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What\'s at Issue in the Private Equity Tax Inquiry

The New York attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, is said to be investigating private equity firms' use of a tax strategy known as management fee waiver programs.

Fee waivers are complicated. The main tax strategy is to turn fees, which are normally taxed as ordinary income, into low-taxed capital gains. But another way to understand the strategy is to look at the overall economic benefit of the deal. At issue is whether, through these Byzantine programs, private equity executives are improperly using pretax dollars, rather than after-tax dollars, to invest in their own funds.

Fee waiver programs are a little different from the basic carried interest loophole, which allows returns from an executive's profits interest in a partnership to be taxed as if it were investment income rather than labor income. For one thing, reporting carried interest income as a capital gain, while unseemly, is perfectly legal.

Fee waiver programs, by contrast, are legal ly questionable and might not hold up if challenged in court.

Here's how such a program works. A private equity executive typically has three source of income: management fees, carried interest and investment income from the executive's own investment in the fund. The management fee is received through an affiliate of the fund and is taxed to the executive at ordinary income rates - the top federal income tax rate of 35 percent, plus a 3.8 percent Medicaid tax, plus another 10 percent or more of state and local income tax (which is presumably why the state attorney general is interested). Call it a combined rate of 50 percent.

Carried interest is held by the executive through the general partner of the fund, and it is taxed at the 15 percent long-term capital gains rate. The executive is also required to co-invest some amount alongside the limited partner investors in the fund. This general partner co-investment often ranges from 1 percent to 5 percent of the fund, and returns are taxed at capital gains rates.

A fee waiver program is often used to pay for the general partner's co-investment obligation with waived management fees rather than cash. Each quarter or year, as the management fee comes due, the managers can elect to take the cash, or, if markets are looking good, waive the fee. The waived amount can then be used to satisfy the executive's investment in one of the fund's portfolio companies. To make the tax magic (allegedly) work, the waived amount must be eventually be made up from future profits in the fund. If the fund never has additional profits, the limited partners can theoretically try to claw back the cash from the waived fee amounts.

The risk is mostly theoretical because the waived fee amounts are offset from priority allocations from the fund in any accounting period, even if the fund loses money overall.

And while the general partner can be asked to contribute cash when the fund winds d own, the individual executives do not typically guarantee the partnership's obligations on this amount, and the limited partners, who would have paid the management fee in any event, have no reason to pursue a legal claim.

These fee waiver programs are risky from a tax perspective. Because the management company is not a partner in the fund, the usual “safe harbor” for carried interest, I.R.S. Revenue Procedure 93-27, does not seem to apply. Even if it did, a court would probably treat the waived fee amount as ordinary income under section 707(a)(2)(A), which Congress passed in 1984 to deal with exactly this kind of situation where a partner is acting in its capacity as a service provider to the partnership.

To see the value of this strategy, think about investing with pretax versus after-tax dollars. Suppose Jill works at an investment bank, and her employer pays her a year-end bonus of $500,000. The bonus is taxed at a combined state and federal rate of 50 percent, leaving her with $250,000 to invest. She invests that $250,000 in her friend Jack's private equity fund, and the investment doubles in value over five years. The $250,000 of new gain is taxed at the 15 percent long-term capital gains rate, leaving her with $212,500 and an overall after-tax amount of $462,500.

Now consider Jack, who works at the private equity fund. To satisfy his co-investment obligation, Jack must invest in the fund. Under a fee waiver program, he waives $500,000 of his portion of the management fee and credits his capital account with that amount. After the $500,000 doubles over five years, and is then taxed on the full amount at capital gains rates on the back end, Jack walks away with $850,000 - roughly 84 percent better off than Jill, who invested with after-tax dollars.

(For further reading, see Gregg Polsky's 2008 paper, “Private Equity Management Fee Conversions.“)

Victor Fleischer is a pr ofessor at the University of Colorado Law School, where he teaches partnership tax, tax policy and deals. His research focuses on how tax affects the structuring of venture capital, private equity, and corporate transactions.



In UBS Convictions, Parallels to the Libor Investigation

The conviction on Friday of three former UBS executives on conspiracy and wire fraud charges for rigging bids in the municipal bond market may serve as a template for how prosecutors can pursue cases in the manipulation of the London interbank offered rate, or Libor.

In the UBS case, federal prosecutors were able to obtain the convictions involving an arcane area of the financial markets. The accusations involve various bankers colluding in setting interest rates at the expense of investors and borrowers.

That certainly has parallels to the Libor inquiry as more banks are investigated in the submission of false information for the benchmark rate used in trillions of dollars of loans and bonds worldwide.

In the UBS case, three of the bank's former executives were accused of working with brokers at other firms to rig bids submitted to local governments and agencies to invest the proceeds of their bond offerings. By lowering the interest rate paid on the i nvestment contracts, the firms were able to generate higher returns.

