The two other founders are Juan Pablo Cappello, a Chilean lawyer, and E duardo Costantini Jr., a filmmaker and son of the founder of the Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires, or Malba.

The company's investors, who have raised more than $1 million, include the founders and Lawence Benenson, who is with Benenson Capital Partners and a trustee at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

Others include Andy Kleinman, former head of Zynga's Latin America operations, and Wences Casares, Lemon co-founder and iconic figure for Latin American entrepreneurs.

Movere said in its first 15 months it received more than $300,000 in funds pledged. Out of 143 projects, 60 reached their funding goal. The two companies combined have $420,000 pledged.

Ideame had also initially registered in Brazil, contemplating growing here solo. But Mr. Cappello said in an interview that they ultimately decided that “ Brazil is not a market that goes well when you don't have a local presence.”

One challenge Ideame faces in becoming a regio nal crowd-funding player is integrating payment systems which vary from country to country.

For example, it uses Dineromail for Chile and Mexico, MercadoPago for Argentina, and MoIP for Brazil.

Rebecca Plofker, Ideame's business development head said in an interview that it now has an agreement with PayPal for transactions across countries and 20 percent of their contributions currently use the service, a figure she expects to increase.



Week in Review: A Defeat for Schapiro

EMI Music WEEK IN VERSE The Go-Gos remind the S.E.C. chairwoman that “it doesn't matter what they say”.

In an effort to curb money market funds, a Plan B is considered. | The New York Fed sold the last of its AIG bailout bonds. | Jesse Eisinger uncovered a TARP move itsn't helping taxpayers. | And Andrew Ross Sorkin said investors in health care are betting on President Obama. A look back on our reporting of the past week's highs and lows in finance.

“There's a lot that we know we don't know,” said Luis Aguilar of the Securities and Exchange Commission. And with that comment, the chairwoman of the S.E.C., Mary L. Schapiro, lost the crucial swing vote in her effort to make sweeping changes to the $2.6 trillion money market fund sector.

Regulators are are now huddling to discuss more modest alternatives. Peter Eavis and Nathaniel Popper explored the most likely next steps:

  1. A group of top regulators, the so-called Financial Stability Oversight Council, could vote on designating money market funds as systemically important, which would pave the way for stricter regulations.
  2. The Federal Reserve could limit the ability of banks to borrow from money market funds, which would reduce one of the riskiest holdings at many funds.
  3. The Fed could also make banks that run money market funds hold capital to protect against losses in the funds.

Best Buy Reports a 91% Drop in Second-Quarter Profit | The weakness could give Richard M. Schulze more leverage in his takeover dealings with management and directors, Michael J. de la Merced reported. DealBook '

Best Buy Names a Hospitality Executive as Its Chief | Investors seemed unhappy with the selection of Hubert Joly as C.E.O., as the stock tumbled. DealBook '

Aetna Agrees to Buy Rival in Deal Worth $5.7 Billion | “It is the latest deal in an industry that has been spurred to seek consolidation in part because of the Obama administration's sweeping expansion of health care coverage,” Mr. de la Merced reported. DealBook '

Market Operator Is Said to Be Extending Its Global Reach | “The CME Group is planning to start a European derivatives exchange, in a significant expansion of the American market operator's global footprint,” Mr. de la Merced reported. DealBook '

Private Equity Firms Stimulate Earnings and Deals in Post-Revolution Egypt | “With increased purchasing power, the country notched record high sales in consumer goods,” Sara Hamdan reported. DealBook '

In an Effort to Curb Money Market Funds, a Plan B Is Considered | After the Securities and Exchange Commission called off an overhaul, other regulators may have to rely on more modest alternatives, Mr. Eavis and Mr. Popper reported. DealBook '

New York Fed Sells Last of Its A.I.G. Bailout Bonds | “In all, such sales generated $9.4 billion for taxpayers,” Mr. de la Merced reported. The Treasury Department still owns a roughly 53 percent stake. DealBook '

The Trade: TARP Move Is No Plus for Taxpayer | Jesse Eisinger of ProPublica says that Treasury Department isn't getting great bids on some investments in small banks to the detriment of taxpayers. DealBook '

Why should healthy banks or hedge fund investors get a gift so that the Obama administration can score some political points by raising the number of banks that have left the program?

