Total Pageviews

Upping the Ante in a Play for a Stronger Board

Would you pay a director tens of millions for fantastic performance Welcome to the newest trend in activist investing: hedge funds paying their nominees to a company’s board as if they were chief executives.

The latest examples can be found in two prominent proxy fights. In the first, Paul Singer’s Elliott Management has acquired about $800 million in stock of the Hess Corporation, the integrated oil company. The hedge fund has nominated five directors to the 14-member Hess board and is agitating for change, arguing that the company has substantially underperformed its peers by 460 percent over the last 17 years.

In the second, Barry Rosenstein’s Jana Partners is storming the ramparts of Agrium, acquiring about 7.5 percent of the company, an agriculture supply retailer and wholesaler based in Calgary, Alberta. Jana, which contends Agrium has underperformed its peers by 160 percent over the last five years, has nominated five directors to the company’s 12-member board.

Agitating for changes and waging proxy fights are familiar pages from the activist investor playbook. What’s different here is that each hedge fund is promising to pay its director candidates what are essentially bonuses that could run into millions of dollars, if not more.

In Elliott’s case, its five nominees will be paid a $50,000 retainer, a mere tip. The kicker is that any of its nominees who win a seat on the Hess board and serve for a year will be paid an aggregate $30,000 for each percentage point the stock price of Hess outperforms a peer group of stocks over three years from January 2013, when the stock was trading at about $58 a share (it’s at $70 now). The total potential payment tops out at $9 million for each director â€" or 300 percent outperformance, an admittedly fantastic return for everyone if it occurs.

Jana is paying its nominees in a more direct and potentially more lucrative manner. Jana’s nominees also get $50,000 each, but they will receive 2.6 percent of Jana’s net profit from the price of Agrium shares as of Sept. 27, 2012, if they are elected (Agrium’s stock then was $102.99 in New York, and is currently trading a few dollars below that). If they are not elected, they will still receive 1.8 percent of Jana’s net profit. The hedge fund’s investment is about $1 billion, so we are talking about potential millions, if not tens of millions, of dollars.

Any way you slice it, Jana and Elliott are raising the ante for director compensation. A study of 1,500 companies found that the average director made $134,000 in annual cash and incentive compensation from 2006 to 2010. And this week, Susanne Craig of The New York Times reported that some Goldman Sachs directors made more than $500,000 a year. That’s a nice sum, but these hedge fund-nominated directors stand to make much more.

Not surprisingly, both Agrium and Hess are up in arms about the hedge funds’ plans to pay their nominees. They make two basic arguments.

The first is that the hedge fund directors are not independent. Because the directors are being paid by the hedge fund, they will be loyal to the hedge fund, rather than the company.

The second is that by paying these directors large sums over three years, the hedge fund nominees will aim for short-term performance and not care what happens to the company in the longer term.

The counterargument has been put forth most forcefully by Jana. The hedge fund argues that the compensation system is hard-wired. Jana (and Elliott, for that matter) have already agreed to pay these amounts and can’t renege, so the directors are no longer beholden to the hedge fund, if they ever were.

Jana also contends that its compensation arrangement is better than other kinds of director pay, since it better aligns the company’s performance with the directors’.

Elliott echoed this, saying in a statement: “There is no link to any plan, there is no discretion by Elliott, and the term is longer than any compensation offered by Hess. In other words, there is complete alignment with long-term shareholders’ interests.”

So who is right

First, as long as the arrangement is disclosed and the hedge funds don’t exert any future control over the nominees, it is unlikely that this violates any state or federal law. Here, director compensation falls into the same basket as executive compensation.

The examples of hedge funds paying directors are all over the place.

Some funds, like Pershing Square Capital Management, do not directly compensate nominees. Other funds pay just a flat fee of $50,000 to $150,000. And then there are arrangements like the one Carl C. Icahn had with Frank J. Biondi Jr., the former chief executive Viacom, during Mr. Icahn’s battle with Time Warner in 2006. In that case, Mr. Icahn’s fund agreed to pay Mr. Biondi $6 million to $10 million depeding on whether he was elected or not (he was not).

It’s clear that if you need good people to run for these positions and clean up the company, it is going to cost money. Most of the people the hedge funds have nominated have better things to do than walk around with a bull’s-eye on their backs.

But it’s hard to know. There is no doubt that this kind of pay arrangement sets up two classes of directors doing the same job but being paid very different amounts. It could not only create resentment, but disagreement over the path of the company. And it also has the potential to begin a second arms race in director compensation, something probably best avoided.

There is a bigger problem here. Directors are looked on as caretakers. In exchange for a wide release from liability, they get a decent salary for not a lot of work. In most instances, they are not going to become staggeringly rich.

Relatively modest compensation may ensure that directors act more prudently and serve as a counterweight to chief executives, who are more willing to shoot for the moon because their upside is so high. By paying directors as if they were chief executives, they may become all the more willing to take on more risk.

This may be particularly true where there is no downside, which is not typical for directors who receive stock in the company. In fairness, Jana’s directors have bought $14 million in Agrium stock, so they do have downside. Some of Elliott’s nominees have also purchased Hess shares.

In the end, it is hard to see either of these contests as a referendum on director compensation. Shareholders will get full disclosure of the arrangements, but in this case it is hard to say that it matters. They are going to vote for who they think is the better for the company and probably not pay much attention to the compensation issue, like “say on pay” votes, which regularly pass. I can’t really argue with this. Let’s face it, the performance and assessment of these companies is the most pressing point.

The influential proxy adviser Institutional Shareholder Services looked at the director compensation issue in the case of Agrium, but didn’t take a position on it. (It is recommending two of Jana’s nominees, while a competitor, Glass Lewis, has recommended all of Agrium’s nominees.)

Whatever the outcome in both contests, perhaps it is time to take a hard look at director compensation. For this could all end in tears. The last decade hasn’t exactly inspired confidence that incentive compensation works as the theorists say it should in terms of aligning directors, executives and shareholders. Compensating directors more like chief executives may change the entire risk profile of companies. It may be for the better, but it also can be for the worse. We just don’t know.



A Suite of Their Own

Women make up more than half of the work force on Wall Street. But breaking into the highest ranks is still largely a man’s sport.

Women account for just 3 percent of the chief executives in finance, according to the consulting firm Catalyst. In corporate boardrooms, women fill 19 percent of the roles; in executive suites, it’s 16 percent.

Their paths to the top are varied. Some, like Esta E. Stecher of Goldman Sachs and Clare Woodman at Morgan Stanley, started their careers at law firms. Christine P. Katziff, Bank of America’s general auditor, and Eileen Serra, the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase’s credit card division, worked at top consulting firms before moving into finance. Others like Edith W. Cooper and Sni Harford have been in finance their entire professional lives.

Once they reach the upper echelons, few run the big, revenue-generating businesses like investment banking and trading. For the most part, women tend to lead divisions like asset management, human resources and marketing.

There are some notable exceptions. Blythe Masters of JPMorgan Chase, who oversees a $1 billion-plus business, is one of the most powerful women in commodities trading. As a banker at Citigroup in 2000, Wei Christianson worked on the $3.5 billion public offering of Sinopec, the Chinese oil giant, and now is co-head of Morgan Stanley in Asia.

Women in finance have to strike a delicate balance between tough and tyrannical, explains Ilene H. Lang, the chief executive of Catalyst. Swagger and the willingness to do a deal at any cost are rewarded, she added. But “it’s behavior that’s admired in men and hated in women.”



Verizon Says It’s Not ‘Currently’ Planning to Bid for Vodafone

Investors hoping for a giant trans-Atlantic telecom deal will have to cool their heels for a bit longer.

Verizon Communications said on Tuesday afternoon that it does not “currently have any intention to merge with or make an offer for Vodafone, whether alone or in conjunction with others.”

The word from Verizon, disclosed in a securities filing after market close, followed a report by The Financial Times’ Alphaville blog that the American telecom giant was working with AT&T on a potential bid for Vodafone.

Verizon would have acquired the British company’s 45 percent stake in Verizon Wireless, the heavyweight cellphone service provider, while AT&T would have taken over the rest of Vodafone’s operations.

