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Deferring Six Figures on Wall Street for Teacher\'s Salary

Four years after the financial crisis, Wall Street hiring has remained weak, and many college graduates have searched for jobs and even careers in other fields. In the last several years, hundreds of such would-be finance professionals and management consultants have taken their high-powered ambitions and spreadsheet modeling skills to the classroom.

Teach for America, the 22-year-old nonprofit organization that recruits high-achieving college graduates to teach in some of the nation's poorest schools for two years, in particular has garnered renewed interest among the business-oriented set. Teach for America says that its 2012 class contained about 400 recent graduates with a major in business or economics. Of those with professional experience, about 175 worked in finance.

< p>Those participants include Zachary Dearing, 23, a recent graduate of M.I.T. Two summers ago, he was an intern at McKinsey & Company, and the year before, Goldman Sachs.

Yet, he was one of 21 teachers in this year's class who had deferred job offers from a Wall Street bank, a management consulting firm or another corporate partner to join Teach for America.

“If somebody had told me I was going to be a high school math teacher in Dallas, Texas, when I entered college, I'd be like, ‘No, there's no chance of that being true,' ” said Mr. Dearing, who has deferred an offer from McKinsey. The teaching skills easily translate to office environments, he said. “I'm effectively the leader, every day, for 46 minutes, in front of seven different groups,” Mr. Dearing said.

Teach for America also became a sought-after option for students like Eric Rodriguez, who was a senior at Harvard when the financial crisis hit. Mr. Rodriguez had completed two internships at Lehman Brothers and was fully expecting to work at the firm after he graduated. But as he started his senior year in September 2008, Lehman Brothers collapsed and Wall Street was in a free fall.

But that fall, Teach for America began its to woo him to join its ranks.

“At Harvard, they harass you: ‘I'm going to be at this place, come meet me,' ” he said. “It wasn't until I was desperate that I said ‘I'll check this out and speak to this person.' ” In 2009, Mr. Rodriguez joined Teach for America and taught in an elementary school in San Francisco for two years. Afterward, he landed a job at Facebook in its user operations department.

At least a dozen other teaching programs also compete to attract talented college graduates and professionals. NYC Teaching Fellows, a 12-year-old program that is run by the city's education department, said that nearly 7 percent of its applicants in 2012 were business majors. It is similarly selective and had nearly 12,000 applicants last year for about 1,400 spots, mostly for positions in Brooklyn and the Bronx.

Other publicly and privately run teaching enterprises, like Chicago Teaching Fellows and City Year, a one-year service program, attract applicants from across the country. But among most graduates, Teach for America holds a higher profile, said Monica Wilson, acting co-director of Dartmouth College's office of career services.

“As Teach for America has been around longer and hired very smart people, it's gotten even better at how they recruit students, while the financial services industry has slowed down and experienced negative publicity in the media,” Ms. Wilson said. Many regard earning a spot in Teach for America a “badge of success.”

Teach for America in particular said that its applicant pool had swelled during the recession and lackluster recovery. More than 48,000 applied for 5,800 spots in 2012, nearly twice as many as those who had sought positions for the 2008 class.

The relationship between the teachers in the program and those outside the program has often been tense. Critics of the Teach for America program say teachers, in general, aren't at their best until they've been working for at least five years.

Teach for America contends that many of its teachers last beyond the required two years. Of its 28,000 alumni, two-thirds remain in education roles, including as principals and superintendents (about half of those educators are in classroom settings).

“It wouldn't have the same appeal if it were for a longer period of time,” said Kaitlin Gastrock, a spokeswoman for Teach for America. “Two years is a reasonable ask to make of folks who are just finishing up their college experience.”

Teach for America participants receive the same starting salary as first-year teachers in their districts, which is about $25,500 to $51,000 a year. That pales in comparisons to the six-figure salary and bonus structures that many elite college graduates can expect in finance.

The program fully expects that it will not keep all of its recruits. Mr. Dearing, for one, said he intended to work at McKinsey after his commitment was over. But the teaching program could lead to a career in public service one day, he said.

In many ways Teach for America was modeled on the success of top Wall Street firms, which seek to recruit the best and the brightest college graduates. In her 2001 memoir, the program's founder, Wendy Kopp, wrote that she hoped to both improve the stature of the profession and give the recruitment process a much-needed jolt. In the book, she said she envisioned creating “a teachers corps that would recruit as aggressively as the investment banks and management consulting firms that were still swarming all over c ampus.”