Deal Professor: Profits in G.M.A.C. Bailout to Benefit Financiers, Not U.S. | Stephen M. Davidoff says that the fitful housing recovery would be a good situation for Ally Financial to buy back assets in bankruptcy. But it will be private investors who will profit. DealBook '

That's the problem with companies being bailed out. They're no longer as entrepreneurial or risk-taking as they might be, and instead have to balance gains against a need to pay back the government.

DealBook Column: Investors in Health Care Seem to Bet on Incumbent | Andrew Ross Sorkin says that there is an argument to be made that investors are favoring President Obama to win. DealBook '

At a time when so many in the business community appear to be supporting Mr. Romney, it is telling that some businessmen and investors expect a different result - and are wagering more than rhetoric; they are staking their wallet on it.

Examining the Ponzi Scheme Through the Mind of the Con Artist | In her new book, Tamar Frankel, a legal scholar, explores the psychology of the financial criminals and what makes them tick. Diana B. Henriques provides a Q. and A. with the author. DealBook '



Regulatory SWAT Team May Have to Move Slowly on Money Funds

A SWAT team of top regulators was formed after the financial crisis to swoop in and stamp out big risks lurking in the financial system. Should the mutual fund industry fear this team as it tries to protect one of its biggest products from further reform?

The Securities Exchange Commission said Wednesday that it would have to drop its proposed overhaul of the money market mutual fund industry after it was a clear that a majority of its commissioners would not support the reforms. Investors use money market funds like banks accounts, a theoretically safe place to park cash for short-periods. But a large amount of investors fled the funds during the financial crisis in 2008. Regulators have therefore wanted to impose changes they think would prevent such runs.

After the S.E.C. defeat, regulators are contemplating pursuing money fund overhaul through the Financial Stability Oversight Council, a body composed mostly of the heads of essentially a super-committee of financial regulators. It was set up by the Dodd-Frank legislation to identify systemic risks that individual regulators may not have a grip on - and then set in motion moves to remove those risks. The council, which is chaired by Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner, has said that money funds are a concern, and backed the reforms scuttled at the S.E.C.

On paper, the council certainly has the freedom and power to take up money market funds, and then identify them as an area of risk.

“F.S.O.C. exists for this very circumstance,” said Dennis Kelleher, president of Better Markets, a lobbying group that has pushed for stronger financial regulation.

But the big question is whether the council has the resolve to go down untrodden paths and officially designate money funds as a risk, especially in the few months before the presidential election.

In some ways the council has to act. The Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve have both supported mo ney fund reform, saying they remain vulnerable. Therefore, failure to use the council would mean they were resigned to letting a systemic risk remain.

Conversely, they may balk when they think through what they have to do.

One concern in Washington may be that if the council takes up money funds, it would damage the standing of the funds' primary regulator, the S.E.C. Darrell Duffie, a professor of finance at Stanford University says the council should act on money funds, but he adds, “there would be a weakening of the S.E.C.”

Even though the council has freedom to label money funds a risk, its two main options present serious challenges. One is to designate the whole money fund industry as a risk. But the Dodd-Frank legislation effectively says that if the council recommended money fund reforms, the S.E.C., as the funds' primary regulator, would also have to sign off on them. The S.E.C.'s current commissioners might not vote for the recommendations. B ut another set might.

Another option: The council might designate individual money funds, or the companies that manage them, as systemically important. Those funds would then end up regulated by the Fed, which could decide to impose new rules.

But the council's members might worry that picking only some funds could create instability in the sector and create an unlevel playing field.

That would be something that the mutual fund companies would likely emphasize.

“Designating one money market fund as a significantly important financial institution won't accomplish much except destroy that one money market fund,” said Jay G. Baris, a lawyer at Morrison & Foerster, which has represented fund companies.

But Mr. Kelleher, who favors reforms, said the council could simply designate, say, the 100 largest funds as systemically important, which would mean regulation of most of the industry.

The opponents of the reforms acknowledge that the counc il has a lot of authority, but they say it will still need to present a thorough analysis of the costs and benefits of the reforms. The council “would not be able to operate arbitrarily without standards,” said Bob Kurucza, a partner at law firm Godwin Procter.

As a result, the council will likely move slowly and carefully. Not only will it need to build a detailed case for designating money funds as a risky sector, it will also want to make doubly sure that it properly fulfills its own procedures.

In other words, don't expect to see this SWAT team bursting into the money fund sector anytime soon â€" even if President Obama wins re-election.



