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In His Annual Letter, Buffett Plays Up Newspapers

Over the last half-century, Warren E. Buffett has built a reputation as a contrarian investor, betting against the crowd to amass a fortune estimated at $54 billion.

Mr. Buffett underscored that contrarian instinct in his annual letter to shareholders published on Friday. In a year when Mr. Buffett did not make any large acquisitions, he bought dozens of newspapers, a business others have shunned. His company, Berkshire Hathaway, has bought 28 dailies in the last 15 months.

“There is no substitute for a local newspaper that is doin its job,” he wrote.

Those purchases, which cost Mr. Buffett a total of $344 million, are relatively minor deals for Berkshire, and just a small part of the giant conglomerate. And Mr. Buffett has begun this year with a bang, announcing last month his takeover, along with a Brazilian investment group, of the ketchup maker H. J. Heinz for $23.6 billion.

Despite the Heinz acquisition, Mr. Buffett bemoaned his inability to do a major deal in 2012. “I pursued a couple of elephants, but came up empty-handed,” he said, adding that “our luck, however, changed early this year” with the Heinz purchase.

Written in accessible prose largely free of financial jargon, Berkshire’s annual letter holds appeal far beyond Wall Street. This year’s dispatch contained plenty of Mr. Buffett’s folksy observations about investing and busines! s that his devotees relish.

“More than 50 years ago, Charlie told me that it was far better to buy a wonderful business at a fair price than to buy a fair business at a wonderful price,” Mr. Buffett wrote, referring to his longtime partner at Berkshire, Charlie Munger.

Mr. Buffett also struck a patriotic tone, directly appealing to his fellow chief executives “that opportunities abound in America.” He noted that the United States gross domestic product, on an inflation-adjusted basis, had more than quadrupled over the last six decades.

“Throughout that period, every tomorrow has been uncertain,” he wrote. “America’s destiny, however, has always been clear: ever-increasing abundance.”

The letter provides more than entertainment value and patriotic stirring, delivering to Berkshire shareholders an update on the company’s vast collection of businesses. With a market capitalization of $250 billion, Berkshire ranks among the largest companies in the United States.

Its holdings vary, with big companies like the railroad operator Burlington Northern Santa Fe and the electric utility MidAmerican Energy, and smaller ones like the running-shoe outfit Brooks Sports and the chocolatier See’s Candies. All told, Berkshire employs about 288,000 people.

The letter, once again, did not answer a question that has vexed Berkshire shareholders and Buffett-ologists: Who will succeed Mr. Buffett, who is 82, as chief executive

Last year, he acknowledged that he had chosen a successor, but he did not name the candidate.

He has said that upon his death, Berkshire will split his job in three, naming a chief executive, a nonexecutive chairman and several investment managers of its publicly traded holdings.

In 2010, he said that his son, Howard! Buffett,! would succeed him as nonexecutive chairman.

Berkshire’s share price recently traded at a record high, surpassing its prefinancial crisis peak reached in 2007 and rising about 22 percent over the last year.

The company reported net income last year of about $14.8 billion, up about 45 percent from 2011. Yet the company’s book value, or net worth â€" Mr. Buffett’s preferred performance measure â€" lagged the broader stock market, increasing 14.4 percent, compared with the market’s 16 percent return.

Mr. Buffett lamented that 2012 was only the ninth time in 48 years that Berkshire’s book value increase was less than the gain of the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index. But he pointed out that in eight of those nine years, the S.& P. had a gain of 15 percent or more, suggesting that Berkshire proved to be a most valuable investment during bad market periods.

“We do better when the wind is in our face,” he wrote.

For Berkshire’s largest collection of assets, its insurnce operations, the wind has been at its back. We “shot the lights out last year” in insurance, Mr. Buffett said.

He lavished praise on the auto insurer Geico, giving a special shout-out to the company’s mascot, the Gecko lizard.

Investors also keep a keen eye on changes in Berkshire’s roughly $87 billion stock portfolio. Its holdings include large positions in iconic companies like International Business Machines, Coca-Cola, American Express and Wells Fargo. He said Berkshire’s investment in each of those was likel! y to incr! ease in the future.

“Mae West had it right: ‘Too much of a good thing can be wonderful,’ ” Mr. Buffett wrote.

