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As Investors Jump Ship, SAC Looks to Cut Back

The wildly successful hedge fund SAC Capital Advisors typically heads into the end of the year in a position of strength, promising market-beating returns for its investors and outsize paydays for its owner, Steven A. Cohen.

But as it looks to the final months of 2013, SAC’s prospects are grim as the fund, while operating under a criminal indictment, prepares to become leaner with virtually no outside investors.

With a regularly scheduled deadline of midnight on Friday for SAC investors to ask for their money back, the fund expects to lose virtually all its outside capital. Already this year, investors have requested $5 billion of the $6 billion in outside capital from the $15 billion that the fund had at the start of the year. That money will be paid out in installments over the coming months.

The Blackstone Group, the influential hedge fund investor that once had more than $500 million with SAC, has pulled its entire investment from the firm, according to people briefed on the matter, speaking only on the condition of anonymity.

The news of a final wave of withdrawals comes days after SAC quietly closed Parameter Capital, one of its trading units, and disclosed in a securities filing that it had reduced its stock positions by $2 billion as of June 30 in anticipation of having to fulfill its investors’ withdrawal requests.

Jonathan Gasthalter, a spokesman for the fund, declined to comment on investors’ requests to withdraw funds.

As Wall Street watches SAC shrink, it hopes that the fund, which for years has been a lucrative client at many of the large banks, continues to operate as a firm that manages Mr. Cohen’s fortune. The roughly $9 billion left in the fund at the end of the year will be mostly Mr. Cohen’s, with a small percentage belonging to his employees.

SAC has told employees that it can endure the wave of client withdrawals and operate the fund as a “family office” that mostly manages Mr. Cohen’s money. But the government’s continuing investigation into SAC and Mr. Cohen continues to raise questions about the fund’s future.

The firm is fighting a criminal indictment issued on July 25 that charged SAC with carrying out a vast insider trading conspiracy. At least 10 former employees have been implicated in illegal trading while at the fund; five have admitted guilt.

Federal prosecutors said SAC’s misconduct “resulted in insider trading that was substantial, pervasive and on a scale without known precedent in the hedge fund industry.”

Prosecutors have separately filed a civil forfeiture complaint stating that the government could seek “any and all” assets in the fund.

While the government has taken an aggressive prosecutorial stance against SAC, it has also proceeded cautiously to try to limit the collateral damage from the indictment. Prosecutors decided not to try to freeze SAC’s assets or prevent it from trading, a move that could have saddled outside investors with losses and hurt the Wall Street banks that do business with it.

While the government stopped short of bringing criminal charges against Mr. Cohen, it has not absolved him of responsibility for his firm’s suspected wrongdoing. In a civil action, the Securities and Exchange Commission accused Mr. Cohen of failing to supervise his employees, a case that could result in Mr. Cohen being barred from the securities industry.

“The government has a wide variety of potential penalties it can choose from,” said Steven Nadel, a hedge fund lawyer at Seward & Kissel, “ranging from monetary fines to some sort of ban on trading.”

Mr. Cohen has already paid a hefty penalty to securities regulators. This year, SAC agreed to pay a record $616 million fine to settle two civil insider trading lawsuits â€" money that effectively comes out of Mr. Cohen’s pocket. The penalty surpassed fines handed down during the 1980s for Wall Street scandals involving Michael R. Milken and Ivan F. Boesky.

For now, it is business as usual for SAC’s banking partners, according to two people employed at brokerage firms that work closely with the hedge fund. While there are rumors of layoffs, “it doesn’t feel like a lot of the investment teams have left yet,” one analyst said, adding that the bank’s contacts at SAC “so far seem to be there.”

Even as accusations and charges continued to emerge, some people on Wall Street have stood by the hedge fund. This month, Gary D. Cohn, the president of Goldman Sachs, announced publicly that his firm remained in business with SAC.

Under the deal that SAC lawyers reached with the government that allows the fund to continue trading, called a protective order, the fund is required to hold a set amount of its assets equal to $5 billion, a person briefed on the matter said.

In response to a question about whether one Wall Street bank would end its relationship with SAC in light of recent revelations, one analyst asked rhetorically, “How many $9 billion hedge funds are out there?”

“Not many,” the analyst said.

Ben Protess contributed reporting.



Week in Review: Failed Trades in London Add to Inquiry in New York

Criminal cases against two former JPMorgan Chase traders who worked in an office building near the Thames River spotlighted federal authorities’ inquiry of bank executives on Park Avenue.