The defendants were also charged with accepting kickbacks from firms in exchange for steering business their way. The government relied on recordings and e-mails to establish its case, along with cooperating witnesses who had entered guilty pleas.

Although this type of collusion can violate the antitrust laws, federal prosecutors centered their case on the wire fraud statute because it provides a longer prison term and has a longer statute of limitations to pursue charges. A defendant convicted of an antitrust violation can receive a sentence of up to 10 years, while wire fraud that affects a financial institution authorizes a maximum 30-year prison term.

The defendants raised the statute of limitations issue in trying to get their case dismissed; the transactions occurred primarily from 2001 to 2004, and the defendants were not charged until late 2010.

Under federal law, most char ges must be filed within five years of the conduct. The UBS defendants asked the United States District Court in Manhattan to dismiss some counts on those grounds. A law adopted in 1990 during the savings and loan crisis, however, expanded the statute of limitations to 10 years for banking crimes and any violation of the wire fraud statute that affects a financial institution.

An opinion by Judge Kimba M. Wood, who presided over the case, took a broad view of what affects a financial institution. As a result, she concluded that the longer limitations period applied to the UBS case.

Although the victims were state and local governments - which do not qualify as financial institutions - she found that settlements affected UBS and other banks because they paid fines and civil penalties to resolve their cases. Although it was the defendants' own conduct that impacted the financial institutions, their violations were enough to extend the limitations period to 10 yea rs.

The case against the three former UBS executives has a number of interesting parallels to the Libor investigation, providing the framework for prosecutions that might emerge.

One of the defendants, Peter Ghavami, a Belgian who had been head of an investment bank in Moscow, was arrested in December 2010 at Kennedy Airport. In the Libor case, a number of banks are outside the United States, so individuals who might be involved should be wary about traveling to this country because of the risk that they could be detained.

The $450 million settlement by Barclays in the Libor investigation means that a financial institution was affected by the submission of false interest rates for setting Libor. The Justice Department and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission are investigating other banks for their role in manipulating Libor, so we can expect additional settlements that are likely to include substantial monetary penalties.

That means federal pros ecutors can rely on the 10-year limitations period because manipulation of Libor affected a financial institution, opening a much wider window for charging individuals for violations.

The Barclays settlement details a number of communications in 2005 and 2006 by traders at the bank seeking to have its Libor submissions manipulated to benefit their investment positions. Among the statements was one in which a person responsible for submitting information for Libor told a trader “Always happy to help, leave it with me, Sir,” and another saying “Done . . . for you big boy.”

The settlement outlining the violations notes that the Barclays traders also colluded with counterparts at other banks to manipulate the Libor submissions, and that they “made the requests in person, via e-mail, and through electronic ‘chats'.”
As in the UBS case, prosecutors can pursue charges for violating the wire fraud statute at the banks because e-mail and instant messag ing almost always involve interstate transmissions via the Internet.

The definition of an interstate wire transmission has also been broadly construed by the federal courts, making wire fraud particularly useful in cases involving manipulation of information. The communication does not have to be important to the execution of the fraud so long as it was a step in the process, which can include a confirmation like telling “big boy” that the false information had been submitted. A defendant need not even be the one sending or receiving the interstate wire for a violation, or have any knowledge that the communication crossed state lines.

The federal sentencing guidelines recommend substantial penalties for fraud convictions based on the amount of the loss suffered by victims. Because Libor is so important to the loan and debt markets, the potential impact of even a small variation in the rate could trigger enormous losses. Federal judges do not have to make precise calculations when assessing the loss, or even a potential loss. A recommended sentence for manipulating Libor could easily reach 20 years or more.

The conviction of the former UBS executives shows that prosecutors can win a case involving complex transactions and sophisticated financial issues under the wire fraud statute. That is likely to encourage the Justice Department to pursue cases from the manipulation of Libor against individuals for conduct that took place in the last 10 years.

US v Ghavami Statute of Limitations Opinion July 2012

Peter J. Henning, who writes White Collar Watch for DealBook, is a professor at Wayne State University Law School.



Business Day Live: How Plan to Help a City Pay Pensions Backfired

Examining the advertising industry's lack of diversity. | A look at America's financial illiteracy. | How a plan to pay city pensions in California backfired.

Valeant Continues Its String of Acquisitions

Valeant Pharmaceuticals International has not been afraid to spend its cash.

In its latest deal, the Canadian health care company forked out $2.6 billion late on Monday to buy Medicis Pharmaceutical, a skincare business based in Arizona.

The announcement follows a succession of acquisitions by Valeant since the company merged with rival Biovail of Canada in a $3.2 billion deal in 2010.

The company has picked up assets in emerging economies like Russia and Brazil, as well as specialty pharmaceuticals firms across North America. In total, Valeant already has announced 11 acquisitions so far this year.

The deals include the $180 million deal for Natur Produkt International of Russia, a cough and cold pharmaceuticals provider, and the $64 million deal for a number of assets from University Medical Pharmaceuticals, a skincare company.