Business Day Live: Drought Disrupts Everyday Tasks in Rural Midwest

For farmers, drought becomes a way of life. | Americans near retirement suffer big income losses. | James B. Stewart discusses Mitt Romney's foreign tax credit.

Permira to Buy Japanese Sushi Chain for About $1 Billion

The European private equity firm Permira has struck a deal to acquire a Japanese sushi restaurant chain, with plans to help it expand overseas.

The agreement values Akindo Sushiro, an Osaka-based operator of sushi bars in Japan, at roughly $1 billion including debt, Permira said in a statement. The private equity firm is buying a stake in Sushiro from Unison Capital, a Japanese rival.

The deal is among this year's largest private equity transactions in Japan. In June, Bain Capital agreed to buy 50 percent of a Japanese TV shopping company, Jupiter Shop Channel, for more than $1 billion.

For Permira, the deal is a significant foray into Japan, following its 2008 acquisition of Arysta Lifescience, an agrichemical company, for about $2.2 billion.

Akindo Sushiro, which was founded in 1984, ranked first among Japan's “revolving sushi” chains by sales last year, according to the company. Unison Capital came on board in 2007.

Permira “was attra cted to Sushiro's corporate vision of providing high quality sushi at attractive prices and sees ample potential in exporting Japan's food culture further,” Alex Emery, co-head of the firm's Asian business, said in a statement on Friday. “Sushiro has successfully grown over the last few years and has now become a very well-known and popular brand.”

Permira is betting it can take Sushiro beyond the growth it achieved on Unison's watch, seeing an opportunity to expand the chain into other countries.

“We believe that there is growing demand both in Japan and elsewhere for our value proposition,” Kenichi Toyosaki, Sushiro's chief executive, said in a statement.

Permira is making the purchase through Consumer Equity Investments Limited, an investment company based in Ireland that is backed by the private equity firm's funds. The acquiring company was advised by Nomura Securities.



Australian Magnate Abandons Bid for Whitehaven Coal

An effort to stage a buyout of Whitehaven Coal has fallen apart.

Nathan Tinkler, an Australian coal magnate, has abandoned a $5.4 billion bid for the coal mining company, amid investor concern about Australia's mining sector. Mr. Tinkler had offered 5.20 Australian dollars a share for the company in July ($5.29 at the time), at what was then a 50 percent premium.

Shares of Whitehaven dropped on Friday to close at 3.1 Australian dollars a share, 11 percent below Thursday's closing price.

Whitehaven had opened its books to Mr. Tinkler on July 23, giving him until Thursday this week to gather the resources for a bid. According to Reuters, which cites an unidentified person familiar with the deal, the billionaire was unable to line up enough equity financing.

“The due diligence period expired yesterday and Whitehaven has now been advised by the Tinkler Group that a formal binding proposal of $5.20 cash per share will not be forthcoming,” Whitehaven said in a statement on Friday. “Accordingly, the data room has been closed and the due diligence process has now ended.”

Mr. Tinkler has a history with Whitehaven, having amassed a 20 percent stake in the company after it bought Aston Resources, a coal company of which he was chairman, and Boardwalk Resources, another mining company he backed. This summer, he tried to parlay that stake into a bid for the entire company.

In July, Mr. Tinkler's bidding group said it had received support from roughly 48.3 percent of Whitehaven's shares, according to the mining company.

The effort came as investors have soured on Australia's mining sector, contributing to a fall in coal prices. Part of that concern stems from slowing economic growth in China, a major trading partner for Australia.



Morning Take-Out

TOP STORIES

Plan B Is Considered to Curb Money Market FundsPlan B Is Considered to Curb Money Market Funds  |  After the failure of one effort to overhaul a major part of the mutual fund industry, top government officials worked on Thursday to find alternative ways to rein in what they see as a systemic threat to the financial system.

Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner and other top regulators were given sweeping powers after the 2008 financial crisis that would allow them to force new rules on money market funds, a popular type of mutual fund that has taken some of the blame for the crisis. On Wednesday evening, the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Mary L. Schapiro, announced unexpectedly that she was calling off her agency's long-running effort to change rules for money funds.

Mr. Geithner and fellow regulators had urged the S.E.C. to act and could now use their new authority to shift oversight of the money market fund industry away from the S.E.C., a move that has few precedents. But after being surprised by the suddenness of the S.E.C.'s decision, numerous agencies were huddling to discuss whether they could carry out such bold moves or would have to rely on more modest alternatives, people with knowledge of the deliberations said.

