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Former Programmer Demands That Goldman Cover His Legal Fees

A former Goldman Sachs programmer charged a second time with stealing valuable computer code from the investment bank is fighting back, demanding that his former employer cover his mounting legal fees.

On Tuesday, the programmer, Sergey Aleynikov, sued Goldman in Federal District Court in New Jersey. He wants the financial firm to pay for the nearly $2.4 million in costs he has racked up defending himself in both an overturned federal case and a pending state proceeding by the Manhattan district attorney.

Those costs are likely to grow as the case by the district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., progresses. A grand jury has handed up an indictment, and Mr. Aleynikov is expected to be arraigned on Thursday, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the grand jury's actions are private until the arraignment.

Mr. Aleynikov's lawyer, Kevin H. Marino, has requested a $500,000 retainer fee as he and his partners at Marino, Tortorella & Boyle in Chatham, N.J., prepare Mr. Aleynikov's defense. In the complaint filed on Tuesday, they wrote that their client had exhausted his financial resources before the federal district trial. They argued that Goldman was obligated to pay his fees because he was an officer of the firm during the time in question.

“Aleynikov incurred significant legal fees and expenses in connection with his successful defense of the federal charges,” the complaint read. “Because he succeeded on each federal charge brought against him, Aleynikov is entitled to indemnification for the reasonable fees and expenses incurred in his defense.”

A Goldman spokesman, Michael DuVally, declined to comment.

It is the latest twist in Mr. Aleynikov's long legal journey.

Three years ago, he was arrested after Goldman reported him to the United States attorney in Manhattan. Then a vice president at the firm, he was charged with stealing source code for high-frequency trading software as he was leaving to join a start-up.

A jury found him guilty in 2010, and Mr. Aleynikov was sentenced to eight years in federal prison. An appeals court reversed that conviction this year, finding that the case was built on a misuse of federal corporate espionage laws. Mr. Aleynikov was released from prison shortly thereafter.

But last month, Mr. Vance filed his own charges, accusing Mr. Aleynikov of exploiting his access to Goldman's “secret sauce.” The case is widely seen as part of a campaign by Mr. Vance and Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, to pursue white-collar crime.

That legal battle has left Mr. Aleynikov with little money, according to Tuesday's complaint. He is relying on friends to provide him with housing and cannot afford to pay his lawyers.

As part of their case, Mr. Aleynikov's lawyers point to a section of Goldman's bylaws that, they say, requires the firm to indemn ify employees charged in criminal or civil proceedings in connection with their status as an officer or director of the bank.

The firm has paid a large portion of the legal fees for a former director, Rajat K. Gupta, who was convicted of leaking boardroom talks to the hedge fund magnate Raj Rajaratnam. It has done the same for Fabrice Tourre, the subject of a securities fraud lawsuit by the Securities and Exchange Commission. While Goldman settled a related civil case for $550 million, Mr. Tourre, who is on leave, is awaiting trial.

Late last month, Mr. Aleynikov requested that Goldman advance him money to cover some of the fees for his defense in the state court case. He offered to refund the money if he were ultimately found ineligible for such treatment, according to court papers.


Aleynikov Legal Fees Complaint


Sergey Aleynikov Fees Memorandum of Law



Questions About Electric Cars as a Manufacturer Struggles

As Tesla Motors, maker of electric cars, burns through cash and misses production targets, it is turning to investors and taxpayers for extra financial help.

On Tuesday, Tesla announced plans to sell five million shares to raise cash. The federal government also agreed to waive some conditions of a $465 million loan, easing pressure on the company over the next couple of quarters.

Such moves are raising questions about the long-term viability of the market for electric cars.

In recent months, Tesla has been ramping up production of its main vehicle, a high-performance sedan called the Model S, and has started rolling out the first cars. But the company, which cut its revenue forecast, was four to five weeks behind on delivering the cars to customers and is consuming cash at a rapid rate.

“Tesla's story is starting to show some serious cracks,” said Carter Driscoll, an analyst at CapStone Investments. “This shows that capital raising is a neces sity, not a luxury, as the company had maintained.”

The situation was weighing on the stock. Shares of Tesla, which have been volatile this year, slumped 9.78 percent on Tuesday.

Tesla's problems could also spark criticism of the government's energy loan program, which has been heavily promoted by the Obama administration. The program came under fire after Solyndra, a solar-panel maker, collapsed in 2011 owing taxpayers $535 million.

In Tesla's case, the moves suggested that cash was getting tight. Under the new terms of the loan, Tesla received extra time to make a coming payment, and will not have to pass a test this quarter that compares short-term assets with short-term liabilities.

But Tesla must submit a plan to the Energy Department by the end of October for early repayment of the loan.

Deepak Ahuja, Tesla's chief financial officer, said the changes to the loan were “purely a normal course of events” because Tesla's business model h ad evolved.

Tesla is now entering a critical phase. The company has fully drawn down the government loan, and shareholders may not be happy with additional stock offerings. Amid the financial pressure, investors will look for signs that sales of the Model S will lead to strong cash flows.

Mr. Ahuja said that he expected Tesla's operations to produce positive cash flows soon. In the first six months of this year, Tesla showed a cash drain of $111 million.

“When do people start to question their ability to execute?” Mr. Driscoll said.

Tesla will also test customers loyalty. Some early customers who have received their Model S cars are extremely pleased. Rob Stelling, a clinical laboratory scientist in St. Helena, Calif., who got car his earlier this month, said it had exceeded expectations.

“I give more than 10 rides a day,” Mr. Stelling said. “I think I've sold at least five.”

Buyers are paying a hefty sum to reserve the Model S , which can go from 0 to 60 miles per hour in as little as 4.4 seconds. The deposit on the basic model, which sells for about $57,400 before tax credits, is $5,000. Souped-up versions require larger deposits.

Such payments have been a big source of cash for the company. At the end of June, Tesla was holding $133.4 million of reservation payments. But if production delays worsen, customers still waiting to get their cars may grow impatient.

“I wish Tesla could meet the production target, because it's better for the company,” said John Griswell, a computer engineer from Austin, Tex., who put down $5,000 for a Model S but had not yet received it. “But it's also important that they get the product right.”

In the end, Tesla's fortunes will depend on the size of the market beyond the enthusiastic early buyers.

“People are going to want these cars because they're great,” Mr. Griswell said.



