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Buffett, With His Magic Touch, May Be Irreplaceable

Acquisitions usually come with a nice premium for the seller. But when Warren E. Buffett is the buyer, there is typically something of a discount.

The ability to make acquisitions on favorable terms is a testament to Mr. Buffett’s personality and skills as a deal maker. It also highlights an almost unsolvable problem for his company, Berkshire Hathaway, and its shareholders. When its 82-year-old chief executive is gone, who will negotiate such sweet deals?

A case in point is the $28 billion buyout of the H.J. Heinz Company by Berkshire Hathaway and a partner, the investment firm 3G Capital. The deal, announced in February, is expected to be completed by the end of the summer.

Heinz had three investment bankers to advise it: Centerview Partners, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Moelis & Company. Going through Heinz’s disclosure of the bankers’ analysis, it is pretty clear that Berkshire and 3G did not pay top dollar.

Berkshire Hathaway and 3G are paying a 19.1 percent premium over the closing price of Heinz shares the day before the acquisition was announced. This is below the average premium of 31 percent in the industry that Heinz’s own investment banking firm Centerview Partners used to determine the fairness of the transaction.

The two buyers are also paying a multiple of 11.9 times the last 12 months of Heinz’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or Ebitda. This compares with a range of 8.8 to 15.6 times, the ratio paid in comparable acquisitions of food companies disclosed by Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

The bottom line is that the bankers’ disclosure shows that the amount that 3G and Berkshire paid was below that of many other deals in the food industry.

The two buyers did not pay top dollar, but they did pay a fair price for Heinz and are certainly not paying as low a multiple as in other deals, like Kohlberg Kravis Roberts’s $5.3 billion acquisition of Del Monte Foods in 2010, which had a multiple of almost nine times.

Where it gets really tasty, though, are the terms that Berkshire negotiated for its own investment. In addition to putting up half the equity with 3G, or $4.12 billion each, Berkshire made an $8 billion investment for preferred stock.

And boy, is that preferred stock investment on good terms. It pays 9 percent interest, and has a redemption feature at “at a significant premium price,” according to Mr. Buffett.

This gives real downside protection to Berkshire for the investment. Not only that, but in exchange for the preferred investment, Berkshire was also issued warrants to buy 5 percent of Heinz for a “nominal” price, or in other words, pennies.

Mr. Buffett is getting 55 percent of Heinz plus an interest payment of $700 million a year. This is an extraordinarily good deal.

To see why, you need only to look at the terms of the rest of the financing. Heinz is taking on $14.1 billion in additional debt to help finance this deal. The debt takes several forms, and one part of it is $3.1 billion of high-yield notes at a 4.25 percent interest rate.

This yield is extraordinarily low, given that high-yield debt is ordinarily in the double digits. But this is no ordinary time, and despite the low yield, the issue was more than three times oversubscribed.

In this light, the relatively high 9 percent payment on the preferred stock investment plus its bonus features seem out of whack. 3G could have found cheaper financing by a few percentage points lower than it will pay on the preferred investment, even though Heinz will be laden with debt. The higher rate on the preferred investment will translate into a couple hundred million dollars more each year for Berkshire Hathaway.

As for Berkshire, it just sold five-year debt yielding a measly 1.3 percent. Basically, Berkshire’s financing costs for its preferred investment are most likely around 1 percent, meaning that it is earning in the double digits on the preferred investment. Then there is the upside on the $4 billion equity investment.

The Heinz deal aptly illustrates the huge issue looming for Berkshire shareholders. Simply put, Mr. Buffett negotiated a deal almost no one else on the planet could have received.

If this deal was better for Berkshire than 3G, you may ask why 3G would agree to it. I suspect that it is really paying to be associated with the Oracle of Omaha and his magic. Mr. Buffett has a unique ability to not only score a low acquisition price, but he can scare off competitors and attract other investors. Boards of target companies also appear to run into his grasp.

Heinz is again a good example. According to Heinz, 3G and Berkshire Hathaway made a first bid at $70 a share and then after one round of bargaining raised their bid to a best and final offer of $72.50 a share. That was it. Heinz accepted the bid without speaking to any other parties.

The reason that Heinz gave for failing to look for other bidders was that its investment bankers informed the Heinz board that “strategic acquirers” were unlikely.

Moreover, these bankers also told the board that if Heinz did solicit “alternative acquisition proposals,” 3G and Berkshire Hathaway were likely to withdraw their proposal.