The deal for Medicis would help Valeant to expand its presence in in the world of specialty health care. The acqu isition, which is expected to close by June 2013, will strengthen the company's market share in the skincare industry, according to a company statement.

“The acquisition of Medicis represents a significant next step in our journey to become the leader in dermatology,” Valeant's chief executive, J. Michael Pearson, said in a statement.

In trading on the New York Stock Exchange early Tuesday morning, Valeant shares rose more than 13 percent.

Not every proposed deal, however, has been successful for Valeant. Early this year, the Canadian pharmaceuticals company withdrew its $360 million offer for ISTA Pharmaceuticals, while Valeant also failed in its $5.7 billion bid last year for the biotech firm Cephalon.

The global recession has hurt merger activity, but the health care industry has still seen a steady flow of deals, though it is down somewhat from 2011. The total value of deals has reached $111.8 billion so far this year, according to the data pr ovider Thomson Reuters.

The spate of activity comes as health care companies look to take advantage of an aging population that analysts expect will continue to spend money on pharmaceuticals and other healthcare products.

Last month, the health insurance company Aetna announced that it would buy Coventry Health Care for about $5.7 billion in cash and stock. Aetna said the move would help it expand further into government-backed programs like Medicaid and Medicare.

In July, the health insurer WellPoint also agreed to buy Amerigroup for about $4.9 billion in a bid to increase its presence in the markets for the government-backed medical programs.

Many of the acquisitions have come as companies look to take advantage of a slump in targets' share prices in the wake of the economic slowdown.

Following a lengthy stand-off, for example, the British drug maker GlaxoSmithKline agreed in July to buy the biopharmaceutical company Human Genome Sciences for about $3 billion.

Shares in the company had fallen around 75 percent in the 12 months before the proposed deal was first announced.



Santander Seeks $4.2 Billion I.P.O. of Its Mexican Unit

LONDON â€" The Spanish bank Banco Santander said on Tuesday that it was looking to raise as much as $4.2 billion through the initial public offering of its Mexican unit.

The listing would be one of the largest ever I.P.O.'s in Mexico, and comes as the Latin American country's economy continues to grow on the back of strong local demand. At the same time, American depository receipts of the unit would list on the New York Stock Exchange.

The Madrid-based bank is planning to sell as much as 24.9 percent of Grupo Financiero Santander México, and has set the price range of between 29.00 pesos ($2.20) and 33.50 ($2.55) pesos a share, according to a regulatory filing released on Tuesday. Around 20 percent of the shares would be offered to Mexican investors, while the remaining stake would be sold to international investors.

The Mexican subsidiary is the country's fourth largest bank, based on assets, and had a total of $25 billion of outstanding loans, as of t he end of June.

The Spanish bank said a three-week roadshow for investors would start on Tuesday, and shares in Grupo Financiero Santander México would begin to trade in Mexico and New York by the end of September.

“We want to continue playing a part in the growth of Mexico,” Santander's chairman, Emilio Botín, said in a statement. “Our goal is to list our most significant subsidiaries within five years,”

Money raised from the listing would help to strengthen Santander's capital reserves, according to a company statement. The Spanish bank has suffered from a struggling domestic market, which has buffetted by the European debt crisis.

Banco Santander reported a 93 percent drop in second-quarter profit, to 100 million euros ($126 million) as the Spanish bank set aside more money to cover bad loans in its home market.

Santander, UBS, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Deutsche Bank are coordinating the I.P.O.



Dick Clark Productions Sold to Guggenheim Partners

Dick Clark Productions, the company that produces the Golden Globe awards show and the New Year's Eve broadcast hosted for nearly 40 years by its late founder, was sold Tuesday to Guggenheim Partners and a group of investors.

Guggenheim, an upstart Wall Street firm, teamed up with a pair of multimedia investors to buy the production company for an undisclosed sum. A person briefed on the matter said the deal was for about $370 million.

In 2007, RedZone Capital Management bought Dick Clark Productions from another investment group for $175 million. Mr. Clark, the legendary broadcaster who died in April, had no ownership role in the company.

”We're thrilled about the transaction with Guggenheim Partners,” Mark Shapiro, chief executive of Dick Clark Productions, said in statement, adding that “Dick Clark and his legacy will surely be in good hands.”

The deal also involved Mandalay Entertainment and Mosaic Media Investment Partners, a collection of investment partners who specialize in entertainment companies. The group is led by Allen Shapiro, the former chief executive of Dick Clark Productions and current chairman of TV Guide Network and TVGuide.com.

The 55-year-old company, which also produces several other TV shows including “So You Think You Can Dance” and the American Music Awards, put itself on the market in June. In response to an expression of interest from a Chinese media company, it hired the Raine Group, a boutique investment bank, to run the sales process. At the time, likely suitors also included several private equity firms.

After weeks of negotiation, Guggenheim emerged as the likely winner. It was the second major deal for the firm this year, after it become majority owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers in March.

