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Apollo’s Harris and Blackstone’s Blitzer Strike Deal for Devils

Private equity has struck another deal for yet another professional sports team, as two prominent leveraged buyout investors agreed on Thursday to buy the New Jersey Devils for about $320 million.

Ownership for the National Hockey League team will pass on to Joshua Harris, a cofounder of Apollo Global Management, and David S. Blitzer, the head of tactical opportunities for the Blackstone Group. Both men are members of the consortium that bought the Philadelphia 76ers basketball team, with Mr. Harris serving as principal owner.

Though neither man is a native of Philadelphia, both graduated from the University of Pennsylvania‘s Wharton School and have long rooted for the city’s teams. But both men are part of the latest generation of financiers to buy pro sports organizations as trophy properties.

A group of private equity moguls, including Bain Capital’s Steve Pagliuca, already owns the Boston Celtics. And Tom Gores of Platinum Equity controls the Detroit Pistons alongside his firm. Since 2002, the principal owner of the Boston Red Sox has been John W. Henry, who took over Liverpool Football Club in the fall of 2010.

(Mr. Harris and Mr. Blitzer are taking control of the Devils from Jeff Vanderbeek, a former Lehman Brothers executive who had held an ownership stake in the team since 2000.)

Part of the selling point for bringing in private equity owners â€" other than their big bank accounts â€" is their expertise in turning around troubled enterprises.

The Devils have struggled of late, having failed to go beyond the first round of the N.H.L. playoffs or missing the postseason entirely in five of the last six years.

At a press conference on Thursday, Mr. Harris pledged to do his best to lift the hockey franchise’s fortunes:

“We’ve had a lot of success at identifying literally the best, highest-quality management teams and then bringing them into situations and letting them do their thing and holding them accountable,” Harris said. “Other people may like to meddle in it. What we like to do in essence is agree what the vision is, what the business plan is and then resource it and allow people to do their jobs.”



Glasses That Solve Colorblindness, for a Big Price Tag

A few weeks back, I wrote about special lenses that were developed to give doctors “a clearer view of veins and vasculature, bruising, cyanosis, pallor, rashes, erythema, and other variations in blood O2 level, and concentration,” especially in bright light.

But these lenses turned out to have an unintended side effect: they “may cure red-green colorblindness.”

I’m severely red-green colorblind, so I was eager to try these $300 lenses. Turns out they didn’t help me; the company said that my colorblindness is too severe. They have helped many others, though (their Amazon reviews makes that clear).

After my column appeared, I heard from another company that makes color-enhancing glasses â€" this time, specifically for red-green colorblind folks. The company’s called EnChroma, and the EnChroma Cx sunglasses are a heartbeat-skipping $600 a pair.

“Our lenses are specifically designed to address color blindness,” the company wrote to me, “and utilize a 100+ layer dielectric coating we engineered for this precise purpose by keeping the physiology of the eyes of colorblind people in mind.”

I asked to try out a pair. (You can, too: there’s a 30-day money-back guarantee.)

To begin, you figure out which kind of colorblindness you have â€" Protan or Deutan â€" by taking the test at enchroma.com. Turns out I have something called Strong Protan. (“Protanomaly is a type of red-green color vision deficiency related to a genetic anomaly of the L-cone (i.e. the red cone).”) I’d never heard of it, but whatever.

The glasses themselves look like high-end mirrored sunglasses (actually, several styles are available). They come in a sleek, compact case. I was surprised to read some of the disclaimers. First, they’re sunglasses. They don’t work indoors unless the light is very bright. Second, they’re not designed for use with a computer screen.

And, weirdly enough, these glasses won’t help you pass the standard Ishihara colorblindness test, the ones where you try to see a number composed of hundreds of dots in a circular test pattern. I still failed that test. You can read much, much more about the fine print and the scientific basis here.

In any case, I took them outside on a sunny day â€" and was floored. I mean, I had a visceral reaction to what I saw.

Colors I see just fine â€" blues, yellows, oranges â€" looked exactly the same. But all of a sudden, greens and reds looked richer. It’s almost impossible to describe in words. In fact, it’s impossible for normal-vision people to understand, even by wearing them, because they don’t see anything different with the EnChroma glasses on!