That offer, as described by Alphaville, could have solved needs of all three companies. Verizon would buy full control of Verizon Wireless, while Vodafone would have finally received what could have been a potentially high premium for its stake. And AT&T would have found new markets in which to grow, after its deal-making efforts were stymied in recent years.

Some future offer by Verizon may be off the table for six months, per British securities regulations, but certainly not in the long term. Verizon noted in its securities filing that it has said many times that “it would be a willing purchaser” of Vodafone’s 45 percent stake in the wireless unit.

Alphaville’s post sent Vodafone’s stock up 4.3 percent on Tuesday, to 194.70 pence.



Law Firm Partner Accused of Sexual Harassment Fires Back

A law firm partner sued last month for sexual harassment fired back at the junior lawyer who brought the case, accusing her of fabricating her claims and being obsessed with him.

The partner, Juan Monteverde, and his law firm, Faruqi & Faruqi, filed a counterclaim in Federal District Court in Manhattan on Tuesday, accusing the junior lawyer, Alexandra Marchuk, of defamation and damaging his and the firm’s reputation. The lawsuit detailed the firm’s version of events related to the relationship between the two.

In a lurid complaint filed last month, Ms. Marchuk said that Mr. Monteverde repeatedly made improper comments and unwanted sexual advances toward her. In one instance, she said, he forcibly had sex with her in the firm’s offices.

The counterclaim denied those accusations. “In fact, however, there was no sexual intercourse, forced or otherwise; there was no sexual harassment, and there were no complaints,” said the complaint. “Marchuk’s claims are false.”

Last month’s lawsuit had grabbed the attention of the New York legal profession. Faruqi & Faruqi is a well-known plaintiffs’ firm that has made a name for itself aggressively filing shareholder lawsuits against companies related to executive pay as well as mergers and acquisitions. Mr. Monteverde, for his part, has helped pioneer a relatively new type of plaintiffs’ action called “say on pay” lawsuits that relate to Dodd-Frank reforms over executive pay.

The counterclaim jointly filed by Mr. Monteverde and his firm is equally as sensational as the original complaint, describing in excruciating detail several instances of sexual contact between Ms. Marchuk and Mr. Monteverde.

The first encounter, as described in the counterclaim, took place after Ms. Marchuk accompanied Mr. Monteverde down to Wilmington for a hearing at the Delaware Court of Chancery, according to the counterclaim. That evening, back in New York, the two went to LexBar, a Midtown watering hole.

“Once at LexBar, both Marhuck and Monteverde drank,” said the countersuit. “After some time at the bar and several drinks, both engaged in consensual kissing and fondling.”

They continued their “consensual conduct” on the sidewalk, the countersuit said.

“Marchuk volunteered that if Monteverde wanted to have sex with her, she would not say no,” it continued. “But Monteverde said no and hailed a taxi for Marchuk, at which point they parted ways. The next day, Monteverde told Marchuk that they both had too much to drink and it could not happen again.”

The lawsuit portrays Ms. Marchuk as consumed by Mr. Monteverde. She told him that her mother was making a sculpture for him similar to the one in her office, which he had complimented, the complaint said. At the firm’s Christmas party, according to the lawsuit, “Marchuk virtually shadowed Monteverde.”

It was at the Christmas party in 2010 that Ms. Marchuk claims in her complaint that Mr. Monteverde “quickly and forcefully had sex with her.” The counterclaim denies this and presents a different version of events. At a bar after the office party, Mr. Monteverde and Ms. Marchuk were seen kissing and fondling one other. At 3 a.m., the two went back to the law firm’s offices, the complaint said. The sexual contact that transpired was entirely consensual, according to the countersuit.

Less than a week later, Ms. Marchuk resigned. The firm did not know about Ms. Marchuk’s claim until receiving a letter from her lawyer in October 2012. When she filed her complaint last month, she sent it to the media, Faruqi & Faruqi clients and Mr. Monteverde’s wife.

“We are aware that the simple and easy course of least resistance is to quell the controversy and suggest that Mr. Monteverde find employment elsewhere,” Lubna M. Faruqi and Nadeem Faruqi, the firm’s sister and brother co-founders of the firm, said in a statement. “Although he exercised very poor judgment and has been disciplined by F&F, we are convinced that he did not commit sexual harassment, that our firm is not a hostile workplace, and that he does not deserve to have his promising future forever tarnished by letting these allegations go unanswered.”

Harry W. Lipman, a lawyer for Ms. Marchuk, did not immediately return a request for comment.

Faruqi Counterclaim



Women in a Man’s World

Irene Dorner blames herself â€" and her female colleagues â€" for the lack of women on Wall Street.

As the chief executive of HSBC North America, Ms. Dorner, 58, is one of the few women to have breached the upper levels of finance. But along the way, Ms. Dorner said, she didn’t push hard enough to change the “status quo” on male-dominated trading floors and executive suites. Rather, she said, she kept her head down, focusing on her own career.

“The women at the top of organizations that I know will tell you that we think that we’ve made it because we were born the way we are and can play by these rules without feeling damaged by them,” Ms. Dorner said. “Or, we’ve learned how to play by these rules and use them to our own advantage.”

“I suspect that we were simply not very good role models,” she added. “And there aren’t enough of us to be visible so that people can work out how to do what we did.”

Ms. Dorner and her peers in the upper echelons â€" like Ruth Porat at Morgan Stanley, Joan S. Solotar of the Blackstone Group, Edith W. Cooper of Goldman Sachs and Cecelia Stewart of Citigroup â€" are the latest generation of women making it in a man’s world.

Isabel Benham, who started her career as a bond analyst in 1934, was so worried about being taken seriously that she initially signed her reports using her first initial and middle name, “I. Hamilton Benham.” When Muriel Siebert became the first woman to own a seat on the New York Exchange in 1967, the Big Board had only men’s bathrooms. “Not since I was a baby had so many people been so interested in my bathroom habits,” she declared in her memoir.

Ms. Dorner, who started her career in 1982 as an in-house lawyer at the merchant banking arm of Midland Bank, recounted a gathering several years later at a bar with a group of male colleagues, who she said made misogynistic comments.

“It just was anachronistic â€" it was awful,” Ms. Dorner said. But “I didn’t complain. I, of course, ended up being the only woman there, and I have to say I had the most miserable day.”

The challenges are not unique to Wall Street. While women and men appear in the broad work force in equal numbers, few women make it to the executive suite, regardless of industry. And female chief executives like Indra K. Nooyi of Pepsico, Ursula M. Burns of Xerox and Marissa Mayer of Yahoo are even rarer.

Many companies are trying to close the gender gap, with varying degrees of success.

Big banks have created networking and mentorship programs to cultivate talented women. As a way to bolster the number of women with computer science and engineering degrees, nonprofit groups are focusing on teaching high school girls to code. Norway requires 40 percent of the board members of public companies to be women, a model that the rest of Europe is considering.

Sheryl K. Sandberg, the chief operating officer of Facebook, has helped start a national conversation over the issue with her best-selling book, “Lean In.” In it, Ms. Sandberg argues that women may be holding themselves back in the workplace “by lacking self-confidence, by not raising our hands and by pulling back when we should be leaning in.” Her position has prompted an angry response from some, who say Ms. Sandberg is blaming the victim.

But Ms. Dorner, too, says women on Wall Street need to advocate more forcefully for themselves. In many cases, she says, the problem of the glass ceiling is matched by what she calls the “sticky floor” â€" that is, women who remain in lower-tier jobs because they don’t proactively try to climb the corporate ladder.

“Women do funny things,” Ms. Dorner said. “They do things like work very hard and expect to be noticed for it â€" and they’re not, because it doesn’t work like that.”

Instead, Ms. Dorner argues that women need to take a page from their counterparts in pushing their own agenda and advancement. “I don’t think we need to suddenly flip and all be acting in a male way,” Ms. Dorner said, “but you can learn something from male behavior.”

“If you offer a woman a professional management opportunity or promotion â€" and I’ve had this happen to me â€" the first thing they do is produce a long list of pros and cons: ‘Oh, dear, what do I have to do with child care I must and go tell my husband,’ “ she said. “If you offer it to a guy, he’ll just say: ‘Well, thank you very much. I’ll do the best I can.’ ”

Ms. Dorner says she wishes she had spoken up earlier, by trying to reform practices and pushing for diversity programs. In her position, she said, she could have helped change the underlying cultural bias against women.