Santander\'s Mexican Arm Said to Price Its I.P.O. at $12.18

The Mexican arm of Banco Santander priced the U.S. portion of its initial public offering at about $12.18 on Tuesday, according to a person briefed on the matter, within its expected price range as the lender held one of the biggest stock sales ever by a Mexican company.

The unit, Grupo Financiero Santander México, sold additional shares on the Mexican Stock Exchange at 31.25 pesos each, at the middle of that offering's expected range. All told, the Spanish lender hoped to raise up to $4.2 billion through the dual listing.

When it begins trading on the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday under the ticker symbol BSMX, Santander México will become the only Mexican lender listed on the Big Board. It is largely seen as a way to tap into that country's growth prospects, as investors hunt for ways to gain greater exposure to international markets.

Still, the offering for the unit was seen as a test for investors on a number of fronts. Its size, trailing only the likes of Facebook's $18 billion stock sale, was seen as potentially daunting at a time when the I.P.O. market has stagnated. The number of initial offerings priced this year has slid nearly 50 percent from 2011, according to data from Renaissance Capital.

And Santander México will still be closely tied to its parent, one of Spain's biggest banks and a closely watched proxy of that country's financial health. Santander is expected to control about 75 percent of the company, raising the prospect that it may flood the market with additional shares if it needs to raise more capital.

Neither its size nor its Spanish parent appeared to be a major hurdle for investors. Santander México's offering was about two times oversubscribed, estimated Scott Sweet, the senior managing partner of IPOboutique.com.

“Originally, I was concerned about the size,” Mr. Sweet said. “But as the road show took place, the conversion rates on orders was excellent.”

I nvestors appeared to be enticed by Santander México's financial performance, which has outstripped that of the parent company. Its profit for the first half of the year rose 14.4 percent, to 556 million euros, benefiting from overall improvements in the Mexican economy.

“There are very few quality banks that hit the I.P.O. front, whether they be in the U.S. or abroad,” Mr. Sweet said.

Santander's overall first-half profit, meanwhile, slid 51 percent from the year-ago period, to 1.7 billion euros, as it continues to grapple with Spain's depressed economy.
Underwriters for Santander México sold about 20 percent of the bank's shares in Mexico, with the rest being sold internationally.

The Spanish lender has already taken its Brazilian arm public, raising about $7.5 billion. Santander said that it plans to hold I.P.O.'s for all of its biggest foreign subsidiaries within the next five years.

The Mexican stock sale is expected to bolster Santande r's capital ratios by about half of a percentage point.

The offering was led by Santander, UBS, Deutsche Bank and Bank of America Merrill Lynch.



A Tax Shelter Mitt Romney Could Love

Gov. Mitt Romney's 2011 tax return highlights the use of a questionable tax planning technique that may have avoided Medicare tax liability on up to $2 million of services income derived from his past employment at Bain Capital.

When Mr. Romney formally left Bain Capital in 2002, he entered into a severance agreement that covered the period from 1999, when he left Bain to work for the Olympics, until 2009. The severance agreement entitles him to receive a percentage of the profits, or “carried interest,” from Bain funds organized during that period, as well as cash payments equal to a percentage of capital committed to the Bain funds. The severance agreement technically ended in 2009, but continues to pay out additional amounts.

The notes to Mr. Romney's financial disclosures in June reported what it called “ordinary course true-up” payments totaling just over $2 million in income in 2011. These payments were from management companies that provided i nvestment advisory services to the Bain funds: Bain Capital Inc., Bain Capital II, Bain Capital NY and Bain Capital L.L.C.

It has not been disclosed how much Mr. Romney earned through his severance agreement in previous years. It is also unclear what “ordinary course true-up” payments are, as it is not a common legal term. The term most likely refers to payments based on a formula that, for some reason, could not be calculated accurately when the agreement ended in 2009, and pursuant to the agreement can now be calculated and paid out to Mr. Romney.

In short, Mr. Romney continues to receive cash payments from the companies that manage Bain Capital's funds. A couple of weeks ago in this column, I described how private equity firms like Bain Capital convert management fees, which would normally generate ordinary income, into investments that yield capital gain.

R. Bradford Malt, the trustee who manages Mr. Romney's Bain holdings, has stated that Mr. Romne y did not participate in the fee conversion program. One might have logically inferred, then, that Mr. Romney's share of the management fee income would be reported as wage income on Mr. Romney's tax return.

Not so. Instead, the payments are reported on Schedule E of the return as distributions from S corporations - the largest being $1,961,325 from Bain Capital Inc. The distinction between wage income and an S corporation distribution is meaningless from a business standpoint, but it's important for tax purposes.

Current law imposes a 2.9 percent Medicare tax on all wages and self-employment income. To avoid this tax, taxpayers have an incentive to characterize as much labor income as they can as investment income (like carried interest) or as a distribution from an S corporation.

Most corporations are classified as C corporations and are taxed under Subchapter C of the tax code. But under Subchapter S of the tax code, corporations can elect to be taxed o n a pass-through basis, avoiding one layer of tax. Only certain corporations with a limited number of individual shareholders can make the election.

Normally, the benefit of the S corporation is that it avoids the “double tax” on corporate earnings; instead, when the corporation makes distributions to its shareholders, the income flows through and is reported on the shareholder's return.

In the case of a closely held service business like a law firm, the corporate “double tax” can be easily avoided by organizing as a partnership or sole proprietorship. Here, the main benefit of organizing as an S corporation is to avoid employment taxes.

Imagine a trial lawyer who makes $10 million in a particular year, after expenses. That $10 million in wage income would generate $290,000 in Medicare tax liability.

But rather than providing legal services directly, the trial lawyer incorporates his legal practice as an S corporation, becoming its sole shar eholder. The corporation pays the lawyer a minimum wage salary, and the lawyer pays employment taxes on that salary. The S corporation is the nominal provider of legal services and pays expenses, distributing what's left (almost $10 million) to the lawyer as its sole shareholder.

That $10 million retains its character as ordinary income, but because it is treated as a shareholder distribution rather than wage or self-employment income, the distribution avoids the Medicare tax, and saves the trial lawyer nearly $290,000 in tax liability.

This strategy, more or less, was made famous by the trial lawyer and former presidential candidate John Edwards, giving rise to what is sometimes known in tax policy circles as the Edwards Loophole. (It has been employed more recently by Newt Gingrich, who has provided speaking and consulting services through an S corporation.)

