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Qatar Imperils Big Merger of Commodity Companies

A megamerger in the natural resources business is close to falling apart.

On Friday, shareholders in Xstrata, one of the world's biggest miners of copper and coal, are to vote on an offer from Glencore, which dominates the global trading of such materials. The deal, which values the combined company at $86 billion, would create a commodities behemoth whose activities touch all types of companies that need raw materials to make cornflakes, cars, mobile phones and other goods.

But Qatar Holding, a unit of the Persian Gulf nation's sovereign wealth fund, is poised to squash the acquisition.

Over the last year, Qatar, an increasingly powerful investor with holdings in large multinational companies, has spent nearly $5 billion amassing a 12 percent share of Xstrata. That stake gives Qatar a big voice in the process, and it plans to vote against the deal.

The deal comes at a pivotal time in the industry. After experiencing strong growth in recent years, c ommodities prices have sunk over fears that major consumers like China might be pulling back. The weakness has crimped the profits of major players.

The merger of Glencore and Xstrata could have broad ramifications. The combined company would have significant financial heft, potentially setting off another round of consolidation in an industry that needs to wring out cost savings.

The parties are squabbling over price. In February, Glencore, which already owns 34 percent of Xstrata, agreed to exchange 2.8 of its shares for each share of the mining company. But Qatar has been pushing for more, at one point demanding a ratio of 3.25 to 1.

So far, both sides have remained firm in their positions. Last month, Ivan Glasenberg, the chief executive of Glencore, who has developed a reputation as a masterful negotiator, said it was “no big deal” if the merger fell apart. Qatar, meanwhile, is a gas-rich emirate that can hold out for better terms.

Qatar has the support of other Xstrata shareholders. Norges Bank Investment Management, a Norwegian fund, and the investment firm Knight Vinke, have both said they will vote against the deal. Since Glencore must abstain from voting, a group of investors with just 16 percent of Xstrata shares can block the merger.

A solution is possible, but any breakthrough will most likely come at the 11th hour. So far, neither party has budged, according to a banker for Qatar and a banker for Xstrata who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

“This is a game of poker, and the Qataris have called Glencore,” said Andrew Keen, a mining company analyst at HSBC. “What we will find out soon is how much Ivan really thinks Xstrata is worth.”

The deal has been anticipated for years. Glencore has held a large stake in Xstrata since the mining company listed on the London exchange in 2002, and the two companies are deeply intertwined. Mr. Glasenberg sits on Xstrata's board.

The tw o companies would complement each other. Glencore oversees a vast trading network that sells billions of dollars' worth of commodities to manufacturers and governments. It's a steady business, but the margins are slim. Xstrata owns a mining empire that stretches from Australia to Canada to South Africa. While mining is more profitable than trading, it is also prone to cyclical booms and busts.

So far, Glencore is sticking with its bid. Privately, Mr. Glasenberg has indicated that Glencore could abandon the deal now and pick up Xstrata a year later for less, according to several London bankers and Glencore shareholders who have spoken with the chief executive.

The mining industry's deteriorating fundamentals bolster Glencore's stubborn stance. As the price of coal plummeted, net profits for Xstrata dropped by 33 percent in the first half of the year. Since the deal was announced, shares of Xstrata have dropped by 16 percent. Glencore's stock price has fallen by 10 percent in the same time period.

At current levels, the market values Xstrata at only 2.4 times Glencore's shares, below the current deal ratio. That means investors don't expect that the deal will happen - much less that Glencore will sweeten the bid.

But Glencore and Xstrata both have a lot to lose if the deal falls apart.

If Glencore walks away, Mick Davis, the chief executive of Xstrata, could feel pressure from shareholders. Knight Vinke has called for a shake-up of the board in the event the deal fails, pushing to make it “more independent and robust.” Worse, Glencore could turn on Xstrata's management, joining the calls for changes at the top.

“Xstrata's problem if it remains a stand-alone company is not about the fundamentals of its mining business but rather about Glencore remaining its biggest shareholder,” said Christopher LaFemina, a mining analyst at Jefferies, the American investment bank.

Glencore faces strategic risk. Wi thout the added balance sheet of Xstrata, Glencore will not have the financial strength to pay for its expansion efforts. As the commodities market weakens and its share price declines, Glencore needs money to increase its trading business, build new mines and oil fields and pursue a new round of deal-making.

“The value of the deal to Glencore is a higher equity valuation and much greater ability to make further acquisitions,” said Mr. LaFemina.

Qatar has opened the door for a potential compromise. A week ago, the sovereign wealth fund said it “will not support the proposed merger terms.” In doing so, Qatar dropped its earlier reference to a specific ratio of 3.25, which analysts say they believe indicates a willingness to negotiate with Glencore.

But with billion of dollars in cash, the sovereign wealth fund can take the long-term view on its investments, rather than wait for the immediate payoff of a deal. Qatar is “very comfortable with the pos sibility that this merger does indeed fall over,” according to one of the bankers for the emirate who spoke on the condition of anonymity.



U.P.S. Deal for TNT Express Hits Fresh Delays

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About UPS
United Parcel Service (NYSE: UPS) is a global leader in logistics, offering a broad range of solutions including the transportation of packages and freight, the facilitation of international trade, and the deployment of advanced technology to manage the world of business more efficiently. Headquartered in Atlanta, UPS serves more than 220 countries and territories worldwide. The company can be found on the Web at UPS.com and its corporate blog can be found at blog.UPS.com. To receive UPS news direct, visit pressroom.UPS.com/RSS.

About TNT Express
TNT Express (NYSE Euronext: TNTE) is one of the world's largest express delivery companies. On a daily basis, TNT Express delivers close to 1 million consignments ranging from documents and parcels to palletized freight. The company operates road and air transportation networks in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, Asia-Pacific and the Americas. TNT Express had revenues of EUR 7.25 billion in 2011.



Regulators Clarify Timing of New Derivatives Rules

As Wall Street gears up for an overhaul of the $600 trillion derivatives business, big banks have grumbled that regulators failed to specify when the new policies will take effect.

After months of uncertainty, the issue reached a happy conclusion for the banks. Federal authorities now say the new regime will not kick in until Jan. 1, providing clarity and a brief - but important - extension to Wall Street.

Until now, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission had warned banks that they must likely register as so-called swaps dealers by October. The agency's chairman, Gary Gensler, also recently told Congress that “light will begin to shine on the swaps market,” a prominent area of derivatives trading, this fall.

But last week, Mr. Gensler expressed a more lenient timeline in a private meeting with Wall Street groups, according to people briefed on the meeting. His spokesman, Steve Adamske, confirmed on Wednesday that banks need not become registered sw ap dealers until January at the earliest.

It was the latest regulatory reprieve for Wall Street. Last week, the agency also granted an extension for rules that, for example, will require firms to verify that their trading partners meet certain “eligibility standards.”

The C.F.T.C. is now planning to issue a formal document that spells out some of the agency's due dates. The decision drew praise from Wall Street lawyers whose clients have grown anxious about the unclear deadlines.

“In ending market uncertainty as to the registration date, the C.F.T.C. will provide a major service to the market,” said Annette L. Nazareth, a partner at the law firm Davis Polk and a former regulator at the Securities and Exchange Commission. “Entities planning to become swap dealers are working incredibly hard to implement a plethora of new C.F.T.C. requirements, and certainty as to the compliance timeline is a necessary prerequisite.”

The agency's rules are a central component of the Dodd-Frank Act, which overhauled Wall Street regulation in the aftermath of the financial crisis. The law took particular aim at swaps trading, an opaque business that blew up in the crisis.

The swap-dealer designation, which applies only to firms that arrange more than $8 billion worth of swaps contracts annually, was among the most contentious aspects of the crackdown. The title carries the requirement that banks, among other things, adopt internal risk management controls, bolster disclosures to trading partners and report their trades in real time.

But even the most sophisticated financial firms - and their high-priced lawyers - could not ferret out the registration deadline. The confusion stemmed from the vagaries of several overlapping rules. While the fine print of Dodd-Frank suggested that January was the likely deadline, some conflicting statements from the C.F.T.C. confused the banks.