Regulators and advocates of change were also dealing with the likelihood that an overhaul will now be much more difficult to achieve.
DealBook '

DEAL NOTES

Europe Turns Once Again to Debating Aid for Greece  |  The negotiations are seemin gly never-ending. This time, as European leaders decide how to provide more aid to Greece, political pressures have introduced the possibility that a third bailout of the struggling nation may not be an option, The New York Times writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

Lehman Brothers T-Shirt Becomes a Collector's Item  |  A line of canary yellow t-shirts dating to a tennis tournament hosted by Shearson Lehman in 1985 has commanded prices above $60 on eBay, Bloomberg Businessweek reports.
BLOOMBERG BUSINESSWEEK

Mergers & Acquisitions '

Kodak to Sell Legacy Film Units As Part of Bankruptcy Plan  |  Eastman Kodak said on Thursday that it planned to sell several legacy film units a nd focus on commercial printing as part of its plan to emerge from bankruptcy protection.
DealBook '

Qatar Fund Raises Stake in Xstrata  |  Qatar Holding, the sovereign wealth fund, has increased its stake in the mining company Xstrata to above 12 percent, as it continues to oppose the planned $30 billion takeover of Xstrata by Glencore International.
DealBook '

What the Sound and Fury Over Best Buy May Signify  |  Behind the squabbling between Best Buy and its founder, Richard M. Schulze, there is a mystery, the Deal Professor writes. What exactly is Mr. Schulze's strategy? And why is this fight public?
DealBook '

Permira to Buy Japan ese Restaurant Chain for $1 Billion  |  The European private equity firm Permira has agreed to buy Akindo Sushiro, a large Japanese sushi restaurant chain, for $1 billion including debt, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Olympus to Sell Mobile Business for $676 Million  |  Olympus said it would split a subsidiary in two and then sell the mobile phone retailing business to Japan Industrial Partners, an investment fund, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Australian Mogul Abandons Bid for Whitehaven  |  Nathan Tinkler, the Australian mining magnate, walked away from a planned $5.5 billion bid for Whitehaven Coal on Friday after being unable to line up financing, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Share Offering Stirs Speculation of Interest From Slim  |  The Polish fiber optic company Hawe said it would raise about $107 million by selling shares to an investor, fueling speculation that the billionaire Carlos Slim may be seeking a stake, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

INVESTMENT BANKING '

Morgan Stanley Mutual Funds Bet on Facebook  |  Mutual funds run by Morgan Stanley, the lead underwriter of Facebook's I.P.O., have a disproportionately high amount of exposure to the social network, The Wall Street Journal reports, citing the research firm Morningstar.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Bank of America Adds 4 Directors  |  Bank of America on Thursday appointed four new directors to its board in anticipation of several current board members stepping down after they reach retirement age.
DealBook '

JPMorgan's Former Leader Makes a Case for Big Banks  |  William B. Harrison Jr., a primary architect of the modern-day JPMorgan Chase, writes in an op-ed in The Times that the breakup of big banks would not prevent risky behaviors.
DealBook '

Swiss Private Bank Pushes Into Emerging Markets  |  With a deal to buy the non-American business of Merrill Lynch's International Wealth Management division, the Swiss bank Julius Bär is “changing the face of the once rather staid, f amily-dominated” institution, The Economist writes.
ECONOMIST

Small Banks Turn to Credit Cards  |  More small banks are issuing credit cards, putting excess deposits to work amid new regulations that make debit cards less profitable, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

PRIVATE EQUITY '

Private Equity Firms Stimulate Earnings and Deals in Egypt  |  Last year, a number of private equity-owned businesses in Egypt, in sectors like health care and power, increased their earnings by 40 percent or more, driven by surprising consumer spending.
DealBook '

Romney's Lessons From Bain Capital  |  In an op-ed essay in The Wall Street Journal, Mitt Romney describes his investments in Staples and other companies as leader of Bain Capital. He writes, “I'm not sure Bain Capital could have grown or turned around some of the companies we invested in had we faced today's anti-business environment.”
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Bain Capital Documents Show Details on Romney's Wealth  |  Internal documents from Bain Capital that were published by Gawker.com on Thursday include annual financial statements and investor letters distributed to limited partners in more than 20 Bain and related funds. Though the documents don't specify the stakes the Romney family held in the funds, they highlight the complexity of the presidential candidate's investments, The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES  |  GAWKER

