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Knowledge Is Money, but the Peril Is Obvious

Toward the end of 2007, Silver Lake Partners, a well-respected investment firm, made what then seemed like a curious investment: it paid about $200 million to buy slightly less than a quarter of a fast-growing company called the Gerson Lehrman Group.

The investment was unusual because Gerson Lehrman, a so-called expert network firm that links hedge fund investors with experts in various fields, had been under scrutiny by regulators and the press for creating a business model that some said was tailor-made to foster insider trading on Wall Street.

A hedge fund manager could call up Gerson Lehrman, ask to speak with an expert - often a current or former employee of a company that the hedge fund was considering investing in - and, for prices as high as $1,000 an hour, the “expert” would, with luck, divulge what he knew. A front-page article in The Wall Street Journal in 2006 provided a series of anecdotes of questionable information being sought by Gerson Lehr man's clients.

Gerson Lehrman insisted that its business was honest, and it instituted a variety of compliance programs to prevent investors from seeking inside information from its experts. Soon after, all the regulatory investigations into the firm seemed to dry up.

Then came the investment from Silver Lake, a firm with a track record for investments in information technology and a group of founders with illustrious backgrounds in Washington, on Wall Street and in Silicon Valley. (Glenn Hutchins, one of the founders, worked as a special adviser to President Bill Clinton, for example.) So Silver Lake's investment came across as a seal of approval. The firm, which had been a client of Gerson Lehrman, said it had done significant diligence on the firm and was more than satisfied.

And yet here we are: last week, federal prosecutors announced what they said was the largest insider trading case in its history, charging Mathew Martoma, an employee at the hedge f und SAC Capital Advisors, with using inside information about drug trials from one of these experts, Dr. Sidney Gilman, a neurology professor at the University of Michigan Medical School who had been hired by Elan and Wyeth to oversee the drug trials. The transfer of information was made possible by Gerson Lehrman, which had played matchmaker. If this expert network did not exist, it is not clear that Mr. Martoma and Dr. Gilman would ever have found each other. More on that in a moment.

The criminal case against Mr. Martoma suggests that he used Gerson Lehrman's services repeatedly, paying a total of $108,000 to Dr. Gilman, who was paid about $1,000 an hour for his expert counsel - or his dispensing of inside information, as the government sees it. Dr. Gilman, 80, entered into a nonprosecution agreement in exchange for providing information on his discussions with Mr. Martoma to the government.

In fairness to Gerson Lehrman, the various complaints against Mr. Mar toma make clear that the firm put Mr. Martoma and Dr. Gilman through a number of compliance programs and repeatedly provided them with notices - boilerplate e-mails - that Mr. Martoma was not to seek inside information and Dr. Gilman was not to provide it.

One e-mail explicitly instructed that the expert “will not reveal any information that the [expert] has a duty to keep confidential, including material nonpublic information.” The e-mail also said experts “participating in clinical trials may not discuss the patient experience or trial results not yet in the public domain.”

Based upon the complaints against him, Mr. Martoma appears to have tried to dupe Gerson Lehrman about the true intent of his requests to talk to Dr. Gilman by mischaracterizing the subjects he hoped to discuss.

And yet, the information appears to have been passed with tremendous efficiency. Each phone call between the two men was organized and documented by Gerson Lehrman, in p art so that Dr. Gilman could be properly compensated for his expert advice. Gerson Lehrman, however, does not chaperon the calls.

Of about a million “consultations” the company has conducted between its clients and “experts,” this is the first time a criminal complaint has been filed against a client or expert of Gerson Lehrman. The Gerson Lehrman Group has not been charged or implicated in any way.

Still, the expert network business model is inherently perilous. Many expert network firms have gotten caught up in one insider trading case or another. Primary Global was featured in the Raj Rajaratnam case; it has since closed its doors. While Gerson Lehrman remains the leader in the business and might have the best compliance program in the industry, one of its experts was interviewed by the F.B.I. in 2010 after a client was raided. No charges were brought.

The original purpose of these firms was to provide primary information to investors looking for research after the old Wall Street research business model seemed to collapse under the weight of an industry settlement over conflicts of interest, led by Eliot Spitzer when he was the attorney general of New York. Gerson Lehrman became so popular that Goldman Sachs considered buying it, and other banks sought to copy its model.

Silver Lake declined to comment. Gerson Lehrman's chief, Alexander Saint-Amand, said: “Professionals need to consult with other professionals to learn and make better decisions, especially as the business environment becomes more not less complex. That's true for all of our clients - investors, corporations, law firms, nonprofits.”

So what to think of expert networks now?

On one side, there is a good argument that these firms help investors and others find one another - consider it a high-priced Facebook for consultants. Gerson Lehrman has expanded its business beyond simply working with investors; it now helps corporations lo oking for experts, or advertising agencies looking for help ahead of a big pitch.

There is clearly a market for matchmaking, and without a Gerson Lehrman, it is very possible that some interactions would take place over beers or expensive dinners - without the compliance efforts and audit trails that the firm provides. With the advent of LinkedIn and other social networks, there are increasingly new ways to find experts.

But investors don't pay hundreds of thousands of dollars a year for information that isn't material - at least, material to them. In the best of worlds, the expert network business model is about pushing clients as close to the “line” as possible without crossing it. That's a tough thing to do consistently - and a precarious way to run an enterprise.



You Can Stop Spreading That Facebook Notice Now

For the last couple of days, my Facebook timeline, and probably yours, has been filled with repetitions of a peculiar piece of boilerplate text, from all kinds of friends. It goes something like this:

In response to the new Facebook guidelines, I hereby declare that my copyright is attached to all of my personal details, illustrations, comics, paintings, crafts, professional photos and videos, etc. (as a result of the Berner Convention).

For commercial use of the above my written consent is needed at all times!

Facebook is now an open capital entity. All members are recommended to publish a notice like this, or if you prefer, you may copy and paste this version.

Guess what? You've been hoaxed.

First, no declaration by you, in a Facebook posting, would make any differenc e to the legal status of your posts. You're already protected by copyright law.

Second, there are no “new Facebook guidelines.” Facebook's policy is this: “You retain the copyright to your content. When you upload your content, you grant us a license to use and display that content.”

Third, there's no such thing as the Berner Convention. There's a Berne Convention, which covers literary works.

Fourth, the fact that Facebook is now a publicly traded company has absolutely nothing to do with its copyright or privacy policies. They're entirely unrelated.

Finally, Facebook itself has issued the following statement: “There is a rumor circulating that Facebook is making a change related to ownership of users' information or the content they post to the site. This is false. Anyone who uses Facebook owns and controls the content and information they post, as stated in our terms. They control how that content and information is shared. That is our po licy, and it always has been.”

Snopes, the anti-misinformation site, has already debunked this hoax. So you can stop pasting that meaningless “I hereby declare” status update. Let's get back to hearing what you had for lunch.



After Regulatory Sanction, Intrade Closes to U.S. Investors

Facing accusations that it allowed American investors to bet on the outcome of wars and other world events without the blessing of regulators, Intrade announced on Monday that it was closing its Web site to United States residents.

The disclosure, which referenced “legal and regulatory pressures,” came just hours after American authorities sued the Irish company over its popular trading network. Investors log on to Intrade by the thousands to bet on the outcome of elections, the weather and even whether the United States will bomb Iran.

But in a civil complaint filed in federal court in Washington, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission took aim at the company and an affiliate for offering the contracts outside traditional exchanges and without regulatory approval. The agency also accused the companies of “making false statements” to regulators and violating a past order banning it from offering so-called “prediction” contracts outside traditional exchanges.

“Unfortunately this means that all U.S. residents must begin the process of closing down their Intrade accounts,” the company said on its Web site. “We understand this announcement may come as a surprise and a disappointment, and we apologize for the short notice and haste required to deal with this.”

An Intrade representative did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The company, created in 1999 by an Irish businessman who died last year after coming within 50 yards of the summit of Mount Everest, recently gained prominence as a gambling hub for both professional and amateur investors. Following the model of Wall Street derivatives, Intrade customers buy and sell contracts tied to the outcome of a future event.

The site positioned itself as a sort of crystal ball for major world events, aggregating individual opinions and signaling the popular wisdom on, for instance, presidential elections. Intrade bettors correctly predicted President Obama's 2008 victory and his re-election earlier this month. The site, which accurately anticipated the capture of Saddam Hussein in 2003, is now putting the odds of a United States or Israeli air strike against Iran at 31 percent.

But the company's business model in the United States is on murky legal ground. Some states explicitly outlaw gambling on elections. The trading commission this year also rejected the North American Derivatives Exchange's plans to offer an election contract.