But an old brown Vermont barn roof was revealed, quite clearly, to be salmon red. Yards full of leafy trees and plants suddenly had different shades of green. Everywhere I looked, desaturated or barely discernible red things were popping.

There was a weird sensation of seeing red and green areas in the periphery of my vision.

It was a little like the Claritin TV commercials, where you’re seeing a nature scene, and then they “peel away” what is revealed to be a subtly milky film over the camera lens, making the image much richer and more saturated.

The highlight came on Day 4 of my tests, when my kids discovered a rainbow arcing across the sky, pointing and exclaiming. I looked. With my own eyes, I could barely see it. Maybe there was a soft arc of yellow, but that was it.

Then I put on the glasses. Unbelievable! Now I saw two entire additional color bands, above and below the yellow arc. It was suddenly a complete rainbow. I don’t mind admitting, I felt a surge of emotion. It was like a peek into a world I knew existed, but had never been allowed to see.

My mind raced. Is this what normal people see all the time? Until eye-transplant surgery becomes cheap and commonplace, you and I will never know.

So would I pay $600 for these glasses?

The truth is, I don’t consider colorblindness much of a handicap. When I was growing up, my mom had to help me match my clothes. People had to help me choose the right color paint in art class in school.

But traffic lights, contrary to popular myth, aren’t a problem. The bottom one appears white to me, but so what? I still know that “bottom light” means “go.” A few times a year, someone will say, “What, you can’t see that reddish area?” (Or, somewhat uselessly: “What color does grass look to you?” Uh…)

No, I’ll never grow up to be an interior designer or house painter. I review cameras, of course, but I always have non-colorblind people look over the photos before I make any comments about their color.

So for me, a guy whose career, conversation and clothing don’t depend on accurate identification of color names, $600 is too steep.

But these glasses really do work. They clearly help you distinguish colors, detect reds and greens, and restore the richness of the world you’ve been missing. They’ve brought me at least a few moments of genuine, breath-catching wonder. And it’s joyous to know that if it’s ever important enough, somewhere out there, I can lay my hands on an item that will let me see the real world of color.



India Seeks to Overhaul a Corporate World Rife With Fraud

In the wake of global scandals involving kickbacks and accounting fraud, one unlikely country, India, is aiming to set a tone in overhauling its corporate oversight laws.

This month, the nation’s upper house of Parliament passed the Companies Bill, 2012, sweeping legislation meant to overhaul auditing, impose stiffer penalties for fraud and create more government oversight of businesses.

The lower house had passed the bill last year. Once India’s president, Pranab Mukherjee, signs it into law, it will replace India’s 57-year-old corporate legislation that critics say had failed to keep up with changes in business practices.

India, a nation notoriously rife with graft and bribery, was partly motivated to pass the legislation in the wake of an accounting scandal that has been called India’s Enron. In 2009, Ramalinga Raju, the chairman of a prominent outsourcing company, Satyam Computer Services, confessed to overstating company assets and earnings by more than $1 billion, and then resigned. The fact that one company could defraud shareholders of such a large sum despite regular audits made painfully obvious the need for greater oversight in corporate India.

But some four years after that startling case, little change in corporate laws had taken place until now.

The new legislation will affect all companies doing business in India, regardless of their size, structure or ownership, including the estimated 8,000 corporations listed on three national stock exchanges.

Yet while hopes remain high that the bill will appeal to foreign investors, and kick-start India’s economic growth, nearly a decade of revisions has left a watered-down measure lacking structure. Much of the bill depends on new committees and rules that have yet to be drafted, so legal experts have doubts about its ability to police corporations.

“It started off trying to make things easier for corporates, but somewhere along the line, it became more about corporate governance and transparency,” said Nilanjana Singh, a partner at the Mumbai office of AZB & Partners, one of India’s leading corporate law firms.

Legislators were further motivated to pass meaningful changes after Reebok India accused two former executives last year of embezzling 8.7 billion rupees, or $157 million. Reebok’s parent brand, Adidas, discovered during an audit that its former India managing director and chief operating officer amassed their fortune through years of falsifying sales receipts, faked storage facilities and circular trading.