Private Equity Boss in China Strikes an Upbeat Tone  |  Paul Song, managing partner at the Beijing Capital Growth Fund, who is trying to raise $100 million from foreign investors, says he isn't fazed by a fund-raising environment that has capital leaving China at its fastest pace since the financial crisis, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

HEDGE FUNDS '

Citigroup Private Bank Said to Ask Paulson for Its Money  |  The private bank of Citigroup is redeeming about $410 million from Paulson & Company, which recently has been contending with a disappointing run of losses, Bloomberg News reports, c iting two unidentified people familiar with the matter.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Ackman Urges Mall Owner to Consider a Sale  |  William A. Ackman of Pershing Square Capital Management, the second-largest shareholder of General Growth Properties, urged the mall operator to consider selling itself, and said in a regulatory filing that he had discussed the possibility of an acquisition with the Simon Property Group, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Activist Fund Pushes for a Sale of Ralcorp  |  Corvex Management, a hedge fund run by a former lieutenant of Carl Icahn, disclosed on Thursday a 5.13 percent stake in the food company Ralcorp and urged the company to put itself on the block, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Macro Fund Defies a Broader Slump  |  The BTG Pactual Global Emerging Markets and Macro Fund has returned 16 percent this year, drawing a sharp contrast with the other firms that invest in large economic trends, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS '

Facebook Tries to Make Money in a Small-Screen World  |  Facebook has “retooled and focused the company around mobile,” in the words of Mike Schroepfer, vice president for engineering for the social network. The move entails risks - mobile ads bring in less money than standard Web ads - and Wall Street is paying close attention to the company's ability to reorient itself, The New Y ork Times writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

Facebook Strikes a Deal for Payments on the Go  |  The social network is partnering with Bango, a British company, in a payment tool that could help Facebook in its effort to make money from mobile devices, the Bits blog writes.
NEW YORK TIMES BITS

UBS Also Urges S.E.C. to Reject Nasdaq's Proposal  |  UBS is the latest financial firm to shoot down Nasdaq's $62 million proposal to compensate customers who lost money during Facebook's bungled initial public offering.
DealBook '

Groupon Executive to Leave the Company  |  Lee Brown, who oversees national sales at Gr oupon, plans to follow other senior executives out the door, Reuters reports, citing an internal memo.
REUTERS

Santander Said to Plan Mexican Listing for September  |  Banco Santander of Spain has set a date of Sept. 25 for the I.P.O. of its Mexican unit, looking to raise between $3 billion and $4 billion, Reuters reports, citing an unidentified person close to the deal.
REUTERS

VENTURE CAPITAL '

New York Sets Up an Entity to Oversee Tech Projects  |  The New York Times reports: “Scalded by scandal, cost overruns and embarrassments in some of its most ambitious computerization efforts, the Bloomberg administration has hit upon on a new remedy: outsourcing such projects to a new quasi-governmental entity that will operate free of the usual city procurement rules, salary limits and legislative oversight.”
NEW YORK TIMES

Start-Ups Gain Favor as Technology Vendors  |  Businesses in need of technology are finding that start-ups can be more responsive to customers and quicker to embrace new models than the giants of the industry, The Wall Street Journal writes.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Venture Capitalist Affirms a Focus on Mobile  |  John Lilly, a partner at the venture capital firm Greylock Partners, told The Deal, “there will be more and more companies that get bought that are mobile-first or mobile-only.”
THE DEAL

LEGAL/REGULATORY '

Fallout Continues at Vietnamese Bank  |  The arrest of a second former executive of Asia Commercial Bank is the latest twist in a banking scandal that has prompted Vietnam's central bank to help fend off a run on deposits.
DealBook '

New York Fed Sells Off Last A.I.G.-Related Holdings  |  The Federal Reserve Bank of New York said on Thursday that it had wound down the final remnant of its rescue of the American International Group, generating a multibillion-dollar profit in the process.
DealBook '

More Bad Marks for Auditors  |  Floyd Norris writes in his column in The New York Tim es: “Are audits getting worse? Or are the inspectors getting pickier? Those would seem to be two possible explanations of a trend that looks very bad.”
NEW YORK TIMES