In the complaint on Monday, the agency skirted the larger question of whether investors can legitimately bet on elections. Instead, it cited Intrade for allowing American customers to trade off-exchange contracts. From late 2007 through mid-2012, according to the agency, Intrade “unlawfully solicited and permitted U.S. customers to buy and sell” futures contracts.

“The requirement for on-exchange trading is important for a number of reasons, inclu ding that it enables the C.F.T.C. to police market activity and protect market integrity,” David Meister, the agency's director of enforcement, said in a statement. “Today's action should make it clear that we will intervene in the ‘prediction' markets, wherever they may be based, when their U.S. activities violate the Commodity Exchange Act or the C.F.T.C.'s regulations.”

The trading commission's complaint further accuses Intrade - and an affiliated company, Trade Exchange Network Ltd. - with filing bogus annual forms with the agency. The companies, the complaint said, misled the agency into thinking that they limited their contracts to “eligible” investors.

Trade Exchange Network Ltd., the complaint said, also failed to honor a 2005 agreement that it halt improper trading. At the time, the company paid a $150,000 fine.



Lehman Estate to Sell Archstone for $6.5 Billion

The deal that helped sink Lehman Brothers is now playing an important role in paying off the failed investment bank's creditors.

The Lehman estate agreed on Monday to sell Archstone, the sprawling apartment complex company, to Equity Residential and AvalonBay Communities for about $6.5 billion in cash and stock.

Under the terms of the deal, the Lehman estate will receive $2.685 billion in cash, as well as shares in Equity Residential and AvalonBay worth about $3.8 billion. The two apartment companies will also assume Archstone's roughly $9.5 billion in debt.

By selling Archstone, the Lehman estate will dispose of its single biggest asset, as it continues its efforts to wind itself down and pay off the firm's legions of creditors. And it will signal the latest twist for a property that has played an important role in Lehman's demise.

Lehman bought Archstone in 2007, paying more than $22 billion to buy the apartment complex operator at the very height of the housing boom. That leveraged buyout piled even more debt onto an already overburdened firm, significantly contributing to its demise in the fall of 2008.

Since then, however, Archstone has become regarded as one of the crown jewels in the Lehman estate's pile of assets. And as the estate has sold off a number of its other properties, from the asset manager Neuberger Berman to sundry other real estate holdings, the apartment company was held out as the best opportunity for a major payday.

Such was the Lehman estate's zealousness that it bought out its partners in Archstone, Bank of America and Barclays, earlier this year, spending a total of $2.88 billion. The goal then was to prevent the firms from selling their holdings to Equity Residential too cheaply.

The stock component of the transaction announced on Monday will give make the Lehman estate the single biggest investor in Equity Residential, with a 9.8 percent stake, and in AvalonBay, with a 13. 2 percent stake.

The purchase price represents a roughly 17 percent premium to what the Lehman estate had valued the apartment complex operator.

“The sale of Archstone to Equity Residential and AvalonBay is a very positive outcome for our creditors,” Owen Thomas, the chairman of Lehman's board of directors, said in a statement.

Equity Residential, which is run by the billionaire Samuel Zell, will own about 60 percent of Archstone's assets and liabilities. AvalonBay will own the remainder.

Lehman was advised by Gleacher & Company, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and the law firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges.

Equity Residential received advice from Morgan Stanley and the law firms Hogan Lovells and Morrison & Foerster. AvalonBay was advised by Greenhill & Company and the law firm Goodwin Procter.



Cravath Announces Bonuses for Its Associates

It is around this time of year that associates at the country's largest law firms start wondering about their year-end bonuses.

Cravath, Swaine & Moore kicked off the season on Monday by announcing bonuses for its associates that ranged from $10,000 for first-year associates to $60,000 for senior associates, according to a memo obtained by DealBook.

The numbers are a significant bump from last year, when bonuses at Cravath ranged from $7,500 to $37,500. Indeed, the figures are now back to pre-financial crisis levels.

While the business environment across the Big Law landscape remains soft, Cravath, one of the nation's most profitable law firms, has had a busy year. Large mergers-and-acquisition assignments included advising Hertz Global Holdings in its acquisition of Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group, and Grupo Modelo in its combination with Anheuser-Busch. On the litigation side, it is representing Credit Suisse and JPMorgan Chase in various lawsuits relat ed to mortgage-backed securities.

“Thank you very much for your hard work during 2012,” the memo said. “We wish you a happy holiday season and new year.”

Here is the memo in full:

We are pleased to announce that the year-end bonus amount for each associate class is as follows:

Class of 2012 - $10,000 (pro-rated)
Class of 2011 - $10,000
Class of 2010 - $14,000
Class of 2009 - $20,000
Class of 2008 - $27,000
Class of 2007 - $34,000
Class of 2006 - $40,000
Class of 2005 - $50,000
Class of 2004 - $60,000

Bonuses will be paid on Friday, December 21. Absent special circumstances (approved by the Managing Partners), an associate must still be at the Firm on December 21 to be eligible for the bonus. The Firm does not apply any billable hour or similar criteria in determining eligibility for associate bonuses. As always, while receipt of the bonus for each individual attorney is dependent on suitable performance at that attorney's experience level, virtually all of our associates will receive the full bonus.

Attorneys who were with the Firm for only part of the year or are working part-time will receive a pro-rated portion of the applicable class-level bonus. Bonuses for senior attorneys, specialist attorneys, discovery specialist attorneys and foreign associate attorneys will be determined on an individual basis.

Thank you very much for your hard work during 2012. We wish you a happy holiday season and new year.



Former SAC Analyst Freed on Bond in Insider Case

Mathew Martoma, the former SAC Capital Advisors employee at the center of what the government calls the most lucrative insider trading case ever brought, appeared in Federal District Court in Manhattan on Monday to face the charges against him.

Federal prosecutors have accused Mr. Martoma, 38, with using secret information about a drug trial to help SAC gain profits and avoid losses totaling $276 million. Three former SAC employees have already pleaded guilty to unrelated illegal trading at the firm, but Mr. Martoma's case is the first time that the government has aimed to connect questionable trades to Steven A. Cohen, the billionaire founder of SAC, one of the world's most powerful hedge funds.

Mr. Cohen has not been accused of any wrongdoing and, through his spokesman, has said that he at all times acted appropriately. Prosecutors have not said that Mr. Cohen was in possession of any inside information related to Mr. Martoma's trades.

Mr. Martoma appea red before United States Magistrate Judge James Cott. Lean and square-jawed with close-cropped hair, Mr. Martoma sat at a table flanked by his lawyers, with his wife, Rosemary, seated in the spectators' gallery. Judge Cott informed of his rights as a criminal defendant and freed him on a $5 million bond. His next court appearance was scheduled for Dec. 26.

F.B.I. agents arrested Mr. Martoma at his home in Boca Raton, Fla., on Nov. 20 at 6:30 a.m. The government charged him via a criminal complaint instead of using a grand jury indictment, a tactic that suggests prosecutors are trying to secure Mr. Martoma's cooperation in its investigation of Mr. Cohen and SAC.

Charles A. Stillman, Mr. Martoma's lawyer, declined to comment after the hearing. Last week, he said that he expected his client to be fully exonerated.

The government says that Mr. Martoma was fed confidential data about clinical trials for an Alzheimer's drug being jointly developed by Elan and Wye th. His tipster, according to prosecutors, was Dr. Sidney Gilman, a neurology professor at the University of Michigan Medical School. Elan and Wyeth hired Dr. Gilman, 80, to oversee the trial and present the results at a medical conference.

Dr. Gilman has secured a nonprosecution agreement with the government, meaning he will not be charged in the case. He has also agreed to testify, said a person familiar with the case, giving the government another pressure point in its bid to gain Mr. Martoma's cooperation.

Mr. Martoma joined SAC, which is based in Stamford, Conn., in 2006. A summa cum laude graduate of Duke University with a degree in biomedicine, ethics and public policy, Mr. Martoma graduated from business school at Stanford University before pursuing a career as a health care analyst on Wall Street.

Prosecutors say that Mr. Martoma and Mr. Cohen worked closely together in accumulating large blocks of Elan and Wyeth shares for SAC. But the fund did an about-face, selling its entire position in both stocks - and proceeding to make a large negative bet against the companies - after Dr. Gilman told Mr. Martoma about problems with the drug trial, according to the complaint.

In 2008, the year of the Elan and Wyeth trades, SAC paid Mr. Martoma a $9.4 million bonus. But in early 2010, the firm fired Mr. Martoma for poor performance. In an internal e-mail discussing his abilities, an SAC executive called Mr. Martoma a “one trick pony.”