“I only realized what was happening when I was 50, because there I was, making my way in the unconscious rules,” Ms. Dorner said. “I really do think the next push has got to come from the senior middle-management women who must stand up and be counted on this earlier than I did.”

As she sees it, diversity is not just a moral issue, but also a good business decision. “I think that you are insane commercially if you run any corporation and you turn down the opportunity for different views, innovation and a different way of thinking.”



A Law Firm Stands Out for Its Work, not Its Gender Makeup

As Harvard Law School classmates in the mid-1980s, Susan E. Brune and Hillary Richard dreamed about one day starting their own law firm.

About a decade later, they followed through on that fantasy, hanging up a shingle in Lower Manhattan. They soon hired a third lawyer, Nina S. Beattie; and then another, Laurie J. Edelstein; and then another, Dorothy C. Mitchell; and then another, Theresa M. Trzaskoma.

They never intended to build an all-female firm. “That wasn’t the plan,” Ms. Brune said. “It just happened, and then it became kind of a thing.”

It’s still kind of a thing. Today, 13 of the 19 lawyers at Brune & Richard are women. Six of its nine partners are women. Across 220 of the country’s largest law firms, women represent 19 percent of all partners, according to a recent National Law Journal study.

Lawyers at Brune & Richard (pronounced Brew-knee & Ri-SHARD) insist that there is nothing especially distinct about the firm’s femaleness. A top-flight New York litigation boutique, the firm handles corporate disputes for big clients like Prudential Insurance and Pacific Gas and Electric. On its white-collar defense docket, it represents finance executives ensnared in the rate-rigging investigation and the municipal bond kickback scandal.

“I have no choice but to practice law as a woman,” said Ms. Brune, 51, a white-collar defense lawyer and mother of three.

Ms. Richard, 53, a commercial litigator also with three children, put it more bluntly. “Clients don’t hire us because of our sex,” she said. “They hire us because we win.”

Brune & Richard’s founders pursued different paths after Harvard, where they were classmates with Michelle Obama. Ms. Brune became a prosecutor, joining the United States attorney’s office in Manhattan, and Ms. Richard rose to partner at a small litigation firm, Rabinowitz, Boudin, Standard, Krinsky & Lieberman.

While on maternity leave and at a crossroads in her prosecutorial career, Ms. Brune sought out Ms. Richard for advice. Over lunch, Ms. Richard said she was starting a firm. She urged Ms. Brune to join and sketched on a napkin what she thought they could accomplish. A few months later in 1998, Brune & Richard was born. Ms. Brune’s name came first; Ms. Richard got the better office.

“Susan and Hillary were ‘leaning in’ long before Sheryl Sandberg raised these issues,” said Michele Hirshman, Ms. Brune’s supervisor at the United States attorney’s office, referring to the best-selling book by Ms. Sandberg, “Lean In,” which has stoked a national conversation about women in the workplace.

Ms. Hirshman, now a partner at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, added: “At the time when other women might have leaned back and settled into more comfortable jobs, they did something different and bold.”

Both Ms. Brune and Ms. Richard cited “Lean In” when discussing their careers, and noted that they had husbands who were their full partners in child-rearing and all other aspects of their domestic lives. (Ms. Brune’s husband, Carl H. Loewenson Jr. is a partner at Morrison Foerster; Ms. Richard’s, Peter McCabe, is the resident dramaturge at the Here arts center in SoHo.)

David B. Wilkins, director of the Program on the Legal Profession at Harvard Law School, said a firm like Brune & Richard, where so many women lawyers thrive, is an outlier. Since the mid 1980s, he said, women have composed roughly 40 percent of entering associates at large law firms, but their attrition rate far exceeds that of male lawyers.

“The problem is that the typical legal career is that it’s not just built for a man, it’s built for a man with a wife that doesn’t work,” said Professor Wilkins. “There’s a deepening crisis in the legal profession about the retention and promotion of women.”

Early on, Ms. Brune and Ms. Richard drummed up business through referrals from big firms and by forging relationships with in-house legal departments. A relationship with Bear Stearns led to the firm’s most prominent representation to date â€" its successful defense of Matthew M. Tannin, one of two former Bear Stearns executives acquitted in 2009 on charges they misled investors in their mortgage-backed securities hedge fund. The case was built on e-mails that prosecutors said proved Mr. Tannin and his partner, Ralph R. Cioffi, knew the fund was collapsing while they were reassuring clients of its soundness.

The monthlong jury trial was the first major prosecution of Wall Street executives stemming from the housing collapse. Some legal experts say they believe the loss made the Justice Department more circumspect about filing criminal cases against executives at the nation’s largest banks.

Mr. Tannin, who agreed to a two-year ban from the securities industry as part of a civil settlement with regulators, is still represented by Brune & Richard in several lawsuits connected to the failed fund. He began working with Ms. Brune, along with Ms. Beattie and MaryAnn Sung, in mid-2007.

“From the very beginning, Susan did not mince words,” said Mr. Tannin, now an executive in a payment-processing business. “She said, ‘You are in a bad situation. This is not going to end for a very long time. We will win, but it will not be quick. It will be a long battle, but we’re all here to battle with you.’ ”

Many of Brune & Richard’s lawyers are recruited from the country’s most eminent firms. But they are quick to point out that Brune & Richard is not a “lifestyle firm,” meaning they work just as hard as big-firm lawyers.

Jessica R. Holloway came to Brune & Richard in 2010 after six years at Cravath, Swaine & Moore. Ms. Holloway said that while the female factor was not a driving force in her joining, it has been a boon to have so many women as role models.

“So much of the time, the important decisions are being made by women, all of the key legal arguments are being delivered by women, and they aren’t shying away from that work or deferring to anyone else,” Ms. Holloway said.

Brune & Richard’s male lawyers play down the gender imbalance. Charles A. Michael, who started his career at Sullivan & Cromwell, said it was far more significant that he could try complex, high-stakes cases in a small-firm environment. As a young associate at Sullivan, Mr. Michael had weekly lunches with his law school classmate Rishi Bhandari, the second male lawyer at Brune & Richard. Unlike many of his peers, Mr. Bhandari was already in the courtroom.

“Here he was just out of law school, and giving a closing argument,” Mr. Michael said. (Mr. Bhandari has since started his own firm.)

As far as the “women thing,” Mr. Michael draws a nuanced distinction. “We have a pro-family culture, but it’s not a women’s culture.”

By “pro-family,” Mr. Michael means that he doesn’t have to apologize for leaving the office to relieve the sitter and put his children to bed. “I’ll say ‘Hillary, I’m on duty tonight and will be back online at 8,’ ” he said. “I don’t have to be sheepish about it.”

Brune & Richard’s first male lawyer, Laurent Sacharoff joined in 2005 from the Legal Aid Society. Now a law professor at the University of Arkansas, he says the firm should not be judged on its gender makeup but â€" to use legal lingo â€" on the merits.

“It’s a great firm with smart, hard-hitting lawyers,” Mr. Sacharoff said. “Why not just leave it at that”



Staying Independent Not Much of an Option for MetroPCS

MetroPCS owners should forget about a standalone option. Dissident investors John Paulson and Peter Schoenfeld persuaded two proxy services that the cellphone operator is selling out on the cheap to rival T-Mobile USA and that independence is a better option. While the agitating may bring a sweeter bid, MetroPCS is unlikely to prosper or exist for long on its own.

The activists claim â€" and Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis agree â€" that the merger shortchanges MetroPCS shareholders. They will wind up with just 26 percent of the combined company. An integral part of the evaluation is $1.5 billion MetroPCS raised in 2010 to buy wireless spectrum that has gone unspent.

The cash is being returned to MetroPCS investors as part of the deal. P. Schoenfeld Asset Management argues that deducting this amount before calculating the equity split is unfair since all cellular companies need to buy spectrum. Leave it in, and MetroPCS should get 37 percent, assuming both companies are worth about five times estimated earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or Ebitda.

T-Mobile’s network, however, is in better shape and underused. Discounting the cash, therefore, makes the proposed equity split seem reasonable enough.