And the Justice Department filed a lawsuit to block the creation of the world’s largest airline.

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

FRIDAY, AUG. 16

Judge Denies Icahn’s Effort to Move Dell Meeting | The ruling means that Michael S. Dell’s takeover bid will proceed to a shareholder vote as scheduled for Sept. 12. DealBook »

THURSDAY, AUG. 15

With New Bill, India Seeks to Overhaul a Corporate World Rife With Fraud | It will replace 57-year-old corporate legislation that critics say had failed to keep up with changes in business practices. DealBook »

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 14

Charges Against 2 Traders Fault JPMorgan for Lack of Oversight | The future of the investigation hinges on whether Javier Martin-Artajo and Julien Grout decide to cooperate. DealBook »

News Analysis: Unreliable Guesswork in Valuing Murky Trades | A cadre of JPMorgan employees embarked on a foolhardy quest to trade their way out of trouble. DealBook »

To His Collection of Steinways, Hedge Fund Titan Adds Their Maker | John A. Paulson said that the calculation was rather simple â€" he loves the pianos. DealBook »

Once a Symbol of Brazil’s Might, Billionaire Sells Controlling Stake in a Company | Eike Batista has seen his own net worth, once about $30 billion, tumble to well under $1 billion. DealBook »

América Móvil’s $9.5 Billion Offer for KPN Under Scrutiny | Carlos Slim Helú’s European expansion plans may be running into trouble from a a Dutch foundation with the power to block his bid for the Dutch cellphone operator. DealBook »

TUESDAY, AUG. 13

U.S., Filing Suit, Moves to Block Airline Merger | The move surprised airline industry officials, but it underscored a newly aggressive approach by the Justice Department’s antitrust division. DealBook »

The Loudest Voice Fails | William A. Ackman’s embarrassing retreat from J. C. Penney’s board may highlight not only the flaws of the hedge fund titan’s approach and his force of personality but also the limits of what shareholder activists can achieve. DealBook »

Questions Arise About Herbalife Product Safety | Herbalife is at the heart of a Wall Street brawl. Now the company’s handling of a product safety issue in 2011 is drawing scrutiny. DealBook »

U.S. Faces Obstacle in Bid to Arrest 2 in Big Trading Loss at JPMorgan | One of the employees remains on vacation while the other has returned to his native France, complicating plans to extradite them. DealBook »

New York and U.S. Open Investigations Into Bitcoin | Lawmakers are worried that upstart virtual currencies can be used to evade taxes, defraud investors and assist trade in illegal products like drugs and pornography. DealBook »

Deal Professor: Thriving Financial Product, Despite a Record of Failure | Silver Eagle’s I.P.O. is the largest in the past seven years for a SPAC, but Steven M. Davidoff says the outcome is not so clear for its investors. DealBook »

MONDAY, AUG. 12

Blackberry Sends a Message | The abrupt decline of BlackBerry illustrates how consumers and investors demand almost instant change these days, especially from tech companies. And the window for redemption for a tech company that misses a step can be tiny indeed. DealBook »

SAC Closes a Trade Unit as It Starts to Retrench | Some SAC employees are already covertly conducting job interviews in hotel rooms and private homes to avoid being spotted on rivals’ trading floors. DealBook »

In One Bundle of Mortgages, the Subprime Crisis Reverberates | A Goldman Sachs bond with a complex name â€" GSAMP Trust 2007 NC1 â€" has wide-ranging impact, on the bankers who sold the deal, the struggling homeowners, and taxpayers who helped pick up the bill. DealBook »

DealBook Column: Wall St. Debates Who Should Pay Legal Bills | “In this era, positions on Wall Street are fraught with all sorts of perils,” a partner at Marino, Tortorella & Boyle tells Andrew Ross Sorkin. DealBook »

Suit Accuses Online Lender of Violating New York Rate Caps | Western Sky Financial offers short-term loans at interest rates of more than 300 percent. Its affiliates claim connections to American Indian tribes tribes â€" ties that the lenders have argued immunize them from federal and state laws. DealBook »

SUNDAY, AUG. 11

With I.P.O.’s on the Rise, Analysts Get New Scrutiny | Companies routinely interview analysts when selecting bankers to underwrite their I.P.O.’s. During these meetings, the analysts say, they increasingly feel pressure to say the right things. DealBook »

Prosecutors and F.B.I. Examine JPMorgan | The investigation could yield a fine and a reprimand of the bank. The action would come in addition to civil charges from the Securities and Exchange Commission. DealBook »

WEEK IN VERSE

‘Learn to Fly’ | In a merger that was unopposed by the Justice Department, the Foo Fighters and Tenacious D parodied the movie “Airplane!” YouTube »



Brazilian Fund, Under Fire, Has a Defender

SÃO PAULO, Brazil â€" GP Investments, one of Latin America’s largest private equity funds, has come under fire over its executives’ compensation while its stock price languishes, but the fund is receiving some support from Wall Street.