Before Monday morning's hearing, Mr. Martoma and his wife, who have three young children, appeared relaxed, smiling and chatting over breakfast in the courthouse cafeteria with Mr. Stillman and his law-firm partner, James A. Mitchell. As they left the building a few hours later, throngs of photographers and cameramen surrounded them as they fought their way into a town car and drove off.



Mortgage Interest Deduction, Once a Sacred Cow, Is Seen as Vulnerable

A tax break that has long been untouchable could soon be in for some serious manhandling.

Many home buyers deduct their mortgage interest when assessing their tax bill, a perk that has helped bolster the income of millions of families - and the broader housing market.

But as President Obama and Congress try to hash out a deal to reduce the budget deficit, the mortgage interest deduction looks vulnerable. Limits on a broad array of deductions could emerge in any budget deal. It is likely that any caps would be structured to aim at high-income households, and would diminish or end the mortgage tax break for many of those taxpayers.

“This is definitely a chance worth jumping for,” said Amir Sufi, a professor at the Booth School of Business at the University of Chicago. “For a fixed amount of revenue, it's better to remove deductions than increase marginal tax rates.”

Such a move would be fiercely opposed by the real estate industry. The industr y has played a crucial role in defending the tax break, even as other countries with high homeownership have phased it out.

Housing market players who oppose any whittling down of the mortgage deduction still have time to press their case. If President Obama and Congress manage to reach an agreement to avoid the looming tax raises and spending cuts, their deal will be broad in nature. Then, over the following months, Congress will hash out details, like any caps on deductions.

“Until Congress introduces specific legislation, there's nothing to say about any proposed changes to the mortgage interest deduction,” Gary Thomas, president of the National Association of Realtors, said in an e-mailed statement. “However, it has always been the N.A.R.'s position that the mortgage interest is vital to the stability of the American housing market and economy, and we will remain vigilant in opposing any future plan that modifies or excludes the deductibility of mortgag e interest.”

One of the reasons the mortgage tax break is so vulnerable is that both Democrats and Republicans have recently favored capping deductions, including both President Obama and the recent Republican presidential nominee, Mitt Romney.

What is more, deductions could be used to grease a compromise in the budget negotiations. High earners would be hit most by deduction limits, something that might make Republicans recoil. But the party may tolerate such a policy in return for a deal that limits how much actual tax rates go up for high-income households.

Tax numbers suggest it may not be hard to structure deduction limits in a way that leaves most middle-income households untouched.

With the mortgage interest deduction, households realized tax savings of $83 billion in 2010, according to figures from the Reason Foundation. Nearly $65 billion, or 78 percent of those savings, went to households earning $100,000 or more.

There are a range o f ways to increase tax revenue by aiming at higher earners, some less comprehensive than others. For instance, the interest deduction relating to second homes could be ended. Also, the cap on mortgage debt eligible for the interest rate deduction - currently $1 million - could be reduced.

There are broader approaches, too. In its proposed budget, the Obama administration plans to focus on top earners. The administration suggests capping deductions at 28 percent for high-income households, those earning more than $250,000.

Under the current rules, a high-earning household deducting $20,000 in interest payments would probably apply a 35 percent rate to that amount and receive $7,000 in tax savings. The Obama budget aims to limit that tax saving by capping that rate at 28 percent. If that rate were applied to $20,000 of interest payments, the saving would fall to $5,800.

The United States would capture the difference. Over the next 10 years, that 28 percent ca p could increase tax revenue by $584 billion, according to the Treasury Department.

Separately, the Obama administration also wants to limit high earners' deductions by letting certain Bush-era exemptions expire. Altogether, the Treasury Department thinks it could raise $749 billion over 10 years by limiting deductions for higher earners. That's substantially more than the $684 billion it thinks it could raise from increasing their tax rates.

Still, there are situations where certain middle-income earners do get hit by deduction limits.

Consider a policy that uses a dollar limit, and caps all deductions at $35,000. That amount would be plenty to cover most middle-income households' mortgage interest, state and local taxes and charitable giving.

But people earnings more than $100,000 may start to reach the limit, according to Sidney B. Rosenberg, associate professor emeritus at the University of North Florida. He assumes a household earns $110,000 and has a $300,000 mortgage on which it pays $17,500 a year. It also pays property taxes and state taxes at estimated nationally average rates. Such a family would have nearly $35,000 of deductible expenses, Dr. Rosenberg calculates.

One argument against curtailing the mortgage deduction is that it could reduce demand for housing, depressing home prices when the housing market is still somewhat weak. The National Association of Realtors believes a removal of the deduction could reduce property values by 15 percent, according to a presentation last year from its chief economist, Lawrence Yun.

Other analysts say they believe the housing industry overstates the potential impact. With several forms of government subsidy also supporting housing, it's hard to single out the effect of the mortgage deduction. At the most, the Reason Foundation estimates, the deduction may bolster house prices by 3 percent.

Since any deduction cap is likely to aim at higher earners, exp ensive houses would be most affected. But big-ticket homes appear much more resilient to shocks than lower-cost dwellings.

CoreLogic, a housing data company, tracks data that effectively divides the market into higher- and lower-cost houses, grouping them based on the size of the mortgages. The prices of the higher-cost houses are up 5.9 percent since the start of 2005, before the housing crash. In contrast, the houses at the lower end have fallen 13.5 percent in price since the beginning of 2005.

Given the apparent sturdiness of the higher end of the housing market, politicians may decide there are few risks in effectively capping mortgage deductions for high earners. Limiting tax breaks in a way that could reduce mortgage relief would be a change for Washington, which has done so much to support housing.

Nick Kasprak, an analyst at the Tax Foundation, said that up until recently he didn't expect to see a cap on deductions. “But now,” he said, “it se ems both parties are open to pursuing this strategy.”



The Confusing Outlooks for China\'s Growth

The recent economic data out of China have been good, but as Caixin explains there is still no consensus on predictions for 2013 growth.

Researchers at Renmin University now expect 2013 “real economic growth” to be 9.3 percent. A Chinese business newspaper on Monday morning reported that the Central Economic Work Conference in December will probably set the 2013 target gross domestic product growth rate at 7.5 percent, and earlier this month the Conference Board predicted that the growth rate over the next six years will likely average 5.5 percent.

All but the most bearish analysts believe economic activity is picking up, though there are concerns that the growth is in response to real end-user demand as opposed to inventory restocking in anticipation of more stimulus. Looking past the high-frequency data, Gavyn Davies argues in The Financial Times that “China has faced greater economic challenges in the past three decades, and has succeeded in overcomi ng them. It can do so again.”

Do not feel bad if you are confused by the differing views about China's economy. Even the usually bearish Ambrose Evans-Pritchard seems disoriented. In a remarkable turnabout for someone who has recently written such alarmist columns as “China's Economic Destiny in Doubt After Leadership Shock” and “China's Revolution Risk,” Mr. Evans-Pritchard sounds almost giddy in his description of Chengdu and the potential for China as a high-tech expansion drives a second boom in the hinterland.

THE KEY FOR FUTURE GROWTH IS REFORM, as this column has discussed several times. Last week Li Keqiang, No. 2 in the Communist Party and the premier-in-waiting, gave a talk in which he emphasized the need for continuing reforms. His comments were widely covered and praised in Chinese media but received only limited mention in most Western media, probably because of the Thanksgiving holiday in the United States. One early test of the apparent resolve for reform will be the income distribution reform plan that is expected by the end of the year, after several years of delays. Income distribution reform can only happen if the government is willing to take on special interests and state-owned enterprises.

On Sunday The New York Times published “Lobbying, a Windfall and a Leader's Family,” the second part of its investigation into the family wealth of Premier Wen Jiabao. Ping An Insurance, the company at the center of the report, on Monday said that it was considering legal action after the reports.

Last week's column discussed the likelihood that Xi Jinping would begin a meaningful corruption crackdown. Rumors are now going around that Beijing is planning an anti-corruption and rectification campaign in early 2013. The excessive role of the state in China's economy breeds graft, and without significant reform any anti-corruption campaigns are likely to fail, even if they snare some high-level offici als and impact the graft economy from which many firms profit, including global luxury goods companies.

Both Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang have emphasized the need for rule of law in China, but there is still a yawning gap between rhetoric and reality that damages not only social order but also investor confidence and economic development.

On Saturday Fairfax Media published a disturbing report about Dr. Du Zuying, a Chinese Australian cardiac surgeon who co-founded a biotech venture. The company, China Biologic Products, is now listed on Nasdaq with a market capitalization of over $300 million. Dr Du has been in custody in Shandong Province since February 2011 and his family alleges that his former partners both took his shares and colluded with the local police to have him arrested.