He also heaped praise on two relatively new hires, Todd Combs and Ted Weschler, who now each manage about $5 billion in stock portfolios for Berkshire. Both men ran unheralded, modest-size money management firms before Mr. Buffett plucked them out of obscurity and moved them to Omaha to work for him.

He called the men “a perfect cultural fit” and indicated that the two would manage Berkshire’s entire stock portfolio once he steps aside. “We hit the jackpot with these two,” Mr. Buffett said, noting that last year, each outperformed the S.& P. by double-digit margins.

Then, sheepishly, employing supertiny type, he wrote: “They left me in the dust as well.”

A former paperboy and member o the Newspaper Association of America’s carrier hall of fame, Mr. Buffett devoted nearly three out of 24 pages of his annual report to newspapers.

While Mr. Buffett has been a longtime owner of The Buffalo News and a stakeholder in The Washington Post Company, he told shareholders four years ago that he wouldn’t buy a newspaper at any price.

But his latest note reflects how much his opinion has turned. His buying spree started in November 2011, when he struck a deal to buy The Omaha World-Herald Company, this hometown paper, for a reported $200 million. By May 2012, he bought out the chain of newspapers owned by Media General, except for The Tampa Tribune. In recent months, he! continue! d to express his interest in buying more papers “at appropriate prices â€" and that means a very low multiple of current earnings.”

“Papers delivering comprehensive and reliable information to tightly bound communities and having a sensible Internet strategy will remain viable for a long time,” wrote Mr. Buffett.

Mr. Buffett said in a telephone interview last month that he would consider buying The Morning Call of Allentown, Pa., a paper that the Tribune Company is considering selling. But Mr. Buffett said he had not contacted Tribune executives.

“It’s solely a question of the specifics of it and the price,” he said about the Allentown paper. “But it’s similar to the kinds of communities that we bought papers in.”

Mr. Buffett has plenty of cash to make more newspaper acquisitions. To cover is portion of the Heinz purchase, Mr. Buffett will deploy about $12 billion of Berkshire’s $42 billion cash hoard. That leaves a lot of money for Mr. Buffett to continue his shopping spree for newspapers â€" and more major acquisitions like Heinz.

“Charlie and I have again donned our safari outfits,” Mr. Buffett wrote, “and resumed our search for elephants.”



Week in Review: Sizable Pay for the Wall St. Survivors

The Heinz case may have involved a side bet in London. | Mary Jo White is trying to allay skepticism ahead of her Senate confirmation hearing. | Bonus pay on Wall St. rose 9% last year. | Andrew Ross Sorkin warns that “shareholder democracy” can mask abuses. | Banks fear a court ruling in Argentina’s bond debt.

A look back on our reporting of the past week’s highs and lows in finance.

Tribune Company Hires Investment Banks to Weigh a Sale of Its Top Newspapers | The company, which emerged from bankruptcy late last year, has retained JPMorgan Chase and Evercore Partners as advisers, Michael J. de la Merced reported. DealBook »

Chairman of Barnes & Noble Planning Offer for Its Stores, but Not Nook | Leonard Riggio, who built the book-selling empire, wants to buy its 689 stores and create a private company, Mr. de la Merced reported. DealBook »

Japan to Sell Part of Stake in Large Cigarette Maker | The sale of Japan Tobacco shares will net about $10 billion and go toward rebuilding the country’s battered northeast coast, Hiroko Tabuchi reported. DealBook »

J. Crew Chief and American Express Invest in Retailer | Warby Parker, a start-up whose retro-style eyeglasses have been selling mostly through word of mouth, has been selective about its investors, Mr. de la Merced reported. DealBook »

R.B.S. Posts Big Loss and Makes Cuts | The bank said it would sell assets and further cut investment banking to appease regulators and the British government, Julia ! Werdigier reported. DealBook »

Bonus Pay On Wall St. Rose 9% Last Year | Wall Street may be shrinking â€" cutting thousands of jobs over the last year â€" but for those who remain, a report from the New York state comptroller’s office says the pay is still very lucrative. DealBook »

A JPMorgan Chase Deal Maker Is Returning to the Law | James Woolery will join Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft. That will leave Chris Ventresca as head of North American mergers and acquisitions, Mr. de la Merced reported. DealBook »