Businesses say such problems are rife in corporate India. In a 2012 report by the global consulting firm KPMG, more than half of respondents reported that their companies had experienced fraud or theft in the past two years. Most of the respondents considered fraud an inevitable cost of doing business in this country, and many Indian companies were setting aside a portion of their turnover to offset anticipated losses.

The new legislation will take some time to put in place, but some accounting officials are hopeful that real progress could be made in reforming India’s arcane systems. Nitin Kini, a partner at KPMG in India, said he believed that the bill could only bolster India’s recent economic woes that have included a free-falling rupee.

“Do we live with the current act and be happy with it, or do we look at this draft of the bill?” he asked. “Between the two, the new bill is good. It is a step in the right direction.”

The Companies Bill sets tough sanctions for embezzlement, including mandatory jail time and hefty fines for offenders. To prevent additional cases like Satyam â€" where Indian auditors failed to notice discrepancies despite auditing the company for years â€" the measure calls for the mandatory rotation of auditors and their firms.

Among other moves, a new committee, the National Financial Reporting Authority, will be created to prescribe and monitor accounting and auditing standards the first time.

The Serious Fraud Investigation Office, an agency that played a leading role in both the Satyam and Reebok cases, will be empowered to start investigations and frame charges. Until now, its authority had been limited mainly to inspecting documents and was diluted by the bevy of other investigative government agencies, all of which had overlapping areas of authority.

A new judiciary, the National Company Law Tribunal, will be created to allow swifter justice, removing corporate cases from high courts so backlogged that petitions linger there for years. The Company Law Board, a quasi-judiciary panel that also heard cases related to the older act, will be dissolved.

Companies in India will also be required to adopt uniform financial years from April to March. The bill also introduces protections for whistle-blowers, class-action suits, and provisions to prevent conflicts of interest and insider trading.

The new measure allows for greater flexibility in cross-border mergers and acquisitions, but it also requires companies to employ at least one resident director, creating a problem for many foreign-owned companies. Stock buybacks, a favored strategy to bolster share prices that is currently permitted every six months, will be restricted to once a year.

One of the most controversial clauses asks larger enterprises â€" like those with net profits of at least 50 million rupees, or $815,000 â€" to donate 2 percent of their net profits to corporate social responsibility programs.

“The problem is that some of the changes they’ve made are quite retrograde,” Ms. Singh said. For instance, the efforts to limit a company’s number of subsidiaries didn’t address substantive problems, she said. “Why should the government should care how a company structures?”

Bharat Vasani, chief legal and group general counsel for Tata Sons Limited, the holding company behind India’s multibillion-dollar conglomerate Tata Group, said the bill had many shortcomings. Among those, he said, it fails to adequately address corporate insolvency, stressing that ailing Indian companies desperately need protections like the Chapter 11 bankruptcy rules in the United States.

Removing the jurisdiction of the High Court was also a mistake, he said, because now the bill depends entirely on the efficiency of the tribunal.

“India’s experience with tribunals has not been very great,” said Mr. Vasani, explaining that they rarely receive the proper infrastructure, financial support or manpower.

“This entire legislation was drafted by the bureaucracy, and they’ve never experienced how corporate India functions,” he said.

And so far, investors in Indian stocks have greeted the passage of the bill with little enthusiasm. The S.&P. B.S.E. Sensex 500-stock index is down 7.55 percent this year, and little has changed since the passage of the bill this month.

But in time, it may pave the way for greater governance, Mr. Kini, the KPMG partner, said. Other provisions prevent the government from interfering in daily business decisions, he said.

“So in that sense, it simplifies how an organization can govern itself, but also puts enough scope for oversight,” he said. “But it will take time.”



Why a Twitter I.P.O. Should Go Dutch

Maybe Twitter should Google its initial public offering.

Instead of a typical share sale, the Internet search giant catered to individual investors with what’s known as a modified Dutch auction. Though flawed, the unconventional approach is worth consideration by Twitter and its boss Dick Costolo as anticipation builds for the $10 billion social network to go public.