A CHINESE INTERNET COMPANY successfully listed on the Nasdaq market last week. YY.com raised $82 million the day before Thanksgiving. Two existing investors bought 1.505 million o f the 7.8 million shares offered and the deal priced at the bottom of the range, but it got done. And that is a positive sign for other Chinese firms considering a listing in the United States. One of the concerns about Chinese companies has been the frequent use of variable-interest entities to get around legal restrictions, as explained earlier this year by this DealBook article. The Securities and Exchange Commission has raised a lot of questions about the variable interest entity structure but its approval of the YY.com initial public offering is a sign the commission is still comfortable with it, so long as the risks are properly disclosed.

But without reforms to significantly strengthen the rule of law the risks in China for any investor, foreign or Chinese, remain high.



Bank of England\'s New Leader, a Member of the \'Government Sachs\' Club

The announcement on Monday that Mark Carney will serve as the next head of the Bank of England shows that the “Government Sachs” meme isn't going anywhere.

Mr. Carney, who is the head of the Bank of Canada, is the latest government minister to have worked at Goldman Sachs earlier in his career. (He reportedly beat out a current Goldman executive, Jim O'Neill, for the position.)

Current members of that club include Mario Draghi, the head of the European Central Bank and a former vice chairman of the firm; Mario Monti, the Italian prime minister and a former international adviser; and Gary Gensler, the head of the United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

And the list of Goldman alum in previous government posts is much more extensive, encompassing the likes of Henry M. Paulson Jr., the former Treasury secretary and onetime Goldman chief executive, and Neel T. Kashkari, a top lieutenant under Mr. Paulson who helped draft the Bush administratio n's response to the 2008 financial crisis.

That's to say nothing of Robert E. Rubin, the former Treasury secretary; Stephen Friedman, the onetime chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; and Jon S. Corzine, the former senator and governor of New Jersey.

The history of Goldman employees moving into the halls of political power is well known and highly contentious. Goldman has long been regarded as one of the savviest firms on Wall Street, and a stream of former officials taking seats in financial ministries, banking regulators and elsewhere.

Detractors of the phenomenon are legion, arguing that it leads to government policies that favor banking firms at the expense of the general populace. Proponents say that it allows for more sophisticated regulations, penned and executed by people who know Wall Street inside out.

Goldman itself has sought to play down the practice. “We're proud of our alumni, but frankly, when they work in the public sec tor, their presence is more of a negative than a positive for us in terms of winning business,” a spokesman for the firm told The New York Times in 2008. “There is no mileage for them in giving Goldman Sachs the corporate equivalent of most-favored-nation status.”

It's unclear whether Mr. Carney's time at Goldman will be a burden in his new post. He spent 13 years at Goldman, working from its London, New York and Tokyo offices, serving at one point as Goldman's head of sovereign risk for Europe, Africa and the Middle East. That position included playing a role in the firm's response to Russia's fiscal crisis and South Africa's first government bond sales after the fall of apartheid.

As the head of the Bank of Canada, Mr. Carney has largely won acclaim for steering that country's central bank through the global market turmoil of 2008, avoiding the tumult that upended England's financial institutions.

“Mark Carney is a quick study and has an enviable track record in the private sector, monetary policy and regulatory issues,” Barbara Ridpath, the chief executive of the International Centre for Financial Regulation, told The Financial Times in April. “Few other ‘candidates' have all three.”



Credit Suisse Said to Cut Investment Bank Jobs in Britain

LONDON â€" Credit Suisse is eliminating 100 jobs at its investment banking operation in Britain as part of a cost-cutting program, according to a person with direct knowledge of the plan.

The job cuts affect Credit Suisse's equities and fixed-income divisions, said the person, who declined to be identified because the plan was not public. The step is part of the bank's continuing $4.3 billion cost-reduction program.

Separately, Luigi de Vecchi, who in March went on sabbatical as co-head of global investment banking at Credit Suisse, has now left the bank, the person said. Mr. de Vecchi was supposed to return to the bank in an “important senior client coverage role” after the sabbatical, according to an internal memorandum at the time.

Credit Suisse announced changes to its management team last week, merging asset management into its wealth management operation and naming a co-head of its investment banking unit.



In SAC Case, a New Type of Deal

The Justice Department's prosecution of Mathew Martoma, a former portfolio manager at Steven A. Cohen's SAC Capital Advisors, over insider trading involved a new tactic â€" a nonprosecution agreement â€" to gain the cooperation of a crucial witness.

Though the tool is commonly used in criminal investigations, this appears to be the first time it has been used to secure evidence from an individual in a prominent white-collar crime case.

This is an intriguing development because white-collar defense lawyers may seek similar agreements for their clients rather than entering into plea bargains that result in a criminal conviction and punishment. An important issue for the Justice Department will be developing standards for when a nonprosecution agreement is better than using plea bargains in order to secure the cooperation of witnesses.

Prosecutors accuse Mr. Martoma of receiving information from Dr. Sidney Gilman, who entered into the nonprosecution agreemen t. The information concerned problems in a clinical trial for a drug to treat Alzheimer's disease that was being developed jointly by the pharmaceutical firms Elan and Wyeth.

SAC Capital sold out its positions in the two companies ahead of the announcement of the test results and made bearish bets against them. The moves allowed the hedge fund to avoid losses of $194.2 million and generate profits of $82.8 million.

Dr. Gilman served on a committee monitoring the safety of the drug being tested. An expert networking firm had put the two men together. Dr. Gilman received approximately $108,000 in consulting fees. But he did not trade on the information and he did not receive any portion of SAC Capital's enormous benefits from the well-timed trades.

The case against Mr. Martoma hinges largely on Dr. Gilman's credibility as a witness. Although there are suspicious e-mails and meetings between the two men, there are no recordings or other evidence to show exact ly what they discussed.

According to the criminal complaint, Dr. Gilman filled in those blanks by telling investigators that he passed along the information about the clinical trial just days before SAC Capital sold out its positions in Elan and Wyeth. Without the cooperation of Dr. Gilman, prosecutors would have highly suspicious trades and a potential source of inside information but little else to prove a violation of federal securities laws.

Prosecutors have filed charges against other people in expert networking cases, including Winifred Jiau, who worked for a California firm and passed on information about Nvidia and Marvell Technology to hedge fund traders. Other tippers who have not directly profited from trades have also been charged. A prominent recent case involved the successful prosecution of a former Goldman Sachs board member, Rajat K. Gupta, who was convicted of tipping the former hedge fund manager Raj Rajaratnam with inside information.

The current trial against Anthony Chiasson and Todd Newman over insider trading hinges largely on the testimony of traders at their hedge fund firms. Unlike Dr. Gilman, they entered into plea agreements with the Justice Department that will result in criminal convictions and sentences at some point in the future.

In other cases involving individuals, prosecutors have used deferred prosecution agreements, which are similar to nonprosecution agreements because neither type results in a criminal conviction. But those agreements were not used as a means of securing the cooperation of an important witness who would testify in a criminal case.

In August, the cyclist Floyd Landis entered into a deferred prosecution agreement for defrauding donors who had contributed to a fund to defend him from accusations that he had used performance-enhancing drugs while riding as a professional cyclist. Although his cooperation was helpful in building the United States Anti-Doping ag ency's case against Lance Armstrong, Mr. Landis did not testify in any criminal prosecutions.

A recent prosecution of five executives from the insurance companies General Re and American International Group was resolved by a deferred prosecution agreement. But that only came after their convictions were reversed by a court of appeals, and the government used the agreements to avoid another lengthy trial in which the prospects for success were in doubt.

If prosecutors want testimony from a witness, one means to compel cooperation is through a grant of statutory immunity. Such a move, however, prevents the government from prosecuting the person based on any information provided. The Justice Department is often reluctant to give immunity when it is not clear what the person's involvement was in the misconduct for fear of giving protection to the worst offender.

Prosecutors had fairly substantial leverage over Dr. Gilman to persuade him to cooperate in the face of potential insider trading charges. Under the federal sentencing guidelines, a tipper is responsible for the tippee's gains and losses avoided, so the potential sentence would have been 15 to 19 years, based on the $276 million that SAC Capital generated from the information.

So why did the Justice Department opt for a nonprosecution agreement with Dr. Gilman rather than a plea bargain?

The agreement appears to be a middle ground between a plea bargain and immunity. It contains terms normally seen in a plea agreement, like a promise of continuing cooperation in exchange for not pursuing additional charges. He also agreed to repay the benefits he received from Mr. Martoma, and settle civil charges filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Like a grant of immunity, Dr. Gilman will not be prosecuted for what he says, but he does admit in the agreement that he violated the law.