The I.R.S. has challenged this abuse of S corporations, finding some success in the courts. In Sp icer Accounting Inc. vs. United States, for example, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that “regardless of how an employer chooses to characterize payments made to its employees, the true analysis is whether the payments are for remuneration for services rendered.”

The problem is that the line between return on human capital and return on investment capital is difficult to draw. By paying themselves a (modest) salary, the owners of S corporations put the I.R.S. in the difficult position of having to estimate what a reasonable wage is.

In a recent article, the law professor Richard Winchester noted that under current law, the government can rightfully attack these distributions “as being nothing more than disguised compensation.” But because the government is ill equipped to perform the kind of audits that would help detect all potential instances of disguised compensation, Mr. Winchester notes that “the vast majority of thes e cases probably go unchallenged.”

The use of the S corporation as a tax shelter is widespread. A 2002 Treasury inspector general report stated that of 84 S corporation returns under audit, the average shareholder wage was only $5,300, while the average shareholder distribution was nearly $350,000. Obviously, in many of these cases the wage portion is being deliberately understated.

In the case of Mr. Romney, the issue of his Medicare tax liability is complicated because he no longer provides services to Bain Capital. Some portion of the payment represents payment for past services rendered, but perhaps some amount could be attributed to nonwage income.

Existing case law gives the I.R.S. ample authority to challenge at least some amount of the “true up” payments as remuneration for services rendered. If the entire amount were attributed to past services, then Mr. Romney's use of the S Corporation avoided $58,000 in Medicare taxes. Without knowing the terms of the severance agreement, however, determining Mr. Romney's proper tax liability is difficult.

In reality, the $58,000 in Medicare taxes is small beer for Mr. Romney, who voluntarily paid an extra $250,000 in taxes in 2011 to keep his effective federal income tax rate above 13 percent. The Medicare taxes avoided on earlier severance payments might have been much greater. But more important, from a tax policy perspective, it highlights one of the many ways that partnerships and S corporations can be manipulated to help business owners avoid the taxes that normal wage earners pay.

For further reading on using business entities to avoid employment taxes, see Richard Winchester, “The Gap in the Employment Tax Gap,” Stanford Law and Policy Review (2009).

Victor Fleischer is a professor 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.



Hedge Fund\'s Complex Scheme May Backfire, Costing It Millions

Hedge funds are supposed to be the smart money, but sometimes even they can be outsmarted.

Take the case of Mason Capital Management and the Telus Corporation, a large Canadian telecommunications company. Mason Capital, a New York and London hedge fund with about $8 billion in assets under management, has made a complex bet in Telus stock that looked shrewd at first, but that may now lose tens of millions of dollars.

Telus has two classes of shares, one that is voting and trades only in Canada and another that is nonvoting and trades in Canada and the United States. The nonvoting shares traditionally trade at a discount to the voting shares, but Telus is proposing to convert the shares on a one-for-one basis, giving a windfall to the holders of nonvoting shares.

Mason has taken a complex trading position in opposition to the proposal. In April, the hedge fund announced that it had acquired 19 percent of Telus's voting stock, worth 1.9 billion Canadian do llars, or $1.8 billion.

Mason was able to finance this position by setting up a roughly equivalent short position in Telus's nonvoting common stock, betting that those shares would fall. Basically, for every dollar that Mason earned on the voting shares, it would lose a dollar on the nonvoting shares. Since Mason is almost perfectly hedged, this was a bet that Telus's proposal would fail, causing the nonvoting stock to lose value and the voting stock to gain.

Pretty clever, right?

Mason has no real economic interest in the future of the company because of its offsetting positions, but it can still vote its 19 percent against the share conversion proposal. This anomaly has led Telus to claim that Mason is an “empty voter” - voting shares in which it has no economic interest “at the expense of other shareholders.”

The hedge fund has argued that Telus is seeking to hand the nonvoting shareholders free money by collapsing the shares at a 1-to-1 ra tio instead of at the traditional discount.

According to Mason, “over the past 13 years, Telus voting shares have traded at an average premium of 4.83 percent relative to the nonvoting shares; the premium has been as high as 15.23 percent.” The hedge fund also argues that the Telus directors who approved this transaction are conflicted because 89 percent of their total holdings are in the nonvoting shares.

In response, Telus claims that the lack of a discount is justified because the voting shares would get additional liquidity.

Mason won Round 1 of this argument in May, when Telus withdrew its proposal.

At the same time, Telus also planted the seeds to thwart Mason's trade. The company announced that it would try again to collapse the shares at some future time. This gave price support to the nonvoting shares and prevented Mason from cashing out its position.

Mason reportedly hired the Blackstone Group to look at strategic alternatives for its Telus stake, but was unable to sell it. In August, the fund sought to press the issue by calling a shareholder meeting to amend Telus's charter to prevent the nonvoting shares from being converted into voting shares without a discount.

This started Round 2.

Telus again proposed that the shares be collapsed. But in a twist, the company has structured the transaction so that only a majority of the voting shares are needed to approve it, instead of the 66 2/3 vote initially required. The reduction in the number of necessary votes gives the proposal a much better chance of passing despite Mason's 19 percent holding.

Telus also refused to hold a special meeting. The battle came before the Supreme Court of British Columbia, and on Sept. 11, the court rejected on technical grounds Mason's effort to force Telus to hold the meeting. But in an aside, the court heavily criticized the hedge fund for its voting strategy, calling it “empty voting.” The court stat ed that “the practice of empty voting presents a challenge to shareholder democracy … when a party has a vote in a company but no economic interest in that company, that party's interests may not lie in the well-being of the company itself.” Mason has appealed the ruling.

Unless a higher court intervenes, the share collapse is heading to a shareholder vote on Oct. 17. Given that only a majority vote is needed, Telus may have the votes necessary to push the measure through. And with the decision of the Canadian court, other hedge funds appear to have closed out their positions in Telus, further narrowing the spread between the two share classes.

On paper, Mason's trade was a deliciously clever scheme that made perfect sense. But once the trade went public, its position in Telus raised eyebrows. Mason has argued that it is not an empty voter because its interests are aligned with the voting shareholders; the conversion will be at their expense. That message m ay make sense, but the messenger has been viewed with suspicion. As a result, Mason has had a hard time convincing Canadian shareholders to support it.