DealBook Column: ‘Shareholder Democracy’ Can Mask Abuses | Andrew Ross Sorkin says that so-calld activist investors take to the media to pump or dump stocks in hopes of creating a fleeting rise or fall in a company’s stock. DealBook »

Breuer Reflects on Prosecutions That Were, and Weren’t | Lanny Breuer, who left the Justice Department today, discusses his days defending President Bill Clinton from impeachment and his upbringing as the son of Holocaust survivors. DealBook »

Heinz Case May Involve a Side Bet in London | The S.E.C. is examining a derivative that allows investors to bet on a change in the price of a stock without owning the shares, Ben Protess and Susanne Craig reported. DealBook »

With a Judge’s Decision, Dewey Is Offic! ially Dis! solved | Al Togut, the law firm’s lead bankruptcy lawyer, said that winding down Dewey & LeBoeuf had moved more swiftly and less contentiously than other law firm liquidations, Peter Lattman reported. DealBook »

Nominee for S.E.C. Tries to Allay Skepticism | Ahead of her confirmation hearing, Mary Jo White is visiting members of the Senate Banking Committee, Mr. Protess reported. DealBook »

  • Hearing Is Expected Soon for S.E.C. Nominee | Lawmakers have tentatively scheduled Mary Jo White to appear the week of March 11. DealBook »

Deal Professor: Tax on Trades Is a Simple Idea With Unintended utcomes | Steven M. Davidoff says that a century of experience with a financial transaction tax suggests that it is not as successful as thought. DealBook »

Banks Fear Court Ruling in Argentina Bond Debt | Investors who hold a majority of Argentina’s foreign debt have been left vulnerable, as well as the banks that process the payments to those investors, Peter Eavis reported. DealBook »

St. Joe Co. Investors Lose Appeal of a Fraud Lawsuit | Shareholders sued the company, saying they were blindsided by the assessment of a hedge fund manager, Mr. Lattman reported. DealBook »

Ex-Director of Goldman Told to Repay L! egal Cost! s | A federal judge ordered Rajat K. Gupta to reimburse the bank more than $6.2 million, Mr. Lattman reported. DealBook »

Forget You | Andrew Mason, the former chief of Groupon, could use some Cee Lo Green to inspire him at his next venture: fat camp. DealBook »



Tip Bankers Like Waiters

Forget Europe’s bonus caps for bankers. It might make for good publicity for the politicians, but wags in the City, London’s financial district, are already joking about ways to get around it.

So why not, for example, put a ceiling on salaries and let clients reward good service, just as they do in restaurants That could allow banker pay to shrink to a more realistic level.

The U.S. restaurant business even provides a model of sorts. The Fair Labor Standards Act lets an employer pay waiters below minimum wage as long as they earn a certain amount a month in tips. If the combined total remains below the minimum wage, the restaurant has to make up the difference.

Regulators could easily adapt that for the banking industry, setting a reasonable amount that bankers should be able to earn in a given year. There would need to be rigorous procedures for clients to claw back tips in the event of malfeasance - the banking world’s equivalent of getting food poisoning.

But clients wouldbe empowered to pay what they really feel a banker or trader is worth. Long-standing M.&A. and underwriting fee structures could be overhauled, while trading would probably become more efficient more quickly, as all sides would have a greater incentive to switch more deals to electronic platforms.

Sure, there’s a chance it could turn into a boondoggle for some. A client might decide to hire a friend, want to curry favor or return past help. But companies looking to raise capital or get involved in mergers and acquisitions and investors wanting to trade are as cost conscious as any. They’d probably welcome the chance to pay the bank enough to cover its expenses, including base salaries, and then determine for themselves how much extra their middlemen warrant on top of that.

Banks boast so often about serving customers that it would mean they really have to practice what they preach - or expect a welter of forlorn-looking bankers following clients out of offices asking what they did wro! ng. The chance of seeing that alone surely makes paying bankers in tips worthy of consideration.

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



Deutsche Bank Shares Fall on Capital Concerns

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Carlyle-Led Group to Take Chinese Hotel Chain Private

A group led by the Carlyle Group agreed on Friday to buy 7 Days Group Holdings for about $689 million, taking the Chinese low-cost hotel chain private.

The sale by 7 Days comes as many Chinese companies that sought listings in the United States several years ago have been running into problems â€" with some of these entities facing heightened regulatory scrutiny.