There’s also the question of over $15 billion of debt provided by T-Mobile’s parent company, Deutsche Telekom. The rate may end up over 7 percent, but it’s not obvious there was - or is - another way to finance the deal. It’s not a far cry from what MetroPCS paid to borrow last month. And up to $7 billion of synergies make the debt worthwhile.

The case about valuation may be reasonable, but making one for independence is not. MetroPCS lost more than 400,000 customers last year and may keep shrinking. Bigger companies can buy the best spectrum, use it more efficiently, get preferential access to new handsets and implement powerful advertising campaigns. They usually earn more, too: AT&T’s estimated 2013 return on assets is almost twice as high as what’s forecast for MetroPCS.

Subscriber growth overall is sluggish and capital intensity rising. Small fries like MetroPCS can’t keep up. Investors may think their company could be worth more to Sprint or even possibly Dish Network one day. Given the industry dynamics, that’s a risky proposition - and rejecting T-Mobile for a standalone future is even more so.

Robert Cyran is a columnist and Jeffrey Goldfarb is an assistant editor at Reuters Breakingviews. For more independent commentary and analysis, visit breakingviews.com.



A Plan to Simplify the Tax Code That May Be Too Simple

Did anyone else notice the elephant in the living room

Last month, Dave Camp, the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, released a draft proposal to change how we tax certain types of businesses known as pass-throughs. Under current law, the owners of these partnerships, limited liability companies and subchapter S corporations pay their share of the company’s income or loss on their individual tax returns instead of paying tax at the entity level. Mr. Camp’s proposal would maintain this basic approach and simplify aspects of it for small businesses.

Reaction to Mr. Camp’s proposal has been subdued compared with the praise for his plan to change the way we tax derivatives. Mr. Camp’s willingness to float draft proposals and invite comment should again be commended. But the likely outcome here is a slight change, not a major overhaul.

Incremental change with a minimum of controversy must be Mr. Camp’s goal. That would explain why he takes the corner wide, steering clear of the most controversial aspect of partnership tax: carried interest. Carried interest refers to the share of partnership profits earned by an investment fund manager, and under current law it is often taxed at low capital gains rates. Critics like myself argue that because carried interest is labor income, not investment income, it ought to be taxed as ordinary income.

Mr. Camp’s proposal includes two options. The first option addresses what we might think of as deferred maintenance â€" cleaning up some corners of the tax code that have been neglected. For example, it would relax the anachronistic eligibility restrictions for subchapter S corporations. For partnerships, the proposal would repeal the confusing rules related to “guaranteed payments.” It would also make some useful changes to the partnership tax rules related to basis adjustments and revise some outdated definitions.

The second option, a more radical one, appears to be a stalking horse. This would replace our existing system with a unified set of rules for pass-throughs. This sounds simple and appealing. Many of the ideas in Option 2 are promising, but they are largely untested and not fully explained in the proposal.

For example, Option 2 would replace the labyrinth of rules for determining whether allocations of income will be respected for tax purposes with a simple rule: the tax consequences should track the economic gains or losses. This sounds great in theory, but it’s hard to implement in a system where Congress likes to single out certain activities for special tax treatment.

The tax rules often allow and even encourage the tax consequences of a deal to diverge from the economics. Examples include depreciation deductions (where tax depreciation is accelerated compared with real economic depreciation), tax credits for low-income housing and clean energy and nonrecourse liabilities (when a loan is secured by an asset instead of the partnership or any of the partners).

Suppose a partnership allocates wind energy tax credits to a limited partner who financed a new project with those tax credits in mind. The tax credits, however, have no effect on the partner’s capital account or economic risk of loss. Would the I.R.S. allow the limited partner to take the tax credits Or would the tax credits be denied because they represent artificial tax losses, not real economic losses

In my view, there’s an additional problem with Mr. Camp’s proposal: its failure to address how the partnership tax rules are now being used, and abused, by large businesses. The partnership tax rules were originally created for small business, so a small number of individuals could work in a business together and mix together labor and capital without having to pay an extra layer of tax. The rules are now used in ways that Congress never intended. Two examples are the erosion of the corporate tax base and the tax treatment of carried interest.

The corporate tax base is eroding because many large businesses are able to avoid the corporate tax rules altogether and choose to be taxed as pass-throughs instead. Bain Capital, the Blackstone Group, the Carlyle Group and other large asset management firms are organized as partnerships, yet take in billions of revenue each year. Energy Products Partners, a publicly traded master limited partnership, has a market capitalization more than $50 billion. The Bechtel Corporation, the largest engineering firm in the United States, is organzed as a subchapter S corporation and pays no entity-level tax.

And the proposal doesn’t contain so much as a whisper about carried interest, the most controversial partnership tax issue in recent years.

Of course, Mr. Camp has pitched the proposal as being about simplification of the tax rules for small business. Avoiding the topic of carried interest is consistent with that message.

But if Mr. Camp wants to raise some revenue to pay for tax changes elsewhere, like a reduction in the corporate tax or a shift to a territorial tax system, he will have to follow the money to where it disappears â€" through loopholes like carried interest and the abuse of the publicly traded partnership rules.

For further reading on the use of the partnership tax rules by large asset managers, see Victor Fleischer, “Taxing Blackstone“, Tax Law Review (2008).

For further reading on pass-through entities and how they fit into the broader legislative agenda regarding business taxes, see Karen Burke, “Passthrough Entities: The Missing Link in Business Tax Reform“.

Victor Fleischer is a professor at the University of Colorado Law School, where he teaches partnership tax, tax policy and deals. Twitter: @vicfleischer



Chipping Away at the Glass Ceiling in Private Equity

The clubby, male-dominated world of private equity prompted a lot of name-calling in the late 1980s. Barbarians. Raiders. Vultures.

And Sandra J. Horbach wanted in.

A student at Stanford University’s business school, Ms. Horbach, who had previously worked at Morgan Stanley, spoke to at least 10 private equity firms about jobs. She got offers from three.

“At some firms, it was very clear that the fact that I was a woman meant I would not be considered,” Ms. Horbach said.

After graduating in 1987, she joined Forstmann Little & Company, a boutique firm. When she was named a partner five years later, she was the only woman in that position at a major American private equity company.

Ms. Horbach, 52, who now runs the consumer and retail practice at the Carlyle Group, is no longer in a class by herself.

Decades later, women are slowly moving into senior leadership roles in private equity firms. A few are even breaking into the executive suite. In 2011, Carlyle tapped Adena T. Friedman as chief financial officer, the first woman on the firm’s nine-person management committee. Just before going public, the Blackstone Group hired Joan S. Solotar, one of six executive officers.

A wide gender gap still persists. In North America, about 10 percent of the senior employees in private equity are women, according to a report from Preqin. By comparison, Wall Street widelyâ€" an industry long criticized for its lack of diversity â€" has women in 19 percent of its leadership positions.

The dearth of women in private equity has come into focus as the industry evolves. Once known for aggressive, freewheeling ways, private equity firms are transforming into large, institutionalized public companies. With new constituents to please, the business â€" by choice or circumstance â€" is starting to address the deficit through internal programs and recruitment efforts.

“The dialogue around it has changed,” said Ms. Solotar, the head of external relations and strategy at Blackstone. “Companies are thinking about: Why can’t we attract and retain the top women’ ”

Private equity largely developed out of the investment banking world of the 1970s, when women were more likely to be secretaries than deal makers. The brand-name firms that flourished in the subsequent decade were all founded by men, who tended to hire others like them.

Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company â€" started by two cousins, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, and an older colleague, Jerome Kohlberg Jr. â€" didn’t employ a single female managing director until 2009, when it hired Suzanne O. Donohoe from Goldman Sachs. Ms. Donohoe, now the equivalent of partner at K.K.R., joined a year before the company went public.

In the early days, many women succeeded by blazing a trail in sectors where men did not already dominate.

In 1989, Elizabeth H. Weatherman, a year after joining Warburg Pincus, was asked to build the firm’s expertise in medical device companies, a new area for the firm. “It was a low opportunity cost at that time,” Ms. Weatherman, 53, said. “I was young and hadn’t really proven myself.”