Dr. Gilman is a well-regarded neurologist at the University of Michigan Me dical School, where he is the William J. Herdman Professor of Neurology. In addition, he is 80 years old, so prosecutors may have concluded that there was little upside to a guilty plea when there was only a small likelihood that a person of his stature and professional background would receive a prison sentence.

Perhaps more important, Dr. Gilman held the key to possibly building a case against Mr. Cohen through Mr. Martoma. As DealBook's Peter Lattman reported, prosecutors applied pressure to get Mr. Martoma to cooperate against his former boss, no doubt threatening him with the same potential sentence of 15 to 19 years in prison. Dr. Gilman is a much smaller fish than the traders at SAC Capital, so he had leverage of his own in negotiating with the Justice Department.

White-collar defense lawyers will be eager to figure out what led the Justice Department to give Dr. Gilman a nonprosecution agreement, and whether their clients might obtain similar outcomes. T his type of agreement is far preferable to a guilty plea in exchange for a lenient sentence because the collateral consequences are minimized.

If nonprosecution agreements are a new direction for federal prosecutors in white-collar crime cases, then lawyers will have an even stronger incentive to get a client to cooperate early on in order to get this kinder and gentler disposition.



Schapiro, Head of S.E.C., to Announce Departure

Mary L. Schapiro, who overhauled the Securities and Exchange Commission after the financial crisis, is expected to announce on Monday that she is stepping down as chairwoman of the agency, according to two Obama administration officials briefed on the matter who were not authorized to speak publicly.

In recent days, the S.E.C. informed the White House and Treasury Department that Ms. Schapiro planned to leave next month, becoming the first major departure from the Obama administration's team of financial regulators. Ms. Schapiro will also relinquish her position as one of the five members of the agency's commission, the group that oversees Wall Street and the broader financial markets.

The move, which follows a bruising, four-year tenure, was widely telegraphed. Ms. Schapiro, 57, has confided in staff members for more than a year that she was exhausted and hoped to leave after the November elections.

In 2008, President Obama nominated Ms. Schapiro, a poli tical independent, to head the S.E.C. at a time when extreme economic turmoil had shaken investor confidence in the country's securities regulators.

The agency was faulted for its lax oversight of brokerage firms like Lehman Brothers, which failed in 2008 and contributed to the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression. Just weeks before Ms. Schapiro started as chairwoman, the Wall Street investor Bernard L. Madoff was accused of running a large Ponzi scheme, further damaging the credibility of regulators like the S.E.C., which missed crucial warning signs about the fraud.

Ms. Schapiro, a lifelong regulator who previously ran the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, quickly gained a reputation as a consensus builder determined to repair the agency's reputation. A tireless preparer and self-described pragmatist, Ms. Schapiro overhauled the agency's management ranks, revived the enforcement unit and secured more money and technology at a time when other agencies were being asked to cut back.

“The S.E.C. came back from the brink,” said Harvey L. Pitt, a former chairman of the agency under President George W. Bush. “I give her enormous credit for that.”

Consumer advocates and other critics, however, say she failed to grab the bully pulpit at a time the country needed a vocal critic of Wall Street. Since the financial crisis, the agency brought few enforcement cases against the Wall Street executives at the center of the crisis.

The S.E.C. notes it has brought a record number of cases over the last two years. While no top banking executives have been charged, the agency has filed actions against 129 people and firms tied to the crisis.

There is no clear successor to Ms. Schapiro. Mary J. Miller, a senior Treasury Department official, is under consideration for the job, a person briefed on the matter said. Sallie L. Krawcheck, a former top executive at Citigroup and Bank of America, is also in the running, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The agency's enforcement chief, Robert Khuzami, is a long-shot contender. Elisse B. Walter, a commissioner at the S.E.C., may step in to serve as interim chairwoman until a new one is confirmed.

As for Ms. Schapiro, few expect her to follow her predecessors and move into private legal practice, where she would defend the banks she has spent years regulating. Instead, they say she is more likely to seek out a position at a university or research group.



McGraw-Hill to Sell Education Unit to Apollo for $2.5 Billion

McGraw-Hill agreed on Monday to sell its education division to Apollo Global Management for about $2.5 billion, completing the publisher's transformation into a high-end financial information provider.

The long-expected deal will leave McGraw-Hill with its business information operations, which include Standard & Poor's; a market indexes unit that owns the famous S.&P. 500 and Dow Jones industrial average; and the metals industry publication Platts.

The newly reborn company, which will be renamed McGraw Hill Financial, is expected to report $4.4 billion in revenue this year, nearly 40 percent of which will come from international operations.

The latest sale will speed up a break-up that was first announced last fall, when McGraw-Hill disclosed plans to spin off its education unit. The publisher was one of many companies to pursue corporate dismemberment plans that were aimed at separating slower-growing businesses from faster-growing ones that would fetch higher values in the stock markets.

The education unit had long been one of McGraw-Hill's best-known operations, begun with the purchase of an academic publisher in 1952. But its importance to the company has been eclipsed by the faster growth of businesses like Standard & Poor's, which have benefited from the rise of the financial services sector.

“After carefully considering all of the options for creating shareholder value, the McGraw-Hill board of directors concluded that this agreement generates the best value and certainty for our shareholders and will most favorably position the world-class assets of McGraw-Hill Education for long-term success,” Harold McGraw III, the company's chairman and chief executive, said in a statement.

Larry Berg, a senior partner at Apollo, added: “With a longstanding track record of investing behind leaders in education, Apollo is pleased to be acquiring a marquee business that has been a pioneer in educational inno vation and excellence for over a century.”

The deal is expected to close as soon as the end of the year. The company will take a noncash charge of about $450 million to $550 million tied to the transaction.

Financing for the deal will come from Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley, Jefferies, UBS, Nomura and the BMO Financial Group.

McGraw-Hill was advised by Evercore Partners, Goldman Sachs and the law firms Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz and Clifford Chance.

Apollo was advised by Credit Suisse, UBS and BMO, as well as the law firms Paul, Weiss, Rifkind Wharton & Garrison and Morgan, Lewis & Bockius.



Autonomy Founder Challenges H.P.\'s Claims

Autonomy Founder Challenges H.P.'s Claims

SAN FRANCISCO - Mike Lynch was growing bored in a business meeting in London on Tuesday when his phone buzzed.

Mike Lynch, who founded Autonomy, blamed internal foot-dragging by Hewlett-Packard for problems after H.P. bought his firm.

A text message from a friend informed him that Hewlett-Packard was taking an $8.8 billion charge. A few minutes later, another message said H.P. was putting most of the blame for the write-down on accounting problems at Autonomy, the company Mr. Lynch co-founded and sold to H.P. last year for $10 billion. There was talk of potentially criminal activities.

Since that jolt, Mr. Lynch has been unusually candid and vocal in defending himself and the company he built, rather than hiding out behind a phalanx of lawyers as might be expected. He says he was blindsided by a long-prepared public relations onslaught by H.P., little of which had to do with the substance of its claims about Autonomy.

“It's been a bit of a shock,” said Mr. Lynch, who joined Hewlett-Packard in October 2011 but was fired by Meg Whitman, H.P.'s chief executive, in May. “The last time I talked to anyone there was in June, for about an hour.”

Mr. Lynch was once the face of H.P.'s future, thanks to Autonomy's high-end business analysis software. Last week, he became the public face of what the company said was a vast, systemic fraud.

But in charging gross improprieties at Autonomy, H.P. has attacked a man who may be Britain's most notable and contentious technology executive, and one of Europe's biggest self-made successes. Mr. Lynch, 47, sits on the boards of the British Broadcasting Corporation and the British Library, and was awarded an Order of the British Empire for his service to business.

Before Hewlett-Packard bought Autonomy, it was listed on Britain's major stock index. Its prominence allowed it to hire top engineers, who were worked remorselessly hard compared with their Silicon Valley counterparts, former employees say.

People who have worked with Mr. Lynch note both his accomplishments and his temper. “I don't think I've ever called anyone an idiot in the office, but I'm direct,” he said. “That's part of getting stuff done. I find good people and I value them. That is how I've been able to do what I've done.”

While Autonomy is not well known in the United States, it was considered a pioneer in the booming field of Big Data, and its pattern-seeking algorithms are at work at over 400 companies, including Oracle, Adobe, Cisco and, even before the purchase, Hewlett-Packard. Mr. Lynch personally made about $800 million from the sale to H.P.

Even with all of his money, intellect and a doctorate from Cambridge, what Mr. Lynch says he cannot figure out is how H.P. thinks he has done anything wrong.