Indeed, some of Teach for America's outreach is taken straight from Wall Street's recruiting book. On campuses, career advisers and applicants say, the program's presence is large, with ambassadors compiling lists of impressive candidates from the recommendations of professors, academic advisers and alumni. Now, the number of teachers who joined this year from Ivy League schools is nearly 50 percent higher than it was in 2008.

“They take the time to visit campus, to get to know our students, our student groups, where and when they should present,” said Patricia Rose, director of career services at the University of Pennsylvania. “Most of the other people who use this model are for-profit organizations.”

The previous internships in finance have proved to be effective teaching aids for some of the participants. Ross Peyser, a 2011 graduate of Cornell and a second-year teacher in New Orleans, was once an intern at Oliver Wyman, a financial services consulting firm. As a teacher, he still plays the role of data analyst, creating Excel spreadsheets to diagnose his students' learning needs.

At the end of day, he administers a five-question quiz to students to assess who understood the lesson. When c lass is over, he performs exhaustive data pulls in Excel, just as he did as a finance intern.

“I had a stronger basis to do my data analysis compared to all the other teachers in my school,” Mr. Peyser said. “It came more naturally just based on that one summer in finance.”

And more important, he and others do regard the program as one that provides essential job skills.

“T.F.A. is a really strong name,” he said. “It seems as if going to work for McKinsey or something like that; they hold the same value.”



Investigative Firm Started by Krolls Acquires Private Watchdog

K2 Intelligence, the investigative business started by Jules Kroll and Jeremy Kroll, has acquired the corporate intelligence firm Thacher Associates, a deal highlighting the growing and lucrative business of internal investigations and corporate monitoring.

Thacher, which is based in New York, is a leading player in the niche business of overseeing large-scale real estate development projects on behalf of governments and developers to ferret out corruption in the construction process.

The deal, which is expected to be announced on Thursday, underscores the prevalence of private watchdogs not only in the building industry but across corporate America. Both government regulators and large companies are increasingly looking to independent overseers to monitor businesses for possible wrong doing.

With stepped-up prosecution of financial laws and enhanced government regulation, companies today are increasingly using investigative firms like FTI Consulting and Navigant Consulting to supplement their own in-house compliance and legal programs. In a sign of the business's appeal, the law firm Pepper Hamilton last year acquired the investigative group run by Louis J. Freeh, the former director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

“We look at the heightened regulations that companies face every day, and see the increased need for independent experts to assure regulators and law enforcement that their requirements will be fulfilled,” said Jeremy Kroll, the chief executive of K2.

Recent cases highlight how the government's increased oversight - especially in financial services - has resulted in the need for corporate babysitters. The London-based banking giant Standard Charter recently agreed to a demand by New York officials that it hire an outside monitor to ensure compliance with United States anti-money laundering laws. And the Justice Department forced another big bank, HSBC, as part of a deferred prosecution agreement relating to various financial crimes, to hire a corporate monitor for a five-year period.

Kroll is a big name in the global investigations industry. In the 1970s, Jules Kroll helped pioneer the business of helping corporations improve their operations by uncovering fraud and other forms of corruption in their business. Mr. Kroll grew its business rapidly, embarking on a series of acquisitions and diversifying into areas like litigation support and data recovery. In 2004, Marsh & McLennan purchased Kroll in an all-cash deal worth $1.9 billion. (Marsh sold Kroll in 2010 to the global security firm Altegrity.)

Mr. Kroll and his son, Jeremy, left Kroll in 2008 and the following year started K2, which now employs about 120 people.

K2's deal acquisition of Thacher - the terms of which are not being disclosed - is the first of a number of acquisition that the firm hopes to make in the near-future, Jeremy Kroll said. Mr. Kroll acknowledged that in some ways, K2's planned expansion mirrors the growth strategy executed by Kroll.

In acquiring Thacher, K2 adds a profitable niche of “construction integrity monitoring,” or providing oversight to big real estate development projects. High-profile assignments handled by Thacher include the World Trade Center site clean-up, the building of the new Yankee Stadium, and the construction of the new Bank of Amer ica office tower across in Midtown Manhattan.