Her first investment was a failure. Her second, a company called EP Technologies, was more successful, resulting in an initial public offering. Her third, the purchase of Xomed from Bristol-Myers Squibb in 1994, became a template for future deals.

As the head of Warburg’s overall health care group, Ms. Weatherman oversaw the $3.67 billion buyout in 2007 of Bausch & Lomb, an eye care products maker struggling during a product recall. In stronger shape today, the company filed in March to go public, an offering that could value the company at up to $10 billion, according to people briefed on the matter.

Carrie A. Wheeler joined TPG Capital when it was still an upstart firm, getting an opportunity to take on big responsibilities at a young age. At 29, she was elected to the board of Denbury Resources, an oil and gas company in which TPG was invested at the time.

She was the lone woman in a sea of middle-aged male executives. Standing out in high-level corporate meetings can actually be an advantage, said Ms. Wheeler, 41, who now runs TPG’s retail and consumer investments. “It’s a rare moment that someone forgets my name,” she said.

Even as women have made inroads, it is difficult to break into the highest ranks, in part because the founders often stay in the top jobs. At K.K.R., Carlyle and Blackstone, the founders are at the helm.

Envisioning a new style of private equity firm, Molly F. Ashby struck out on her own. She left her job as the No. 2 at the private equity arm of a predecessor of JPMorgan Chase, and set up Solera Capital in 1999.

As a new firm, not to mention one run by a woman, Solera faced skeptical investors as it tried to start its first fund. But Ms. Ashby had a well-placed mentor: Stephen A. Schwarzman, who had co-founded Blackstone nearly 15 years earlier. After they met through a mutual acquaintance, Ms. Ashby sought Mr. Schwarzman’s advice on raising money, hiring a team and staying focused in spite of challenges.

There were some early stumbles. In 2004, a Solera investment, the natural foods company Annie’s, was struggling, prompting Ms. Ashby to replace the company’s management and make personnel changes within her own firm. Last year, Annie’s had a successful debut on the public markets, and Ms. Ashby, 53, whose employees are mostly women, has generated buzz on Wall Street.

“She attracts some great talent I could never get, because they want to be associated with a woman’s firm,” said Hamilton E. James, the president and chief operating officer of Blackstone, who met Ms. Ashby socially more than a decade ago and has also been an important source of advice.

As the biggest companies go public, they are taking a hard look at their own practices.

Private equity firms tend to promote executives from within their ranks, sometimes making it difficult to improve diversity. The industry is trying to address that issue, albeit in modest ways.

Bain Capital began visiting graduate business schools in 2007, with programs geared toward women. This year, 22 percent of Bain’s incoming analysts and associates are women, compared with 6 percent in 2010.

Women from Blackstone began meeting with college freshmen and sophomores this year to help them prepare for interviews. At Carlyle, a third of the incoming associates in the United States buyout group are women.

Several firms are also developing events for their female employees. Ms. Solotar of Blackstone oversees a dinner series and events with speakers like Barbara Tannenbaum, a lecturer at Brown University, who teaches persuasive communication. Last May, Ms. Donohoe, of K.K.R., brought in an executive coach for a discussion with senior women about personal branding and navigating their careers.

At Carlyle, Ms. Friedman, the chief financial officer, who previously worked at the Nasdaq OMX Group, co-hosted a series of 15 lunches for female employees last year, encouraging them to share “burning questions.” From those conversations, she helped start a mentorship program.

It’s especially helpful for women to be able to discuss balancing a career with a family, said Ms. Friedman, though she noted that “men struggle with it as much as women do.” Ms. Friedman, 43, worked part time at Nasdaq when her two sons were young. After she went back to work full time, her husband, Michael C. Friedman, who was a lawyer at Fannie Mae, started working part time and later became a stay-at-home dad.

“It’s a hard thing to balance, needing to be at home, and needing to be at work, and making sure you’re performing in both arenas,” Ms. Friedman said. “To be honest, the guilt is extreme.”



Why So Few Women Reach the Executive Rank

Here is a puzzle. If the bulk of studies show that women are a net plus to corporate America, why are they still a small minority on Wall Street and in the executive suite

The dearth of women in the top echelons is well documented. Women make up only 16 percent of directors at Fortune 500 companies, 4 percent of chief executives at Standard & Poor’s 500 companies and 10 percent of chief financial officers at S.& P. 500 companies. On Wall Street a small, but increasing, number of traders and executives are women (although the numbers are even worse at hedge funds, where only 3 percent of assets are managed by women).

The figures stand in contrast to the fact that more than 57 percent of bachelor’s degrees are awarded to women. And in 2012, 43 percent of people who took the business school admissions test were women, according to the Graduate Management Admission Council, which administers the primary test.

This is what is puzzling: various studies illustrate women’s great value on Wall Street and as executives, yet their numbers remain small.

The public benefits when women succeed in finance. When it comes to investment strategies, women are more conservative than men and more risk averse.

They also tend to invest for the longer term, a trait that can result in less-volatile returns. And recent evidence suggests that women may do better than men in short-term investing.

A study of hedge funds run by women found that they outperform funds run by men. Another study of retail investors found that men traded 45 percent more than women in their own accounts, but earned 2.65 percent less.

Outside the investing and trading sphere, there are also scores of studies about how women enhance the organizational environment. Women have been found to be more altruistic. There is a female style of corporate leadership, which involves more listening and cooperation, some studies indicate. And a paper that looked at companies in the S.& P. 1,500 index found that corporations led by women performed better.

Many of the more recent studies have focused on the composition of corporate boards and whether having female representation increases a company’s value. Many of these studies are based on the Norway experiment, where at least 40 percent of every corporation’s board must be composed of women.

Some found that adding women to boards in Norway decreased corporate value and profitability. However, this decline may be explained by the fact that the men were replaced by less experienced women, the studies found.

While some studies may conflict with others, in aggregate, these reports provide evidence that women have the potential to add significant value to a company.

Certainly, some scholars and advocates for women do not consider the study of differences between men and women legitimate. To them, such research is insulting because it sets up the idea that women are actually different and perhaps require different treatment.

This is where the conflict lies in seeking a remedy to the problem. Lately, several books and essays have sought to address the reasons for the small percentages of women in corporate leadership. Depending on which rationale you believe, the remedy differs.

The first explanation is simple sex discrimination. Women entering the work force are met with overt hostility. In some cases, benevolent attitudes have been found to be patronizing and can do as much harm as outright discrimination.

More generally, hostility is not required for discrimination to exist. In other words, stereotypes can end up creating different or lower expectations for women in the absence of hostility. And another strand of literature argues that there is not hostility toward women so much as a preference for men.

Evidence for each of these explanations can be found in the repeated studies that have concluded that women on Wall Street and in corporate America are paid less than men for similar work.

The second explanation is more complex, and states that the current male-driven culture does not allow women to succeed. Women’s values and approaches are different, and when entering the work force women find that the male culture is not to their taste or are driven off. Those women who do succeed adapt to the male culture. In other words, women need to become like men to become corporate executives.

Another issue at the forefront involves child care. In large part, women still effectively function as the primary caretakers of their children, and many commentators have described the struggle for “work-life balance.” This is true because the need to care for children is often greatest when women are in their 30s and 40s, a period that is the prime time of their careers.

Demographic changes, however, may help change the equation. The median age of a chief executive of an S.& P. 500 company is 55, while the average age of a director is 62. As more women enter the work force they will gradually come to parity and perhaps even take over.

It is here where we arrive at the thesis put forth by Facebook’s chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg. In her new book, “Lean In,” she seems to side with the explanation that a male-driven culture is at the root of the problem. Ms. Sandberg urges women to lean in and become as assertive as men in pushing forward their careers.

Her chief foil these days is Anne-Marie Slaughter, a professor at Princeton who left a high-powered post in the State Department. Professor Slaughter’s main concerns are the notion that the needs of women, child care and time with children are not being accommodated by the workplace.

Ms. Sandberg and Professor Slaughter are not the only ones examining the issue of women leaders. Other authors and commentators have joined the debate with books like “Nice Girls Don’t Get the Corner Office” and “The Feminine Mistake: Are We Giving Up Too Much”

But the question boils down to how to address this imbalance in the number of women in leadership positions in corporate America and on Wall Street. Do we address overt discrimination with affirmative action or quotas as Europe has Or is the answer to open space for women to spend time with their children and have career breaks Or do women really have to become like men to succeed And, again, the response differs, depending on what you see as the cause of the problem.