And with the nonvoting shares still holding on to their earlier gains, Mason finds itself boxed in. Telus's total market value has increased by $2 billion since February. Mason would have made much more money - hundreds of millions, in fact - had it simply taken a long position.

Lost in all of this maneuvering are the economic merits of Telus's share collapse and the fact that nonvoting shares do appear to be getting a significant benefit that may be inappropriate.

According to sources close to Mason, the trade is currently profitable. But Mason is finding that its ingenious trade may lose it millions, thanks to the equally adroit maneuvering of Telus. Who said Canadians were too nice?

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



British Bankers Group Seen Losing Control Over Libor

LONDON â€" The British Bankers' Association is expected to lose control over the interest rate at the center of a recent manipulation scandal, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter.

The move is likely to be announced on Friday, when Martin Wheatley, managing director of the Financial Services Authority, the British regulator, outlines the findings of a review of the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, added the person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.

The British government called for changes to the benchmark interest rate, which underpins more than $360 trillion of financial instruments worldwide, after Barclays agreed to pay $450 million in June to settle charges that some of its traders manipulated the rate for financial gain.

In the wake of the scandal, Barclays' chief executive, Robert Diamond Jr., and its chairman, Marcus Agius, resigned. Some of the bank's traders may still face criminal prosecution over their role in the manipulation of Libor. And other banks, including UBS and Citigroup, are currently under investigation in a number of jurisdictions about the potential manipulation of the rate.

The move to remove the British Bankers' Association from its role of setting Libor would be a blow to the organization, which established the rate in 1986.

Regulators have continually questioned the trade body's role in the recent scandal.
In documents released by the Bank of England in July, authorities called on the group to change the Libor rate-setting process, which includes a daily poll of a number of banks about what interest rate they would pay if they had to borrow money from the capital markets.

Despite calls from the British Bankers' Association's chief executive at the time, Angela Knight, for regulators to take a greater role in the rate-setting process, authorities balked at taking a more hands-on approach, according to the central bank documents.

By taking the Libor-setting process away from the bankers group, it is likely that authorities will now become more directly involved.

A spokesman for the Financial Services Authority of Britain declined to comment.

In a statement, the British Bankers' Association said that it would work with British authorities about potential changes to the rate.

“If Mr Wheatley's recommendations include a change of responsibility for Libor, the B.B.A. will support that,” the organization said in a statement.

A spokesman for the British Bankers' Association declined to comment on whether the organization would lose control of setting Libor.

The expected overhaul of Libor comes a day after Gary Gensler, chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in the United States, suggested authorities should rework or replace the interest rate.

“It is time for a new or revised benchmark â€" a healthy ben chmark anchored in actual, observable market transactions â€" to restore the confidence of people around the globe that the rates at which they borrow and lend money and hedge interest rates are set honestly and transparently,” Mr. Gensler told the European Parliament on Monday in remarks delivered via video from Washington.



Business Day Live: Law Firms Under Pressure

James B. Stewart and Peter Lattman of The New York Times look at the pressures facing the legal industry.

Business Day Live: Ex-Regulator Has Harsh Words for Bankers and Geithner

Sheila C. Bair on her harsh history of the financial crisis. | Ericsson's chief, Hans Vestberg, on surviving disruption. | The Times's James B. Stewart and Peter Lattman look at the future of big law.

Adding Up the Government\'s Legal Bills for Fannie and Freddie

The government's takeover of the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in 2008 may turn out to be a very expensive proposition.

The bailouts of the two have already cost taxpayers about $185 billion. And it appears that the legal fees from lawsuits involving former executives from the two companies continue to pile up.

A decision last week by Richard J. Leon of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia to dismiss a shareholder lawsuit against the former Fannie Mae chief executive Franklin D. Raines may provide a little bit of relief from the legal bills.

But more recent cases will require the government to pay to defend executives accused of misleading investors about subprime mortgages on the companies' books that in all likelihood will take years to resolve.

Lawsuits and government investigations involving Mr. Raines and two other former Fannie Mae executives were the result of accounting irregularities at the company. Th is problem surfaced while the company was still profitable â€" that is, before it was crippled by the collapse in the housing market. Mr. Raines and the other executives resigned in 2004 and settled with the government in 2008, but the private litigation has dragged on for another four years.

Like most public companies, Fannie Mae had a broad indemnification policy requiring it to advance the legal fees for executives accused of misconduct based on their work for it. When the government took over the company in September 2008, it affirmed that position and has continued to pay for the lawyers.

A report issued in February by the inspector general of the Federal Housing Finance Administration, which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, estimated that the legal fees paid on behalf of Mr. Raines and the other executives totaled $97 million to that point, of which the government had paid approximately $37 million.

In his opinion dismissing the securities fraud claims, Judge Leon concluded that the evidence showed “at best, that Raines acted negligently in his role as the company's chief executive and negligently in his representations about the company's accounting and earnings management practices.” Securities fraud requires proof of intentional conduct or at least recklessness, so Mr. Raines was released from the case.

That does not necessarily spell the end to the government's obligation to pay legal fees.

Judge Leon has not yet decided whether to dismiss the case against the two other Fannie Mae executives. In addition, plaintiffs can appeal his decision on Mr. Raines, so the legal bills can certainly continue to add up.

Legal claims against former executives arising from financial crisis that led to the government's takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are just getting started. There is the distinct possibility that costs from those cases will far exceed what was spent defending Mr. Raines and others .

The Securities and Exchange Commission filed civil securities fraud charges in December 2011 against six executives from the two companies, including the former chief executives Daniel H. Mudd of Fannie Mae and Richard F. Syron of Freddie Mac. The S.E.C. has accused the executives of misleading investors about the companies' exposure to subprime mortgages that caused severe financial losses triggering the government's takeover. Private lawsuits have also been filed against the companies and corporate officers making claims that are similar to the S.E.C. charges.

The case against Mr. Mudd and the other Fannie Mae executives cleared its first hurdle in August when Paul A. Crotty, a federal district judge in Manhattan, rejected a motion to dismiss the complaint. The defendants had argued that the company came under an exemption from the federal securities laws because it was a governmental entity, and that their disclosures about subprime loans were not misleadi ng.

The standard for deciding a motion to dismiss at this stage is quite low: all that the S.E.C. has to show is it could prove the charges if the case goes to trial. Judge Crotty found that Fannie Mae was a private company and not an “independent establishment” of the government that would exempt it from the securities laws.