Latinos in Queens Claim to Be Victims of Ponzi Scheme  |  A group of about 400 investors in Queens, mostly immigrants from Latin America, say they were betrayed in a Ponzi scheme that robbed them of at least a combined $10 million, The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

Creditors of Bankrupt City Challenge Sanctity of Pensions  |  Creditors of the city of Stockton, Calif., are arguing that the city is not treating all of its bankruptcy creditors equitably because it is still funding its workers' pensions, The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

Apple and Samsung Penalized by South Korean Court  |  A court in South Korea ruled on Friday that Apple and Samsung Electronics both infringed on each other's patents, and ordered a ban of some of their products in the country, The Associated Press reports.
ASSOCIATED PRESS



Morning Take-Out

TOP STORIES

Plan B Is Considered to Curb Money Market FundsPlan B Is Considered to Curb Money Market Funds  |  After the failure of one effort to overhaul a major part of the mutual fund industry, top government officials worked on Thursday to find alternative ways to rein in what they see as a systemic threat to the financial system.

Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner and other top regulators were given sweeping powers after the 2008 financial crisis that would allow them to force new rules on money market funds, a popular type of mutual fund that has taken some of the blame for the crisis. On Wednesday evening, the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Mary L. Schapiro, announced unexpectedly that she was calling off her agency's long-running effort to change rules for money funds.

Mr. Geithner and fellow regulators had urged the S.E.C. to act and could now use their new authority to shift oversight of the money market fund industry away from the S.E.C., a move that has few precedents. But after being surprised by the suddenness of the S.E.C.'s decision, numerous agencies were huddling to discuss whether they could carry out such bold moves or would have to rely on more modest alternatives, people with knowledge of the deliberations said.

Regulators and advocates of change were also dealing with the likelihood that an overhaul will now be much more difficult to achieve.
DealBook '

DEAL NOTES

Europe Turns Once Again to Debating Aid for Greece  |  The negotiations are seemin gly never-ending. This time, as European leaders decide how to provide more aid to Greece, political pressures have introduced the possibility that a third bailout of the struggling nation may not be an option, The New York Times writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

Lehman Brothers T-Shirt Becomes a Collector's Item  |  A line of canary yellow t-shirts dating to a tennis tournament hosted by Shearson Lehman in 1985 has commanded prices above $60 on eBay, Bloomberg Businessweek reports.
BLOOMBERG BUSINESSWEEK

Mergers & Acquisitions '

Kodak to Sell Legacy Film Units As Part of Bankruptcy Plan  |  Eastman Kodak said on Thursday that it planned to sell several legacy film units a nd focus on commercial printing as part of its plan to emerge from bankruptcy protection.
DealBook '

Qatar Fund Raises Stake in Xstrata  |  Qatar Holding, the sovereign wealth fund, has increased its stake in the mining company Xstrata to above 12 percent, as it continues to oppose the planned $30 billion takeover of Xstrata by Glencore International.
DealBook '

What the Sound and Fury Over Best Buy May Signify  |  Behind the squabbling between Best Buy and its founder, Richard M. Schulze, there is a mystery, the Deal Professor writes. What exactly is Mr. Schulze's strategy? And why is this fight public?
DealBook '

Permira to Buy Japan ese Restaurant Chain for $1 Billion  |  The European private equity firm Permira has agreed to buy Akindo Sushiro, a large Japanese sushi restaurant chain, for $1 billion including debt, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Olympus to Sell Mobile Business for $676 Million  |  Olympus said it would split a subsidiary in two and then sell the mobile phone retailing business to Japan Industrial Partners, an investment fund, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Australian Mogul Abandons Bid for Whitehaven  |  Nathan Tinkler, the Australian mining magnate, walked away from a planned $5.5 billion bid for Whitehaven Coal on Friday after being unable to line up financing, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Share Offering Stirs Speculation of Interest From Slim  |  The Polish fiber optic company Hawe said it would raise about $107 million by selling shares to an investor, fueling speculation that the billionaire Carlos Slim may be seeking a stake, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

INVESTMENT BANKING '

Morgan Stanley Mutual Funds Bet on Facebook  |  Mutual funds run by Morgan Stanley, the lead underwriter of Facebook's I.P.O., have a disproportionately high amount of exposure to the social network, The Wall Street Journal reports, citing the research firm Morningstar.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Bank of America Adds 4 Directors  |  Bank of America on Thursday appointed four new directors to its board in anticipation of several current board members stepping down after they reach retirement age.
DealBook '