Hewlett-Packard has said that its internal investigation, set off by a whistle-blower, uncovered major problems at Autonomy that were present before the merger. Among them were the booking of hardware sales as higher-margin software sales, and resellers reporting sales that did not exist.

Mr. Lynch said Autonomy's sales fell off a cliff after it merged with Hewlett-Packard - not because it suddenly had to account for things legally, as H.P. claims, but because of institutional foot-dragging.

“They drove out the top 100 people from Autonomy, and a bunch of trainees were put in” to sell Autonomy products, he said. “H.P. salesmen got better commissions for selling our competitors' products.”

Mr. Lynch said H.P. told him it could not formally approve Autonomy's software for use on its customers' servers, “when it was already running on thousands of H.P. machines around the world.” He added: “H.P. has core structural problems.”

Hewlett-Packard counters that Mr. Lynch was a singular force of resistance to the merger as soon as his check cleared.

“He was at every strategy session, was in person or on video for every meeting of the executive council,” said an H.P. executive briefed on the investigation who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on the record. “He wouldn't work with anyone. Sometimes he was enthusiastic, but other times he'd say, ‘This makes no sense. I'm going back to London.' ”

On at least two different cross-country flights on an H.P. private jet, the executive said, Mr. Lynch went to the back of the aircraft and refused to talk with anyone for the entire flight.

A spokeswoman for Mr. Lynch, Vanessa Colomar, said he had not been on the corporate jet before and “didn't know the etiquette.” She said he spent the time working.

Michael J. de la Merced contributed reporting from New York.

A version of this article appeared in print on November 26, 2012, on page B1 of the New York edition with the headline: Autonomy Founder Challenges H.P.'s Claims.

Buffett\'s Appeal for Higher Taxes

A Minimum Tax for the Wealthy

Omaha

SUPPOSE that an investor you admire and trust comes to you with an investment idea. “This is a good one,” he says enthusiastically. “I'm in it, and I think you should be, too.”

Would your reply possibly be this? “Well, it all depends on what my tax rate will be on the gain you're saying we're going to make. If the taxes are too high, I would rather leave the money in my savings account, earning a quarter of 1 percent.” Only in Grover Norquist's imagination does such a response exist.

Between 1951 and 1954, when the capital gains rate was 25 percent and marginal rates on dividends reached 91 percent in extreme cases, I sold securities and did pretty well. In the years from 1956 to 1969, the top marginal rate fell modestly, but was still a lofty 70 percent - and the tax rate on capital gains inched up to 27.5 percent. I was managing funds for investors then. Never did anyone mention taxes as a reason to forgo an investment opportunity that I offered.

Under those burdensome rates, moreover, both employment and the gross domestic product (a measure of the nation's economic output) increased at a rapid clip. The middle class and the rich alike gained ground.

So let's forget about the rich and ultrarich going on strike and stuffing their ample funds under their mattresses if - gasp - capital gains rates and ordinary income rates are increased. The ultrarich, including me, will forever pursue investment opportunities.

And, wow, do we have plenty to invest. The Forbes 400, the wealthiest individuals in America, hit a new group record for wealth this year: $1.7 trillion. That's more than five times the $300 billion total in 1992. In recent years, my gang has been leaving the middle class in the dust.

A huge tail wind from tax cuts has pushed us along. In 1992, the tax paid by the 400 highest incomes in the United States (a different universe from the Forbes list) averaged 26.4 percent of adjusted gross income. In 2009, the most recent year reported, the rate was 19.9 percent. It's nice to have friends in high places.

The group's average income in 2009 was $202 million - which works out to a “wage” of $97,000 per hour, based on a 40-hour workweek. (I'm assuming they're paid during lunch hours.) Yet more than a quarter of these ultrawealthy paid less than 15 percent of their take in combined federal income and payroll taxes. Half of this crew paid less than 20 percent. And - brace yourself - a few actually paid nothing.

This outrage points to the necessity for more than a simple revision in upper-end tax rates, though that's the place to start. I support President Obama's proposal to eliminate the Bush tax cuts for high-income taxpayers. However, I prefer a cutoff point somewhat above $250,000 - maybe $500,000 or so.

Additionally, we need Congress, right now, to enact a minimum tax on high incomes. I would suggest 30 percent of taxable income between $1 million and $10 million, and 35 percent on amounts above that. A plain and simple rule like that will block the efforts of lobbyists, lawyers and contribution-hungry legislators to keep the ultrarich paying rates well below those incurred by people with income just a tiny fraction of ours. Only a minimum tax on very high incomes will prevent the stated tax rate from being eviscerated by these warriors for the wealthy.

Above all, we should not postpone these changes in the name of “reforming” the tax code. True, changes are badly needed. We need to get rid of arrangements like “carried interest” that enable income from labor to be magically converted into capital gains. And it's sickening that a Cayman Islands mail drop can be central to tax maneuvering by wealthy individuals and corporations.

But the reform of such complexities should not promote delay in our correcting simple and expensive inequities. We can't let those who want to protect the privileged get away with insisting that we do nothing until we can do everything.

Our government's goal should be to bring in revenues of 18.5 percent of G.D.P. and spend about 21 percent of G.D.P. - levels that have been attained over extended periods in the past and can clearly be reached again. As the math makes clear, this won't stem our budget deficits; in fact, it will continue them. But assuming even conservative projections about inflation and economic growth, this ratio of revenue to spending will keep America's debt stable in relation to the country's economic output.

In the last fiscal year, we were far away from this fiscal balance - bringing in 15.5 percent of G.D.P. in revenue and spending 22.4 percent. Correcting our course will require major concessions by both Republicans and Democrats.

All of America is waiting for Congress to offer a realistic and concrete plan for getting back to this fiscally sound path. Nothing less is acceptable.

In the meantime, maybe you'll run into someone with a terrific investment idea, who won't go forward with it because of the tax he would owe when it succeeds. Send him my way. Let me unburden him.

Warren E. Buffett is the chairman and chief executive of Berkshire Hathaway.

A version of this op-ed appeared in print on November 26, 2012, on page A27 of the New York edition with the headline: A Minimum Tax for the Wealthy.

Former SAC Trader to Appear in Court

Mathew Martoma, the latest alumnus of SAC Capital Advisors to be accused of breaking the law, is set to appear in Federal District Court in Manhattan on Monday morning. The insider trading case against him “represents a watershed moment” in the government's investigation of SAC Capital, as it links the hedge fund's founder, Steven A. Cohen, to trading activity the government says was illegal, DealBook's Peter Lattman reports.

The case against Mr. Martoma, according to former employees of the hedge fund, “highlighted SAC's high-stress, pressure-packed culture,” where employees tried to gather as much information as possible about publicly traded companies. Mr. Martoma, “brainy and unassuming,” with a Stanford business degree, was hired for a new research unit that would help the hedge fund gain an edge.

Mr. Lattman writes: “Mr. Martoma is charged with corrupting a doctor who had access to secret drug data, then using that information to gain profits and avert losses totaling $276 million. Mr. Martoma closely collaborated with Mr. Cohen on the questionable trades, prosecutors contend.”

 

IN CHINA, LOBBYING EFFORT LED TO A WINDFALL  |  The family of China's prime minister, Wen Jiabao, grew wealthy during his leadership, but the greatest source of wealth came after Ping An Insurance, a financial services giant, mounted a successful lobbying effort, David Barboza reports in The New York Times. Back in 1999, when the insurer was struggling, its chairman made direct appeals to Mr. Wen that it be exempted from a rule that would require it to break up. After the insurer was granted a waiver, relatives of Mr. Wen made an investment in Ping An through another company, Mr. Barboza reports. “By June 2004, the shares held by the Wen relatives had already quadrupled in value, even be fore the company was listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.” By 2007, the initial $65 million investment had grown to $3.7 billion.

 

UBS FINED $47.5 MILLION  |  UBS's $2.3 billion trading loss has led to a fine of £29.7 million on the bank. The penalty was among the largest ever issued by Britain's Financial Services Authority, DealBook's Mark Scott reports. The regulator found that UBS failed to prevent the loss by a former trader, Kweku M. Adoboli, who received a seven-year jail sentence last week.

 

QATAR FUND SELLS BARCLAYS WARRANTS  |  DealBook's Mark Scott reports: “The sovereign wealth fund Qatar Holding said on Monday that it had sold its remaining warrants in Barclays in a deal that has led to a $1.2 billion share sale in the British bank. Qatar Holding had ac quired the warrants, which are financial instruments that can be exchanged for stock, during the financial crisis. Barclays raised £7 billion ($10.5 billion) in 2008 from new investors.”