Start with the premise that Twitter, because it has over 500 million users, will confront mass appeal for its shares beyond the standard demand from mutual and pension funds. In another similarity with Google and Facebook, traditional valuation metrics may be tough to apply. And even if some investors focus on fundamentals, Twitter risks unleashing a stock whose main attraction will be that many others want to buy it.

The process used by Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin successfully mitigated some of the hype Facebook couldn’t. The auction style asks investors to declare how much they’re willing to pay and for how many shares. The price steadily declines until it reaches a level where all the shares on offer would sell - at which point all interested buyers commit.

Google left itself latitude to cut the price further, which it ultimately did. The decision elicited much criticism but also eradicated the feared “winner’s curse” that instead would years later befall Facebook investors. The social network’s 2012 debut was marred by technological failures and in only a few months the shares had fallen by half. By contrast, Google stock popped by about 18 percent on its first day of trading, achieving the generally desired result of raising the targeted funds for the company and any selling owners while giving new shareholders a warm welcome.

Not everything was handled sensibly in Google’s I.P.O. For example, Twitter would be wise not to copy the ultra-short 15-day lockup period for share sales that Mr. Page and Mr. Brin allowed for some executives. Google also pushed back too hard against Wall Street.

Using an auction reduces the standard role of underwriters, but they’re still needed to liaise with investors. Over-aggressively slashing fees irked bankers unnecessarily and cost the company some important goodwill. Learning from the Google and Facebook market debuts would give Twitter a chance to master the popular tech IP.O..

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



I.B.M. to Buy Trusteer, a Security Firm

I.B.M. agreed on Thursday to buy Trusteer, a provider of security software, to add advanced protection to its cloud service offerings, including mobile payments. Terms of the transaction weren't disclosed.

Third Point Reinsurance Falls Briefly in Market Debut

The reinsurance arm of Third Point, the hedge fund run by Daniel S. Loeb, had a rocky market debut on Thursday, opening at $12.25 a share, below its initial public offering price.

By midmorning, however, the company’s stock had rebounded, rising as high as $12.68 a share.

Underwriters for Third Point Re priced the stock sale at $12.50, at the low end of its forecasted price range. But they slightly cut the size of the offering, to 22.1 million shares.

The offering valued the financial firm at nearly $1.3 billion.

Third Point Re’s business is reinsurance, in which it takes over insurance policies in return for a fee, essentially backing up traditional insurers. Mr. Loeb’s firm moved into the sector at a time when other hedge funds, like Greenlight Capital and SAC Capital, had as well.

Though Third Point Re serves as a reinsurer, its investment portfolio is managed by its parent company, providing the hedge fund with a stable source of capital.

Third Point Re trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “TPRE.”



Silver Lake Sumeru Invests in Accounting Software Firm

While Silver Lake remains locked in a battle over Dell, another arm of the technology-focused investment firm is quietly doing other deals.

Silver Lake Sumeru, the firm’s middle-market group, is leading an investment in BlackLine Systems, a maker of accounting software, the company is announcing on Thursday. The investment, for a majority stake in the company, is worth about $220 million, according to a person briefed on the matter.

The deal came after “pretty fierce competition” among investment firms, another person familiar with the investment said. BlackLine hired Evercore Partners to handle a process that ultimately led to Silver Lake Sumeru, which has a $1.1 billion fund.

The investment is intended to help the company grow around the world. Therese Tucker, the founder of BlackLine, will remain chief executive, according to the announcement.

“We see an enormous opportunity to bring world-class transaction analytics and workflow technology to financial process management,” Hollie Moore Haynes, managing director at Silver Lake Sumeru, said in a statement. “BlackLine Systems provides the core foundation for that strategy.”

Based in Los Angeles, BlackLine makes a suite of accounting software that is intended to replace tools like Excel and simple pencil and paper. The product is available on a “software as a service” model, in which the vendor hosts the software and offers it to customers over the Internet.

In the first half of this year, the company’s revenue increased more than 55 percent from the same period a year earlier, according to Thursday’s announcement. BlackLine’s customer base â€" which includes the Nasdaq OMX Group, Zillow, the Hearst Corporation, AT&T and Boeing â€" has had average annual growth of 50 percent since 2006, according to the company.