“We look forward to continuing DCP's production of branded entertainment that has become a part of the American lexicon,” Todd Boehly, President of Guggenheim Partne rs, said in a statement.

The deal follows a significant court victory, in which a federal judge ruled that the company could keep the Golden Globes show airing on NBC through 2018. The company clashed with the sponsor of the awards, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, which claimed that Dick Clark Productions should have consulted with it before reaching the NBC deal.

In the statement, Mr. Boehly promised to “work closely with the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the Academy of Country Music and all of the network partners and sponsors to ensure” the company's “long-term growth and success.”

The deal, which the new owners expect to complete “expeditiously” must still receive regulatory approval.

Guggenheim Securities was the sole financial adviser to the investors, while legal counsel was provided by Weil, Gotshal & Manges.



Morning Take-Out

TOP STORIES

The Man Behind Facebook's I.P.O. DebacleThe Man Behind Facebook's I.P.O. Debacle  |  It is David Ebersman's fault, Andrew Ross Sorkin writes in the DealBook column. There is just no way around it.

Mr. Ebersman is Facebook's well-liked, boyish-looking 41-year-old chief financial officer. He's not as well known as Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook's founder and chief executive, or Sheryl Sandberg, its chief operating officer and recently appointed director.

But when it came to Facebook's catastrophe of an initial public offering - the stock reached a new low on Friday, closing at $18.06 - it was Mr. Ebersman, not Mr. Zuckerberg or Ms. Sandberg, who was ultimately the one pulling the strings.
DealBook '

Multinationals Stake a Claim in Venture CapitalMultinationals Stake a Claim in Venture Capital  |  New York, London and Hong Kong are common addresses for blue-chip multinationals. Now Silicon Valley is, too.

From downtown San Francisco to Palo Alto, companies like American Express and Ford are opening offices and investing millions of dollars in local start-ups. This year, American Express opened a venture capital office in Facebook's old headquarters in downtown Palo Alto. Less than three miles away, General Motors' research lab houses full-time investment professionals, recent transplants from Detroit.

“American Express is a 162-year-old company, and this is a moment of transformation,” said Harshul Sanghi, a managing partner at American Express Ventures, the venture capital arm of the financial company. “We're here to be a part of the fabric of innovation.”

The companies are raising their profiles in Silicon Valley at a shaky time for the broader venture capital industry. While top players like Andreessen Horowitz and Accel Partners have grown bigger, most venture capital firms are struggling with anemic returns.
DealBook '

DEAL NOTES

A Pivotal Week for Europe's Central Bank Leader  |  Although investors are counting on bold action when the European Central Bank meets on Thursday, analysts say Mario Draghi, the bank's president, could have a far harder time reconciling the expectations of twitchy financial markets with the limitations of his power.
DealBook '

U.S. Companies Ready if Greeks Drop Euro  |  Even as Greece desperately tries to avoid defaulting on its debt, American companies are preparing for what was once unthinkable: that Greece could soon be forced to leave the euro zone.
DealBook '

Moody's Lowers Outlook for Europe  |  Moody's Investors Service reduced its outlook for the European Union's AAA long-term credit rating, saying even the Continent's strong nations were exposed to the debt crisis.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Financial Villains Take Center Stage  |  Two new movies, “Arbitrage” and “Cosmopolis,” feature troubled financiers. Why the focus on Wall Street? David Cronenberg, the director of “Cosmopolis,” told The New York Times that financial villainy, with its ability to affect people around the globe, has a “dangerous scope.”
NEW YORK TIMES

Mergers & Acquisitions '

Valeant to Buy Maker of Dermatology Drugs  |  The Canadian drug giant Valeant Pharmaceuticals International said it had agreed to buy Medicis Pharmaceutical, which makes drugs to fight wrinkles and acne, for about $2.6 billion. The amount represents a 39 percent premium to Medicis's closing price on Aug. 31.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Ahold Weighs Sale of Stake in ICA of Sweden  |  The Dutch retailer Ahold says it is considering options fo r its 60 percent stake in the Swedish supermarket chain ICA, including selling its holding.
DealBook '

Guggenheim Said to Be Buying Dick Clark Productions  |  Guggenheim Partners has agreed to buy Dick Clark Productions for an amount that could not be determined, The Wall Street Journal reports, citing an unidentified person familiar with the matter. An announcement is expected for Tuesday morning.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

American Airlines Parent to Open Books to U.S. Airways  |  AMR Corp., the parent company of American Airlines, agreed to open up its books to US Airways Group. The non-disclosure agreement could pave the way for US Airways to buy the bankrupt airline.
DealBook '

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China Fund Said to Sell Most of BlackRock Stake  |  The China Investment Corporation, that country's sovereign wealth fund, “has sold most of its stake in BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, as part of a wider strategy by the sovereign wealth fund to cut its holdings in global financial institutions,” The Financial Times reports.
FINANCIAL TIMES