Some big investors of Barclays are pushing for a major restructuring, according to The Financial Times. In recent meetings, “at least three of the 30 biggest shareholders” have told executives including Antony P. Jenkins, the chief, that Barclays should consider following the lead of UBS, which announced plans to scale back its fixed-income business. Popular proposals include closing the equities business or spinning off the investment bank, according to the newspaper, which quotes one unidentified bank insider as saying that the “20 percent pop in the UBS share price has got investors' juices flowing.”

 

BAXTER INTERNATIONAL LOOKS TO BUY GAMBRO  |  Baxter International is in talks to buy Gambro of Sweden for about $4 billion, with a possible deal at least two weeks away, people briefed on the matter told DealBook on Friday. “A deal for Gambro would help bolster Baxter's lineup of dialysis products. The Swedish company focuses on equipment that is used in hospitals and other medical facilities.” And a takeover would be the biggest deal ever for Baxter, which is based in Deerfield, Ill.

 

ON THE AGENDA  |  In Europe, finance ministers are meeting to discuss releasing the latest package of aid to Greece. The Dallas Fed releases its survey of manufacturers for November at 10:30 a.m. Peter Fisher, BlackRock's global head of fixed income, is on CNBC at 7 p.m.

 

BUFFETT'S PLEA FOR HIGHER TAXES  |  Writing in an Op-Ed essay in The New York Times, Warr en E. Buffett challenges the idea that higher tax rates discourage investment. In the days when tax rates were higher, he says, “never did anyone mention taxes as a reason to forgo an investment opportunity that I offered.” He continues: “So let's forget about the rich and ultrarich going on strike and stuffing their ample funds under their mattresses if - gasp - capital gains rates and ordinary income rates are increased. The ultrarich, including me, will forever pursue investment opportunities.”

Mr. Buffett offers policy proposals: “I support President Obama's proposal to eliminate the Bush tax cuts for high-income taxpayers. However, I prefer a cutoff point somewhat above $250,000 - maybe $500,000 or so. Additionally, we need Congress, right now, to enact a minimum tax on high incomes. I would suggest 30 percent of taxable income between $1 million and $10 million, and 35 percent on amounts above that.”

 

 

 

Mergers & Acquisitions '

Knight Capital Said to Consider Selling Unit  |  The Knight Capital Group “is in talks about possibly selling” its market-making unit, its most profitable business, The Wall Street Journal reports, citing unidentified people briefed on the talks. WALL STREET JOURNAL

 

Flowers Foods Signals a Possible Bid for Hostess Assets  |  Flowers Foods has not said it intends to acquire assets of Hostess Brands, but the company “said last week that it had renegotiated lending terms that could allow it to tap additional cash, a signal that it could be gearing up to make a bid,” The Wall Street Journal writes. WALL STREET JOURNAL

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L'Oreal Said to Be Buying Urban Decay Cosmetics  |  According to The Wall Street Journal, L'Oréal is paying “between $300 million and $400 million” for Urban Decay Cosmetics, which is owned by the private equity firm Castanea Partners. WALL STREET JOURNAL

 

K.K.R. to Buy Alliant Insurance From Blackstone  |  The deal will transfer ownership of Alliant, an insurance brokerage, for the second time in five years. DealBook '

 

Rival Bid for Stake in Aston Martin  |  Reuters reports: “Aston Martin stands at the center of an international takeover battle after Indian motors group Mahindra trumped an Italian bid for half o f the British luxury car maker.” REUTERS

 

GlaxoSmithKline to Raise Stake in Indian Unit  |  GlaxoSmithKline plans to raise its stake in its Indian consumer products unit to up to 75 percent, from 43.2 percent, in a roughly $940 million deal, Reuters reports. REUTERS

 

INVESTMENT BANKING '

Goldman Sachs Sits Out Business in Southern Europe  |  Goldman Sachs “turned down roles in offerings by banks in Spain and Italy this year, the only top U.S. securities firm not to take part in the fund-raisings by southern European lenders as the region's debt crisis stretches to a fourth year,” Bloomberg News reports. BLOOMBERG NEWS

 

BlackRock Prepares to Enter Infrastructure Debt Market  | 
FINANCIAL TIMES

 

Banks Pay Up for Lending Talent  |  Commercial bankers in towns and cities across the country are commanding pay raises, as “competition to make loans to healthy small and midsize companies is fierce,” The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL

 

PRIVATE EQUITY '

Private Equity Managers Prepare for Higher Taxes  |  With the prospect of higher taxes looming, private equity managers are “accelerating gains and shifting what they transfer to trusts,” Bloomberg News reports. BLOOMBERG NEWS

 

Buyout Firms Find Bargains in Ireland  | 
FINANCIAL TIMES

 

HEDGE FUNDS '

Argentina to Appeal Order That It Pay Bondholders  |  The Financial Times reports: “With a December 15 deadline looming, Argentina will appeal on Monday for U.S. judges to suspend an order for it to pay $1.3 billion to holders of defaulted debt.” FINANCIAL TIMES

 

New Platforms Allow Investors to Trade Hedge Fund Stakes  |  Brokers like Tullett Prebon and Wake2o are helping investors circumvent hedge fund lockup periods, The Financial Times reports. FINANCIAL TIMES

 

I.P.O./OFFERINGS '

At Groupon, a ‘Hedge Fund Party'  |  Groupon's shares rose last week after the disclosure that Tiger Global Management had bought a significant stake. For the daily deal company, “the best medicine right now seems to be a little confidence from a rich guy,” Kara Swisher writes in AllThingsD. ALLTHINGSD

 

I.P.O. Calendar for December Is Looking Empty  |  With no I.P.O.'s scheduled in the United States in the next two weeks, it looks like “it's going to be well into December before we see the next deal,” Scott Sweet, senior managing partner at IPO Boutique, told The Wall Street Journal. WALL STREET JOURNA L

 

VENTURE CAPITAL '

India's ‘Sand Hill Road' for Health Care  |  MedTech Row in New Delhi has become a hub for entrepreneurs and venture capitalists “focused on developing technology to provide better health care to poor people and those with limited access to medical services, while, for the most part, making a profit at the same time,” the India Ink blog reports. NEW YORK TIMES INDIA INK

 

An E-Commerce Entrepreneur Harnesses Star Power  |  Brian Lee, a lawyer turned entrepreneur, “uses celebrities' social media connections with fans, coupled with recent innovations in e-commerce, to sell things in ways that were not possible just a few years ago,” The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES

 

Lab at M.I.T. Spawns Companies by the Dozens  |  Since the 1980s, the Langer Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology “has spun out companies whose products treat cancer, diabetes, heart disease and schizophrenia, among other diseases, and even thicken hair,” The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES

 

G.E. Looks to Heavy Industry for Innovation  |  General Electric is making a “big bet on what it calls the ‘industrial Internet,' bringing digital intelligence to the physical world of industry as never before,” The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES

 

LEGAL/REGULATORY '

Autonomy's Founder Challenges H.P.'s Claims  |  Mike Lynch has found himself having to defend Autonomy, the company he founded and sold to Hewlett-Packard, against H.P.'s claims of accounting improprieties. The New York Times writes that H.P. “has attacked a man who may be Britain's most notable and contentious technology executive, and one of Europe's biggest self-made successes.” NEW YORK TIMES

 

ING Repays $1.45 Billion of Government Bailout  |  The ING Group said on Monday that it had repaid 1.13 billion euros ($1.45 billion) to the Dutch government as part of its effort to return a bailout worth $12.7 billion, plus interest, that the firm received during the financial crisis. DealBook '

 

The Case for Warren on the Senate Banking Committee  |  The New York Times editorial board says it “should be a no-brainer” to send Elizabeth Warren to the Senate banking committee. NEW YORK TIMES

 

I.R.S. Raises Concerns With a Tax Deal  |  The Internal Revenue Service issued a skeptical opinion about a tax deal by a company that, though it was not identified by name, was clearly Fairfax Financial Holdings of Toronto, Gretchen Morgenson writes in The New York Times. NEW YORK TIMES

 

The President's Internal Debate  |  N. Gregory Mankiw, a professor of economics at Harvard who advised Mitt Romney in the presidential campaign, imagines two sides of President Obama deb ating over taxes and “struggling for control of the president's soul.” NEW YORK TIMES

 



Onex to Buy USI, an Insurance Broker, for $2.3 Billion

Onex of Canada agreed on Monday to buy USI, an insurance brokerage firm, from a Goldman Sachs's private equity fund for $2.3 billion.