In his assessment, Judge Crotty found that there was a basis for concluding the company's statements were misleading based on how it classified mortgages made to borrowers who were less creditworthy. That is enough to let the case proceed.

The defendants in the Freddie Mac case also filed a motion to dismiss their case with Richard J. Sullivan, a federal district judge in Manhattan, raising similar issues regarding the S.E.C.'s charges. He has not yet ruled, but winning a motion to dismiss at this stage is difficult, so there is a good chance the case will also move forward.

After a judge rejects a defense motion to dismis s, the discovery process commences in earnest, with each side conducting depositions and exchanging documents. In the private litigation involving Mr. Raines, Judge Leon noted that discovery generated 67 million pages of documents and 123 depositions.

The cases against the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac executives could easily reach those proportions. This is when the meter on the legal bills looks like it is spring loaded because of the legion of lawyers required to gather and analyze the evidence.

Generating that volume of information also takes an enormous amount of time, so discovery is likely to drag on for at least another year or two. On the bright side, once the parties dig into the evidence, the likelihood of a settlement grows because of the toll the process takes on each side.

But even if the S.E.C. settles its case against the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac executives, the private litigation will march on. The private case against Mr. Raines lasted n ine years, barring a successful appeal that would stretch it out even further. So the government will be paying for lawyers for quite a while yet.

In Re Fannie Mae Securities Litigation Opinion Sept 20 2012

SEC v Mudd District Court Opinion Aug 10 2012



The Future of Big Law

The Future of Big Law  |  With business still tepid in the aftermath of the financial crisis, and with the industry reeling from the failure of Dewey & LeBoeuf, DealBook looks at the future of lawyering in a special section, “Big Law Steps Into Uncertain Times.” That future may involve an entirely new business model, one without any partners, writes Andrew Ross Sorkin in his column.

A trio of white shoe law firms - Cravath, Swaine & Moore, Debevoise & Plimpton and Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton - have found success by keeping things old school, paying partners according to a strict lock-step system, writes DealBook's Peter Lattman. At Cravath, a former Obama administration lawyer, Christine A. Varney, had to meet all 83 partners before she could join the firm - and she received no signing bonus or special deal when she was voted into t he partnership.

Cravath has long been a place where money seemed less important than love of the work, writes James B. Stewart, who joined the firm out of law school 36 years ago. The realization that Cravath partners were emotionally invested in what they did is what finally moved him to leave the legal profession for a career in journalism, Mr. Stewart says:

“This came as a profound revelation. Of course they worked long hours, because it didn't feel like work to them. They took great satisfaction in the services they rendered their clients. You couldn't fake this. The partners seemed to have some sixth sense. I enjoyed my work. But I had to admit I didn't love it the way they did.”

So where can a lawyer find work these days? For the white collar bar, a string of Wall Street scandals has provided steady business, reports Azam Ahmed. For instance, the Libor scandal, which touches 16 banks and spans more than 10 government authorities, “is looking lik e a full employment act for the corporate bar,” said Samuel W. Buell, a professor at Duke Law School. Still, white collar work can pose ethical quandaries. Companies being scrutinized for misconduct often hire a law firm to conduct an investigation, but that practice “raises significant questions about conflicts of interest,” writes Peter J. Henning, the White Collar Watch columnist.

Lawyers for Wall Street have found a friendly reception at an appeals court in Washington, which has a philosophy of keeping government watchdogs on a short leash, reports Ben Protess.

A London-based law firm, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, has responded to the global economic slump by emphasizing its international reach - a strategy that has put it on top of the league tables for the first half of 2012, with $162 billion of announced deals, reports Mark Scott. And another firm, the Global IP Law Group, has carved out a niche in patent legal and advisory work, as companies inc reasingly see patents as an asset class, reports Steve Lohr.

For aspiring lawyers, law school, with sky-high tuition and job prospects that remain uncertain, can seem like a losing proposition. Steven M. Davidoff, DealBook's Deal Professor, writes:

“The problem of law school is one that is ubiquitous to higher education - the current model is inherently expensive but even today, lower-priced alternatives don't seem to meet the standards or be desired by many students. It is here where revolutionary technologies like online learning may come into play.”

Sheila Bair Strikes Again  |  The former chairwoman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation has some choice words for bankers and fellow regulators, including Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner, in her new book. DealBook reports that Ms. Bair portrays Mr. Geithner in the book as an apologist for Wall Stree t, and she suggests that his effort to bail out nine big banks may have masked a rescue intended just for Citigroup (a theory that other government officials have rejected).

“Participating in these programs was the most distasteful thing I have ever done in public life,” writes Ms. Bair in the book, “Bull By the Horns: Fighting to Save Main Street from Wall Street and Wall Street from Itself,” set to be released on Tuesday.

On the Agenda  |  Banco Santander is expected to take its Mexican unit public today after the market closes. The I.P.O. will amount to a test both of investors' appetite for Latin American banks and their willingness to invest in an institution closely tied to Europe's crisis. With the results of stress tests of Spanish banks coming on Friday, The Wall Street Journal writes that German banks have a particularly high amount of exposure to their Spanis h rivals.

The media mogul Barry Diller, chairman of IAC/InterActiveCorp, is on CNBC from 8 to 9 a.m. James S. Chanos, the founder of the hedge fund Kynikos Associates, is appearing on Bloomberg TV at 8 a.m. The former prime minister of Greece, George A. Papandreou, is on Bloomberg TV at 9:35 a.m.

With the housing market showing signs of a recovery, the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index, coming at 9 a.m., will offer a portrait of the market in July. Another crucial gauge, the Conference Board's index of consumer confidence, is coming out at 10.

Tim Pawlenty's About-Face  |  Mr. Pawlenty is an odd choice to lead the Financial Services Roundtable, one of Wall Street's most influential lobbying shops, considering that the former Republican governor of Minnesota opposed the financial industry on a range of issues while running for president, Andrew Ross Sor kin says in the DealBook column. “His appointment is the clearest sign yet of the flexible ethic that makes the revolving door in Washington spin faster,” Mr. Sorkin writes.