Thomas D. Thacher 2d, the firm's chief executive, said that the combination with K2 will provide a platform to expand the business to new geographies. Mr. Thacher's business developed in the 1990s when then-Gov. Mario Cuomo sought to root out graft in New York construction projects. A former assistant district attorney in Manhattan, Mr. Thacher served as inspector general of the New York City School Construction Authority before starting his firm.

“We've reached a point where we get calls from all over to work on projects and we don't really have the infrastructure to support that,” said Mr. Thacher, who is known as Toby. “By joining forces with K2, we make our services both nationally and internationally.”

The thinking behind the deal is that what has primarily been a New York-area business has the potential to grow, especially at a time when rebuilding of the nation's infrastructure - its bridges, roads, and tunnels - has become a focus, as has updating the electricty grid.

“There is a high likelihood of fraud, waste and abuse at large-scale construction projects not just in the tri-state area, but all across the country,” Jeremy Kroll said.



A Faster Lane to Profitability

Avis Budget is giving Zipcar a faster lane to profitability. Selling to the mainstream car rental giant for $500 million means a 32 percent loss for those who bought shares in Zipcar's 2011 initial public offering. But it will allow the car-sharing company to increase its margins by tapping into Avis's underused fleet.

Zipcar may have started the shift to renting cars by the hour, with gasoline and most insurance costs included in the price. But it faces stiff competition from Avis rivals Hertz and Enterprise, which have built or bought their way into the same market and offer more services, like one-way rentals to airports.

On top of that, after more than a decade on the road Zipcar has yet to shift into the black. It may do so in 2012, but only with a measly $3.25 million of net income â€" represent ing a 1.2 percent net margin â€" according to Reuters estimates. That's barely a quarter of Avis's expected margin and less than a fifth of Hertz's.

Coming into Avis's garage should improve that. The traditional renter's vehicles get more use during the week than at weekends. Conversely, Zipcar members â€" annoyingly dubbed Zipsters by the company â€" often need wheels most on Saturdays and Sundays for getaways and runs to Ikea. Equipping some of Avis's cars with Zipcar technology and making them available at the weekend could increase revenue by up to $25 million a year, the two companies reckon.

Adding one-way rentals as well as expanding Zipcar locations could inject another $20 million into the top line. Combined and assuming no associated costs, that could add $30 million after tax to annual profit. Attribute d solely to Zipcar in 2012, that would have equated to a racy 10 percent net margin. Factoring in another $25 million of expected cost savings would take that closer to 18 percent.

That's too flattering to Zipcar, of course. A good portion of any benefit from sharing fleets would really belong to Avis's existing business. Even allowing for that, though, the deal adds handy extra oomph to Zipcar's engine. The upstart's shareholders get some of that in the form of a 49 percent premium over the value of their shares on New Year's Eve. Avis shareholders aren't giving anything up, either â€" the anticipated cost synergies, with a present value after tax of $175 million, cover the takeover premium.

Antony Currie is an associate editor at Reuters Breakingviews. For more independent commentary and analysis, visit breakingviews.com.



Long After the I.P.O., Deals at a Discount

In the mergers and acquisitions world, they are called “takeunders,” acquisitions at a price that is less than the target company's stock market value. Now, a number of recent deals for companies that have gone public in recent years offer a variation on the theme: takeovers for less than the initial offering price.

Zipcar, which announced on Wednesday that it would be acquired by Avis Budget Group, is one such instance.

The car-sharing company went public in April 2011 at $18 a share and rose as high as $29.27. Wednesday's offer of $12.25 a share - while amounting to a 49 percent over Zipcar's stock price as of Dec. 31 - represents a discount of 32 percent from its I.P.O. price.

Zipcar is only the latest example, according to data Standard & Poor's Capital IQ. Take an offering from an exuberant market in 2006, when Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company took Sealy pu blic in April 2006 for $16 a share. In September, the company was acquired by rival Tempur-Pedic for $2.20 a share.

Other recent deals represent much less of a comedown from such buoyant market debuts. Starbucks acquired Teavana - which went public for $17 a share in July 2011 - for $15.50 a share. That deal closed on Wednesday.

Duff & Phelps, meanwhile, agreed earlier this week to be sold to a group that includes the Carlyle Group for $15.55 a share. The financial advisory firm went public in October 2007 at $16 a share.