JPMorgan's Former Leader Makes a Case for Big Banks  |  William B. Harrison Jr., a primary architect of the modern-day JPMorgan Chase, writes in an op-ed in The Times that the breakup of big banks would not prevent risky behaviors.
DealBook '

Swiss Private Bank Pushes Into Emerging Markets  |  With a deal to buy the non-American business of Merrill Lynch's International Wealth Management division, the Swiss bank Julius Bär is “changing the face of the once rather staid, f amily-dominated” institution, The Economist writes.
ECONOMIST

Small Banks Turn to Credit Cards  |  More small banks are issuing credit cards, putting excess deposits to work amid new regulations that make debit cards less profitable, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

PRIVATE EQUITY '

Private Equity Firms Stimulate Earnings and Deals in Egypt  |  Last year, a number of private equity-owned businesses in Egypt, in sectors like health care and power, increased their earnings by 40 percent or more, driven by surprising consumer spending.
DealBook '

Romney's Lessons From Bain Capital  |  In an op-ed essay in The Wall Street Journal, Mitt Romney describes his investments in Staples and other companies as leader of Bain Capital. He writes, “I'm not sure Bain Capital could have grown or turned around some of the companies we invested in had we faced today's anti-business environment.”
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Bain Capital Documents Show Details on Romney's Wealth  |  Internal documents from Bain Capital that were published by Gawker.com on Thursday include annual financial statements and investor letters distributed to limited partners in more than 20 Bain and related funds. Though the documents don't specify the stakes the Romney family held in the funds, they highlight the complexity of the presidential candidate's investments, The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES  |  GAWKER

Private Equity Boss in China Strikes an Upbeat Tone  |  Paul Song, managing partner at the Beijing Capital Growth Fund, who is trying to raise $100 million from foreign investors, says he isn't fazed by a fund-raising environment that has capital leaving China at its fastest pace since the financial crisis, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

HEDGE FUNDS '

Citigroup Private Bank Said to Ask Paulson for Its Money  |  The private bank of Citigroup is redeeming about $410 million from Paulson & Company, which recently has been contending with a disappointing run of losses, Bloomberg News reports, c iting two unidentified people familiar with the matter.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Ackman Urges Mall Owner to Consider a Sale  |  William A. Ackman of Pershing Square Capital Management, the second-largest shareholder of General Growth Properties, urged the mall operator to consider selling itself, and said in a regulatory filing that he had discussed the possibility of an acquisition with the Simon Property Group, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Activist Fund Pushes for a Sale of Ralcorp  |  Corvex Management, a hedge fund run by a former lieutenant of Carl Icahn, disclosed on Thursday a 5.13 percent stake in the food company Ralcorp and urged the company to put itself on the block, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Macro Fund Defies a Broader Slump  |  The BTG Pactual Global Emerging Markets and Macro Fund has returned 16 percent this year, drawing a sharp contrast with the other firms that invest in large economic trends, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS '

Facebook Tries to Make Money in a Small-Screen World  |  Facebook has “retooled and focused the company around mobile,” in the words of Mike Schroepfer, vice president for engineering for the social network. The move entails risks - mobile ads bring in less money than standard Web ads - and Wall Street is paying close attention to the company's ability to reorient itself, The New Y ork Times writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

Facebook Strikes a Deal for Payments on the Go  |  The social network is partnering with Bango, a British company, in a payment tool that could help Facebook in its effort to make money from mobile devices, the Bits blog writes.
NEW YORK TIMES BITS

UBS Also Urges S.E.C. to Reject Nasdaq's Proposal  |  UBS is the latest financial firm to shoot down Nasdaq's $62 million proposal to compensate customers who lost money during Facebook's bungled initial public offering.
DealBook '

Groupon Executive to Leave the Company  |  Lee Brown, who oversees national sales at Gr oupon, plans to follow other senior executives out the door, Reuters reports, citing an internal memo.
REUTERS

Santander Said to Plan Mexican Listing for September  |  Banco Santander of Spain has set a date of Sept. 25 for the I.P.O. of its Mexican unit, looking to raise between $3 billion and $4 billion, Reuters reports, citing an unidentified person close to the deal.
REUTERS

VENTURE CAPITAL '