Jeffrey Gundlach Wants His Art Back  |  The bond investor, of DoubleLine Capital, is offering a reward of as much as $1.7 million for information leading to the recovery of the artwork, including pieces by Piet Mondrian, Jasper Johns and Joseph Cornell, that was stolen from his home in Santa Monica, Calif. Mr. Gundlach's “emotions are pretty raw right now,” reports New York magazine's Kevin Roose, citing an unidentified person close to the investor.

Mergers & Acquisitions '

Diageo in Talks to Buy Stake in United Spirits  |  The world's largest spirits compan y is in discussions to buy a stake in United Spirits, which has around a 40 percent market share in India.
DealBook '

Guggenheim Said to Team With Billionaire in Bid for Anschutz  |  Fresh off of leading a group to buy the Los Angeles Dodgers, Guggenheim Partners is joining forces with Patrick Soon-Shiong, the Los Angeles billionaire, to bid for the Anschutz Entertainment Group, Reuters reports, citing three unidentified people with knowledge of the deal.
REUTERS

Sony Said to Be Poised to Invest in Olympus  |  Reuters, citing three unidentified people familiar with the deal, reports that Sony is likely to approve an investment of roughly $642 million in Olympus this week.
REUTERS

Glencore Scales Back Investment in Zinc Producer  |  Glencore is revising down the stake it plans to acquire in Kazzinc to just under 70 percent, a move that could reassure credit rating agencies as the trading firm looks to take over Xstrata, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Groupon Moves Into Restaurant Reservations With Savored Deal  |  As Groupon continues its quest to become a big platform for merchants, it appears that the online coupon purveyor is moving into restaurant reservations - and a little into OpenTable's domain.
DealBook '

Indian Oil Firms Bid $5 Billion for Conoco Assets in Canada  | 
REUTERS < /span>

Times Completes About.com Sale  | 
NEW YORK TIMES MEDIA DECODER

INVESTMENT BANKING '

At R.B.S., Managers Said to Condone Rate Manipulation  |  Traders and their managers at the Royal Bank of Scotland “routinely sought to influence the firm's Libor submissions between 2007 and 2010 to profit from derivatives bets, according to employees, regulators and lawyers,” Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

R.B.S. to Cut 300 More Investment Banking Jobs  | 
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Barc lays to Tie Compensation to Societal Goals  |  The chief executive of the British bank said that employees would be paid based on a new metric that will take into account their contribution to society at large, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Goldman Sachs Expected to Name Fewer Partners  | 
FINANCIAL TIMES

Chase Customers Found to Be Satisfied  |  A new survey found that only 15 percent of the retail customers of JPMorgan Chase had heard or read about the bank's multibillion-dollar trading loss in London, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Bank of America Hires Morgan Stanley Off icial  |  Michael Maghini, formerly a director of distribution for the annuity and insurance business of Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, is joining Bank of America Merrill Lynch to run its insurance and annuities division, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Investors Treat Nordic Banks as a Safe Haven  | 
WALL STREET JOURNAL

PRIVATE EQUITY '

Mediq Agrees to $1 Billion Buyout  |  The Dutch pharmacy and medical supply company Mediq is being sold to the private equity firm Advent International for 775 million euros, or about $1 billion, The Financial Times reports.
FINANCIAL TIMES

Providence Equity Partners Said to Sell Stake in Fund Manager  |  The private equity firm sold a stake of under 10 percent in the company that manages its funds, Reuters reports, citing an unidentified person with direct knowledge of the matter.
REUTERS

Bidders Circle Unit of Telecom Italia  |  Clessidra, an Italian private equity firm, said it was among bidders for the media unit of Telecom Italia, The Financial Times reports.
FINANCIAL TIMES

HEDGE FUNDS '

Asian Hedge Funds Lag Rivals Overseas  |  According to the Eurekahedge Asian index, 395 hedge funds in Asia had a return of 1.6 percent this through August, compared with a 3.2 percent gain globally, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Seattle Signs Off on Arena Backed by Hedge Fund Manager  |  The Seattle City Council voted to approve a plan to build a $490 million arena after the hedge fund manager Chris Hansen said he would guarantee the debt, The Associated Press reports.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Man Group Releases Details of Restructuring  | 
REUTERS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS '

Facebook Shares Tumble 9%  |  Investors digested the Barron's cover story that estimated Facebook's stock was worth $15.
REUTERS

Guide to Fairway's I.P.O.  |  Want to own a piece of the company that controls the New York grocery store Fairway? According to the risk disclosures, you will have another overbearing landlord in your life.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Dave & Buster's Sets Range for I.P.O.  |  Dave & Buster's Entertainment, the restaurant and arcade chain, is seeking to sell 7.7 million shares in its I.P.O. at $12 to $14 a share. At the midpoint of that range, the private equity-backed company is set to raise $100 million.
DealBook '

Quintiles Transnational Said to Consider I.P.O.  |  The c ompany, which provides drug-trial services to pharmaceutical companies, was bought in 2008 by private equity firms including TPG and Bain Capital.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

VENTURE CAPITAL '

Twitter Said to Eye Media Moguls for Board  |  AllThingsD reports: “Twitter is now interviewing a series of well-known media players for its board, as the San Francisco online social communications service seeks to increase its ties to the entertainment industry, according to sources close to the situation. And one of the top director candidates is well-regarded Hollywood exec Peter Chernin, said several sources.”
ALLTHINGSD

Former Principal Accuses Pantheon Ventures of Discrimination  |  Carol Foster, a former principal at Pantheon Ventures, sued the venture capital firm, charging that she missed financial benefits and lost sales territory to younger male colleagues, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Venture Capitalists Take a Shine to Life Sciences  | 
REUTERS

Lightstone Ventures Raising New Fund  |  The venture capital firm is raising a fund of at least $200 million to invest in early-stage therapeutics companies, Reuters reports, citing an unidentified person.
REUTERS

LEGAL/REGULATORY '

A Crucial Witness in Rajaratnam Trial Receives Probation  |  Rajiv Goel, a former Intel executive who leaked secret information about his employer, was sentenced to two years' probation.
DealBook '

Gensler Calls for Overhaul of Libor  |  Gary Gensler, chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, suggested that authorities should retool or replace the London interbank offered rate.
DealBook '

Discover Financial Agrees to Refund $200 Million to Customers  |  Discover Financial Services struck a settlement with regulators after being investigated over deceptive telemarketing and sales practices, The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

Morgan Stanley O rdered to Pay Fidelity in Dispute  |  An arbitration panel told Morgan Stanley Smith Barney to compensate a unit of Fidelity Investments in a fight over a broker who tried to solicit former Fidelity clients, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Lawyers for Peregrine Founder Oppose Motion to Keep Him in Jail  | 
REUTERS



The Future of Big Law

The Future of Big Law  |  With business still tepid in the aftermath of the financial crisis, and with the industry reeling from the failure of Dewey & LeBoeuf, DealBook looks at the future of lawyering in a special section, “Big Law Steps Into Uncertain Times.” That future may involve an entirely new business model, one without any partners, writes Andrew Ross Sorkin in his column.