Analyst Sees Possible Bank Unit Sales

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Abbott Completes Spinoff

ABBOTT PARK, Ill., Jan. 2, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- Abbott (NYSE: ABT) today announced it has completed the separation of its research-based pharmaceuticals business, which became AbbVie, a new independent biopharmaceutical company. AbbVie will begin trading independently on the New York Stock Exchange today under the symbol "ABBV."

On Nov. 28, 2012, Abbott's board of directors declared a special dividend distribution of all outstanding shares of AbbVie common stock. For every 1 share of Abbott common shares held as of close of business on Dec. 12, 2012, Abbott shareholders received 1 share of AbbVie common stock on Jan. 1, 2013.

Abbott announced in October 2011 that it was separating into two independent companies, as its businesses evolved into two different investment identities. AbbVie is a research-based specialty biopharmaceuticals company with a broad portfolio of medicines, including leadership in immunology and virology, and a pipeline of breakthrough therapies. Abbott is one of the largest science-based, diversified healthcare companies, with market-leading offerings in diagnostics, medical devices, nutritionals and branded generic pharmaceuticals.

"We wish our colleagues at AbbVie continued success as they become part of a new, independent company that is already making a significant difference, focusing on highly specialized, market-leading therapies for some of the world's most difficult-to-treat diseases," said Miles D. White , chairman and chief executive officer, Abbott.

"Abbott has taken the most transformative action in its 125-year history," said Mr. White. "We have had enduring success precisely because of what we're doing now â€" reinventing ourselves for changing times and creating new ways to serve the millions of patients, customers, communities and shareholders who depend on us."

Strength Through Diversity
Abbott begins its 125th year with approximately $22 billion in revenues generated throughout 150 countries and remains one of the largest and most far-reaching global healthcare companies, with diversity across technologies, businesses and geographies.

The company is comprised of four businesses of roughly equal size â€" diagnostics, medical devices, nutritionals and branded generic pharmaceuticals. Abbott's businesses are all leaders in their respective fields and hold the top market positions across numerous categories. These businesses develop leading, science-based products that are meeting the needs of patients and consumers in the evolving global healthcare environment.

Abbott is well positioned to deliver reliable performance with industry-leading growth, expanding margins and strong cash flow. The company's businesses are aligned with long-term health trends, including the world's aging population, increasing prevalence of chronic disease, and improving access to care in fast-growing economies. Continued investment in new technologies is advancing Abbott's offerings in vascular health, diabetes care, diagnostic screening and detection, vision correction and nutrition science.

Revenue among Abbott's businesses is well balanced geographically, with 30 percent generated in the United States, 30 percent from Western Europe, Canada, Japan and Australia, and 40 percent from the fastest-growing economies, including India, China, Russia and Brazil. The company's presence in these high-growth markets is among the most expansive of any diversified healthcare company and is expected to reach nearly 50 percent of sales by 2015.

About Abbott
Abbott is a global healthcare company devoted to improving life through the development of products and technologies that span the breadth of healthcare. With a portfolio of leading, science-based offerings in diagnostics, medical devices, nutritionals and branded generic pharmaceuticals, Abbott serves people in more than 150 countries and employs approximately 70,000 people. 

Visit Abbott at www.abbott.com and connect with us on Twitter at @AbbottNews.

â€" Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 â€"
A Caution Concerning Forward-Looking Statements
Some statements in this news release may be forward-looking statements for purposes of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including Abbott's expected financial results after the separation. Abbott cautions that these forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements. Economic, competitive, governmental, technological and other factors that may affect Abbott's operations are discussed in Item 1A, "Risk Factors," to our Annual Report on Securities and Exchange Commission Form 10-K for the year ended Dec. 31, 2011 and in Item 1A, "Risk Factors," to our quarterly report on Securities and Exchange Commission Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2012 and June 30, 2012, and are incorporated by reference. Abbott undertakes no obligation to release publicly any revisions to forward-looking statements as a result of subsequent events or developments, except as required by law.

SOURCE Abbott

RELATED LINKS
http://www.abbott.com



Markets Welcome Fiscal Deal

The new year began on an optimistic note after the House of Representatives approved a deal to resolve the fiscal showdown. Major indexes rose in Asia, Australia and Europe in the early hours of trading.