New York Sets Up an Entity to Oversee Tech Projects  |  The New York Times reports: “Scalded by scandal, cost overruns and embarrassments in some of its most ambitious computerization efforts, the Bloomberg administration has hit upon on a new remedy: outsourcing such projects to a new quasi-governmental entity that will operate free of the usual city procurement rules, salary limits and legislative oversight.”
NEW YORK TIMES

Start-Ups Gain Favor as Technology Vendors  |  Businesses in need of technology are finding that start-ups can be more responsive to customers and quicker to embrace new models than the giants of the industry, The Wall Street Journal writes.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Venture Capitalist Affirms a Focus on Mobile  |  John Lilly, a partner at the venture capital firm Greylock Partners, told The Deal, “there will be more and more companies that get bought that are mobile-first or mobile-only.”
THE DEAL

LEGAL/REGULATORY '

Fallout Continues at Vietnamese Bank  |  The arrest of a second former executive of Asia Commercial Bank is the latest twist in a banking scandal that has prompted Vietnam's central bank to help fend off a run on deposits.
DealBook '

New York Fed Sells Off Last A.I.G.-Related Holdings  |  The Federal Reserve Bank of New York said on Thursday that it had wound down the final remnant of its rescue of the American International Group, generating a multibillion-dollar profit in the process.
DealBook '

More Bad Marks for Auditors  |  Floyd Norris writes in his column in The New York Tim es: “Are audits getting worse? Or are the inspectors getting pickier? Those would seem to be two possible explanations of a trend that looks very bad.”
NEW YORK TIMES

Latinos in Queens Claim to Be Victims of Ponzi Scheme  |  A group of about 400 investors in Queens, mostly immigrants from Latin America, say they were betrayed in a Ponzi scheme that robbed them of at least a combined $10 million, The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

Creditors of Bankrupt City Challenge Sanctity of Pensions  |  Creditors of the city of Stockton, Calif., are arguing that the city is not treating all of its bankruptcy creditors equitably because it is still funding its workers' pensions, The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

Apple and Samsung Penalized by South Korean Court  |  A court in South Korea ruled on Friday that Apple and Samsung Electronics both infringed on each other's patents, and ordered a ban of some of their products in the country, The Associated Press reports.
ASSOCIATED PRESS



Fallout Continues at Vietnamese Bank

HONG KONGâ€"Police in Vietnam have arrested the former head of one the country's biggest banks, official media said Friday, as the fallout from a banking scandal continues to spread.

The ministry of public security's investigation department arrested Ly Xuan Hai, who had resigned as general director of the Asia Commercial Bank, ‘‘for allegedly violating state regulations on economic management leading to serious consequences,'' the official Vietnam News Service reported on Friday.

The arrest of Mr. Hai, 47, which took place on Thursday when police also searched his home and office, is the latest development in a brewing banking scandal that has already this week toppled a cofounder of the bank, prompted a broad sell-off in Vietnam's stock market and forced the Communist-run country's central bank to step in and help fend off a run on deposits at Asia Commercial Bank.

The trouble at the bank began on Tuesday, when news broke that authorities on Monday had arrested its cofounder and former vice chairman, Nguyen Duc Kien, an influential local businessman who retained stakes in several banks and other businesses and who is also a soccer aficionado that served as the general manager of the Hanoi Football Club.

Asia Commercial Bank, in which Mr. Kien, 48, retains a stake but no longer has any management role, had attempted to distance itself from his arrest for what it described as ‘‘his own personal wrongdoings in business.''

The bank, 15 percent owned by the British bank Standard Chartered, 7.3 percent by the Hong Kong-based conglomerate Jardine Matheson Holdings and 6.8 percent by the Vietnam-focused investment and fund manager Dragon Capital, said in a statement Tuesday that the arrest of Mr. Kien ‘‘has no impact on A.C.B.'s financial position, its decision-making process and its operations.''

But despite that reassurance, pledges of liquidity from the central bank and calls for calm from the sec urities regulator, investors and customers fled.

By Friday, shares in the bank had fallen 16 percent over the previous week. The broader Ho Chi Minh Stock Index also fell, ending the week down 7.8 percent as companies associated with Mr. Kien were especially hard hit.

Customers lined up to withdraw their money from the bank's branches on several days during the week. The new bank chief Do Minh Toan, appointed to replace Mr. Hai, told state media that customers withdrew around 5 trillion Vietnamese dong, or $240 million, worth of deposits on Wednesday alone. The bank had 146 trillion dong in customer deposits at the end of June, according to filings.