USI, which is based in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y., sells products like property and casualty insurance and employee benefits and is one of the 10 biggest insurance brokers in the United States. It has been an active buyer in recent years, having struck about 30 deals in the past five years, according to Standard & Poor's Capital IQ.

Goldman's merchant banking arm bought the firm in 2007 for about $993 million.

“USI has established a strong national insurance brokerage with a very impressive management team led by Mike Sicard,” Robert Le Blanc, an Onex managing director, said in a statement. “The company is well positioned to continue to grow both organically and by building on its track record of successful acquisitions.”

It is the second deal for an insurance brokerage firm in three days. Last Friday, Kohlberg Kr avis Roberts agreed to buy Alliant Insurance Services from the Blackstone Group for an undisclosed sum.

Onex, a publicly traded private equity firm with $14 billion in assets under management, will finance the deal with about $700 million in equity.

Goldman was counseled by the law firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges.



L\'Oreal Freshens Its Lineup with Urban Decay Deal

Mon Nov 26, 2012 2:16am EST

L'ORÉAL SIGNS AN AGREEMENT TO ACQUIRE URBAN DECAY, ONE OF THE FASTEST-GROWING SPECIALTY MAKE-UP BRANDS IN THE USA

Clichy 26 November 2012 - L'Oréal today announced the signing of an agreement with Castanea Partners to acquire Urban Decay.

Based in Newport Beach California, Urban Decay, created in 1996 by make-up expert Wende Zomnir, has built a reputation based on the concept of "beauty with an edge" and values of femininity and irreverence. The line has star products in the eye category such as the Naked Palette and recently successfully launched its new foundation, the Naked Skin weightless liquid make-up. Urban Decay is popular among the youthful highly-involved cutting-edge consumers who are attracted by the fashion-forward image of the brand. The market for make-up specialist brands represents 44% of the luxury make-up market in the US.

In the fiscal year ended in June 2012, Urban Decay recorded net sales of 130 million US dollars.

"Urban Decay will beautifully complement L'Oréal Luxe's portfolio of iconic brands. It is the make-up specialist we needed to fully satisfy young women in search of playful colors and inspiration in selective distribution, at an accessible price point. It is totally additional to our existing propositions and as such it will contribute significantly to the growth of the Division in the years to come," said Nicolas Hieronimus, President L'Oréal Luxe.

Urban Decay is distributed in the key assisted self-service channel which includes among others Ulta and Sephora. It is one of the fastest growing segments in the US luxury retail universe. Urban Decay is also strong in e-commerce with www.urbandecay.com and www.sephora.com.

Frédéric Rozé CEO L'Oréal USA said, "Thanks to the acquisition of Urban Decay, the Group will strengthen its position in two very dynamic distribution channels in the USA, ie assisted self-service and e-commerce. We look forward to this new and exciting opportunity." In the US, Urban Decay will report to Carol Hamilton, President of L'Oréal Luxe USA.

"L'Oréal's strong innovation capabilities and presence in every channel of distribution will enable Urban Decay to reach its full potential in the marketplace," added Tim Warner, General Manager, Urban Decay. "Together, we have great ambitions for the future."

The closing is subject to regulatory approval which is expected by the end of the year.

L'Oréal
L'Oréal, the world's leading beauty company, has catered to all forms of beauty in the world for over 100 years and has built an unrivalled portfolio of 27 international, diverse and complementary brands. With sales amounting to 20.3 billion euros in 2011, L'Oréal employs 68,900 people worldwide. Regarding sustainable development, Corporate Knights, a Global Responsible Investment Network, has selected L'Oréal for its 2012 ranking of the Global 100 Most Sustainable Corporations in the World. L'Oréal has received this distinction for the 5th consecutive year. www.loreal.com

L'Oréal USA
L'Oréal USA, headquartered in New York City, with 2011 sales of over $5.1 billion and 9,800 employees, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of L'Oréal SA, the world's leading beauty company. In addition to corporate headquarters in New York, L'Oréal USA has Research and Innovation, Manufacturing and Distribution facilities across seven states, including New Jersey, Kentucky, Arkansas, Illinois, Ohio, Texas and Washington.  L'Oréal's impressive portfolio of brands includes Lancôme, Giorgio Armani Beauty, Yves Saint Laurent Beauté, Viktor & Rolf, Diesel, Cacharel, Clarisonic, L'Oréal Paris, Garnier, Vichy, La Roche-Posay, L'Oréal Professionnel, Kérastase and Shu Uemura Art of Hair, Maybelline New York, Soft-Sheen.Carson, Kiehl's Since 1851, Ralph Lauren Fragrances, essie Cosmetics, Redken 5th Avenue NYC, Matrix, Mizani, Pureology, SkinCeuticals and Dermablend. For more information visit www.lorealusa.com.

Castanea Partners  

Castanea Partners is a private equity firm founded by operating executives and private equity veterans. Castanea invests between $15M to $75M of equity in companies within specifically targeted industry sectors where the firm has proven investment and operating expertise. Castanea is principally focused on investing in dynamic consumer brands and marketing services companies that enable such brands to connect with their customers. Castanea is currently investing from its third fund, a $500 million fund that targets companies with enterprise values up to $250 million.

"This news release does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy L'Oréal shares. If you wish to obtain more comprehensive information about L'Oréal, please refer to the public documents registered in France with the Autorité des Marchés Financiers, also available in English on our Internet site www.loreal-finance.com.
This news release may contain some forward-looking statements. Although the Company considers that these statements are based on reasonable hypotheses at the date of publication of this release, they are by their nature subject to risks and uncertainties which could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated or projected in these statements."

Contacts at L'Oréal (switchboard: +33 1 47 56 70 00)

Individual shareholders and market authorities
Mr Jean Régis CAROF
Tel: +33 1 47 56 83 02
jean-regis.carof@loreal.com 

Financial analysts and Institutional investors
Mrs Françoise LAUVIN
Tel: +33 1 47 56 86 82
francoise.lauvin@loreal.com

Journalists 
Mrs Stephanie CARSON-PARKER
Tel: +33 1 47 56 76 71
stephanie.carsonparker@loreal.com

For more information, please contact your bank, broker or financial institution (I.S.I.N. code: FR0000120321), and consult your usual newspapers, and the Internet site for shareholders and investors, http://www.loreal-finance.com, or its mobile version on your cell phone, http://loreal-finance.mobi; alternatively, call +33 1 40 14 80 50.

 
 

Contacts at L'ORÉAL USA

Journalists

Rebecca Caruso                                  
212-984-4894                                       
rcaruso@us.loreal.com                      

Suzie Davidowitz
212-984-4105
sdavidowitz@us.loreal.com



Qatar Fund Sells $1.2 Billion in Barclays\' Warrants

LONDON â€" The sovereign wealth fund Qatar Holding said on Monday that it had sold its remaining warrants in Barclays in a deal that has led to a $1.2 billion share sale in the British bank.

Qatar Holding had acquired the warrants, which are financial instruments that can be exchanged for stock, during the financial crisis. Barclays raised £7 billion ($10.5 billion) in 2008 from new investors.

In a statement, Qatar Holding, which remains the largest shareholder in the British bank, said it had monetized 379 million units of Barclays warrants.

Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank sold 303.3 million of the converted shares to investors priced at a 4 percent discount on Barclays' closing share price on Friday, according to statements from the banks. In total, the share sale raised around $1.2 billion.

Investors reacted negatively to the announcement on Monday. Shares in the British bank fell 4.1 percent, to £2.44, in morning trading in London.< /p>

Despite the share sale, Qatar Holding said it continued to support Barclays, which has been hit by a number of scandals in recent months.

The British firm agreed to pay $450 million earlier this year to settle allegations that some of its employees manipulated the London interbank offered rate, or Libor. British and American authorities also continue to investigate payments that Barclays made to Qatar Holding as part of the 2008 fundraising.

“We maintain our confidence in the long term prospects for the business,” Qatar Holding's chief executive, Ahmad Al-Sayed, said in a statement.

The announcement came after some of Barclays investors called on the bank's new chief executive, Antony Jenkins, to pare back the firm's investment banking division, according to a report in The Financial Times.

The steps would follow similar moves by Swiss rival UBS, which announced 10,000 layoffs in its own investment banking unit last month in an effort to foc us on its profitable wealth management business.

Despite Barclays' leading position in several trading areas, particularly its fixed income business, a reduction in its investment banking unit would help to increase the bank's return on equity, a key measure of a firm's profitability, according to a research note by JPMorgan Chase.

“We believe that a credible new strategy requires balance sheet reduction in investment banking over time, alongside further cost cuts group-wide,” the JPMorgan Chase analysts' said in the note to investors on Monday.

A spokesman for Barclays declined to comment.