Universal's EMI Deal Said to Be Approved in Europe  |  The European Union is set to sign off on Universal's agreement to acquire EMI and sell some assets, Reuters reports, citing two unidentified people familiar with the deal.
REUTERS

Campari Picks Up Jamaican Rum Maker  |  The Italia n spirits maker Gruppo Campari has acquired 81.4 percent of Lascelles deMercado, with plans to buy the rest of the Jamaican company by the end of the year, in a deal worth $414.8 million, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Ericsson Said to Be Poised to Acquire Nokia Siemens Unit  |  Ericsson is in the lead in the process to acquire the business support systems of Nokia Siemens Networks, Dow Jones reports, citing an unidentified person familiar with the matter.
DOW JONES

Buyer of Saab Outlines Plans to Go Electric  |  National Electric Vehicle Sweden, which acquired Saab assets in bankruptcy, said it would introduce an electric vehicle based on Saab cars in about 18 months, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

INVESTMENT BANKING '

Nomura Reshuffles Investment Banking Unit  |  William Vereker is stepping aside as Nomura's joint head of investment banking, leaving Kentaro Okuda as chief of the unit, according to an internal memo.
DealBook '

Morgan Stanley Financial Advisers Said to Consider Leaving  |  Several dozen “rainmakers” at Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, who together oversee about $47 billion in client assets, are considering leaving the firm due to “widespread technology problems” that “have made it very difficult for them to do their jobs,” according to Reuters, which cites unidentified people familiar with the matter.
REUTERS

Economic Fears Prompt Spaniards to Move Their Money  |  It's far from certain that Spain will become the next Greece, but many in Spain are moving their money, and sometimes even themselves, out of the country, The New York Times reports. In July, Spaniards withdrew about $94 billion from banks, an amount equal to 7 percent of the country's economic output.
NEW YORK TIMES

Spain O.K.'s Creation of a ‘Bad Bank'  |  The Spanish government moved on Friday to allow banks to unload troubled real estate assets and eventually receive rescue money from Europe.
NEW YORK TIMES

Letting Go of Big Banks Is Hard to Do  |  Even if sha reholders of big banks would like to see those companies broken up, bondholders may be putting up resistance, since being part of a federally insured bank means borrowing is relatively cheap, Bloomberg News writes.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Canaccord Attracts an Executive From Bank of America  |  The Canadian firm Canaccord Financial plans to hire Alexis de Rosnay, a prominent London banker who worked at Lazard before coming to Bank of America Merrill Lynch, to be the head of its European operations, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Chief of ANZ on Integrating R.B.S. Assets  |  Susan Yuen, the chief executive of the Australia & New Zealand Banking Group, told The Wall Street Journal about the challenges of inte grating businesses that her firm acquired from the Royal Bank of Scotland. The ways the two companies “did things were not very similar,” she said.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Credit Cards Targeting the Wealthy  |  With the number of wealthy rising in Asia, companies like Citibank and DBS Bank - and soon, MasterCard - are offering credit cards aimed at utra-high-net-worth individuals, The New York Times writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

PRIVATE EQUITY '

Private Equity Firms Face Subpoenas on Tax Strategy  |  The New York attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, has subpoenaed more than a dozen firms seeking documents that would reveal whether they converted certain management f ees collected from investors into fund investments, which are taxed at a far lower rate than ordinary income, The New York Times reports.
DealBook '

Ryan Seacrest Has $300 Million to Play With  |  The “American Idol” host recently secured a $300 million private equity war chest from Bain Capital and Thomas H. Lee Partners and has been on the lookout for acquisitions, The Wall Street Journal writes.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Goldman Sachs Plans a Foray Into Brazilian Private Equity  |  The firm is expecting returns as high as 35 percent from investing in private equity in Brazil, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

CVC Faces a Loss in Australia  |  The private equity firm CVC Capital Partners may lose 1.8 billion Australian dollars ($1.85 billion) on its investment in Nine, the Australian television network, Reuters reports. The entertainment company is at risk of triggering a breach of debt covenants that would place it under the control of its lenders.
REUTERS

Employees of Bain-Controlled Companies to Speak at Democratic Convention  |  Employees from companies managed by Bain Capital are expected to discuss private equity at the Democratic convention, according to The Huffington Post, which cites an unidentified Obama campaign official.
HUFFINGTON POST

HEDGE FUNDS '

Man Group Starts a F und to Trade Sovereign Bonds  |  The move comes as the British hedge fund giant is trying to reverse a period of disappointing returns.
REUTERS

German Bonds Present a Puzzle for Hedge Funds  |  Reuters reports: “Hedge funds are split on how to bet on German bonds, in a sign that even managers supposedly at the cutting edge of finance are struggling to work out how paper offering buyers a negative yield will fare as the euro zone's debt crisis unfolds.”
REUTERS