But the rally was not expected to last long, with more concerns looming in the months ahead. The fiscal deal, which was approved by the House late on Tuesday and was expected to be signed quickly by President Obama, does not include a long-term solution for getting past the debt ceiling, the borrowing limit that the government reached at the end of the year, The New York Times notes. Spending cuts of $110 billion to the defense budget and other programs were delayed until March. And the deal itself could reduce economic growth by as much as 1 percent in the first quarter of 2013, market strategists said.

Under the agreement, only the most affluent households will pay more in income tax. But a break on payroll taxes was not extended, meaning that about 77 percent of households will pay a larger share of income to the federal government this year, according to the Tax Policy Center. Income from dividends will be taxed at a flat rate of 20 percent, rather than the same marginal rate as earned income.

In a statement on the deal, President Obama looked ahead to negotiations to come. “The one thing that I think, hopefully, the new year will focus on,” he said, “is seeing if we can put a package like this together with a little bit less drama, a little less brinkmanship, and not scare the heck out of folks quite as much.”

 

AVIS TO BUY ZIPCAR FOR $500 MILLION  |  The Avis Budget Group announced on Wednesday that it had agreed to buy the car-sharing pioneer Zipcar for $500 million in cash. The offer of $12.25 a share represents a premium of 49 percent over Zipcar's closing stock price of $8.24 at t he end of 2012. But it is still below the $18 a share that Zipcar commanded in its I.P.O. in April 2011.

 

HIGHS AND LOWS OF 2012  |  The winners and losers of the past year gathered in spirit for DealBook's annual “Closing Dinner.” Robert H. Benmosche, chief executive of A.I.G., deserves credit for the turnaround of the year, Andrew Ross Sorkin writes. And though Jamie Dimon experienced the biggest failure of his career in 2012, the JPMorgan Chase chief executive was wise to admit his mistake, Mr. Sorkin says. With Marissa Mayer at the helm of Yahoo, “people are talking about the company as if it actually has a future.” Mark Zuckerberg is in need of “friends” on Wall Street, and the board of Hewlett-Packard had a particularly rough year. Mr. Sorkin writes: “We're pleased that Speaker John Boehner also decided to join us this year. We had asked him to invite some other senior members of his caucus, but as you can see from the empty seats at his table, none of them were willing to join him. So we've stuck him next to Vikram Pandit.”

 

WHITE COLLAR CASES TO COME  |  “It is not really of question of whether there will be a major white-collar crime that captures the public's attention in 2013; it's a question of when and how costly it will be,” Peter J. Henning writes in the White Collar Watch column. Several big investigations remain active, including the broad crackdown on interest-rate manipulation. Insider trading is also likely to remain a major focus, and more companies are r unning afoul of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, Mr. Henning writes. In addition, “every year seems to bring news of a major trading loss as a result of a breakdown in the internal controls at a major financial institution.”

The United States attorney's office in Manhattan is not focused solely on putting criminals behind bars. It also commands a stream of revenue from asset forfeiture that reached about $3 billion in 2012, including more than $2 billion from a failed Ponzi scheme and about $160 million from an online poker operation, DealBook's Peter Lattman reports. “The aggressive use of forfeiture as a legal mechanism to seize and freeze criminal proceeds has long been a hallmark of Manhattan's federal prosecutors. Securing forfeited assets is a priority of the office in part because many of the largest financial fraud cases are centered in New York.” The proceeds from asset forfeiture amounted to more than 60 times the office's annual budget. “As I like to joke,” said Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, “that's a lot better than the investment return of any hedge fund.”

 

ON THE AGENDA  |  The ISM manufacturing index for December is released at 10 a.m. The Federal Reserve's policy-making committee releases minutes from its previous meeting at 2 p.m. Bill Gross of Pimco is on CNBC at 3 p.m.

 

RISE OF THE CELEBRITY SHORT-SELLER  |  Rock star investors like William A. Ackman and David Einhorn have a huge advant age over ordinary short-sellers, with their ability to move stocks simply by disclosing their bets. But that phenomenon “makes the truth about a company harder to discern,” Steven M. Davidoff writes in the Deal Professor column. The most recent example was Mr. Ackman's bet against Herbalife, which led to a sell-off in the stock last month and created a public relations drama for the company. Herbalife has scheduled an analyst day for Jan. 10 to challenge the hedge fund manager's arguments.