A trio of white shoe law firms - Cravath, Swaine & Moore, Debevoise & Plimpton and Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton - have found success by keeping things old school, paying partners according to a strict lock-step system, writes DealBook's Peter Lattman. At Cravath, a former Obama administration lawyer, Christine A. Varney, had to meet all 83 partners before she could join the firm - and she received no signing bonus or special deal when she was voted into t he partnership.

Cravath has long been a place where money seemed less important than love of the work, writes James B. Stewart, who joined the firm out of law school 36 years ago. The realization that Cravath partners were emotionally invested in what they did is what finally moved him to leave the legal profession for a career in journalism, Mr. Stewart says:

“This came as a profound revelation. Of course they worked long hours, because it didn't feel like work to them. They took great satisfaction in the services they rendered their clients. You couldn't fake this. The partners seemed to have some sixth sense. I enjoyed my work. But I had to admit I didn't love it the way they did.”

So where can a lawyer find work these days? For the white collar bar, a string of Wall Street scandals has provided steady business, reports Azam Ahmed. For instance, the Libor scandal, which touches 16 banks and spans more than 10 government authorities, “is looking lik e a full employment act for the corporate bar,” said Samuel W. Buell, a professor at Duke Law School. Still, white collar work can pose ethical quandaries. Companies being scrutinized for misconduct often hire a law firm to conduct an investigation, but that practice “raises significant questions about conflicts of interest,” writes Peter J. Henning, the White Collar Watch columnist.

Lawyers for Wall Street have found a friendly reception at an appeals court in Washington, which has a philosophy of keeping government watchdogs on a short leash, reports Ben Protess.

A London-based law firm, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, has responded to the global economic slump by emphasizing its international reach - a strategy that has put it on top of the league tables for the first half of 2012, with $162 billion of announced deals, reports Mark Scott. And another firm, the Global IP Law Group, has carved out a niche in patent legal and advisory work, as companies inc reasingly see patents as an asset class, reports Steve Lohr.

For aspiring lawyers, law school, with sky-high tuition and job prospects that remain uncertain, can seem like a losing proposition. Steven M. Davidoff, DealBook's Deal Professor, writes:

“The problem of law school is one that is ubiquitous to higher education - the current model is inherently expensive but even today, lower-priced alternatives don't seem to meet the standards or be desired by many students. It is here where revolutionary technologies like online learning may come into play.”

Sheila Bair Strikes Again  |  The former chairwoman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation has some choice words for bankers and fellow regulators, including Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner, in her new book. DealBook reports that Ms. Bair portrays Mr. Geithner in the book as an apologist for Wall Stree t, and she suggests that his effort to bail out nine big banks may have masked a rescue intended just for Citigroup (a theory that other government officials have rejected).

“Participating in these programs was the most distasteful thing I have ever done in public life,” writes Ms. Bair in the book, “Bull By the Horns: Fighting to Save Main Street from Wall Street and Wall Street from Itself,” set to be released on Tuesday.

On the Agenda  |  Banco Santander is expected to take its Mexican unit public today after the market closes. The I.P.O. will amount to a test both of investors' appetite for Latin American banks and their willingness to invest in an institution closely tied to Europe's crisis. With the results of stress tests of Spanish banks coming on Friday, The Wall Street Journal writes that German banks have a particularly high amount of exposure to their Spanis h rivals.

The media mogul Barry Diller, chairman of IAC/InterActiveCorp, is on CNBC from 8 to 9 a.m. James S. Chanos, the founder of the hedge fund Kynikos Associates, is appearing on Bloomberg TV at 8 a.m. The former prime minister of Greece, George A. Papandreou, is on Bloomberg TV at 9:35 a.m.

With the housing market showing signs of a recovery, the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index, coming at 9 a.m., will offer a portrait of the market in July. Another crucial gauge, the Conference Board's index of consumer confidence, is coming out at 10.

Tim Pawlenty's About-Face  |  Mr. Pawlenty is an odd choice to lead the Financial Services Roundtable, one of Wall Street's most influential lobbying shops, considering that the former Republican governor of Minnesota opposed the financial industry on a range of issues while running for president, Andrew Ross Sor kin says in the DealBook column. “His appointment is the clearest sign yet of the flexible ethic that makes the revolving door in Washington spin faster,” Mr. Sorkin writes.

Jeffrey Gundlach Wants His Art Back  |  The bond investor, of DoubleLine Capital, is offering a reward of as much as $1.7 million for information leading to the recovery of the artwork, including pieces by Piet Mondrian, Jasper Johns and Joseph Cornell, that was stolen from his home in Santa Monica, Calif. Mr. Gundlach's “emotions are pretty raw right now,” reports New York magazine's Kevin Roose, citing an unidentified person close to the investor.

Mergers & Acquisitions '

Diageo in Talks to Buy Stake in United Spirits  |  The world's largest spirits compan y is in discussions to buy a stake in United Spirits, which has around a 40 percent market share in India.
DealBook '

Guggenheim Said to Team With Billionaire in Bid for Anschutz  |  Fresh off of leading a group to buy the Los Angeles Dodgers, Guggenheim Partners is joining forces with Patrick Soon-Shiong, the Los Angeles billionaire, to bid for the Anschutz Entertainment Group, Reuters reports, citing three unidentified people with knowledge of the deal.
REUTERS

Sony Said to Be Poised to Invest in Olympus  |  Reuters, citing three unidentified people familiar with the deal, reports that Sony is likely to approve an investment of roughly $642 million in Olympus this week.
REUTERS

Glencore Scales Back Investment in Zinc Producer  |  Glencore is revising down the stake it plans to acquire in Kazzinc to just under 70 percent, a move that could reassure credit rating agencies as the trading firm looks to take over Xstrata, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Groupon Moves Into Restaurant Reservations With Savored Deal  |  As Groupon continues its quest to become a big platform for merchants, it appears that the online coupon purveyor is moving into restaurant reservations - and a little into OpenTable's domain.
DealBook '