When it went public on the New York Stock Exchange in late 2009, Chinese companies were increasingly finding rapturous greetings by American investors seeking to tap into the enormous growth in that country.

Since then, many of these Chinese companies have run into trouble fro both regulators and investors, and have largely seen their stock prices fall. Shares in 7 Days have slid 16 percent over the past 12 months.

Under the terms of the agreement, Carlyle and its partners, Sequoia Capital and Actis, will pay $13.80 per American depositary share, a slight bump from 7 Days’ Thursday closing price. It is also 30.6 percent higher from the company’s closing price on Sept. 25, the day before 7 Days first received a buyout proposal.

JPMorgan Chase and the law firms Baker & McKenzie and Maples and Calder advised a special committee of 7 Days’ board, while the company itself was counseled by O’Melveny and Myers.

The buyers consortium was advised by Nomura and the law firms Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, Conyers Dill & Pearman and the Han Yi Law Offices.



Bertelsmann to Buy Out K.K.R.’s Stake in Joint Music Venture

Bertelsmann, the German media conglomerate, said Friday that it would acquire Kohlberg Kravis Roberts’s stake in their joint music venture, taking full control of the business, BMG. With K.K.R., Bertelsmann has helped build BMG into one of the largest music rights businesses, which owns the rights to songs by Bruno Mars, Johnny Cash, and Will.i.am. “This is a great day for Bertelsmann,” Bertelsmann chairman and chief executive Thomas Rabe said in a statement. “We are bringing the music home to our group.”

Bertelsmann to Buy Out K.K.R.’s Stake in Joint Music Venture

Bertelsmann, the German media conglomerate, said Friday that it would acquire Kohlberg Kravis Roberts’s stake in their joint music venture, taking full control of the business, BMG. With K.K.R., Bertelsmann has helped build BMG into one of the largest music rights businesses, which owns the rights to songs by Bruno Mars, Johnny Cash, and Will.i.am. “This is a great day for Bertelsmann,” Bertelsmann chairman and chief executive Thomas Rabe said in a statement. “We are bringing the music home to our group.”

Glencore Delays Closing of Xstrata Merger

Glencore said Friday it would not be be able to complete its merger with Xstrata by March 15, citing regulatory hurdles. The mining giant plans to provide further details in its financial report next Tuesday. Read more »

Glencore Delays Closing of Xstrata Merger

Glencore said Friday it would not be be able to complete its merger with Xstrata by March 15, citing regulatory hurdles. The mining giant plans to provide further details in its financial report next Tuesday. Read more »

Groupon C.E.O. Is Out

GROUPON DISMISSES CHIEF  |  Andrew Mason, the irreverent chief executive of Groupon, was ousted on Thursday, after the company’s dismal fourth-quarter results capped a string of disappointing quarters. True to his humorous style, Mr. Mason wrote in a letter to employees: “After four and a half intense and wonderful years as C.E.O. of Groupon, I’ve decided that I’d like to spend more time with my family. Just kidding â€" I was fired today. If you’re wondering why… you haven’t been paying attention.”

Groupon’s stock fell 24.3 percent on Thursday, to $4.53 a share, after the daily deals company missed analysts’ expectations for its fourth-quarter results and guidance for future revenue. That valued Groupon at about $3 billion, a far cry from the $12.7 billion valuation in its I.P.O. in late 2011. Mr. Masonâ™s departure had been speculated about for some time, given the company’s continued troubles, but it was only finalized on Thursday morning, DealBook’s Michael J. de la Merced reports. Shares rose more than 4 percent in late trading, after Mr. Mason’s exit was announced.

Mr. Mason, 32, “never seemed to dream about building a huge company or even becoming fantastically wealthy,” The New York Times’s David Streitfeld writes. “Groupon was an outgrowth of a start-up, the Point, which was aimed at encouraging charitable actions by groups. In late 2008, Mr. Mason and a few colleagues reformulated it as a deals shop.” But the company’s meteoric rise was followed by a steep fall, amid controversies that Mr. Mason acknowledged in his letter. “As! C.E.O., I am accountable,” he said.

Groupon said it was searching for a new chief executive, and that Mr. Mason would be replaced on an interim basis by an “office of the chief executive” made up of Eric Lefkofsky, the chairman and co-founder, and Ted Leonsis, the board’s vice chairman.