“We have seen this before with Warren E. Buffett, when a new investment by him pushes the stock of the company up instantly. But more often these days, it is the bets of hedge fund managers that a stock will go down that move share prices.” Disclosing these bets, Mr. Davidoff writes, can “create momentum, pushing investors to make decisions ba sed not on the information but on fear.” So, he continues, “perhaps it is time for the Securities and Exchange Commission to require short-sellers with significant positions to disclose them as they are required to do for long positions.”

 

 

 

Mergers & Acquisitions '

ArcelorMittal to Sell Stake in Iron Ore Unit for $1.1 Billion  |  The giant steel maker has agreed to sell a 15 percent stake in a Canadian iron ore unit to a consortium of Asian investors that includes Posco of South Korea. DealBook '

 

Duff & Phelps to Be Sold for $665.5 Million  |  Duff & Phelps said on Sunday that it had reached a $665.5 million deal to be acquired by a consortium including the Carlyle Group, Stone Point Capital and the Edmond de Rothschild Group. DealBook '

 

Middleby Acquires Viking Range for $380 Million  | 
WALL STREET JOURNAL

 

INVESTMENT BANKING '

Investors Opted for Bonds in 20 12, But the Craze May Fade  |  The New York Times writes: “Entering the new year, a growing number of professional investors are betting that the craze for bonds has gone too far, perhaps dangerously so, as has been evident in the headlines from the year-end reports from large investment firms.” NEW YORK TIMES

 

Markets Came Out Ahead, Despite Turmoil  |  The New York Times columnist Floyd Norris writes: “It may have been typical of 2012 that it was politicians and central bankers - not economic news or corporate developments - that dominated investor attention. As the year ended, the difference was that it was Washington, not Europe, where the squabbles were taking place.” NEW YORK TIMES

 

Big Investors Flock to a Mall Boom in Russia  |  Morgan Stanley, which paid $1.1 billion a year ago for a single mall in St. Petersburg, is among big investors buying into Russian malls, The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

 

Big Depositors Seek a New Safety Net  |  On the first day of the New Year, $1.5 trillion of bank deposits lost an unlimited government guarantee granted during the financial crisis, and a scramble is under way to make sure cust omers do not withdraw large sums out of banks. DealBook '

 

Should Buffett and Bank of America Part Ways?  |  “Bringing Warren Buffett on board as an investor during a crisis is meant to instill confidence in a company. The real show of strength, though, is seeing him off,” The Wall Street Journal's Heard on the Street column says. WALL STREET JOURNAL

 

TD Bank Tries to Appear More Human  |  In a new advertising campaign called “Bank Human Again,” TD Bank is looking to “portray the custome r experience at other banks as cold and impersonal,” The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

 

PRIVATE EQUITY '

Buyout Firms Raise Less Money From I.P.O.'s  |  Companies backed by private equity raised $20.5 billion through 103 I.P.O.'s worldwide between January and November last year, according to Ernst & Young, compared with $38.6 billion raised in 2011, The Financial Times reports. FINANCIAL TIMES

 

2 Directors Leav e Best Buy's Board  |  Two directors of Best Buy, including G. Mike Mikan, who was interim chief executive last year, have resigned, leaving the retailer with four vacancies on its board, Reuters reports. REUTERS

 

Warburg Pincus Acquires Control of Drug Company for $195 Million  |  Warburg Pincus bought a majority stake in JHP Pharmaceuticals from Morgan Stanley Principal Investments, Bloomberg News reports. BLOOMBERG NEWS

 

 

HEDGE FUNDS '

Once Again, Most Hedge Funds Trail S.&P. 500  |  The Wall Street Journal reports: “Despite a few outsize performers, hedge funds lagged behind broader markets for the fourth year in a row, the longest period of underperformance since 1998, according to industry tracker HFR.” WALL STREET JOURNAL

 

I.P.O./OFFERINGS '

India Considers a Plan to Refund I.P.O. Investors  |  The Wall Street Journal reports: “India's capital-markets regulator is taking steps to tame what has been one of the world's wildest I.P.O. markets, with plans including forcing companies' founders to reimburse small investors for some losses.” WALL STREET JOURNAL

 

A Global Slump in I.P.O.'s  |  The Wall Street Journal reports: “In 2012, only 751 companies made initial offerings, raising $113.1 billion,” a 29 percent decline in the amount of funds raised. WALL STREET JOURNAL

 

VENTURE CAPITAL '