In other words, Heinz’s board decided to deal only with Berkshire. And when Heinz requested the chance to solicit other bidders after announcement of the deal, through a so-called go-shop period, Berkshire and 3G said no.

Heinz and 3G declined to comment on the deal. Berkshire did not respond to a request for comment.

The Heinz board’s quick acquiescence is not unusual for Buffett deals. In Berkshire’s $9 billion acquisition of Lubrizol and $26.5 billion acquisition of Burlington Northern, neither board appeared to negotiate particularly hard. In Lubrizol’s case, its board accepted Mr. Buffett’s first bid of $135 a share. In Burlington Northern’s case, the board accepted Mr. Buffett’s first bid of $100 a share after he said that was all he could pay. The Heinz shareholders are lucky their board held out for at least one raise.

When it comes to Mr. Buffett, boards roll over. According to a draft paper by Shane Corwin, Matt Cain and myself, the median number of bidding rounds in public deals from 2006 to 2011 was four, and only 16 percent of bidders made a best and final offer.

Mr. Buffett is thus an outlier in that he will not raise a bid significantly from his first or contemplate target companies speaking to other possible buyers. But unlike other bidders, boards do not push back with Mr. Buffett.

Only someone with his magic touch could do this. Boards, buyers and everyone else want to be associated with Mr. Buffett. This is perhaps why he was also able to work his magic on 3G, getting a financing co-partner deal that others couldn’t.

As for competing bidders, they too appear to be unwilling to challenge him. In Heinz’s case, Mr. Buffett not only got a better deal with his partner, he may have saved a few dollars a share in the total price paid. It all adds up over time.

Heinz’s shareholders don’t appear to be complaining about the possible loss of a few dollars a share. Happy to get a premium, they approved the deal, a transaction recommended by the proxy advisory services.

The question really is what happens once Mr. Buffett isn’t around. Berkshire will still be a gigantic company with a lot of cash, but there are other companies out there of the same ilk. It all means that unless Berkshire can find another Warren Buffett, it may find its returns just aren’t as good.

Even though Mr. Buffett has hired and groomed other executives, he is a true star, and he cannot just create or transmit those qualities, which are the very ones that get those great deals. Unfortunately, there is only one Oracle of Omaha.



Wall Street Advocacy Group Turns to Former Lawmakers

Wall Street’s top advocacy group is finally getting with the program.

The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, or Sifma, announced on Monday that it had hired two former members of Congress to run the ship. The previous leadership under Tim Ryan, a former banker who has returned to JPMorgan Chase, scored some successes battling new rules. But using former politicians to sweet-talk regulators and try to improve the image Main Street has of the industry could be a better strategy.

Both are friends of high finance. Former Republican Senator Judd Gregg, Sifma’s new chief executive, was the chief G.O.P. negotiator on the bank bailouts in 2008. He later fought Democrats as they drafted the Dodd-Frank Act in 2010 as a member of the chamber’s Banking Committee. And after leaving office he acted as an adviser to - surprise, surprise - Goldman Sachs.

Ken Bentsen, who will be Gregg’s second in command as Sifma’s president, is at least from the other side of the aisle. He’s a former Democratic congressman who sat on the House Financial Services Committee. But he also spent some time as an investment banker in municipal and mortgage finance.

Nonetheless, with their different political hues they should make for a formidable pair. Sifma is a bit behind the trend on this one, though. The Financial Services Roundtable, another industry advocate, plumped for a politician for the top spot last year - former Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty. Christopher Dodd, erstwhile senator for Connecticut and co-author of the landmark 2010 banking law, heads the Motion Picture Associaion of America. And Blanche Lincoln, who spent two terms as a senator in Arkansas, leads the Small Business for Sensible Regulations coalition.

Such jobs are great money-spinners for former lawmakers looking to cash in. Tim Ryan, Mr. Gregg’s predecessor, earned $3 million in 2011, for example. They’re also key roles, though, for an industry grappling with what it thinks are overly aggressive new rules and growing calls to break up the largest firms. Deal-making bankers like Mr. Ryan have not done a bad job. But a couple of astute glad-handing baby-kissers may do better.

Daniel Indiviglio is Washington columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. For more independent commentary and analysis, visit breakingviews.com.