One Dodd-Frank provision implies, in effect, that banks must register on Oct. 12, when a rule that defines “swap” and other terms takes effect. But a separate provision requires only that banks start counting on that date to see if they hit the $8 billion threshold for swaps contracts in any given year. Big banks like Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase are likely to pass that point in a matter of days.

At the end of the month in which a bank reaches the $8 billion mark, likely Oct. 31, banks then have an additional 60 days to sign up. That time frame will prompt most large banks to register by Jan. 1, while smaller firms might end up taking months to comply.

It is unclear if any banks will register early. Only one firm, Newedge, has opted to move ahead of the deadline.



When Fairness Opinions Are Used Outside of Mergers

Jill R. Goodman is a managing director at Rothschild, where leads the firm's practice representing special committees of independent directors in M.&A. transactions.

There is a trend emerging in corporate boardrooms to request fairness opinions, which are used in merger deals to provide a gauge of a company's worth.

The trend to use them in nontraditional situations may be a result of a confluence of factors, including a significant increase in deal-related litigation. Presumably, a board's rationale is that if a fairness opinion provides comfort to the directors in mergers, it should provide comfort in other situations as well.

This trend merits scrutiny. Directors should understand what “fairness” conveys outside of a change of control or mergers-and-acquisitions context. Moreover, courts have increasingly shown a willingness to parse through the analyses undertaken to support fairness opinions in conventional situations; it is possible that the y may start to consider, particularly in unconventional situations, the actual language of such opinions and the reliance that directors place on them.

Fairness opinions have typically been limited to transactions involving a change of control. The practice was established after a Delaware Chancery Court decision in 1985, when a target company's directors were found to have breached their duty of care, based in part on their failure to obtain a fairness opinion. Although fairness opinions are not legally required, the courts have generally noted with approval when a fairness opinion has been obtained in a merger.

The substance of a fairness opinion is the valuation work conducted by a financial adviser. The financial analyses set forth a value range â€" estimates of intrinsic value, trading value and takeover value â€" against which the proposed consideration is compared. The value range creates guideposts for determining how much a company might be worth.

“Fairness” is not actually defined. From a financial adviser's perspective, it is a determination that, at a particular point in time, the consideration proposed falls within a range of values. If the proposed price does not fall within that range, the price is inappropriate.

The wording of a fairness opinion describes its scope, the work that was completed and the assumptions made. The opinion makes clear that a conclusion about financial fairness is not a recommendation regarding whether to enter into a transaction and is not an affirmation that the proposed consideration is the best achievable. Most of the wording is standard if the opinion is rendered in a traditional M.&A. context.

But tension can arise when the situation is outside that context. The conventional value range â€" the relevant set of estimates for valuing a company â€" may not be applicable.

Consider a transaction where a company exchanges debt for equity. Before a deal, the c ompany's indebtedness exceeded its enterprise value â€" in other words, its equity is worthless; but afterward, the company's enterprise value would exceed its debt. An investment banker can prepare a set of analyses illustrating that the company's equity will be more valuable after the proposed transaction.

Such a conclusion does not, however, require citation to a reference range or guideposts. The conclusion is that positive equity value is greater than zero equity value.

Or consider a transaction where a controlling stockholder asks a company to provide consideration to induce the stockholder to sell stock into the open market. All other things being equal, the float and liquidity of the stock will increase, which may create a benefit for all stockholders. Given that the proposed transaction will be with a controlling stockholder, the board (or special committee) may ask an investment banker for a fairness opinion. While an investment banker can provide evidence of the benefits of greater float and liquidity, there is not a reference range of values that can be determined for the transaction.

In these and other unconventional situations, where the usual reference range is not applicable, it is unclear what “fairness” means. As in a conventional situation, financial analyses will form the basis for the written opinion. But if a conventional value range does not apply, the opinion may say so. The opinion may also go on to set forth a nonstandard list of assumptions and qualifications. Read in its entirety, the opinion could, in essence, circumvent the question of fairness.

How the courts will think about such opinions remains to be seen. In the meantime, an analogy to “second opinions” may be instructive. Boards obtain second fairness opinions for a variety of reasons, but most frequently when there is a perceived or actual conflict of interest on the part of the primary financial adviser. The courts are clear that obtaining a second opinion at the end of an M.&A. process does not negate the conflicts of the primary adviser nor does it retroactively fix a troubled process. A fairness opinion has never been, and continues not to be, an essential condition for a change of control transaction.

That is also the case in a unconventional situation. Directors exercise their business judgment by evaluating all the information available. If an opinion is rendered in a nontraditional context, the board should be made aware of the substance of the opinion, so reliance is not misplaced.

And a financial adviser may determine that a conventional value range does not apply in particular situation and that a fairness opinion cannot be rendered. This characterization is different from a conclusion that a fairness opinion cannot be rendered because the consideration is not fair. Directors who understand why the conventional value range does not apply can make a fully info rmed decision about whether “fairness” is applicable to a nontraditional situation and exercise their judgment accordingly.



Former Goldman Executive Joins Strategic Value Partners

Stephen J. McGuinness, the former co-chief operating officer of Goldman Sachs Asset Management, has joined the investment firm Strategic Value Partners as a senior managing director.

Mr. McGuinness, 53, who previously served as co-head of Goldman Sachs's special situations group, will focus on business development and operations at Strategic Value Partners.

Like many distressed investors, Strategic Value Partners has been active of late, capitalizing on the weakness in the United States and Europe. Over the last two years, the firm has invested $2.2 billion in distressed assets like troubled corporate debt. Earlier this year, it gained control of the German plastics maker Klöckner Pentaplast.

A 19-year veteran of Goldman, Mr. McGuinness will report to the founder of Strategic Value Partners, Victor Khosla. Mr. McGuinness joined Goldman Sachs in 1992, and became partner in 2000 after holding several senior positions at the bank.

“Steve McGuinness joins S.V.P. at an exciting point in our growth,” Mr. Khosla said in a statement. “His addition brings to our team senior management and sales expertise from one of the leading financial firms, as well as deep knowledge of credit and distressed situations.”



Survey Deems JPMorgan\'s Investment Bank Best Place to Work

A multibillion-dollar trading loss and multiple regulatory investigations apparently haven't made life too miserable at JPMorgan Chase.

In a survey of some 3,500 Wall Street professionals, JPMorgan's investment bank was selected as the best firm to work for in North America this year, judging by quality of life and overall prestige. The firm held the N.1 spot for the second year in a row, according to the survey released Wednesday by the career research company Vault.

JPMorgan's investment bank edged out the Blackstone Group, which shot upward in the ranks to second from 24th a year earlier. Goldman Sachs, which came in third, ranked second last year, after being knocked from the top spot by JPMorgan.

The survey asked employees to assess their rival firms by prestige and to judge their own employer by considerations like compensation, hours and culture. JPMorgan also claimed the top spot in Europe, where Goldman Sachs came in second and Morgan Stanley pla ced third, according to Vault.

JPMorgan was seen as highly prestigious by bankers at other firms, who said it was “just like Goldman and arguably better,” according to Vault. JPMorgan also beat Goldman in terms of quality of life, Vault said.

Goldman Sachs, though, may draw some solace from another set of rankings that was published on Wednesday.

Lloyd C. Blankfein, Goldman's chief executive, was deemed one of 10 influential bankers in an annual list by Bloomberg Markets Magazine. Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan's leader, was also on the list.

Mr. Blankfein, the magazine said, “has won back some influence in part by simply keeping the firm out of the headlines.”

A cloud has hung over JPMorgan Chase this year after it disclosed a trading loss in its chief investment office that eventually grew to at least $5.8 billion. Still, the loss didn't stop the nation's second-largest bank by assets from logging a profit of $5 billion in the second quarter.

Business Day Live: Bin Laden Book Release Moved Up

Publishing stardom for an ex-Navy SEAL member. | Generating new revenue at the U.S. Open.

Safeway Plans I.P.O. of Gift Card Unit

Safeway, the California-based supermarket chain, said on Wednesday that it planned to file for an initial public offering of a minority stake in its fast-growing gift card unit, Blackhawk Network Holdings. Shares of Safeway were up 5 percent by midday.