When the Founders Have Already Worked Together  |  Roxanne Martino, the chief executive of the hedge fund of funds firm Aurora Investment Management tells Pension & Investments magazine that the Volcker Rule has led to the “migration of full teams into our industry.”
PENSIONS & INVESTMENTS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS '

P.I.C.C. Said to Plan $3 Billion I.P.O. in Hong Kong  |  The People's Insurance Company of China may aim to raise as much as $3 billion in a Hong Kong I.P.O. in October or November and postpone a listing in Shanghai, after initially planning a dual listing in both cities, Bloomberg News reports, citing two unidentified people with knowledge of the matter.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

German Insurer Aims to Raise $882 Million  |  The I.P.O. of Talanx, the large German insurer, would be the biggest in Europe since February, according to Bloomberg News.
BLOOM BERG NEWS

Sinopec Forms a Construction Unit to Be Taken Public  |  The parent of the energy giant Sinopec has created a construction unit that is expected to have an I.P.O. in Hong Kong in 2014, state media said, according to Reuters.
REUTERS

VENTURE CAPITAL '

Start-Up Factory Produces a Grab Bag of Companies  |  Kevin Ryan, who runs the New York-based AllyCorp with Dwight Merriman, is behind an array of companies like Gilt Groupe and Business Insider. His approach to starting companies is a little like dating, The New York Times writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

Twitter Aims to Reconcile Free Speech and Profit  |  Twitter's chief lawyer says that fighting for free speech makes good business sense, but The New York Times writes that the effort “sometimes collides awkwardly with another imperative Twitter faces: to turn its fire hose of public opinion into a profitable business.”
NEW YORK TIMES

Can Square Remain Hip?  |  Excitement is building around the payments company, which just struck a deal with Starbucks. But it may be too early to anoint Square as the firm that will lead us into a cashless society.
DealBook '

Reddit Thrives on a Long Leash  |  When Conde Nast, part of Advance Publications, bought Reddit in 2006, the new owners of the social media forum decided to leave well enough alone, and the strategy has worked, David Carr writes in his column in The New York Times.
NEW YORK TIMES

LEGAL/REGULATORY '

Citibank Hid Firm's Financial Troubles, Ex-Partner at Dewey & LeBoeuf Says  |  Steven P. Otillar, who joined the law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf just months before it collapsed, said the bank had a legal obligation to disclose the firm's financial state.
DealBook '

Foreign Firms Most Affected by a U.S. Law Barring Bribes  |  A law intended to prohibit the payment of bribes to foreign officials by United States businesses has produced more than $3 billion in settlements. But the list of companies making settlements is notable for its lack of Americ an names.
DealBook '

Presidential Policy vs. Fed Policy on Jobs  |  Who actually has the most power to create jobs today â€" the president, or the Fed chairman? The answer to that question tells us whether we now live in the age of democracy, or the age of the central bank.
DealBook '

Bernanke Has His Job Cut Out  |  The New York Times editorial board writes that, given the lack of action by Congress to stimulate the economy, the Federal Reserve is “the only entity with the autonomy and the power to take action.”
NEW YORK TIMES

The Life and Death of Delaware's Arbitration Experiment  |  The f ederal court decision striking down the use of the Delaware Chancery Court for private arbitration is likely to be the end of an interesting experiment, the Deal Professor writes.
DealBook '

European Proposal Would Have More Women Join Boards  |  The New York Times reports: “Companies allocating fewer than 40 percent of seats on supervisory boards to women could face serious sanctions later this decade, according to a proposal made Monday by Viviane Reding, the European Union justice commissioner.”
NEW YORK TIMES

Drawing Lessons From a City's Bankruptcy  |  A strategy by Stockton, Calif., to sell about $125 million of bonds to close a shortfall in its pension plan, ended up backfiring, helping push the city into Chapt er 9 bankruptcy, The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

3 Former UBS Executives Found Guilty of Rigging Bids  |  The verdict was the latest development in the Justice Department's investigation into the municipal bond market, Reuters reports.
REUTERS



Ahold Weighs Sale of Its Stake in ICA of Sweden

LONDON â€" The Dutch retailer Ahold said on Tuesday that it was considering options for its 60 percent stake in the Swedish supermarket chain ICA, including selling its holding.

Ahold, which operates the Giant retail chain in the United States, said the review would take up to 12 months, and might lead to an initial public offering of ICA, which runs stores across Scandinavia and the Baltic region.

The Dutch company did not say how much it planned to raise through the potential sale.

The announcement comes at a difficult time for European retailers, as the Continent's debt crisis continues to hamper consumer spending. Uncertainty surrounding the European economy has also severely reduced the number of I.P.O.'s this year.

Ahold operates ICA with the Swedish investment group Hakon Invest, which owns the other 40 percent of the Swedish supermarket chain. Ahold and Hakon share equal control over the management of ICA.

Hakon has first right of refu sal to purchase Ahold's stake in ICA, and is considering a number of options, including potentially buying out Ahold, according to a company spokeswoman.