Ms. Tucker, who founded the company in 2001, was previously the chief technology officer of SunGard Treasury Systems. The company’s Web site describes her as a “software developer at heart.”

“Because of BlackLine’s strong leadership position in the market and impressive year-over-year growth, we had a choice of investment partners from a number of reputable firms,” Ms. Tucker said in a statement. “We selected Silver Lake Sumeru because we felt that their culture and values closely aligned with BlackLine’s.”

Silver Lake Sumeru is partnering in the investment with BlackLine’s management and Iconiq Capital, an investment firm catering to wealthy families. Ms. Tucker and Mario Spanicciati, executive vice president of BlackLine, are retaining “significant” equity stakes, the announcement said.

Ms. Haynes of Silver Lake is joining BlackLine’s board, along with Jason Babcoke, a prinicpal of the investment firm, and John Brennan, a managing director. Will Griffith of Iconiq is also joining BlackLine’s board.

In addition to Evercore, BlackLine received advice from the law firm Munger, Tolles & Olson. The investment group was advised by the law firm Kirkland & Ellis.



Morning Agenda: Oversight at JPMorgan Is Scrutinized

Criminal charges on Wednesday against two former traders for JPMorgan Chase intensified the scrutiny of the bank’s executives in New York, where, federal authorities say, lax controls and the pressure for profits made the problem worse, Ben Protess and Jessica Silver-Greenberg report in DealBook.

The employees â€" Javier Martin-Artajo, a manager who oversaw the trading strategy, and Julien Grout, a low-level trader in London â€" were accused of manipulating the books to disguise hundreds of millions of dollars in losses, operating for months with scant supervision and with the impression that higher-ups supported them.

When, for example, Mr. Martin-Artajo directed Mr. Grout to record losses only in extreme circumstances, he claimed the directive came from New York, meaning the senior management of the bank. People inside the bank, however, dispute that notion.

“This was not a tempest in a teapot but rather a perfect storm of individual misconduct and inadequate internal controls,” Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, said at a news conference to announce the charges. It was a reference to a comment made by Jamie Dimon, the bank’s chief executive, who originally dismissed concerns about the trades as a “tempest in a teapot” before later saying he was “dead wrong.”

The criminal complaints offered a window into how Wall Street values huge derivatives trades, a process that involves a considerable amount of guesswork, DealBook’s Peter Eavis writes. “One way that traders value their holdings is to use pricing data from a range of banks,” Mr. Eavis writes. “The problem with using this approach is that it may not be fully based on prices that occurred in actual transactions.”

BATISTA GIVES UP CONTROL OF A COMPANY  | Eike Batista, the troubled Brazilian businessman, has taken further steps to dismantle his empire of energy, logistics and mining companies, Dan Horch writes in DealBook. Mr. Batista announced on Wednesday night that he would sell a controlling stake in one of his companies, the LLX logistics firm, for about $560 million to EIG Global Energy Partners, an energy investment firm based in Washington.

“People briefed on the matter confirmed on Wednesday that another of his companies, the petroleum firm OGX, has hired the Blackstone Group as a financial adviser,” Mr. Horch writes. “The move may indicate that OGX, which has over $3 billion in debt trading at under 20 cents on the dollar, is planning to either sell some assets or restructure its debt.”

PAULSON’S BID FOR STEINWAY  | 
John A. Paulson, the hedge fund billionaire, already owns three Steinway & Sons pianos: the medium Model M grand, the larger Model O and the nearly seven-foot-long Model B, together worth tens of thousands of dollars. But Mr. Paulson, in investing parlance, was looking to increase his exposure. On Wednesday, his firm, Paulson & Company, agreed to buy the company that makes the pianos, Steinway Musical Instruments, for $512 million.

The move raised eyebrows both in the world of music and on Wall Street. Mr. Paulson made billions in 2007, largely with a bet against the housing market. His firm specializes in mortgages, gold and other financial assets. And while Paulson & Company owns stakes in companies, it has never before bought one outright. But Mr. Paulson said that the calculation was rather simple â€" he loves the pianos.

“I’ve always been enamored with the product,” Mr. Paulson said in an interview on Wednesday. “You have Mercedes in cars, and top brands in every other area. But no one has such a high share of the high end.”