Blackhawk is the third largest distributor of prepaid gift cards for retailers and brands, selling them at more than 70,000 locations, including drugstores, specialty shops and Internet retailers. The business began in 2001, with its cards first appearing in Safeway grocery stores.

At an investor conference earlier this year, Safeway executives disclosed that the face value of the money stored on the cards grew to $6.9 billion last year, up 25 percent from the previous year. The Blackhawk business had pre-tax income of $62 million in 2011 and adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or Ebitda, of $78 million.

If one applied a multiple of 12 times to last year's Ebitda, t he Blackhawk unit has an implied enterprise value of $936 million, Jonathan P. Feeney, an analyst with Janney Capital Markets, wrote in a note to clients.

Safeway said that depending on market conditions, it expected an offering to come to market in the first half of next year.



Pruning Hedge Fund Regulation Without Cultivating Better Rules

Fresh from having declined to constrain money market funds, the Securities and Exchange Commission has moved to loosen marketing constraints on hedge funds.

Two weeks ago, the agency threw up its hands and said it would not be able to defend millions of investors from money market funds that do things like invest in dodgy European bank bonds yet proclaim themselves to be perfectly safe.

Instead, the S.E.C. - mandated by Congress through its misnamed and harmful JOBS Act - proposed rules last week to lift advertising restrictions for hedge funds and other kinds of private investment offerings. The rules haven't been finalized, but we can look forward to an ad featuring a wizened couple in matching tubs overlooking a sunset, holding hands and talking about how they just put money with the next George Soros.

The old rules for hedge funds make little sense. Surely, hedge funds should be able to pitch investors with data about their returns and methods. But th ere's a problem: The S.E.C. does not have any new resources and has not implemented any policies to police these pitches.

Letting slip the dogs of advertising comes as some professional investors and academics doubt that the industry can continue to produce outsize investment returns - if, in fact, it ever did. As they get bigger, hedge funds struggle to score good results. As investments have become increasingly correlated and interrelated, it gets harder to execute safer and unique strategies.

In a perfect world, hedge fund advertising would improve the world of investing. Hedge funds, after all, are wildly misunderstood. A good hedge fund seeks steady returns in good markets and bad. Many of the best-managed funds aren't actually trying to beat the market in its best years. And many of the good funds seek uncorrelated results, so that the returns don't move in lock step with the stock market.

And, honestly, few things could be worse than mutual funds, wh ich in aggregate underperform the stock market and charge too much to do it.

The problem is that the way this loosening looks on paper and the way it will play out in the real world are a tad different.

If Groucho Marx were alive today, he'd say that he would never want to invest in a hedge fund that would have him as a limited partner. One doesn't see Le Bernardin and Château Lafite filling the airwaves during N.F.L. games. The ban on law firms advertising was lifted in the 1970s. Today, Jacoby & Meyers advertises on television; Sullivan & Cromwell does not. Drug ads have wrought a parade of patients demanding new (high-margin) medicines from their doctors that often offer few benefits over the old (off-patent) ones.

Even professionals have a problem in evaluating hedge fund performance, because distinguishing skill from luck and excessive risk-taking is extremely difficult. For instance, funds often don't even let their own employees know how much levera ge they are taking.

Take the case of John Paulson, who is famous for having shorted the housing bubble, making billions. The result is that many, surely including Mr. Paulson, were convinced of his brilliance.

Before his world-renowned score, he was a grinder, eking out decent returns with a relatively small fund. Afterward, his fund grew exponentially to tens of billions under management.

Then his returns nose-dived. His main fund plunged 36 percent last year and has dropped another 13 percent this year, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Last week, after Citigroup's private bank pulled out of his fund, Mr. Paulson convened a conference call with Bank of America investment advisers and their clients to explain what was going so horribly wrong with his funds.

It turns out that Mr. Paulson was like the Old Man in the Hemingway novel: He happened to be the guy, through some skill and some luck, to land the biggest fish in the world. How much of each did he have? No one can know.

Another lesson from Mr. Paulson's experience is that even if a fund manager is smart, people who put their money into them are dumb. Citigroup and Bank of America look as if they were typical. Average investors chase performance, putting in money after the great years. Then they panic, pulling their money out at the bottom.

Look for this to be replicated frequently when hedge funds start advertising. Simon Lack, in an important recent book “The Hedge Fund Mirage” (Wiley), argues that hedge funds have been great for hedge fund managers and not so great for their investors. The managers get huge fees. Investors would have been better off investing in Treasury securities, he says.

The hedge fund trade group says that Mr. Lack has it all wrong. Their logic, however, hasn't been persuasive. Felix Salmon, a blogger for Reuters, wrote that the hedge fund group's complaints have “convinced me of the deep truth of Lack's boo k in a way that the book itself never could.”

At least hedge funds specialize in separating people from their money through excessive fees. Other types of offerings prefer to do so through less savory means. The opening of hedge fund advertising has garnered much of the attention, because of the tantalizing idea that we will all soon be able to invest with the best minds on the planet. But the S.E.C. is also lifting rules on other kinds of securities offerings from small companies. Many of these will require less disclosure and will be particularly ripe for fraud.

So the best-case scenario from the agency's move is a bunch of Paulsons, while the worst-case is a bunch of Madoffs. It doesn't seem like a great bargain.

The S.E.C. declares in a fact sheet that it will keep the rules about who can invest. Yet the victims of Bernard L. Madoff, who orchestrated the largest Ponzi scheme in history, were accredited investors. The agency does not plan to mandate an y new process to ensure that investors are accredited, or whether their investments are appropriate for them.

This is all harks back to a precrisis specialty: get rid of supposedly outdated regulation, but create no new limits or powers to keep things from blowing up.

Jesse Eisinger is a reporter for ProPublica, an independent, nonprofit newsroom that produces investigative journalism in the public interest. Email: jesse@propublica.org. Follow him on Twitter (@Eisingerj).



Why Not Carry Different EBook Readers?

From my e-mail bag:

I felt compelled to say something as a followup to your recent article on “lock-in” in digital book collections.

I want to comment on a way that sidesteps the whole idea of lock-in. One physical E Ink Kindle or Nook is rapidly descending to the sub-$100 threshold. This makes it possible to own both physical devices without excessive expenditure. Since such a pair, when stacked one upon another, remains lighter, more compact and more capacious than most hard back books, the physical effort of owning or traveling with two is negligible and therefore more convenient per gram or cubic millimeter than lugging around the organic original.

My recommendation is to diversify our c ollections and investments.

My reply:

Well, I'm not totally convinced. You're suggesting, I think, that each consumer buy three e-book readers, one from each of the major manufacturers?

And travel with all of them? And keep them all charged? And try to remember which device contains which books?

It really doesn't sound practical to me. It's like suggesting that everyone buy three DVD players, each capable of playing only some discs.

No, I still think that the solution is to make the ebooks mutually compatibleâ€"to compete on quality of the site, price, and customer friendliness, not proprietary file formats!



Greenhill Expands Capital Advisory Group

Greenhill & Company, the boutique investment bank, is building up its division for private equity and real estate clients as it turns to new sources of revenue.

The firm on Wednesday announced three new hires in its private capital advisory group, a relatively new business that advises firms on raising capital. Greenhill is betting that the division will become a significant source of fees, at a time when merger-related work can be scarce.

Matt DeNatale, a former principal at Lazard, and Zaid Abdul-Aleem, a former partner at Piedmont Investment Advisors, are joining Greenhill as principals in the capital advisory team, the firm said in a statement. Mr. DeNatale will be based on San Francisco, and Mr. Abdul-Aleem, a onetime Fulbright scholar, will work in Chicago.

The firm is also hiring Sally Adele Box from QIC Global Infrastructure, an infrastructure investment firm, to be a vice president based in Sydney, Australia.

“These important additions to our team demonstrate our belief that the Capital Advisory business has the potential to grow into a significant contributor to the firm's revenue and profitability,” Scott L. Bok, Greenhill's chief executive, said in a statement.

Greenhill, an independent investment bank founded by Robert F. Greenhill, had a profitable first quarter and kept up a healthy stream of business last year, in spite of an uncertain market for deals. But the firm stumbled in the second quarter of this year, reporting a 90 percent drop in profit as advisory revenue fell.