BEST BUY TAKEOVER TALKS DISSOLVE  |  Richard Schulze’s effort to take over Best Buy, the company he founded, has fallen apart, Mr. de la Merced reports, citing people briefed on the matter.

“By the end, Mr. Schulze and the firms â€" Cerberus Capital Management, Leonard Green & Partners and TPG Capital â€" had been negotiating to buy a bigger stake in Best Buy that would have added to his roughly 20 percent stake, these people said. Any prospect of a full takeover of Best Buy had disappeared several week ago, they added, after the investor consortium discovered little appetite for the debt that would have been involved in a leveraged buyout.”

Shares of Best Buy fell on Thursday after the after The Star Tribune of Minneapolis reported that Mr. Schulze had changed course, trying to take a minority stake. The company may give more detail when it reports earnings on Friday, a day after the release was originally scheduled.

PROSECUTOR REFLECTS ON HIS TENURE  |  Lanny A. Breuer, who spent four years running the Justice Department’s criminal division, is leaving his post on Friday, having led investigations of some of the world’s biggest banks. Though he mounted successful cases, Mr. Breuer has also taken criticism for not putting more Wall Street chiefs behind bars after the financial crisis, DealBook’s Ben Protess writes.

“I understand and share the public’s outrage about the financial crisis,” Mr. Breuer said in a recent interview. “I approached these cases exactly the same way I approached BP, the same way I approached Libor, the same way I approach every case. If there had been a case to make, we would have brought it. I would have wanted nothing more, but it doesn’t work that way.” Asked about his legacy, Mr. Breuer said, “The criminal division is now at the center of criminal law enforcement, both in prosecutions and policy. I don’t think that was ever the case before.”

He also said it wasn’t certain that he would go back to Covington & Burling, his old law firm. “I love Covington. But I’m going to look at Covington; I’ll look at other firms.”

ON THE AGENDA  |  Berkshire Hathaway releases is annual report at about 4 p.m., including Warren E. Buffett‘s letter to shareholders. An interview with Stanley Druckenmiller, the longtime hedge fund investor, airs on Bloomberg TV at 10 a.m. Antony Jenkins, the chief executive of Barclays, is on CNBC at 4 p.m. Data on personal income and spending in January is out at 8:30 a.m.

CITI HEDGE FUND STEPS OUT ON ITS OWN  |  One of Citigroup’s internal hedge funds is beginning a new life on Friday as an independent firm, shedding the restrictions that come with being part of a bank. “What once was part of Citi Capital Advisors will now be known as Napier Park Global Capital, a $6.8 billion hedge fund, in one of the biggest spinoffs of a hedge fund from a major bank,” Mr. de la Merced writes. The move comes as banks respond to the Dodd-Frank regulatory overhaul, including the Volcker Rule that prevents banks from owning more than 3 percent of a hedge fund or private equity firm. The move, in some ways, “opens up new opportunities for the nascent firm and its more than 100 employees, especially since it may attract new clients who hesitated to invest in alternative-asset operations owned by banks.”

But the parting is bittersweet. “Citi has been a terrific parent and partner to us,” Jim O’Brien, a Citi executive who will be a co-chief executive of Napier Park, told DealBook.

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Glencore-Xstrata Deal Faces Delay in China  |  Glencore said on Friday that it wuld not be able to finalize its planned tie-up with Xstrata by March 15 “because it is still awaiting regulatory approval from the authorities in China,” The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

BSkyB to Buy Telefonica Unit for $303 Million  |  British Sky Broadcasting agreed to buy Telefonica’s broadband and fixed-line phone unit in Britain.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Paulson Opposes MetroPCS Merger With T-Mobile  |  The investment firm Paulson & Company, the largest shareholder in MetroPCS Co! mmunicati! ons, said the deal would saddle the new company with too much debt.
DealBook »

Bertelsmann to Buy K.K.R.’s Stake in BMG  |  The European media company Bertelsmann agreed to buy K.K.R.’s stake in BMG, a joint venture that manages music rights. The price “was 700-800 million euros ($915 million-$1.05 billion) including debt,” according to Reuters, which cites an unidentified person familiar with the matter.
REUTERS