ON THE AGENDA  |  The Consumer Price Index for July is out at 8:30 a.m. Data on industrial production in July is out at 9:15 a.m. Wal-Mart Stores and Kohl’s report earnings before the market opens. Nordstrom and Applied Materials report earnings this evening.

THIRD POINT REINSURANCE ARM PRICES I.P.O.  | The reinsurance arm of Third Point, the hedge fund run by Daniel S. Loeb, is expected to begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday, after pricing its initial public offering at $12.50 a share, at the bottom end of an estimated range. The size of the offering was trimmed slightly, to just under 22.1 million shares from 22.2 million shares, reducing the proceeds to about $276.3 million, DealBook’s Michael J. de la Merced reports.

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Justice Dept. Takes a New View on Airline Mergers  |  “A day after the Justice Department filed a lawsuit to block the merger of American Airlines and US Airways, regulators and industry officials continued to wrestle with a central question,” The New York Times writes, “What is the best way to protect consumers?” NEW YORK TIMES

German Cable Merger, Already Completed, Is Thrown in Doubt  |  Liberty Global’s 3.2 billion euro ($4.2 billion) acquisition of KabelBW has been cast in doubt after a regional court in Germany reversed the antitrust regulator’s approval for the deal, Reuters reports. REUTERS

Muzak Maker May Be Sold for $850 Million  |  Mood Media, which provides Muzak to restaurants, hotels, retailers and other businesses, is nearing the end of an auction process, The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Icahn’s Plans for Apple Could Benefit Shareholders  |  The message from Carl C. Icahn to Apple was clear: it should buy back more stock and fast. It would be a smart, relatively effortless move, Robert Cyran of Reuters Breakingviews writes. REUTERS BREAKINGVIEWS

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Emerging Markets’ Growth Falters, as Old Economies Rise  |  “The balance of world economic growth is tipping in another direction,” The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

Barclays Bankers Said to Defect to Rothschild  |  Barclays has “lost three senior mergers and acquisitions bankers to Rothschild in recent weeks, according to people with knowledge of the matter,” Bloomberg News reports. BLOOMBERG NEWS

Morgan Stanley Reduces Risk in Credit Correlation Portfolio  |  Morgan Stanley and other banks are seeking to reduce the capital associated with the derivatives business dating to before the financial crisis, Bloomberg News writes. BLOOMBERG NEWS

PRIVATE EQUITY »

A New Billionaire Minted at Blackstone  |  Jonathan Gray, the head of the real estate business of the Blackstone Group, has recently become a billionaire thanks to the value of his stock holdings in the investment firm, Bloomberg News reports. BLOOMBERG NEWS

BTG Pactual of Brazil Said to Seek $1.5 Billion for Private Equity Fund  | 
BLOOMBERG NEWS

HEDGE FUNDS »

Third Point Acquires Stake in Disney  |  Third Point, the hedge fund run by Daniel S. Loeb, disclosed that it owned a $113.7 million stake in the Walt Disney Company, Bloomberg News reports. The stake is not the only investment in Hollywood for Mr. Loeb, who had also been pressuring Sony to sell part of its entertainment business. BLOOMBERG NEWS

Peltz Buys $1.3 Billion Stake in DuPont  |  The activist investor Nelson Peltz has amassed a stake in DuPont with plans to push the chemical maker to improve its long-term prospects for growth, The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Einhorn’s Firm Discloses Stake in Rite Aid  |  Greenlight Capital, the hedge fund run by David Einhorn, disclosed on Wednesday that it owned 20.2 million shares of Rite Aid, The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Our Daily Facebook Fix  |  “Checking Facebook has become almost as embedded in the lives of Americans as getting a cup of coffee,” Vindu Goel writes on the Bits blog. NEW YORK TIMES BITS

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Chegg, a Textbook Rental Start-Up, Seeks to Go Public  |  Chegg, a start-up focused on the business of renting textbooks, filed for an initial public offering on Wednesday, intending to use the proceeds to raise additional capital and reduce debt. DealBook »

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Euro Zone’s Recession Ends, for Now  |  “The weak upturn, high unemployment and other problems on the Continent left open the question of whether the nascent recovery can last,” The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