For advocates of sex equality, there is reason for optimism. The rising numbers of women in the workplace will inevitably continue to chip away at the disadvantages that women face. And if women really do en masse change cultures and bring separate characteristics to bear, it could transform the way that Wall Street does business.

But it is clear that given today’s low numbers, Wall Street has its work cut out for it.



Opening a Gateway for Girls to Enter the Computer Field

When Julia Geist was asked to draw a picture of a computer scientist last year, the 16-year-old sketched a businessman wearing glasses and a tie. Looking around at her classmates’ drawings, she saw similar depictions of men.

Now, Ms. Geist said, “I see a computer scientist could be anyone” â€" including herself.

Her new perspective is a victory for Girls Who Code. As part of an eight-week program with the Manhattan-based nonprofit group, Ms. Geist and 19 other high school girls learned software programming, public speaking, product development and other skills to prepare them for jobs in the technology industry.

Girls Who Code is among the recent crop of programs aiming to close the gender gap in tech by intervening early, when young women are deciding what they want to study. With names like Hackbright Academy, Girl Develop It, Black Girls Code and Girls Teaching Girls to Code, these groups try to present a more exciting image of computer science.

The dearth of women in the tech industry has been well documented. Even though women represent more than half the overall work force, they hold less than a quarter of computing and technical jobs, according to the National Center for Women and Information Technology based at the University of Colorado, Boulder. At the executive and founder levels, women are even scarcer.

A variety of advocacy and networking groups have tried to address the problem by coaching women on building start-ups, raising venture capital and climbing the management ranks at big companies. Most recently, Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer of the giant social network Facebook, published a best-selling book, “Lean In,” that was a call to arms for women to pursue their ambition in the workplace.

Even so, the number of women entering technology has been declining. Women earn just 12 percent of computer science degrees, down from 37 percent in 1984. Tech executives, recruiters and financiers say women simply do not walk through their doors seeking work.

“We actively recruit women, but there’s just not that many women who want to do this kind of work and are equipped to do the work from their education,” said Adam Messinger, the chief technology officer at Twitter, who is on the board of Girls Who Code.

So the industry is trying a new approach It is tackling the problem long before women start their careers, by teaching girls the basic skill of writing code.

“We have to get women on the right side of the computer,” said Margit Wennmachers, a partner at Andreessen Horowitz, a venture capital firm in Silicon Valley. Knowing a programming language is becoming essential not just for engineers, she added, but also for women who want to be tech executives or deal-makers or pursue other careers, from medicine to fashion.

“The dividing line is learning to code,” Ms. Wennmachers said. “You either tell the computer what to do and you’ve got lots of great career options. Or the computer tells you what to do and you end up working in a shoe store.”

Groups like Girls Who Code are part of a national movement to recruit young people to software development and remain competitive with other economies. A new group called code.org, for example, has people like Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook and Bill Gates of Microsoft calling for all schools to teach children to code.

But the need is most urgent for girls, said Reshma Saujani, who founded Girls Who Code last year. Roughly 74 percent of girls in middle school express an interest in engineering, science and math, she said. But by the time they get to college, just 0.3 percent choose computer science as a major.

Ms. Saujani, the daughter of two engineers who were refugees from Uganda, developed the idea while she was running for Congress, a race that she lost. As she traveled from school to school on the campaign trail, she said she saw the same thing over and over: computer science classrooms without a single girl.

“I saw the ability of technology to either enhance poverty or reduce it, and I saw girls not getting the same opportunities boys were,” said Ms. Saujani, who is now campaigning for public advocate in New York City. “Back in the ’60s, you didn’t have gender parity in law or medicine, but something happened and women started opting into these professions. We have to do that in computer science.”

Researchers say many factors contribute to girls’ reluctance to pursue computing as early as elementary school, including discouraging parents, inadequate resources for teachers and a lack of exposure. Studies have shown that girls imagine computer scientists as men working alone in a basement and can’t relate.

It’s a significant disconnect, given how women embrace technology. Female consumers make up a majority of users for many tech products. For technology companies, women also offer a diverse perspective, which can help bolster the bottom line.

“Being a software developer gives you a lot of insight into the world and business and gives you a lot of career opportunities,” said Sara J. Chipps, the co-founder of Girl Develop It, which teaches coding classes in 15 cities. She is also the chief technology officer of Levo League, a Web start-up for professional women.

After hatching the idea for Girls Who Code, Ms. Saujani and Kristen Titus, its executive director, started going to tech companies and asking what skills they wanted in female applicants. Mr. Messinger at Twitter, for instance, said he wanted to see more candidates who knew how to break a problem into parts and describe it in logic terms, which was incorporated into the program’s curriculum.

The response from companies was encouraging. The group raised money from Google, Twitter, Intel and others technology companies. Some also agreed to host workshops for Girls Who Code at their offices and volunteered employees to teach courses.

To develop the classes, the women recruited academics and people who worked in tech to design the curriculum, which includes topics like robotics, animation and mobile app development, as well as skills like introducing yourself in a business setting and presenting your product onstage. By Week 2, students learn what an algorithm is and how to write one to program a robot. By Week 5, they build their own mobile apps.

Then there are the intangibles, like eating in the Twitter cafeteria, pitching the apps the students built to Twitter’s engineering team and listening to notable female executives talk about what it was like to be the only girl in their computer science classes. Last year, so many girls said they wanted to become forensic scientists â€" like in the hit television show “C.S.I.” â€" that the group took a field trip to the New York Police Department to see how they used computers.

Nikita Rau, 17, another Girls Who Code graduate, said seeing women programmers on field trips taught her that anyone could be a coder. At big companies like Google and small ones like Foursquare, she said she was inspired by seeing successful women and engineering problems scrawled on white boards â€" not to mention “the amazing food.”

“As we walked through Facebook and Twitter, I could imagine myself sitting there coding throughout the day,” she said. “I’m not afraid to be one of the first girls to go into one of those fields. I want to pursue this career and maybe be a C.E.O. of a company.”

Girls Who Code is still in its infancy. In 2012, it taught 20 girls in New York. This summer, the program will accept 160 girls in New York, San Francisco and Detroit. The group is packaging its curriculum so schools and community organizations can teach it, too.

Girls Who Code is already showing signs of progress.

In March, it hosted a recruiting event at Google’s New York office for 200 girls, parents and teachers. Last year’s graduates showed off the apps and Web sites they built and attendees were treated to Google’s famous perks, including a demo of its Internet-connected glasses and a spread of beef sliders and chicken fingers.

Ms. Geist, the high school student who had never taken a computer science course, built an app for finding people with similar interests on Twitter. Now, she has signed up for the only computing courses in her public high school and wants to study computer science and physics in college. She even persuaded her father, a part-time custodian, to take a programming class.

“I guess I was just doing what my friends were doing, and none of the girls wanted to do computer science because it was mostly just guys,” Ms. Geist said. “But I don’t really care about that now. I love computer science.”



After Running S.E.C., Schapiro Becomes Bank Consultant

After more than three decades of policing Wall Street, Mary L. Schapiro is going to work for some if its biggest players.

The Promontory Financial Group, a consulting firm that steers banks and other financial firms through regulatory scrutiny, announced on Tuesday that it had hired Ms. Schapiro as chairwoman of its governance and markets practice. The move follows a grueling four-year period for Ms. Schapiro, who ran the Securities and Exchange Commission in the wake of the financial crisis.

“Mary is an outstanding advocate for investors and was a strong and decisive regulator during one of the most volatile periods in our financial history,” Eugene A. Ludwig, the head of Promontory, said in a statement.

Ms. Schapiro is the latest regulator to step through Washington’s revolving door on her way to Promontory. In addition to its ties with the S.E.C., Promontory has a deep bench of employees from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Mr. Ludwig created Promontory in 2001 after a stint as Comptroller under President Clinton.

Ms. Schapiro’s arrival comes at a difficult time for Promontory, which recently took a beating for its role in a botched review of foreclosures. Under orders from the Comptroller’s office, the nation’s biggest banks had hired consultants like Promontory to determine whether homeowners were wrongfully evicted.