Irregularities Suspected at Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange

4:01 p.m. | Updated

The Hong Kong securities regulator announced on Tuesday that it had discovered possible financial irregularities at the Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange and said it referred the matter over to the police for investigation.

The exchange ceased business over the weekend and has since wound down all open trading positions. The suspected irregularities were “serious ones,’’ Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission said in a statement.

Barry Cheung, the chairman and controlling shareholder of the mercantile exchange, took an abrupt leave of absence Tuesday night from all public service positions, according to a statement issued by the office of the head of the Hong Kong government, Leung Chun-ying.

Mr. Cheung also serves as an unofficial member of Mr. Leung’s cabinet and heads the government’s neighborhood redevelopment agency, the Urban Renewal Authority. He also ran Mr. Leung’s election campaign last year.

In the corporate world, Mr. Cheung is a director of the AIA Group, formerly a unit of the American International Group, and is also on the board of Rusal, the aluminum company controlled by the Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska. Both those companies are listed in Hong Kong.

The Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange, or HKMEx, opened for business two years ago and aimed to be a global platform for investors seeking to tap into China’s tremendous demand for commodities. The exchange, which is privately held, boasted an influential group of minority shareholders, which included Mr. Deripaska’s Eni+, a unit of the Chinese shipping company Cosco Group and a unit of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the world’s biggest bank by market value.

But trading volumes on the HKMEx never came close to rivaling more established peers like the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, the IntercontinentalExchange or the London Metal Exchange. Only two products ever traded in Hong Kong â€" a gold futures and a silver futures contract, both denominated in United States dollars.

A local stock exchange operator, Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing, completed its $2.2 billion acquisition of the London Metals Exchange in December.

Mr. Cheung has not been accused of any wrongdoing. In a statement, he said: “As HKMEx is now under police investigation, I cannont make any comments at this stage aside from that I personally and HKMEx are cooperating fully in the investigation. I feel that it is inappropriate for me to continue my public duties during the investigation.”

In his statement on Tuesday, Mr. Leung, the head of the local government, said: ‘’I am confident the regulatory and law enforcement bodies will act impartially without fear or favor.”

The police in Hong Kong said in a statement that they had arrested a 55-year-old man on charges of ‘‘using a false instrument’’ involving a commodities trading company. The man was not formally charged, but was detained overnight for questioning. Further details were not available.

The Securities and Futures Commission said it began investigating financial irregularities last Wednesday, but waited until Tuesday to make its announcement: “For obvious reasons, it was not appropriate to disclose these matters to HKMEx or to the public pending further steps in the investigation,” the regulator said in its statement.

This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: May 21, 2013

An earlier version of this article misidentified the former corporate parent of the AIA Group. It is the American International Group, not the American Insurance Group.



Court Hears Appeal of Ex-Director of Goldman

It was perhaps the most critical piece of evidence presented at the trial of Rajat Gupta, the former Goldman Sachs director found guilty last year of leaking the bank’s boardroom discussions to his friend.

“I heard yesterday from somebody who’s on the board of Goldman Sachs that they are going to lose $2 per share,” his friend, the hedge fund manager Raj Rajaratnam, told a colleague during an October 2008 conversation that the government secretly recorded.

On Tuesday, a lawyer for Mr. Gupta argued that an appeals court should overturn his client’s conviction and grant a new trial because the lower-court judge tainted the verdict by erroneously admitting that statement and other wiretapped conversations.

“The wiretaps should never have been admitted,” said Mr. Gupta’s lawyer, Seth P. Waxman, during the argument before the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in Manhattan.

Last May, a jury convicted Mr. Gupta, 64, of sharing Goldman’s confidential information with Mr. Rajaratnam. The presiding judge, Jed S. Rakoff, sentenced Mr. Gupta to two years in prison. A year before, Mr. Rajaratnam was found guilty at trial and sentenced to 11 years in prison. His appeal is also pending.

The two men, who came to this country from South Asia as university students and rose to the highest ranks of the business world, are two of the most prominent figures caught up in the government’s vast crackdown on illegal conduct on Wall Street. Since 2009, the United States attorney in Manhattan has charged 81 individuals; of those, 73 have either pleaded guilty or been convicted.

With his freedom hanging in the balance, Mr. Gupta attended Tuesday’s hearing, accompanied by his wife, daughters and about a dozen friends. He was once one of the world’s most admired businessmen, having served for a decade as the global chairman of the management consultancy McKinsey & Company. Mr. Gupta, a resident of Westport, Conn., is free on bail pending the outcome of his appeal.