European Banks Move to Bolster Capital  |  Five years after the financial crisis, European regulators are pressuring banks to reduce assets and increase capital, Bloomberg News writes. BLOOMBERG NEWS

U.S. Puts a Helpful Face on Its Fraud Case  |  The Justice Department has learned an important lesson about putting on cases involving complex Wall Street financial machinations, and has lined up a witness who can explain the case fully, Peter J. Henning writes in the White Collar Watch column. DealBook »



Morning Agenda: Oversight at JPMorgan Is Scrutinized

Criminal charges on Wednesday against two former traders for JPMorgan Chase intensified the scrutiny of the bank’s executives in New York, where, federal authorities say, lax controls and the pressure for profits made the problem worse, Ben Protess and Jessica Silver-Greenberg report in DealBook.

The employees â€" Javier Martin-Artajo, a manager who oversaw the trading strategy, and Julien Grout, a low-level trader in London â€" were accused of manipulating the books to disguise hundreds of millions of dollars in losses, operating for months with scant supervision and with the impression that higher-ups supported them.

When, for example, Mr. Martin-Artajo directed Mr. Grout to record losses only in extreme circumstances, he claimed the directive came from New York, meaning the senior management of the bank. People inside the bank, however, dispute that notion.

“This was not a tempest in a teapot but rather a perfect storm of individual misconduct and inadequate internal controls,” Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, said at a news conference to announce the charges. It was a reference to a comment made by Jamie Dimon, the bank’s chief executive, who originally dismissed concerns about the trades as a “tempest in a teapot” before later saying he was “dead wrong.”

The criminal complaints offered a window into how Wall Street values huge derivatives trades, a process that involves a considerable amount of guesswork, DealBook’s Peter Eavis writes. “One way that traders value their holdings is to use pricing data from a range of banks,” Mr. Eavis writes. “The problem with using this approach is that it may not be fully based on prices that occurred in actual transactions.”

BATISTA GIVES UP CONTROL OF A COMPANY  | Eike Batista, the troubled Brazilian businessman, has taken further steps to dismantle his empire of energy, logistics and mining companies, Dan Horch writes in DealBook. Mr. Batista announced on Wednesday night that he would sell a controlling stake in one of his companies, the LLX logistics firm, for about $560 million to EIG Global Energy Partners, an energy investment firm based in Washington.

“People briefed on the matter confirmed on Wednesday that another of his companies, the petroleum firm OGX, has hired the Blackstone Group as a financial adviser,” Mr. Horch writes. “The move may indicate that OGX, which has over $3 billion in debt trading at under 20 cents on the dollar, is planning to either sell some assets or restructure its debt.”

PAULSON’S BID FOR STEINWAY  | 
John A. Paulson, the hedge fund billionaire, already owns three Steinway & Sons pianos: the medium Model M grand, the larger Model O and the nearly seven-foot-long Model B, together worth tens of thousands of dollars. But Mr. Paulson, in investing parlance, was looking to increase his exposure. On Wednesday, his firm, Paulson & Company, agreed to buy the company that makes the pianos, Steinway Musical Instruments, for $512 million.

The move raised eyebrows both in the world of music and on Wall Street. Mr. Paulson made billions in 2007, largely with a bet against the housing market. His firm specializes in mortgages, gold and other financial assets. And while Paulson & Company owns stakes in companies, it has never before bought one outright. But Mr. Paulson said that the calculation was rather simple â€" he loves the pianos.

“I’ve always been enamored with the product,” Mr. Paulson said in an interview on Wednesday. “You have Mercedes in cars, and top brands in every other area. But no one has such a high share of the high end.”

ON THE AGENDA  |  The Consumer Price Index for July is out at 8:30 a.m. Data on industrial production in July is out at 9:15 a.m. Wal-Mart Stores and Kohl’s report earnings before the market opens. Nordstrom and Applied Materials report earnings this evening.