The firm is looking to its capital advisory division for more revenue. That business accounted for 9 percent of the firm's revenue last year, offering what Mr. Bok called its “first significant” contribution.

Last year, Greenhill grappled with several defections by senior executives amid a sagging stock price. The firm's stock is now up about 27 percent since the beginning of this year.

Mr. Bok said the new hires would expand the capital advisory group's reach in the United States and give it access to Australia.



Lord & Taylor Owner Hudson\'s Bay Explores I.P.O.

Two of the oldest department store chains in North America are on the verge of a public stock listing.

Plans for an initial public offering are in the works for Hudson's Bay Company - the parent of The Bay stores in Canada and Lord & Taylor in the United States, according to two people briefed on the talks. A listing, which is expected to be on the Toronto Stock Exchange, could come before the end of November, these people said.

A successful I.P.O. would be a windfall for Richard Baker, the New York real estate developer-turned-retailer. In 2006, just before the markets seized up, Mr. Baker acquired Lord & Taylor for $1.2 billion. He later acquired Hudson's Bay and merged the two into a single company.

Skeptics derided Mr. Baker's purchases as top-of-the-market deals of two once-storied, now-tired chains. But Mr. Baker, by all accounts, has made improvements in both brands. Lord & Taylor, which has about 50 stores, has increased sales by remodeling its s tores and offering more fashion-forward merchandise.

The company could sell as much as 20 percent of the company to the public at a valuation of between $2.5 billion to $3.5 billion, according to these people.

A spokeswoman for Mr. Baker declined to comment. The New York Post earlier reported on Hudson's plans.

A Hudson's Bay deal comes at a time of uncertainty in the I.P.O. market. New stock issuance has cooled since the disappointing performance of Facebook‘s shares. A share listing in Canada, however, has certain advantages for Hudson's. Because Canadian law requires that its pension funds and mutual funds own a certain percentage of Canadian stocks, Hudson's could have a more natural set of buyers. (The Canadian stock market also has a paucity of publicly traded retailers and an outsized number of natural resource companies.)

Hudson's is one of a number of retail chains that went private during the leverage buyout boom that are weighing I.P.Os. Retailers including Neiman Marcus, Michaels Stores, Toys “R” Us, and Burlington Coat Factory are owned by some of the nation's largest private equity firms, which are all looking for the right opportunity to take these companies public.



R.B.S. Insurance Unit to Cut 900 Jobs

LONDON â€" The insurance unit of the Royal Bank of Scotland plans to cut almost 900 jobs as it looks to reduce costs ahead of an initial public offering.

The unit, Direct Line Insurance Group, which could raise around $4.7 billion in a potential I.P.O later this year, said the layoffs were part of a £100 million ($159 million) annual cost saving plan for the next two years.

The insurer currently has around 15,000 employees.

“We have not made these proposals lightly and fully understand the impact this will have on our people,” Direct Line's chief executive, Paul Geddes, said in a statement.

Regulators are forcing the Royal Bank of Scotland, which is more than 80 percent owned by British taxpayers after receiving a bailout, to dispose of the country's largest auto insurer as part of the deal to receive government money.

The Edinburgh-based bank is also looking to reduce its own headcount, announcing earlier this year that it would cut 3,500 jobs in its investment banking division over the next three years.



Amid Hacker Attacks, Security Start-Ups Garner Attention

As the number of hacker attacks swell, so do the fortunes of security start-ups.

Accel Partners, an early backer of Facebook, announced early Wednesday that it had invested $50 million in Tenable Network Security, a software maker that helps companies identify network security problems. The investment represents the venture capital firm's largest initial investment in an American company.

“We're trying to accelerate in an exploding market,” said Ping Li, an Accel partner. “Tenable is a company we've been trying to invest in for a couple of years.”

Accel's big bet on Tenable comes as other venture capital firms plow more and more money into security software start-ups and the broader enterprise market. Last year, the industry invested nearly a billion dollars into technology security start-ups, almost double the amount spent in 2010, according to a MoneyTree report produced by PricewaterhouseCoopers, the National Venture Capital Association and Tho mson Reuters.

Venture capital investors have also been emboldened by the strong stock performances of several recent enterprise initial public offerings. Those include Imperva, an Accel-backed company, which went public last November and remains more than 72 percent above its offering price. In contrast, Facebookâ€" Accel's better known investmentâ€" is trading at less than half its May offering price.

The technology security market is expected to grow in the coming years, as corporations - in response to highly publicized security breachesâ€" spend more money on patching up security holes and adjusting to the rise of mobile and cloud computing.

“These major black eyes are happening with increasing frequency,” Mr. Li said. “And its not just big companies but also smaller companies, too.”

Businesses already spend billions of dollars each year on firewalls, applications and antivirus software to keep hackers out of their systems and yet, even th e companies, like Symantec and RSA, that sell these solutions cannot always keep out hackers.

Part of the problem is that businesses have taken a piecemeal approach to security by using firewalls to keep hackers at bay and antivirus software to weed out malware. But none of these solutions communicate with each other well - a fact hackers readily exploit. When a vulnerability is detected, often it is after trade secrets have been stolen or customer data has already been exposed.

Companies are increasingly looking for security solutions that can monitor network trafficâ€" and watch for unusual activityâ€" in real time.

Founded in 2002, Tenable's software is used by thousands of enterprise and government clients, such as the Defense Department, Amazon and Apple, to scan and actively monitor networks for vulnerabilities. The company has about 15,000 paying customers, a roughly 30 to 40 percent increase from last year, according to Jack Huffard, the president a nd chief operating officer of Tenable.

Mr. Huffard said the investment would be used to expand its product line and to grow the business abroad. It also plans to double its staff, which currently stands at about 200, in the next couple of years.



Morning Take-Out

TOP STORIES

ING Group to Sell Stake in Capital One  |  The Dutch financial services giant ING Group plans to sell its 9 percent stake in Capital One in a deal that could be worth around $3 billion.

ING acquired the stake in the American firm when Capital One bought ING Direct USA for $9 billion in February.

The Dutch firm said late on Tuesday that it would sell 54 million shares in Capital One, and would set the price before the start of trading in New York on Wednesday. Based on the closing share price on Tuesday, ING's stake in Capital One is worth around $3 billion.

The move to sell the shares comes as ING has been forced to sell assets as part of the conditions of a 10 billion euro ($12.5 billion) bailout it received from its local government in 2008.
DealBook '

With Lax Regulation, a Risky Industry Flourishes OffshoreWith Lax Regulation, a Risky Industry Flourishes Offshore  |  The hedge fund industry has been rushing headlong to open Bermuda-based reinsurers, writes Steven M. Davidoff, DealBook's Deal Professor.

Reinsurance, already something of a murky business, may become even more complicated as a result. And while the hedge funds are likely to profit, the question is: Who's watching to make sure this doesn't lead to another financial calamity?
DealBook '

DEAL NOTES

Europe's Central Banker Discusses a Plan to Buy Bonds  |  In a close d-door meeting this week, Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, “made clear his plans to buy short-term government bonds on secondary markets, lawmakers who were present said,” according to The New York Times. The comments appeared to set the stage for the central bank's announcement this week.
NEW YORK TIMES

Banking Group Gets in the Super PAC Game  |  The American Bankers Association, an industry group, is planning to raise several million dollars in the next few weeks for a fund to allow members to contribute anonymously to Senate campaigns, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

When an Insider Trader Is in the Family  |  Stuart J. Boesky, the chief executive of Pembrook Capital Management, a n adviser and fund manager focused on debt, spoke with The New York Times about his business. He also happens to be the first cousin of Ivan F. Boesky, the convicted insider trader from the 1980s. “Here's a guy that never helped me, but the association is not all that helpful,” Stuart Boesky said.
NEW YORK TIMES

Mergers & Acquisitions '

3M and Avery Dennison ‘Committed' to Deal Despite Antitrust Issue  |  After the Justice Department balked at 3M's $550 million acquisition of Avery Dennison, the companies said they would seek to appease antitrust concerns.
DealBook '

Valeant Sticks to Torrid Pace of Deal-Making  |  The $2.6 billion acquisition of Medicis Pha rmaceutical is the 11th deal this year for the Montreal-based Valeant, which merged with Biovail of Canada in 2010.
DealBook '