The hearing, held in a cramped courtroom in the stately federal courthouse building on Foley Square, was packed with spectators. About two dozen summer law school interns from Mr. Waxman’s firm, WilmerHale, came to watch, as did a class of curious high school students from the Beacon School on the Upper West Side. The youth-filled courtroom forced several members of Mr. Gupta’s large legal team and a group of senior government prosecutors to watch a televised simulcast of the proceeding in an overcrowded anteroom.

Mr. Waxman tried to persuade the three-judge appeals-court panel â€" Jon O. Newman, Amalya L. Kearse and Rosemary S. Pooler â€" that the lower court made a series of incorrect rulings during the trial. Much of the time was spent discussing a ruling by Judge Rakoff that curtailed the testimony of Mr. Gupta’s daughter, Geetanjali Gupta. She had planned to testify that at the time of the tips cited by prosecutors, her father told her that he believed that Mr. Rajaratnam had stolen money from him as part of an investment they had together.

Judge Rakoff curbed her testimony, allowing her to say only that her father was upset with Mr. Rajaratnam. If the jury had heard that Mr. Rajaratnam might have cheated Mr. Gupta, “that testimony would have powerfully refuted the government’s theory of motive,” Mr. Waxman said.

Judge Newman appeared skeptical that the daughter’s testimony would have swayed the jury given the substantial circumstantial evidence of Mr. Gupta’s guilt.

“You’re telling me that if the jury had heard that statement, it would have disregarded all the other evidence in the case?” Judge Newman asked. “How realistic is that?”

Later on in the argument, Judge Newman recounted damning evidence from the trial â€" phone logs and trading records that showed how less than one minute after hanging up from a Goldman board call, Mr. Gupta phoned Mr. Rajaratnam, who quickly bought about $35 million worth of Goldman stock.

“Are you telling us that that’s a coincidence?” Judge Newman asked.

Mr. Waxman tried to avoid answering the question, but Judge Newman persisted. “O.K., I embrace it â€" it’s a coincidence,” said Mr. Waxman, a former solicitor general of the United States who is considered one of the country’s top appellate lawyers.

Richard C. Tarlowe, the federal prosecutor who argued the appeal for the government, seized on Judge Newman’s incredulity when he rose to speak. “The argument” â€" that the phone calls and trades were coincidental â€" “was made to the jury, and it was rejected because of its absurdity,” he said.

For Mr. Gupta to have his conviction reversed, the appeals court does not have to believe in his innocence. He can win a new trial if the judges decide that Judge Rakoff improperly admitted the wiretapped conversations between Mr. Rajaratnam and his colleagues that suggested that he had an inside source at Goldman, or made other faulty rulings.

During the argument, Mr. Waxman characterized Mr. Rajaratnam’s statements as unreliable testimony that was not in furtherance of any insider trading conspiracy. Mr. Rajaratnam was a braggart who “lied about his sources to impress his subordinates,” Mr. Waxman said.

“The court’s decidedly asymmetrical interpretation of the rules of evidence left the jury with a distorted picture, in which Gupta was accused by the self-serving hearsay of a known fabulist,” Mr. Gupta’s legal team wrote in court papers.

A ruling by the appeals court is expected in the coming months, and one party closely watching for a decision is Goldman Sachs, which had its lawyers attend Tuesday’s hearing. Because the bank’s bylaws require it to cover the legal fees for top officers and directors, Goldman is paying for Mr. Gupta’s costly defense, which has reached at least $35 million.

Separately, a judge ordered Mr. Gupta to pay Goldman more than $6.2 million to refund the bank for legal expenses related to an internal investigation and other costs. Mr. Gupta had agreed to reimburse the bank for his legal bills if a jury convicted him, but Goldman must continue to pay them until the final outcome of his appeal.



LPL Financial to Pay $7.5 Million Fine

4:58 p.m. | Updated

One of the nation’s largest brokerage firms, LPL Financial, is paying $7.5 million to settle accusations that it made misstatements to regulators and failed to properly supervise its brokers’ communications.

LPL has grown into a brokerage powerhouse over the last decade by providing financial services to clients with lower incomes and outside the major cities, who have often been overlooked by the large brokerage firms.