But delays and inefficiencies plagued the consultants, which collected about $2 billion in fees over 14 months. Promontory, the firm examining loans for Wells Fargo, Bank of America and PNC, was blamed for relying on contract employees and low-balling the amount of harm homeowners suffered. The Comptroller’s office, fed up with the delays, scuttled the review in January and negotiated a multi-billion dollar settlement deal directly with the banks.

“From Day 1, Promontory strove to conduct its review work as thoroughly and independently as possible,” a spokesman for the firm, Christopher Winans, said in a previous statement. “Our overarching concern at all times was to serve the best interests of borrowers.”

The arrival of Ms. Schapiro could help Promontory deflect the mounting scrutiny. She might also bolster its corporate governance practice, which advises public companies on managing risk.

“The risk environment for firms in today’s global markets is increasingly complex,” Ms. Schapiro said in the statement

It is unclear how much Ms. Schapiro will earn at Promontory, but the job will certainly pay her more than the S.E.C, where she made $165,000 annually. Ms. Schapiro will also pick up a healthy payday as she joins corporate boards. Last month, General Electric nominated her to join its board, a spot that should pay about $250,000.

And then there’s her payday from the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Wall Street’s self-regulatory group. In 2008, Ms. Schapiro left Finra with a $7 million-plus payout that included pension and deferred compensation.

Until now, Ms. Schapiro was a lifelong regulator. Joining the government straight out of law school, she started as a trial lawyer for the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, an agency she later ran under President Bill Clinton. She ultimately ran Finra, before she took the reins of the S.E.C. in 2009, when the agency was being widely condemned after it failed to thwart the financial crisis and spot Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme.



Could Verizon’s Best Friend Be Its Biggest Rival

For years, Verizon and Vodafone have confronted a problem: what to do with Verizon Wireless, which they both own nearly equally

According to a new report, the answer may be simple: Bring in Verizon’s top competitor.

The Financial Times’ Alphaville blog said on Tuesday that Verizon and AT&T are teaming up to buy all of Vodafone.

That would give the British telecom giant what the blog reckoned was a $245 billion enterprise value and would be one of the biggest takeovers in at least a decade.

The plan outlined by Alphaville â€" Verizon buying out Vodafone’s 45 percent stake, while AT&T buys the rest of the British telecom â€" could solve the many issues that Verizon and Vodafone have been trying to figure out for years. And it would solve issues that both American companies face.

Verizon has long wanted to take control of the profitable business. And Vodafone has sought to sell the 45 percent stake it owns â€" but at an acceptably high premium and without being hit by an enormous tax burden.

Every year like clockwork, speculation has arisen that Verizon and Vodafone have had talks about striking a deal over Verizon Wireless. And every year so far, nothing has come up.

Last month, Bloomberg News reported that the two had again held talks, with Verizon remaining quite eager to take control of the wireless business.

But bringing in the company’s biggest rival could help out. AT&T hasn’t pursued a big deal since the failure of its $39 billion bid for T-Mobile two years ago, and still has plenty of financial firepower, with nearly $5 billion in cash and short-term debt on its balance sheet.

Verizon itself has about $3.6 billion. And both American telecoms have healthy balance sheets that could support the additional debt needed to finance a major deal.

Despite the collapse of the T-Mobile deal, AT&T has still sought to grow. With American antitrust regulators unlikely to let the telecom giant buy anything of scale at home, the company has turned its eyes abroad for possible opportunities.

Vodafone shareholders seem to like the idea: Shares of the company jumped 5 percent on the London Stock Exchange on Tuesday, reaching 196 pence by midday.



$14 Million SAC Settlement Is Approved

On the same day that prosecutors announced insider trading charges against a former portfolio manager at the hedge fund SAC Capital Advisors, a judge signed off on a civil settlement between the fund and regulators related to the same set of facts.

Judge Harold Baer of Federal District Court in Manhattan approved a pact late Friday in which SAC agreed to pay $14 million to settle accusations by the Securities and Exchange Commission that the fund’s Sigma Capital unit illegally traded in  shares of technology companies after a former analyst there obtained secret information about the companies. As part of the agreement, SAC neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing.

The former SAC analyst, Jon Horvath, last fall pleaded guilty to participating in the scheme, and said he passed along the information to his supervisor, who then traded on it. His supervisor was Michael S. Steinberg, who was arrested on Friday. He pleaded not guilty, and his lawyer, Barry H. Berke, said that his client had done nothing wrong.

Judge Baer did not raise any concerns with SAC’s $14 million settlement, signing off on the deal in a perfunctory series of orders without comment.

Yet his approval came during the same week that another judge expressed skepticism over the terms of a larger settlement that SAC struck with regulators.

Judge Victor Marrero raised questions about the larger deal, a record $602 million agreement related to a separate insider trading case. He took issue with the government allowing SAC to settle the case without having to admit any wrongdoing.

“There is something counterintuitive and incongruous about settling for $600 million if it truly did nothing wrong,” the judge said  at last week’s hearing.

Judge Marrero declined to sign off on the $602 million settlement, which relates to SAC allegedly gaining $275 million in profits or avoided losses from insider trading in two pharmaceutical stock.

Instead, Judge Marrero hinted that he might approve it subject to the outcome of a pending ruling in a federal appeals court that is expected to weigh in on the “neither admit nor deny wrongdoing” language used by government agencies in reaching settlements with government agencies. That case relates to a settlement between Citigroup and the S.E.C. over accusations of fraud in the bank’s sale of a complex mortgage-bond deal.

The different approaches by the two judges highlight an emerging debate in the judiciary over a judge’s role in approving such settlements. In recent months, federal judges across the country have taken issue with agencies like the S.E.C. letting defendants off easy by not forcing them to acknowledge wrongdoing.

An SAC spokesman declined to comment on the approval of the $14 million settlement. When both settlements were struck earlier this month, the spokesman, Jonathan Gasthalter, said they were “a substantial step toward resolving all outstanding regulatory matters.”



Blackstone’s Curious Bid for Dell

The Blackstone Group’s interest in Dell seems to raise more questions than it answers, especially in light of Dell’s 274-page proxy filing about the process of selling the company. Is Blackstone “really bidding for Dell Or is it part of a bizarre, high-stakes charade” Andrew Ross Sorkin asks in the DealBook column.

There is one detail that may help explain what’s going on, Mr. Sorkin says: Blackstone demanded that Dell pay its expenses to prepare a bid, up to $25 million. “Here’s what’s not in the proxy: Originally, Blackstone did not demand to be reimbursed for just out-of-pocket expenses â€" for consultants, travel and the like â€" but also sought to be able to receive payments for the time of its own executives, according to people involved in the process,” Mr. Sorkin writes. “The fact that Blackstone refused to bid unless its costs were covered by Dell â€" a highly unusual maneuver â€" just goes to show you how little confidence it has that it expects to submit a winning bid for Dell.”

Blackstone’s plan to pursue a bid of at least $14.25 a share, more than the $13.65 offer from Michael S. Dell and Silver Lake, emerged as part of the 45-day process to encourage rival interest in the company. “For Dell’s special committee, agreeing to these bold demands from Blackstone is probably good business. If the board can keep a second bidder at the table, even if the suitor never makes a firm bid, Dell’s special committee will have insulated itself from criticism that it did not run a competitive process,” Mr. Sorkin writes. “The real question is why, despite the $25 million reimbursement guarantee, Blackstone is risking its reputation to even contemplate a deal for Dell.”

ACKMAN’S HITS AND MISSES  |  Joe Nocera writes in his column for The New York Times that the hedge fund manager William A. Ackman “is like one of those guys you used to see in a certain kind of old-fashioned comedy. On one shoulder sits an angel, encouraging his better nature. On the other sits a devil, whispering temptation.” While Mr. Ackman has been generous in philanthropy and gutsy in his bet against Herbalife, he has had less success with the retailer J.C. Penney, Mr. Nocera says. “The question is whether Ackman has learned anything.”