Silicon Valley Prepares for More Scrutiny  |  The tech industry is likely to step up its lobbying effort this year, as the government takes a harder look at privacy and tracking issues, The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

 

Start-Ups Try New Approaches to Computer Security  | 
NEW YORK TIMES

 

LEGAL/REGULATORY '

Banks Approach Settlement on Past Abuses in Home Loans  |  The New York Times reports: “Banking regulators are close to a $10 billion settlement with 14 banks that would end the government's efforts to hold lenders responsible for foreclosure abuses like faulty paperwork and excessive fees that may have led to evictions, according to people with knowledge of the discussions.” NEW YORK TIMES

 

Tribune Company Emerges From Chapter 11  |  After four years, the Tribune Company has emerged from bankruptcy protection, Christine Haughney reports on the Media Decoder blog of The New York Times. DealBook '

 

< span class="title">William Baer Confirmed as Justice Department Antitrust Chief  |  William J. Baer is expected to continue what has been widely seen as the agency's reinvigorated enforcement of antitrust laws after a period of lax oversight during the Bush administration. DealBook '

 

Family of Chinese Regulator Profited From Rise of Ping An Insurance  |  The New York Times reports: “Relatives of a top Chinese regulator profited enormously from the purchase of shares in a once-struggling insurance company that is now one of China's biggest financial powerhouses, according to interviews and a review of regulatory filings.” NEW YORK TIMES

 



Avis to Buy Zipcar for $500 Million

The Avis Budget Group said on Wednesday that it had agreed to acquire the car-sharing pioneer Zipcar for $500 million in cash.

Avis's offer of $12.25 a share represents a premium of 49 percent over Zipcar's closing stock price of $8.24 at the end of 2012. The company, based in Cambridge, Mass., rents vehicles by the hour or the day, and it went public in April 2011 at $18 a share.

“We see car sharing as highly complementary to traditional car rental, with rapid growth potential and representing a scalable opportunity for us as a combined company,” Ronald L. Nelson, Avis's chief executive, said in a statement.

Founded in 2000, Zipcar says it has more than 760,000 members - known as Zipsters. It is in 20 metropolitan areas in the United States, Canada and Europe, as well as located near many colle ge campuses. For its third quarter, the company reported a 15 percent gain in revenue from the year-ago period, to $78 million. The company had earlier forecast that it expected to end its year with a profit of as much as $4 million.

Avis said it expected to reap significant cost reductions in acquiring Zipcar, including savings on its fleet. It also said that Avis's fleet could meet more of Zipcar's heavy weekend demand.

Citigroup and the law firm Kirkland & Ellis is advising Avis Budget. Morgan Stanley and the law firm Latham & Watkins advising Zipcar.



ArcelorMittal to Sell Stake in Iron Ore Unit for $1.1 Billion

LONDON â€" The European steel maker ArcelorMittal agreed on Wednesday to sell a 15 percent stake in a Canadian iron ore unit to a consortium of Asian investors for $1.1 billion.

Under the terms of the deal, the group - including Posco, the largest steel maker in South Korea, along with China Steel and a number of unnamed financial investors - will acquire the combined stake in ArcelorMittal's Labrador Trough iron ore project in Canada.

The Asian investors also have signed long-term supply contracts with ArcelorMittal to gain access to the iron ore deposits from the Canadian mining site, according to company statements.

The agreement will allow Posco and China Steel to gain greater control over the raw materials needed to produce steel. Despite a slowdown in the economies of fast-growing emerging markets, analysts expect demand to gradually return for a number of commodities, including iron ore.

The sale of a 15 percent stake in one of its Canadian i ron ore assets also will help ArcelorMittal to repay debts that have been hit by the weakening demand for commodities from developing economies. The European steel maker said it would retain a majority holding in the Canadian mining unit.

Last year, the ratings agencies Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's both cut ArcelorMittal's credit rating to junk because of its worsening debt situation and a downturn in the global steel industry. ArcelorMittal's net debt reached $23 billion as of Sept. 30, the latest figures available.

‘‘We are committed to growing ArcelorMittal's mining business,'' Peter Kukielski, chief executive of the company's mining division, said in a statement.

Shares in ArcelorMittal rose 3.9 percent in morning trading on Wednesday in Europe.

The deal is expected to close in two installments during the first and second quarters of this year.