THIRD POINT REINSURANCE ARM PRICES I.P.O.  | The reinsurance arm of Third Point, the hedge fund run by Daniel S. Loeb, is expected to begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday, after pricing its initial public offering at $12.50 a share, at the bottom end of an estimated range. The size of the offering was trimmed slightly, to just under 22.1 million shares from 22.2 million shares, reducing the proceeds to about $276.3 million, DealBook’s Michael J. de la Merced reports.

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Justice Dept. Takes a New View on Airline Mergers  |  “A day after the Justice Department filed a lawsuit to block the merger of American Airlines and US Airways, regulators and industry officials continued to wrestle with a central question,” The New York Times writes, “What is the best way to protect consumers?” NEW YORK TIMES

German Cable Merger, Already Completed, Is Thrown in Doubt  |  Liberty Global’s 3.2 billion euro ($4.2 billion) acquisition of KabelBW has been cast in doubt after a regional court in Germany reversed the antitrust regulator’s approval for the deal, Reuters reports. REUTERS

Muzak Maker May Be Sold for $850 Million  |  Mood Media, which provides Muzak to restaurants, hotels, retailers and other businesses, is nearing the end of an auction process, The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Icahn’s Plans for Apple Could Benefit Shareholders  |  The message from Carl C. Icahn to Apple was clear: it should buy back more stock and fast. It would be a smart, relatively effortless move, Robert Cyran of Reuters Breakingviews writes. REUTERS BREAKINGVIEWS

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Emerging Markets’ Growth Falters, as Old Economies Rise  |  “The balance of world economic growth is tipping in another direction,” The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

Barclays Bankers Said to Defect to Rothschild  |  Barclays has “lost three senior mergers and acquisitions bankers to Rothschild in recent weeks, according to people with knowledge of the matter,” Bloomberg News reports. BLOOMBERG NEWS

Morgan Stanley Reduces Risk in Credit Correlation Portfolio  |  Morgan Stanley and other banks are seeking to reduce the capital associated with the derivatives business dating to before the financial crisis, Bloomberg News writes. BLOOMBERG NEWS

PRIVATE EQUITY »

A New Billionaire Minted at Blackstone  |  Jonathan Gray, the head of the real estate business of the Blackstone Group, has recently become a billionaire thanks to the value of his stock holdings in the investment firm, Bloomberg News reports. BLOOMBERG NEWS

BTG Pactual of Brazil Said to Seek $1.5 Billion for Private Equity Fund  | 
BLOOMBERG NEWS

HEDGE FUNDS »

Third Point Acquires Stake in Disney  |  Third Point, the hedge fund run by Daniel S. Loeb, disclosed that it owned a $113.7 million stake in the Walt Disney Company, Bloomberg News reports. The stake is not the only investment in Hollywood for Mr. Loeb, who had also been pressuring Sony to sell part of its entertainment business. BLOOMBERG NEWS

Peltz Buys $1.3 Billion Stake in DuPont  |  The activist investor Nelson Peltz has amassed a stake in DuPont with plans to push the chemical maker to improve its long-term prospects for growth, The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Einhorn’s Firm Discloses Stake in Rite Aid  |  Greenlight Capital, the hedge fund run by David Einhorn, disclosed on Wednesday that it owned 20.2 million shares of Rite Aid, The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Our Daily Facebook Fix  |  “Checking Facebook has become almost as embedded in the lives of Americans as getting a cup of coffee,” Vindu Goel writes on the Bits blog. NEW YORK TIMES BITS

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Chegg, a Textbook Rental Start-Up, Seeks to Go Public  |  Chegg, a start-up focused on the business of renting textbooks, filed for an initial public offering on Wednesday, intending to use the proceeds to raise additional capital and reduce debt. DealBook »

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Euro Zone’s Recession Ends, for Now  |  “The weak upturn, high unemployment and other problems on the Continent left open the question of whether the nascent recovery can last,” The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

European Banks Move to Bolster Capital  |  Five years after the financial crisis, European regulators are pressuring banks to reduce assets and increase capital, Bloomberg News writes. BLOOMBERG NEWS

U.S. Puts a Helpful Face on Its Fraud Case  |  The Justice Department has learned an important lesson about putting on cases involving complex Wall Street financial machinations, and has lined up a witness who can explain the case fully, Peter J. Henning writes in the White Collar Watch column. DealBook »