Dick Clark Productions Sold to Guggenheim PartnersDick 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, was sold to Guggenheim Partners and a pair of multimedia investors.
DealBook '

European Soft Drink Makers in Merger Talks  |  Britvic, a British soft drink maker, said it was in talks with A.G. Barr, a Scottish company that makes the popular Irn-Bru drink, for a possible all-share merger, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Mexican Bank Considers Buying Assets From BBVA  |  The Mexican lender Grupo Financiero Banorte said it was eyeing the Latin American pension and retirement businesses of Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, a Spanish rival, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

INVESTMENT BANKING '

Chinese Bank Takes an Aggressive Stance in Asia  |  China Development Bank, which traditionally has lent to state-run companies, has begun doing private deals and is willing to offer big, long-term loans, The Wall Street Journal reports, citing unidentified bankers.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Deutsche Bank Said to Plan Cuts in Asia  |  The German lender is shedding about 85 jobs at its equities units in Japan and Hong Kong, Bloomberg News reports, citing two unidentified people with knowledge of the matter.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Confessions of a Barclays Intern  |  An unidentified summer intern at Barclays tells New York magazine about working at a bank that was tainted by scandal: “No one felt morally responsible. The first concern on everyone's mind was, Is this going to affect my pay in two weeks? And the answer we got from management was a firm no.”
NEW YORK

Pimco's Total Return Fund Attracts $1.3 Billion in A ugust  |  The giant mutual fund had its eighth straight month of net deposits, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Small Companies in Britain Cut Back on Borrowing  |  A survey showed that small and medium-sized business in Britain had a limited appetite for financing, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

PRIVATE EQUITY '

Blackstone's Real Estate Fund Confronts the Challenges of Size  |  With a $13.3 billion war chest, Blackstone Real Estate is looking for buyers for more than 40 previous investments while also deciding how to commit the fresh capital, Bloomberg News writes.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

What's at Issue in the Private Equity Tax Inquiry  |  The New York attorney general's office is said to be investigating private equity firms' use of a tax strategy known as management fee waiver programs - programs that might not hold up if challenged in court, writes Victor Fleischer, the tax columnist for DealBook.
DealBook '

Mexico Becomes a Private Equity Destination  |  It may not be as well-known a market as Brazil, but Mexico is attracting the interest of buyout firms, The Wall Street Journal reports. Private equity investment in the country grew to $228 million during the first half of the year, compared with $84 million the year earlier.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Buyouts of Chinese Companies Take Time  |  A proposed buyout of Focus Media, which would be the biggest ever in China, shows how “investors aren't quick to jump to the buyout route,” even when stock prices are depressed, The Wall Street Journal's Heard on the Street column writes.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Morgan Stanley Invests in Chinese Renewable Energy  |  The infrastructure arm of Morgan Stanley, along with two Asian private equity firms, have invested a total of $300 million in Zhaoheng Hydropower, a company that generates power from water, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

HEDGE FUNDS '

Greenlight Capital Rises 4.2% in August  |  David Einhorn's firm benefited in August from a jump in the stock price of Coventry Health Care, Reuters reports. For the year so far, the hedge fund is up 10.9 percent, according to Reuters, which cites two unidentified people familiar with the results.
REUTERS

Magnetar's Triathlete Co-Founder  |  Alec Litowitz, the chief executive and head of equities at Magnetar Capital, trained for the Ironman World Championship before helping start his hedge fund, AR Magazine writes in its cover story. “In some ways, the triathlon may have been the perfect preparation for the battles Litowitz has faced in building Magnetar,” the magazine says.
AR MAGAZINE

Swedish Firm to Require a Longer Commitment From Investors  |  Brummer & Partners, a firm based in Stockholm, is starting a hedge fund that will require investors to lock up their money for a minimum of a year, or even three, in an effort to guard against withdrawals that can come in a volatile environment, The Financial Times reports.
FINANCIAL TIMES

Hartford Financial Agrees to Sell a Division  |  The insurer, which is under pressure from John A. Paulson, agreed to sell a retirement-plans unit for $400 million, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS '

Facebook Moves to Aid Its Shares  |  Facebook has announced what amounts to a repurchase of several million shares, adding that its largest sha reholder and chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, would not sell his shares or options for at least another year. The move appears aimed at instilling confidence into Wall Street.
DealBook '

Who Is to Blame for Facebook's I.P.O.? A Mix of Responses  |  The DealBook column on Tuesday, which pinned the blame of Facebook's mess of an initial public offering on its chief financial officer, David Ebersman, has provoked a wide range of reactions among the online financial commentariat.
DealBook '

Hudson's Bay Said to Consider Selling Shares to the Public  |  Hudson's Bay, a retailer that traces its roots to 1670, may aim to raise about $507 million in October or November through a Toronto I.P.O. of its Canadian and United States sto res, The Wall Street Journal reports, citing unidentified people familiar with the matter.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Santander Seeks $4.2 Billion I.P.O. of Its Mexican Unit  |  The bank's listing would be one of the largest initial public offerings ever in Mexico, and comes as the country's economy continues to grow on the back of strong local demand.
DealBook '

MegaFon of Russia Plans a $4 Billion I.P.O.  |  The Russian mobile phone company MegaFon is seeking regulatory permission for an I.P.O. in London that could be worth as much as $4 billion, Reuters reports, citing unidentified people familiar with the matter.
REUTERS

Hong Kong Los es Its I.P.O. Crown  |  Hong Kong was recently the world's top I.P.O. destination, but this year the value of new listings there has dropped 77 percent compared with the period last year, according to a report from Haitong Securities, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

VENTURE CAPITAL '

Telefonica Steps Up Its Venture Capital Presence  |  The Spanish telecommunications giant Telefonica, which already backs some start-ups, said it would invest 68 million euros ($86 million) in venture capital funds as it looks to expand its digital division with new technology, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Legality of a Taxi-Hailing App Is Questioned in New York  |  Uber, which is based in San Francisco, is introducing its app to New York City's yellow cabs, but taxi officials say that rules prohibiting prearranged rides may mean the service isn't legal, The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

Education Technology Company Raises $80 Million  |  Desire2Learn, an Ontario-based company that offers systems to facilitate online education, said it raised a financing round from New Enterprise Associates and the venture capital arm of a Canadian pension fund, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

LEGAL/REGULATORY '

Banks Face Suits as States Weigh Libor Losses  |  A number of states, including North Car olina, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York and Connecticut, are working to build a case for suing the nation's largest banks in connection with the recent rate-rigging scandal involving the London interbank offered rate, or Libor.
DealBook '

In UBS Convictions, Parallels to the Libor Investigation  |  A case against the three former UBS executives who were convicted last week has a number of interesting parallels to the Libor investigation, and can provide the framework for cases that might emerge, Peter J. Henning writes in the White Collar Watch column.
DealBook '

Finra Executive Departs for Wilmer Hale  |  The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority said its vice chairman, Stephen Luparello, was leaving to join the law fir m Wilmer Hale in Washington.
DealBook '

Lawyer for Banks Has Sway in Washington  |  Annette Nazareth, a former official of the Securities and Exchange Commission who now represents Wall Street firms as a partner at Davis Polk & Wardwell, played a key role in the negotiations over the Dodd-Frank Act, becoming “the preeminent legal advocate for financial services firms as they sought to scale back the new rules,” Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

S.E.C. Accuses Chinese Firm of Falsifying Earnings  |  The Securities and Exchange Commission took a rare action against China Sky One Medical, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Residential Capital May Raise $4 Billion From Asset Sales  |  The troubled mortgage lender has lined up bidders including Nationstar Holdings and Berkshire Hathaway for an auction on Oct. 23 that is expected to raise at least $4 billion, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Lehman Looks to Sell Some Assets for Pennies on the Dollar  |  in Detroit, Lehman Brothers Holdings offered to sell an office property at a price that would recover less than 10 percent of what it paid, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

British Banking Official Is Dead at 69  |  Andrew Crockett, a former head of the Bank for International Settlements and executive director of the Bank of England, died on Monday at his home in California, Reuters reports.
REUTERS



British Soft Drink Companies in Merger Talks

LONDON â€" The British beverage company Britvic said on Wednesday that it was in talks with a rival soft drink maker, A.G. Barr, over a potential merger worth around $2.2 billion.