Spanish Banks Said to Bid for Nationalized Lender  | The banks Santander, Sabadell and Popular were among bidders for Catalunya Banc, a nationalized Spanish lender, according to Reuters, which cites three unidentified people familiar with the auction.
REUTERS

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Lloyds Banking Reports a $2.2 Billion Annual Loss  |  The British banking group’s results were hit by a $2.3 billion charge in the fourth quarter related to compensation for customers that were inappropriately sold insurance products.
DealBook »

JPMorgan Earned the Most Fees on Wall Street Last Year  |  Bloomberg Markets Magazine ranked investment banks by how much they earned in fees, finding that JPMorgan Chase took the top spot in 2012, with $3.97 billion in fees.
BLOOMBERG MARKETS MAGAZINE

Would JPMorgan Ever Split the Chairman and C.E.O. Roles  |  “I don’t think it’s that significant an issue,” Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan’s chief executive, told Fox Business Network, but he said he “would probably take” shareholders’ advice on the matter.
FOX BUSINESS NETWORK

Bonus Rules May Just Reinforce Existing Practices  |  The proposed bonus rules in Europe may not prove to be the sweeping overhaul that bankers are lamenting.
DEALBOOK

Morgan Stanley’s Simkowitz Is Promoted  |  Morgan Stanley has named Dan Simkowitz co-head of global capital markets, according to an internal memo recently sent to employees.
DealBook »

Van Praag, Formerly of Goldman, Changes Name of Consulting Firm  | 
MARKETWATCH

PRIVATE EQUITY »

Warnings of Excess, as Deal Making Rolls On  |  “Buyout bosses fear a bubble may be forming,” The Economist writes. “That won’t stop it.”
ECONOMIST

In Europe, Investors Flock to the Buyout Elite  | 
FINANCIAL TIMES

Carlyle Leads Deal to Buy Chinese Hotel Chain  |  The Carlyle Group led a group of investors in a $688 million deal to buy 7 Days Group Holdings, a Chinese hotel chain that is listed in the United States.
REUTERS

Schwarzman Donates to Track and Field Foundation  |  Stephen A. Schwarzman, the chief executive of the Blackstone Group, gave $500,000 to the USA Track & Field Foundation. “Track and field was a central part of my life from 5th grade through high school,” Mr. Schwarzman said.
PRESS RELEASE

HEDGE FUNDS »

Icahn Gains 2 Seats on Herbalife’s Board  |  Herbalife plans to give two board seats to Carl C. Icahn, as the health supplements maker further binds itself to its most outspoken outside defender of late.
DealBook »

In Defense of David Einhorn  |  Though he has been criticized in some circles for his effort to get Apple to return money to shareholders, David Einhorn should be thanked “for upholding shareholders’ rights,” Jonathan Weil, a columnist for Bloomberg View, writes.
BLOOMBERG VIEW

Hedge Fund Said to Have Tried to Poach JPMorgan Employees  |  BlueMountain Capital, a hedge fund that was on the other side of JPMorgan Chase’s “London whale” trading loss last year, “tried to recruit several employees in the bank’s chief investment office in the months before the losses, according to two people familiar with the matter,” but none of the employees left, according to Reuters.
REUTERS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Facebook Buys a Platform to Show Targeted Ads  |  Facebook bought an advertising platform, Atlas Advertiser Suite, from Microsoft, acquiring technology “that can! help Fac! ebook put its piles of personal data to greater use for behaviorally targeted advertising,” the Bits blog writes.
NEW YORK TIMES BITS

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Venture Capitalists Take a Shine to Nail Polish Seller  |  Julep, a start-up that makes nail polish and other beauty products, “announced it had raised $10.3 million in financing from Andreessen Horowitz, a well-known venture capital firm, and Maveron, the investment firm of Howard Schultz, founder of Starbucks,” the Bits blog reports.
NEW YOR TIMES BITS

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Bank of America Scrutinized Over Mortgage Securities  |  The New York attorney general is investigating Bank of America over mortgage securities that the bank created, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Italian Lender Sues Nomura and Deutsche Bank  |  Monte dei Paschi di Siena, the troubled Italian lender that received a bailout this week, filed separate lawsuits against Nomura and Deutsche Bank over soured derivatives, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Patton Boggs Said to Lay Off Lawyers  |  Reuters reports: “The Washington, D.C., law firm Patton Boggs has laid off an unknown number of lawyers and administrative staff, according to two sources inside the firm with direct knowledge of the matter and two sources outside the firm.”
REUTERS