Indian Oil Firms Bid $5 Billion for Conoco Assets in Canada  | 
REUTERS < /span>

Times Completes About.com Sale  | 
NEW YORK TIMES MEDIA DECODER

INVESTMENT BANKING '

At R.B.S., Managers Said to Condone Rate Manipulation  |  Traders and their managers at the Royal Bank of Scotland “routinely sought to influence the firm's Libor submissions between 2007 and 2010 to profit from derivatives bets, according to employees, regulators and lawyers,” Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

R.B.S. to Cut 300 More Investment Banking Jobs  | 
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Barc lays to Tie Compensation to Societal Goals  |  The chief executive of the British bank said that employees would be paid based on a new metric that will take into account their contribution to society at large, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Goldman Sachs Expected to Name Fewer Partners  | 
FINANCIAL TIMES

Chase Customers Found to Be Satisfied  |  A new survey found that only 15 percent of the retail customers of JPMorgan Chase had heard or read about the bank's multibillion-dollar trading loss in London, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Bank of America Hires Morgan Stanley Off icial  |  Michael Maghini, formerly a director of distribution for the annuity and insurance business of Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, is joining Bank of America Merrill Lynch to run its insurance and annuities division, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Investors Treat Nordic Banks as a Safe Haven  | 
WALL STREET JOURNAL

PRIVATE EQUITY '

Mediq Agrees to $1 Billion Buyout  |  The Dutch pharmacy and medical supply company Mediq is being sold to the private equity firm Advent International for 775 million euros, or about $1 billion, The Financial Times reports.
FINANCIAL TIMES

Providence Equity Partners Said to Sell Stake in Fund Manager  |  The private equity firm sold a stake of under 10 percent in the company that manages its funds, Reuters reports, citing an unidentified person with direct knowledge of the matter.
REUTERS

Bidders Circle Unit of Telecom Italia  |  Clessidra, an Italian private equity firm, said it was among bidders for the media unit of Telecom Italia, The Financial Times reports.
FINANCIAL TIMES

HEDGE FUNDS '

Asian Hedge Funds Lag Rivals Overseas  |  According to the Eurekahedge Asian index, 395 hedge funds in Asia had a return of 1.6 percent this through August, compared with a 3.2 percent gain globally, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Seattle Signs Off on Arena Backed by Hedge Fund Manager  |  The Seattle City Council voted to approve a plan to build a $490 million arena after the hedge fund manager Chris Hansen said he would guarantee the debt, The Associated Press reports.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Man Group Releases Details of Restructuring  | 
REUTERS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS '

Facebook Shares Tumble 9%  |  Investors digested the Barron's cover story that estimated Facebook's stock was worth $15.
REUTERS

Guide to Fairway's I.P.O.  |  Want to own a piece of the company that controls the New York grocery store Fairway? According to the risk disclosures, you will have another overbearing landlord in your life.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Dave & Buster's Sets Range for I.P.O.  |  Dave & Buster's Entertainment, the restaurant and arcade chain, is seeking to sell 7.7 million shares in its I.P.O. at $12 to $14 a share. At the midpoint of that range, the private equity-backed company is set to raise $100 million.
DealBook '

Quintiles Transnational Said to Consider I.P.O.  |  The c ompany, which provides drug-trial services to pharmaceutical companies, was bought in 2008 by private equity firms including TPG and Bain Capital.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

VENTURE CAPITAL '

Twitter Said to Eye Media Moguls for Board  |  AllThingsD reports: “Twitter is now interviewing a series of well-known media players for its board, as the San Francisco online social communications service seeks to increase its ties to the entertainment industry, according to sources close to the situation. And one of the top director candidates is well-regarded Hollywood exec Peter Chernin, said several sources.”
ALLTHINGSD

Former Principal Accuses Pantheon Ventures of Discrimination  |  Carol Foster, a former principal at Pantheon Ventures, sued the venture capital firm, charging that she missed financial benefits and lost sales territory to younger male colleagues, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Venture Capitalists Take a Shine to Life Sciences  | 
REUTERS

Lightstone Ventures Raising New Fund  |  The venture capital firm is raising a fund of at least $200 million to invest in early-stage therapeutics companies, Reuters reports, citing an unidentified person.
REUTERS

LEGAL/REGULATORY '

A Crucial Witness in Rajaratnam Trial Receives Probation  |  Rajiv Goel, a former Intel executive who leaked secret information about his employer, was sentenced to two years' probation.
DealBook '

Gensler Calls for Overhaul of Libor  |  Gary Gensler, chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, suggested that authorities should retool or replace the London interbank offered rate.
DealBook '

Discover Financial Agrees to Refund $200 Million to Customers  |  Discover Financial Services struck a settlement with regulators after being investigated over deceptive telemarketing and sales practices, The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

Morgan Stanley O rdered to Pay Fidelity in Dispute  |  An arbitration panel told Morgan Stanley Smith Barney to compensate a unit of Fidelity Investments in a fight over a broker who tried to solicit former Fidelity clients, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Lawyers for Peregrine Founder Oppose Motion to Keep Him in Jail  | 
REUTERS



Diageo in Talks to Buy Stake in United Spirits

LONDON â€" Diageo, the world's largest spirits company, said on Tuesday that it was in talks to buy a stake in United Spirits of India.

The discussions, which Diageo said might not result in a deal, follow similar talks that the London-based company held in 2008 with United Spirits, which has around a 40 percent market share in India.

Diageo did not say how much of a stake in United Spirits it was looking to acquire. Shares in the British company rose 1.9 percent in morning trading in London.

The Indian billionaire Vijay Mallya owns a 28 percent stake in United Spirits.

Mr. Mallya, who also operates Kingfisher Airlines, has been looking to raise new capital for the Indian carrier for more than a year, and may use the potential sale of a stake in United Spirits to prop up the airline.

Diageo, whose brands include Guinness and Johnnie Walker, is one of many Western beverage companies to turn their attention to the emerging markets.

On Sept . 28, shareholders in Fraser & Neave, the Singaporean conglomerate that owns a minority holding in Asia Pacific Breweries, are expected to back Heineken's $4.6 billion acquisition of the shares in the Asian beer company that it does not already own.