The deal would create one of Europe's largest soft drink companies under the proposed all-stock merger, which would give a 63 percent stake in the combined company to Britvic shareholders. Investors in A.G. Barr would control the remaining 37 percent stake, according to a company statement.

The two companies said discussions were in early stages. If the deal is completed, A.G. Barr's chief executive, Roger White, would become the new company's head. John Gibney, Britvic's chief financial officer, would become head of finance for the combined company.

Britvic and smaller rival A.G. Barr have a combined market share of around $2.2 billion.

In morning trading in London, shares in Britvic, which controls the British license for Pepsi and 7UP, jumped 11.9 percent, while stock i n A.G. Barr 5.6 percent.

Under British takeover rules, the companies have until the beginning of October to announce whether they will pursue a merger.



British Soft Drink Companies in Merger Talks

LONDON â€" The British beverage company Britvic said on Wednesday that it was in talks with a rival soft drink maker, A.G. Barr, over a potential merger worth around $2.2 billion.

The deal would create one of Europe's largest soft drink companies under the proposed all-stock merger, which would give a 63 percent stake in the combined company to Britvic shareholders. Investors in A.G. Barr would control the remaining 37 percent stake, according to a company statement.

The two companies said discussions were in early stages. If the deal is completed, A.G. Barr's chief executive, Roger White, would become the new company's head. John Gibney, Britvic's chief financial officer, would become head of finance for the combined company.

Britvic and smaller rival A.G. Barr have a combined market share of around $2.2 billion.

In morning trading in London, shares in Britvic, which controls the British license for Pepsi and 7UP, jumped 11.9 percent, while stock i n A.G. Barr 5.6 percent.

Under British takeover rules, the companies have until the beginning of October to announce whether they will pursue a merger.



3M and Avery Dennison \'Committed\' to Deal Despite Antitrust Issue

3M‘s acquisition of an Avery Dennison unit was in limbo Wednesday, as the companies scrambled to clear regulatory obstacles.

The Justice Department balked at the $550 million deal, threatening to file a civil antitrust lawsuit against the companies, which sell labels and sticky notes. On Tuesday, the department announced that 3M “abandoned” its takeover plans in the face of a court battle.

But just hours later, the companies vowed to keep fighting. In a statement late Tuesday, 3M and Avery Dennison clarified that they “voluntarily” withdrew the paperwork for the deal as they sought to appease the Justice Department's concerns.

The companies said they were “committed to working together to explore options” for completing a deal with regulatory approval. “The companies continue to believe the transaction would benefit customers and consumers,” the statement said.

The all-cash deal was announced in January. 3M, the maker of Post-it no tes and Scotch Tape, agreed to buy the office and consumer products business of the Avery Dennison Corporation, which makes folder dividers, labels and a popular brand of highlighters. While the deal excluded some of Avery Dennison's sticky notes business, the Justice Department argued that the company would no longer “compete effectively in the sticky notes market.”

“The proposed acquisition would have substantially lessened competition in the sale of labels and sticky notes, resulting in higher prices and reduced innovation for products that millions of American consumers use every day,” the Justice Department said on Tuesday.

Regulators noted that the two companies are each other's closest competitors in the adhesive label and sticky-note business. And under the terms of the deal, according to the Justice Department, 3M's share of the market would have jumped to more than 80 percent.

The deal was part of a broader acquisition spree for 3M, a manu facturing conglomerate. Last year. the company also bought Advanced Chemistry and Technology, a maker of aerospace sealants; assets from Zargis Medical, a medical software maker; and Hybrivet Systems, which makes lead detection products.



Finra Executive Departs for Wilmer Hale

Wall Street's self-policing organization has lost one of its top cops.

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority announced on Tuesday that its vice chairman, Stephen Luparello, was joining the law firm WilmerHale in Washington. Mr. Luparello, who oversees Finra's regulatory and enforcement teams, will leave on Oct. 7.

“It has been the the job and the place of a lifetime,” Mr. Luparello said in an interview on Tuesday. “It's hard to leave the nest,” he said, while adding that he is leaving “Finra in the very capable hands of many colleagues who I know will continue to successfully carry out its regulatory mandate.”

His departure follows several other personnel changes at Finra, a private nonprofit agency whose members include the roughly 4,500 brokerage firms it oversees. Finra's top lobbyist, Howard Schloss, stepped down this summer. And in May, Finra shuffled its legal staff, hiring Robert Colby, a former federal regulator, as its chief leg al officer. His position condensed the responsibilities of two departing senior lawyers: Marc Menchel and T. Grant Callery.

Mr. Luparello, who has spent more than 16 years at Finra, is the highest ranking official to move on. A longtime regulator who also serves stints at the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Mr. Luparello joined Finra's predecessor, the National Association of Securities Dealers, in 1996. In 2009, he rose to vice chairman, which led him to oversee the group's enforcement program.

“He helped lead the organization through one of the most critical times for securities regulators and helped build and shape many of Finra's regulatory programs,” Richard Ketchum, the organization's chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. “”Steve has been at the heart of the work Finra has done to protect investors for almost 16 years.”



Who Is to Blame for Facebook\'s I.P.O.? A Mix of Responses

My column on Tuesday, pinning the blame of Facebook's mess of an initial public offering on its chief financial officer, David Ebersman, has caused quite a reaction - including Mark Cuban denouncing my view, saying “Facebook Handled their IPO Exactly Right”, and Forbes saying “The Man Responsible For Facebook's Stock Debacle Is Mark Zuckerberg.”

As Facebook's stock continues to fall - it slumped 1.8 percent on Tuesday to close at $17.73. - let me offer some additional perspective and background to the various views emerging online on Tuesday.

First - and perhaps I should have said this in the column itself - I take no pleasure in faulting Mr. Ebersman publicly. Really. Good people make mistakes. Mr. Ebersman is human. I would like to see Facebook succeed. Everyday, I see blame assigned to someone or another for a problem and think, “There but for the grace of God go I.” I have made mistakes before, and I will surely make them again.

Having said that, I remain baffled that there has been no accountability for what has to be considered a failed I.P.O. Facebook's market value has fallen more than $50 billion. $50 billion! That's a fact, not an opinion. Mr. Ebersman was the captain of the ship in the case of the I.P.O., and the ship - or at least the stock - is sinking.

Mr. Cuban, whose career deserves enormous respect, argues that the I.P.O. was a success because Mr. Ebersman maximized the total amount of money Facebook was able squirrel away by selling shares at $38 a share.

“If the C.F.O. of Facebook came on SharkTank and told me that he was able to sell his shares to the public for $38 a share, but turned down the opportunity, I would crush him for being an idiot,” he wrot e.

That might make sense if a company is selling itself for cash to a buyer in a merger or acquisition - which is a one-time event - but it misses the long-term nature of the relationship a public company is supposed to have with its investors. If every company sought to use the I.P.O. process simply to fleece investors, selling at the absolute highest price without any sense of room for investors to make a return, no investor would buy shares again. (In some regard, that's what's happening to Facebook now.)

Forbes made the case on Tuesday that the blame should be assigned to Mr. Zuckerberg, not Mr. Ebersman. “It's not just that Zuckerberg is the C.E.O. and the buck stops with him. He purposely and deliberately created a culture at Facebook that was dismissive of the stock market and the responsibilities of being a publicly traded company,” Nathan Vardi, a staff writer at Forbes, wrote.

I could not agree more with Mr. Vardi's view of the culture Mr. Zuckerberg created. It may come back to haunt Facebook. But given that Mr. Zuckerberg distanced himself from the I.P.O. from the beginning, it's hard to fault him directly.

Happily, Eric Jackson, a contributor to Forbes, appeared to agree with my column. (He often disagrees with my column, so thanks, Eric.) He noted: “Ebersman had only ever worked at Genentech since 1994 and Oppenheimer briefly before that. If Facebook had hired a C.F.O. who'd brought a hot young tech company public before, that would have been a valuable skillset. But they didn't.”

Steve Bell said that the column was a missed opportunity for Facebook to publicly back Mr. Ebersman.