“Irrespective of Ahold's decision to proceed in this matter, we are confident with our ownership in ICA,” Hakon's chief executive, Claes-Goran Sylven, said in a statement. “Our shareholding and ownership influence in ICA is not for sale.”

ICA operates more than 2,200 stores in Sweden, Norway and the Baltic countries, and it reported revenue of about $14 billion last year, a slight increase from 2010.

Shares in Ahold rose 4.1 percent in morning trading in Amsterdam on Tuesday.



Foreign Firms Most Affected by a U.S. Law Barring Bribes

A law intended to prohibit the payment of bribes to foreign officials by United States businesses has produced more than $3 billion in settlements. But a list of the top companies making these settlements is notable in one respect: its lack of American names.

The companies that have reached the biggest settlements under the law, known as the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, include Siemens, the German engineering giant; Daimler, the maker of Mercedes-Benz vehicles; Alcatel-Lucent, the French telecommunications company; and the JGC Corporation, a Japanese consulting company. The lone American company in the top 10 is KBR, the former Kellogg Brown & Root, a subsidiary of Halliburton, the Texas services company. As a group, they have paid nearly $3.2 billion in settlements.

Since the law was enacted in 1977, the definition of “American” has expanded greatly to include foreign companies that are listed on United States stock exchanges, sell securities in the country or do business here. At the same time, foreign companies that turn to “facilitation payments” and other forms of under-the-table dealings with local officials in far-flung places have run afoul of the act, either because of cultural differences in business dealings or because of failure to recognize the breadth of the law.

“These big settlements are with sprawling, multinational companies,” said Andy Spalding, a law professor at the University of Richmond and a contributing editor to the F.C.P.A. Blog, which tracks the top settlements. “Yet they are based, in part, in the United States. A culture of compliance may be slower to take in other countries, and many are not aware of the rapid escalation of F.C.P.A. cases or its broad jurisdictional scope.”

The best-known case is that of Siemens, which paid $800 million to the United States and another $800 million to Germany to settle a corruption investigation. Even though the financial settlements took place in 2008, the criminal case against eight former executives continues. In December, they were charged with paying $100 million in bribes to Argentine officials, including former President Carlos Menem, to secure a $1 billion contract for Siemens. All eight executives live in Argentina, Germany or Switzerland, and none have been arrested or extradited - a long and complicated process.

The Siemens case is illustrative. The bribery took place in Argentina. The people offering the bribes were not American, and the people demanding them were Argentine officials. Siemens is a German company. The hook for the United States was that Siemens's securities traded in the United States.

In the Daimler case, the company admitted that its subsidiary in Russia had bribed local officials, that a German subsidiary had made payments to Croatian officials using an American shell company and that improper payments had been made to Chinese officials in an effort to persuade the officials to buy Daimler vehicles. Some of the money flowed through United States bank accounts, and Daimler has extensive operations in the United States.

Peter Y. Solmssen, general counsel at Siemens, said European companies were only now becoming aware that the law applied to them. This is in part because of the attention given to his company's case.

“U.S. companies have been living with this law a lot longer than European companies,” Mr. Solmssen said. “It's been part of their awareness. Our case was a real watershed. It woke up a lot of people in Europe. There had not been a lot of headline cases before that to make people sit up and take notice.”

There is a “culture in many northern European companies that they have to do these things to get business,” he said. “Our message is that they don't have to.”

It some ways, the foreign cases were easy pickings for the Justice Department: the behavior was obvious, and the cases fairly clear-cut. Many of the settlements involved events that took place a decade ago, before companies, especially foreign ones, were fully aware of the extent of the law or realized that it applied to them.

Given the many years it takes to develop and prosecute these cases, some of them are reaching the settlement stage only now, even if the companies have since halted the practices that landed them in trouble.

“Many of these are ‘cash cow' cases for Justice,” said Michael Koehler, an assistant professor at the Southern Illinois University School of Law who also writes the F.C.P.A. Professor blog. “It's a government program that is profitable to the U.S. Treasury. Even more, the U.S. feels that if the home countries are not going to prosecute, the U.S. has a moral obligation to do so.”

Moreover, in a world where businesses operate in an almost borderless fashion, it is often hard to determine what is domestic and what is foreign.

“The world is flat,” said Matthew T. Reinhard, a lawyer at Miller & Chevalier in Washington who represents corporations in cases brought under the law. “You could be based on Mars and Justice will come after you. There was a period before Siemens when the culture of compliance was not as prevalent in foreign-based companies as those in the U.S. But there is a cultural shift, and the U.S. is on the crest of this wave.”



Foreign Firms Most Affected by a U.S. Law Barring Bribes

A law intended to prohibit the payment of bribes to foreign officials by United States businesses has produced more than $3 billion in settlements. But a list of the top companies making these settlements is notable in one respect: its lack of American names.