WOMEN ON WALL STREET  |  DealBook’s spring special section, “Women in a Man’s World,” is out on Wednesday, with articles on gender in finance. Sallie L. Krawcheck, the former executive of Bank of America and Citigroup, tells Susanne Craig that the aftermath of the financial crisis has delivered a setback to the presence of women on Wall Street. “You’re going through this horrible downturn. You’re a C.E.O. You want people who you worked with for 10 years or 20 years who you can trust,” she says. “These moves have led to more homogeneous leadership teams.” She also talks about the importance of having a sponsor, not just a mentor. Her sponsor for a time, Sanford I. Weill, formerly chief of Citigroup, “would tal to anybody and everybody about anything and everything at any time,” Ms. Krawcheck says.

Almost two decades after the “boom-boom room” lawsuit over sex harassment, women are more aware of their rights, Linda D. Friedman, a partner at Stowell & Friedman, tells Susan Antilla. But Ms. Friedman says her law firm continues to work on discrimination cases, largely behind the scenes. In Norway, a training program is responding to a law that requires 40 percent of public company boards to be made up of women. The boot camp, called Female Future, “aims to train the country’s next generation of directors,” Mark Scott writes.

ON THE AGENDA  |  Data on factory orders for February is out at 10 a.m. Peter R. Orszag, vice chairman of global banking at Citigroup, is on Bloomberg TV at 7 a.m. Mortimer B. Zuckerman of Boston Properties is on Bloomberg TV at 8:05 a.m. The financier Steven L. Rattner is on CNBC at 5 p.m.

QUESTIONS OVER TESLA  |  Elon Musk, the chief executive of Tesla, said on Twitter that the electric carmaker was planning to announce “really exciting” news on Tuesday. Already, the stock got a lift on Monday, when Tesla said it expected “full profitability” in the first quarter under generally accepted accounting principles, after it sold more cars than expected. “Here’s what Tesla didn’t say, though: It didn’t quantify the overall size of its order book at the end of the first quarter. There’s pent-up demand for its cars right now as enthusiasts line up. As a result, the sales increase most likely came from meeting existing orders more quickly than expected,” DealBook’s Peter Eavis writes. “However, what’s crucial to the company’s fortunes is how many new orders are coming in each quarter - and that figure wasn’t released on Mondy. Nor was the amount of canceled orders, a negative development Tesla potentially faces.”

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Glencore Extends Deadline for Xstrata Takeover  |  The commodities trader Glencore International announced on Tuesday that it had pushed back the completion date for its $34 billion takeover of the mining company Xstrata amid a review by Chinese authorities. DealBook »

Mergers Slowed to a Snail’s Pace in the First Quarter  |  Only 8,115 deals were announced worldwide in the first quarter of 2013, the lowest number since 2003, according to data from Thomson Reuters. DealBook »

Nasdaq to Buy Electronic Bond Trading Platform for $750 Million  |  The parent company of the Nasdaq stock exchange said on Tuesday that it would buy the electronic bond-trading platform eSpeed for $750 million, a fresh sign of consolidation in the industry. DealBook »

American Greetings to Be Taken Private  |  American Greetings, the greeting card and “social expression” products company, said on Monday that it had agreed to be taken private by its founding family in a deal it valued at $878 million. DealBook »

Hess to Sell Russian Subsidiary for $2.1 Billion  |  The Hess Corporation said on Monday that it would sell its Russian subsidiary, Samara-Nafta, to Lukoil for $2.1 billion as it continued a string of asset sales to focus its operations. DealBook »

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Goldman Sets Up Fund to Invest in Risky Debt  |  Goldman Sachs “registered a fund that invests in risky credit products as a publicly traded business development company, a way for the bank to avoid some regulations that would otherwise limit its activity,” Reuters reports. REUTERS

UBS Limits Disclosures Over Traders’ Dismissal  |  UBS has succeeded in sealing documents concerning the dismissal of two traders in Singapore, saying they were fired for serious misconduct and that the bank was investigating the matter, Bloomberg News reports. BLOOMBERG NEWS

Chief of DBS Group Holdings Makes $7.5 Million  | 
BLOOMBERG NEWS

For London’s Most Valuable Real Estate, Buyers Are Increasingly Foreign  |  Buyers in high-end London neighborhoods like Belgravia are increasingly from places like Russia, Kazakhstan, Southeast Asia and India, The New York Times writes. “For them, London is just a stop in a peripatetic international existence that might also include New York, Moscow and Monaco.” NEW YORK TIMES

Italian Bank Falls in Morning Trading After Posting Loss  |  Shares of Monte dei Paschi di Siena fell 6.7 percent in morning trading in Milan, Bloomberg News reports. BLOOMBERG NEWS

PRIVATE EQUITY »

A Strong Quarter for Private Equity Exits  |  In the fourth quarter of last year, private equity “exits” in the United States amounted to $57 billion, 43 percent of the annual total, according to the latest quarterly newsletter from the placement agent Triago. TRIAGO

Billabong Says Takeover Talks Are Continuing  | 
REUTERS

HEDGE FUNDS »

Icahn Said to Buy Into Speech-Recognition Software Company  |  Carl C. Icahn has taken a 9.27 percent passive stake in Nuance, a company that Apple uses for its Siri feature in iPhones, according to CNBC. CNBC

Broker Payments Under Scrutiny in Canadian Proxy Fight  |  Reuters reports: “Hedge fund Jana Partners accused Canadian fertilizer company Agrium on Monday of improperly paying brokers and investment advisers for shareholder votes as Jana’s battle to shake up Agrium’s board enters its final week.” REUTERS

Auto Parts Maker Lear Agrees to Expand Board  | 
REUTERS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

I.P.O.’s Price Toward High End of Expectations  |  It is “another sign of rising investor appetite for stocks,” The Wall Street Journal writes. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Taylor Morrison Sets I.P.O. Price at $20 to $22 a Share  |  The home builder Taylor Morrison said on Monday that it planned to raise as much as $602 million in an initial public offering, seeking to take advantage of a nascent revival in the housing markets. DealBook »

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Diller’s Aereo Plans to Expand After Court Victory  |  Aereo, the start-up service that streams television stations over the Internet, backed by Barry Diller, received a favorable ruling from a federal appeals court in New York on Monday, dismaying broadcasters and setting the stage for a full-blown trial, The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES

Start-Up That Serves Fashion Industry Attracts $20 Million  |  Attune Consulting, which provides information technology services to fashion and lifestyle companies, raised $20 million from MAS Holdings. PRESS RELEASE

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Schapiro to Join Promontory Financial  |  Mary L. Schapiro, who recently stepped down as head of the Securities and Exchange Commission, is moving to the consulting firm Promontory Financial Group, The Wall Street Journal reports. “In my case, there’s no revolving door,” Ms. Schapiro told the newspaper. “I won’t ever be going back to government.” WALL STREET JOURNAL

11 Partners Leave Bingham for Sidley  |  Eleven lawyers who work in Bingham McCutchen’s highly regarded securities-enforcement practice are said to be leaving the firm to join Sidley & Austin. DealBook »

Judge Declines to Approve Citigroup Settlement  |  Reuters reports that a federal judge in Manhattan on Monday “signaled he will not rubber-stamp” Citigroup’s proposed $590 million settlement of a shareholder lawsuit accusing the bank of hiding tens of billions of dollars of troubled mortgage assets. REUTERS

Judge Approves the Smaller of 2 SAC Settlements  |  A federal judge signed off on a $14 million settlement by a unit of SAC Capital Advisors over insider trading accusations. WALL STREET JOURNAL

In Cyprus, Bailout Sows Feelings of Betrayal  | 
NEW YORK TIMES

In Bankrupt City, Ruling Stokes Fight Over Pensions  |  The New York Times reports: “A federal bankruptcy judge ruled on Monday that the city of Stockton, Calif., was eligible for court protection from its creditors, clearing the way for a battle over whether public workers’ pensions can be cut when the city they work for goes bankrupt.” NEW YORK TIMES

Apple of Discord in China  |  There are a number of theories about why official Chinese media outlets are attacking Apple. And while many Chinese commentators online are mocking the state media, the company does appear to have a problem with Beijing, Bill Bishop writes in the China Insider column. DealBook »

Apple Apologizes for Warranty Policies in China  | 
NEW YORK TIMES