A reader who goes by “btanen” and was critical of the column, c alling it “rediculous” wrote a rather funny rewrite of my column that is worth reading and laughing about, even if it is at my expense.

And finally, Felix Salmon at Reuters takes issue with certain parts of my column. But I will agree with him on this part about Mr. Ebersman: “He didn't much care about investors before the I.P.O., and he doesn't seem to care much about them after it, either. If they react by selling Facebook's stock, that's their right. But Zuckerberg - the guy who really matters - has made it very clear he's concentrating on the long term. And so long as Zuckerberg has confidence that Ebersman is a good steward for Facebook's finances, Ebersman is going to be safe in his job. No matter what investors think. “



With Lax Regulation, a Risky Industry Flourishes Offshore

The hedge fund industry has been rushing headlong to open Bermuda-based reinsurers.

Reinsurance, already something of a murky business, may become even more complicated as a result. And while the hedge funds are likely to profit, the question is: Who's watching to make sure this doesn't lead to another financial calamity?

Reinsurance is the business of providing insurance to insurers. To hedge their risk, insurers will cede part of their claims by buying their own insurance from reinsurers. It's a big business. Holborn, a reinsurance brokerage firm, estimated that $215 billion to $220 billion in reinsurance was written globally in 2011.

The reinsurance business plays an important role in paying claims from catastrophes for which regular front-line insurers don't want to take the full risk. According to Holborn, the reinsurance industry spent an estimated $48 billion last year on claims related to the New Zealand earthquake, the Japanese tsunami and nucle ar disaster and Hurricane Irene in the United States. If you are hit by a disaster, it's probable that your insurance claim will be paid by the reinsurers.

Surprisingly, these big profits make it a good time to be a reinsurer. Less-capitalized companies have fallen by the wayside and premiums are likely to rise.

So why are hedge funds entering this business?

It's the money. Hedge funds are perpetually plagued by fickle investors who want to withdraw money at the first sign of deteriorating results. But a hedge fund can set up a reinsurer in Bermuda or the Cayman Islands. Under the regulations of these islands, the new reinsurer can then use the premiums it collects to invest with the hedge fund itself. The hedge fund suddenly has hundreds of millions in permanent capital that can't be withdrawn.

The hedge funds are also looking to capitalize on the increased interest by pension funds and endowments in reinsurance. With the stock market a shaky investm ent and yields low, pension funds and others are piling into the reinsurance market in search of higher yields. The Pennsylvania Public Schools Employees' Retirement System, for example, recently invested $200 million in the Aeolus Property Catastrophe Fund, which finances reinsurance of catastrophe claims.

David Einhorn's Greenlight Capital pioneered the hedge fund-sponsored reinsurer in 2004, when Greenlight set up Greenlight Re in the Cayman Islands. Since then, a number of other hedge funds have entered the reinsurance market, but in the last six months what was a trickle is turning into a flood. Daniel S. Loeb of Third Point has announced the creation of a $500 million Bermuda reinsurer named TP Re. Steven Cohen's SAC Capital Advisers has also created a Bermuda reinsurer called SAC Re, which is also raising $500 million.

Hedge funds are also big players in a reinsurance instrument known as a catastrophe bond. These bonds pay out only if there has been a sign ificant event like a hurricane. According to GC Capital, $13.5 billion in catastrophe bonds were outstanding as of the first half of 2012. The catastrophe bond market has been around for a while, but as money pours into this sector, it is likely that hedge funds and other financiers will rush to create other types of reinsurance financial products to draw in money.

This new market is arising outside the United States, mostly in Bermuda and the Caymans.

And that may be a problem.

These new reinsurers still operate as hedge funds. If you examine Greenlight Capital Re's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, its appears as focused on its investment return as its reinsurance business. Indeed, Greenlight Capital Re's assets are managed by Greenlight Capital's investment adviser, DME Advisors, for 20 percent of the profits and a 1.5 percent administration fee, the same as would be the case for a hedge fund.

Yet while they are partly hedge fund s, these new companies are regulated as reinsurers. And Bermuda requires only minimal capital requirements and disclosure of financial positions, and it does not strictly regulate how these companies invest their money. The Cayman Islands has similarly light regulation.

For American regulators, the reinsurance industry is largely outside its jurisdiction, dominated as it is by foreign companies. So no regulator is really watching to ensure that these reinsurers do not make excessively risky investments that blow up.

According to Best's Special Report, companies domiciled in Germany wrote about a quarter of the global reinsurance business in 2011 while companies from Bermuda wrote a third of premiums. The last two big American reinsurers left are Berkshire Hathaway and Transatlantic Holdings (now a subsidiary of the Alleghany Corporation), but they are at an increasing disadvantage because of the better tax treatment and lighter regulation for offshore reinsurers.

Yet the concern is not that so much of the business is offshore, but that the growing role of hedge funds may push the main reinsurers to be more aggressive with their own investing. The result would be to push the reinsurance market into becoming a giant hedge fund industry.

We're already seeing some movement in this direction. The big reinsurer Validus is forming the Bermuda-based PaCRe with the hedge fund magnate John Paulson's Paulson & Company.

According to a recent study by the International Association of Insurance Supervisors, we don't have much to worry about. First, these investments are countercyclical - meaning that if the stock market goes down, reinsurance is unaffected. After all, disasters just happen; they aren't caused by the economy.

Furthermore, stress tests have shown that a huge loss can be sustained by the reinsurance industry far greater than losses caused by Hurricane Katrina. The reinsurers are also required to post collater al in the United States when they write policies. This collateral typically takes the form of letters of credit backed by the reinsurer's investments.

All this assumes that there are few links between the insurance market and the stock market. But insurers and reinsurers are already big investors in stocks, and some are invested in hedge funds themselves. And this connection to the capital markets will become more pronounced as hedge funds reinvest their reinsurance business money.

Given hedge funds' penchant for leverage, any movement in the markets will be exacerbated as a result. In a catastrophe like Sept. 11, which sent the market into a tailspin, reinsurers operating as hedge funds may face their own enormous losses, which are magnified by their investment losses.

This could create a serial shock to the system as reinsurers default on their collateral, leaving the banks that issued letters of credit holding the bag for billions in unexpected losses.

In other words, the reinsurance market is starting to look like many of the markets before the financial crisis - lightly regulated and interconnected in ways that policy makers can't see, with banks potentially left with the wreckage. The industry may be right that reinsurance is different and has its own checks and balances, but we've also heard that before. It behooves United States regulators to make sure.

Steven M. Davidoff, writing as The Deal Professor, is a commentator for DealBook on the world of mergers and acquisitions.



Banks Face Suits as States Weigh Libor Losses

The scandal over global interest rates has state officials like Janet Cowell of North Carolina working intensely behind the scenes to build a case for suing the nation's largest banks.

Ms. Cowell, the state's elected treasurer, and several of her staff members have spent the summer combing through the state's investments trying to determine how much the state may have lost because of suspected manipulation of the , or Libor, which is used as a benchmark for trillions of dollars of financial contracts around the world.

“We think this could be as big as the mortgage crisis settlement, that this could be a really high impact situation and that we should be aggressive on this,” Ms. Cowell said, referring to the $25 billion settlement that the nation's biggest banks entered with state attorneys general.

The activity provides a glimpse at how widely the Libor scandal has spread through the financial world, and how much damage may still be in store for the banks accused of manipulating Libor. Her work also suggests just how difficult it is, and how long it may take, to get to the bottom of the losses.

The attorneys general in Maryland, Massachusetts, New York and Connecticut have all been examining how much their states may have lost as a result of a lowered Libor. A spokeswoman for Connecticut's attorney general, George C. Jepsen, said that the state's work with New York's attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, “has broadened significantly over the last few weeks and we are now coordinating with a much larger group of attorneys general.”

Even before the British bank Barclays admitted in June that its employees had tried to manipulate Libor, there were a number of lawsuits filed by cities and municipal agencies seeking damages from large banks for manipulating Libor. But while those cases were filed by private sector lawyers, the public officials are looking at bringing more wide-ranging lawsuits on behalf of the states. The Justice Department has coordinated with the states and is leading its own investigation.