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, which is financed by the industry, said Tuesday that LPL failed to properly monitor the e-mails of its far-flung network of brokers over several years. While LPL did not admit or deny the charges, it will pay Finra $7.5 million and put another $1.5 million aside to pay customers who may have been hurt.

LPL, with headquarters in San Diego and Boston, has been fined by several state and national regulators in recent years. Critics have said that the problems have been a result of the firm’s decentralized business model and the difficulty of supervising the company’s fast-growing network of over 13,000 brokers, which ranks it behind only Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo.

The chief of enforcement at Finra, Brad Bennett, said in a statement on Tuesday that, “as LPL grew, it did not expand its compliance and technology infrastructure.”

The charges carry particular significance for LPL because the company’s far-flung offices have forced it to rely heavily on electronic monitoring systems.

In a statement released Tuesday, LPL said “we very much regret our lapse of oversight.”

“We have undertaken a comprehensive redesign of our email systems and associated compliance policies and procedures, and have engaged independent experts to assess and validate our approach,” the statement said.

Finra said that LPL had numerous lapses in its efforts to monitor and retain e-mails. That resulted in problems like 80 million corrupted e-mails, and the failure to review 28 million messages sent by LPL brokers working as independent contractors.

Once the problems were discovered, Finra said that LPL made misstatements about the extent to which employees of the firm knew about the issues.

LPL has set itself apart in the industry by hiring its brokers as contractors rather than employees. This has been attractive for brokers by allowing them to keep more of their commissions. It has also resulted in LPL expanding into areas of the country that cannot support large brokerage operations. But analysts have said that the scattered offices can be harder to monitor.

Ealier this year, LPL paid Finra $400,000 to settle charges that it failed to properly deliver information on mutual funds to its clients. Four other firms were fined at the same time, but LPL paid more than twice as much as any other firm. A month later, LPL agreed to pay $2.5 million after the Massachusetts accused the firm of improperly selling complex real estate investments to unsophisticated investors.

Before the Finra fine was announced this week, LPL executives were promoting their efforts to revamp their compliance systems. The firm’s president, Robert Moore, said in an interview with Reuters published on Monday that LPL will be adding more dedicated compliance officers closer to local offices.

“It comes at a cost that we have to find a way to absorb,” Mr. Moore told Reuters.

This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: May 21, 2013

Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article misstated the date of a Reuters interview with LPL Financial's president, Robert Moore. The interview was on Friday, not Monday. The article was published by Reuters on Monday.



Jamie Dimon’s Pyrrhic Victory

The Pyrrhic victory Tuesday for Jamie Dimon is a defeat for governance. Just over two-thirds of JPMorgan shareholders voted to keep him as both chairman and chief executive at the bank’s annual meeting in Tampa on Tuesday. And Mr. Dimon and the board had to devote a considerable amount of time to preserving his titles rather than running America’s largest bank by assets. The episode perfectly illustrates the common sense behind separating the two roles.

Having a third of shareholders vote against Mr. Dimon is hardly an overwhelming vote of confidence. It is, though, a marked improvement from last year when 40 percent of shareholders voted for a split just weeks after the bank announced what turned into a $6 billion hit to revenue from the so-called London Whale trading fiasco.

The support comes after the directors lobbied hard â€" and very late in the day -- to keep Mr. Dimon at the helm of both the management team and the board. They had even gone so far as to warn that a change in leadership would be disruptive to the bank, unsubtly implying that Mr. Dimon might leave if he didn’t get his way.

There are more pressing concerns for the bank, from preventing similar losses to mending fences with regulators. Having the entire board be independent would make it a more credible check on the boss and help ensure the quest for profits doesn’t expose the bank and its shareholders to unnecessary risk.

Instead, the board’s presiding director, Lee Raymond, told shareholders at the meeting that what counts is how directors handled the crisis last year - in other words, admitting that he sees his role as purely reactionary. That should be a worrying signal to the bank’s owners.

At least some changes to the board’s risk committee look likely. Raymond hinted as much. Three directors - David Cote, James Crown and Ellen Futter - each won less than 60 percent of the vote for re-election.

If they are rotated out of the risk committee, or even leave the board, it will at least mark a small victory. But for Mr. Dimon, shareholders chose fear and personality over good corporate governance. That’s a big disappointment.

and Agnes T. Crane is a columnist and Antony Currie is an associate editor for Reuters Breakingviews. For more independent commentary and analysis, visit breakingviews.com.