The companies that have reached the biggest settlements under the law, known as the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, include Siemens, the German engineering giant; Daimler, the maker of Mercedes-Benz vehicles; Alcatel-Lucent, the French telecommunications company; and the JGC Corporation, a Japanese consulting company. The lone American company in the top 10 is KBR, the former Kellogg Brown & Root, a subsidiary of Halliburton, the Texas services company. As a group, they have paid nearly $3.2 billion in settlements.

Since the law was enacted in 1977, the definition of “American” has expanded greatly to include foreign companies that are listed on United States stock exchanges, sell securities in the country or do business here. At the same time, foreign companies that turn to “facilitation payments” and other forms of under-the-table dealings with local officials in far-flung places have run afoul of the act, either because of cultural differences in business dealings or because of failure to recognize the breadth of the law.

“These big settlements are with sprawling, multinational companies,” said Andy Spalding, a law professor at the University of Richmond and a contributing editor to the F.C.P.A. Blog, which tracks the top settlements. “Yet they are based, in part, in the United States. A culture of compliance may be slower to take in other countries, and many are not aware of the rapid escalation of F.C.P.A. cases or its broad jurisdictional scope.”

The best-known case is that of Siemens, which paid $800 million to the United States and another $800 million to Germany to settle a corruption investigation. Even though the financial settlements took place in 2008, the criminal case against eight former executives continues. In December, they were charged with paying $100 million in bribes to Argentine officials, including former President Carlos Menem, to secure a $1 billion contract for Siemens. All eight executives live in Argentina, Germany or Switzerland, and none have been arrested or extradited - a long and complicated process.

The Siemens case is illustrative. The bribery took place in Argentina. The people offering the bribes were not American, and the people demanding them were Argentine officials. Siemens is a German company. The hook for the United States was that Siemens's securities traded in the United States.

In the Daimler case, the company admitted that its subsidiary in Russia had bribed local officials, that a German subsidiary had made payments to Croatian officials using an American shell company and that improper payments had been made to Chinese officials in an effort to persuade the officials to buy Daimler vehicles. Some of the money flowed through United States bank accounts, and Daimler has extensive operations in the United States.

Peter Y. Solmssen, general counsel at Siemens, said European companies were only now becoming aware that the law applied to them. This is in part because of the attention given to his company's case.

“U.S. companies have been living with this law a lot longer than European companies,” Mr. Solmssen said. “It's been part of their awareness. Our case was a real watershed. It woke up a lot of people in Europe. There had not been a lot of headline cases before that to make people sit up and take notice.”

There is a “culture in many northern European companies that they have to do these things to get business,” he said. “Our message is that they don't have to.”

It some ways, the foreign cases were easy pickings for the Justice Department: the behavior was obvious, and the cases fairly clear-cut. Many of the settlements involved events that took place a decade ago, before companies, especially foreign ones, were fully aware of the extent of the law or realized that it applied to them.

Given the many years it takes to develop and prosecute these cases, some of them are reaching the settlement stage only now, even if the companies have since halted the practices that landed them in trouble.

“Many of these are ‘cash cow' cases for Justice,” said Michael Koehler, an assistant professor at the Southern Illinois University School of Law who also writes the F.C.P.A. Professor blog. “It's a government program that is profitable to the U.S. Treasury. Even more, the U.S. feels that if the home countries are not going to prosecute, the U.S. has a moral obligation to do so.”

Moreover, in a world where businesses operate in an almost borderless fashion, it is often hard to determine what is domestic and what is foreign.

“The world is flat,” said Matthew T. Reinhard, a lawyer at Miller & Chevalier in Washington who represents corporations in cases brought under the law. “You could be based on Mars and Justice will come after you. There was a period before Siemens when the culture of compliance was not as prevalent in foreign-based companies as those in the U.S. But there is a cultural shift, and the U.S. is on the crest of this wave.”



Nomura Reshuffles Investment Banking Unit

HONG KONGâ€"Nomura has launched a shakeup at its investment banking unit after last week announcing a $1 billion cost-cutting program.

William Vereker, a former Lehman Brothers banker, is stepping aside as joint head of investment banking, leaving Kentaro Okuda as the sole chief of the unit, the Nomura president and group chief operating officer Atsushi Yoshikawa said in an internal memo dated Monday that was seen by Dealbook.

James DeNaut and Charles Pitts-Tucker, the respective heads of investment banking for the Americas, and for Europe, Middle East and Africa, have been appointed as the co-heads of the international side of the business and will report to Mr. Okuda.

Mr. Vereker, who is based in London, will stay on as the vice chairman of investment banking but will no longer be charged with running the unit.

‘‘As we continue to navigate through challenging markets, focusing on the needs of clients and ensuring deals are executed quickly and smoothly is of paramount importance,'' Mr. Yoshikawa said. ‘‘William's new role will enable him to focus more on these matters on a full-time basis, greatly benefiting our clients and global franchise.''