The government officials are hoping that their cases will be bolstered by new settlements between regulators and individual banks that are suspected of participating in the manipulation. Most of the more than one dozen banks involved in setting Libor have said in official filings that they are in discussions with regulators about their involvement in the Libor process.

Libor is supposed to represent how much banks are paying for short-term loans from other banks. It is determined by the British Bankers Association after a daily poll of the world's largest banks. It then serves as a benchmark for rates paid by consumers and businesses on everything from mortgages to derivatives to .

Barclays said in its settlement that it and other banks pushed Libor down artificially during the financial crisis to appear more healthy. Barclays also admitted that its traders tried to manipulate Libor at other points in order to sweeten particular financial deals. Barclays paid $450 million to settle the charges.

The financial products used by states and local governments are especially vulnerable to an artificially lowered rate.

Ms. Cowell, a 44-year-old Democrat and former business consultant who is running for another four-year term, was aware of the potential implications of the Libor case for North Carolina almost as soon as the Barclays settlement was announced on June 27. The next Monday, at her weekly staff meeting, she asked her office's lawyers and investment officers to begin looking into it.

The inquiry has focused primarily on two areas of the state's finances.

One was the state's public pension plans, which in North Carolina are overseen by the treasurer. A state money manager began identifying bonds held by the state pension fund and money market fund investments that derived their value from Libor.

In July, lawyers from the treasurer's office took part in a conference call on the topic with pension funds in other states. Ms. Cowell and members of her staff have found a few investments held by the $76 billion pension fund that were tied to Libor, but they have now determined that the losses were most likely “pretty small.”

The other, more significant area where Ms. Cowell began looking for losses was in a kind of financial contract that many states use, known as an interest rate swap. States use swaps when they want to issue a bond at a floating interest rate but protect themselves from future swings in rates. In a standard swap, a state makes a regular payment to its bank and gets a payment back that is determined by the level of Libor. If Libor was lower, the payments will be, too.

North Carolina had two major swaps at the time the benchmark was suspected of being rigged. Together, the two swaps were tied to $1.3 billion of bonds that were issued in 2002 and 2005. The banks on the other side of these contracts included Bank of America, of Charlotte, N.C., and JPMorgan Chase & Company based in New York, both of which are involved in setting Libor.

The challenge facing North Carolina and other states is that there is no agreement yet on how much the banks actually manipulated Libor, and for how long. The lawsuits that have already been filed have estimated that the banks held Libor down by at least 30 basis points, or 0.30 percent, for three years. By one method of calculation, that could have meant losses for North Carolina of around $10 million on their swaps.

Ms. Cowell said she assumed that as more banks settled with regulators, those numbers would become clearer. In the meantime, the treasurer's office is working out formulas for losses that they can plug numbers into if and when new settlements are made public. At that point, Ms. Cowell also plans to share her work with other municipal agencies in North Carolina that held about 40 swaps during the period in question.

“This is an unprecedented level of analysis, and an unprecedented wide spectrum of financial impact,” Ms. Cowell said.

The inquiry could provide a political bump for Ms. Cowell, who is seeking another term as anti-Wall Street sentiment is running high. A graduate of the Wharton School of Business, she served on the Raleigh, N.C., City Council and then the state Senate before taking office in 2008. She cites among her accomplishments the state's maintaining its status as one of eight with a AAA rating from the major .

North Carolina's attorney general will make the final determination on whether the state will join existing lawsuits, proceed with its own case or take no action at all. The attorney general's office did not respond to requests for comment.

But the office has been involved in many of the discussions with the treasurer's staff, people involved in the meetings said.



Facebook Moves to Aid Its Shares

SAN FRANCISCO - “Stay focused and keep shipping” may be the motto has sought to follow since its flubbed public offering three months ago. But on Tuesday, the company seemed focused mostly on how to stabilize its hemorrhaging stock.

It announced what amounted to a repurchase of several million shares; said its largest shareholder and chief executive, , would not sell his shares or options for at least another year; and moved up when some employees could start selling their shares.

The moves appeared aimed at instilling confidence into Wall Street, analysts said.

The company's stock has lost more than half its value from the public offering in mid-May, closing at $17.73 a share Tuesday. But after-hours trading seemed to bring a bit of cheer to the world's largest social network: The share price rose nearly 2 percent.

Still, analysts were skeptical whether these moves, announced in filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, will have any appreciable bearing on the stock.

Facebook employees and early investors will be able to sell hundreds of millions of shares at the end of October, which could reduce prices. The first lock-up, as this is known, will expire on Oct. 29, the company announced, moving up the date slightly. At that point, employees will be allowed to cash in approximately 220 million shares.

Another window will open in mid-November, when employees will be able to cash in approximately 780 million shares, followed by a third in December, and a final one in May 2013.

“While it's great that Mark isn't selling, you're still saddled with significant selling pressure on the stock,” said Richard Greenfield, an analyst with BTIG Research. “The lock-up monkey on their back isn't going away because Mark isn't selling.”

Facebook said Tuesday that it would withhold about 101 million shares to cover tax bills. That is not an uncommon move when companies go public. For Facebook, it would have an additional benefit: In effect, it is like a stock buyback, reducing the number of total shares on the public market, “thereby reducing our shares outstanding used to calculate earnings per share,” the filing said.

Early investors have been allowed to sell already, and their exits have vexed many public shareholders.

Peter Thiel, one of its first angel backers, has already dumped most of his shares in the company. The venture firm, Accel Partners, has sold millions of its shares.

In the filing, Facebook said its board members Marc Andreessen and Donald Graham also plan to sell shares as soon as they are able to, to pay their tax bills.

In a separate filing late Tuesday, Dustin Moskovitz, one of Facebook's co-founders, who has since gone on to start his own company, reported that he sold 450,000 shares over the last week.

In its filing, Facebook made clear that Mr. Zuckerberg, its co-founder, had no plans to sell his options or shares for the next 12 months.

“I don't interpret this as an investment thesis change in the stock one way or another,” said a Citibank analyst, Mark Mahaney. “It's a slightly positive trading piece of news for a stock that hasn't had any since its I.P.O.”

Rick Summer, an analyst with Morningstar, the investment research firm, said Tuesday's tweaks were “not material to our view of the investment merits of the stock.”

Facebook went public in May at an exceedingly ambitious valuation of more than $100 billion, or $38 a share. Since then, its sales growth has slowed, and the anticipation of more employee shares flooding the market has helped to reduce its value on Wall Street.

Facebook has sought to portray itself as a company that shrugs off the vicissitudes of the market and remains dedicated to its social mission. Right after the ballyhooed public offering, a poster went up on its campus urging employees to remain hard at work. “Stay focused and keep shipping,” it read.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: September 4, 2012

An earlier version of this article incorrectly said that Dustin Moskovitz, a co-founder of Facebook, had sold 450 million shares of stock.  The correct figure is 450,000.

 



ING to Sell Stake in Capital One

LONDON - The Dutch financial services giant ING plans to sell its 9 percent stake in Capital One in a deal that could be worth around $3 billion.

ING acquired the stake in the U.S. firm when Capital One bought ING Direct USA for $9 billion in February.

The Dutch firm said late on Tuesday that it would sell 54 million shares in Capital One, and would set the price before the start of trading in New York on Wednesday.

Based on Capital One's closing share price on Tuesday, ING's stake in the U.S. firm is worth around $3 billion.

The Dutch firm said it planned to complete the transaction by Sept. 10.

The deal for ING Direct USA transformed Capital One into the country's fifth largest bank by deposits. The combined businesses have around $200 billion in deposits, making it larger than regional powerhouses like PNC and TD Bank.

Under the terms of the deal, Capital One issued $2.8 billion worth of new shares to ING, making the Dutch firm its la rgest shareholder.

The move to offload the shares comes as ING has been forced to sell assets as part of the conditions of a 10 billion euro ($12.5 billion) bailout that the firm received from its local government in 2008.

Along with the sale of ING Direct USA to Capital One, the Dutch firm sold its online bank in Canada to local rival Bank of Nova Scotia last month for $3.1 billion. The European banking and insurance company also is planning to sell its Asian insurance businesses.

In morning trading in Amsterdam, shares in ING rose less than one percent.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup are the joint bookrunners for the deal.