Hungary Names New Central Bank Chief  | 
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Regulators and 13 Banks Complete $9.3 Billion Deal for Foreclosure Relief  |  The settlement was reached amid heightened concerns that a foreclosure review process was generating billions of dollars in fees for consultants, but providing little relief for borrowers.
DealBook »

Pondering the Housing Market Without Government Support  |  “Can the American mortgage market ever function again without Uncle Sam guaranteeing that lenders will be repaid It is amazing just how few people think it can,” Floyd Norris, a columnist for The New York Times, writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

For S.E.C., a Setback in Bid for More Time in Fraud Cases  |  A Supreme Court decision involving a statute of limitations rule may mean the S.E.C. will need to seek legislation from Congress that would give the agency more time to complete investigation, Peter J. Henning writes in the White Collar Watch column.
DealBook »



Former UBS Trader Requests to Appeal Fraud Conviction

Kweku M. Adoboli, a former UBS trader currently serving a seven-year jail sentence for a fraud that prompted a multi-billion dollar loss at the Swiss bank, has requested an appeal.

Mr. Adoboli, who was sentenced in November, filed an “application against his conviction and sentence,” a clerk at Britain’s Court of Appeal said. Tim Harris, Mr. Adoboli’s lawyer, was not immediately available for comment.

Last year, a jury was unanimous in its decision to find him guilty of one count of fraud. The jury was nine to one on a second fraud charge and acquitted Mr. Adoboli on two charges of false accounting. Mr. Adoboli’s jail term is unlikely to be significantly reduced should the second fraud charge be reversed, his lawyer said last year.

Mr. Adoboli had pleaded not guilty on all charges. He argued that his actions were aimed at generating profit for UBS and that colleagues were aware.

But the prosecution had described Mr. Adoboli as a “gambler” who sidestepped rules when itsuited him. He was accused of circumventing UBS risk controls and hiding losses by booking fake trades.



Lloyds Banking Books a $2.2 Billion Annual Loss

LONDON â€" Lloyds Banking Group reported a £1.4 billion, or $2.2 billion, net loss for 2012 on Friday, partly because it was forced to set aside billions of dollars to compensate customers that were inappropriately sold financial products.

Lloyds, which is 39 percent owned by the British government after receiving a bailout during the financial crisis, said it had made a further £1.9 billion of extra provisions during the fourth quarter related to a number of wrongdoings.

Amid reports that the British government may soon starting selling parts of its stake in the British bank, Lloyds said it was continuing to dispose of non-core assets, as well as refocusing on the bank’s main retail division.

‘‘My main objective is to get taxpayers’ money back,’’ Lloyds’ chief executive, António Horta-Osório, told reporters during a conference call early on Friday.

Mr. Horta-Osório is in line for a £1.5 million bonus for 2012 that will be paid in deferred shares that he will ot be able to access until 2018. To receive the bonus, the British government also must have sold at least one-third of its holding in the bank above 61 pence a share, which is what local taxpayers paid to bail out the bank in 2008.

Lloyds shares are currently trading around 54 pence, and have risen 56 percent over the last twelve months.

The bank’s net loss narrowed last year to £1.4 billion, compared to £2.8 billion in 2011.

Earnings were weighed down by a series of extra charges, including an additional £1.5 billion, or $2.3 billion, charge in the three months through Dec. 31 for inappropriately selling insurance to customers. The extra provision now takes the total amount that Lloyds has set aside to compensate consumers to £6.8 billion.

Lloyds also more than tripled the amount during the fourth quarter of the year that it will use to compensate small businesses that were inappropriately sold interest-rate hedging products. The figure now stands at £400 million, c! ompared to a previously-announced £90 million provision.

The British bank also said that it continued to cooperate with local and international regulators over the ongoing investigation into the manipulation of key global benchmark rates. Other British banks, including Barclays and Royal Bank of Scotland, already have been fined millions of dollars in connection to the rate-rigging scandal.

‘‘It is currently not possible to predict the scope and ultimate outcome of the various regulatory investigations,’’ Lloyds said in a statement.