The investment firm Third Avenue Management, which owns about 12 percent of GP Investments, co-founded by the Brazilian billionaire Jorge Paulo Lemann, said that it remains positive about the firm’s long-term outlook and pushed back against the criticism about compensation.

Late last month, James Gulbrandsen, a partner at the investment firm NCH Capital, another shareholder in GP Investments, sent a letter to the firm criticizing how it pays its executives. “We demand that you change your compensation policies to align with shareholder interests,” he wrote, adding that the company needs to “reduce cash compensation to management dramatically.”

In a statement, GP Investments said: “With respect to the methodology for calculating bonuses, GP Investments would like to make clear that team remuneration is in line with market practices for the sector.”

Cash compensation to management in 2012 was 24.5 million reais, or $10.47 million, nearly double what it was in 2011, according to documents filed with the CVM, Brazil’s counterpart to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The firm does not disclose what each executive is paid individually. Its share price, meanwhile, has dropped 75 percent over the last five years.

NCH contends the stock is lagging not because of bad investments â€" it describes them as excellent, in fact â€" but because of outsize compensation and a failure to live up to promises to stockholders, who hold nonvoting shares in the firm, to share more of the management and performance fees. NCH is also pressing GP Investments to buy back more stock.

But Amit Wadhwaney, who manages Third Avenue’s international portfolios, rejected the criticism, calling it specious, and said his firm did not support NCH’s campaign.

He said that investors should have known what they were getting into when they bought their nonvoting shares. “You can kick and scream all you want, but you don’t have a leg to stand on,” he said.

Mr. Wadhwaney added that public investors, including his firm, “own the shares but GP owns the general partners” and should be able to determine the cost of managing their business.

He also thinks the firm deserves to do so, arguing that “GP’s historical investment record has been stellar.”

Mr. Gulbrandsen does not dispute this, but he disagrees with the notion that owners of nonvoting shares should not protest compensation. He contends that since his firm started investing, it has been misled by GP Investments in investor presentations and internal meetings.

“Since the company went public, it has sold its stock to investors under the premise that we will be able to participate with them in sharing management and performance fees and carried interest,” he said. But he contends that by his calculations, since 2006 all of the management fees and 76 percent of total fees have been paid as compensation.

GP Investments “is still operating as a private partnership but has the gall to purport to shareholders that we are partners with them,” he said.

At the moment, the firm is facing tough times, at least on its balance sheet.

On Wednesday night, the company reported a wider second-quarter net loss of $63.8 million, compared with a $49.46 million loss in the period a year earlier. Its net asset value dropped to $477.6 million from $560.7 million.
Its stock closed Thursday at 3.90 reais, compared with 4.44 reais a year earlier.

Still, the company’s stock trades at significant discount when net asset value is compared with market capitalization, a reason that NCH says that it continues to buy shares.

While Mr. Paulo Lemann is no longer involved with GP Investments, it continues to play an important role in Brazil. In its 21-year history, the firm, run by Antonio Bonchristiano and Fersen Lambranho since 2003, has invested more than $5 billion in at least 52 deals.

It has backed important Brazilian companies like BR Malls, the country’s largest shopping mall operator, and the steakhouse chain Fogo de Chao. Last year GP Investments sold that company to Thomas H. Lee Partners for $400 million, generating an internal rate of return of 25 percent.

GP Investments’ current fund backs companies considered promising, like BR Towers, a bet on Brazil’s need to ramp up telecommunications infrastructure. On Thursday, during an investors’ conference call, the company said it had added 2,113 cellphone towers during the second quarter, doubling its total to 4,128.

GP Investments has also done some out-of-the-box thinking. In May it acquired 26.7 percent of the Swiss fund APEN, previously known as AIG Private Equity, which was established by the AIG Group in 1999. As part of this transaction, AIG sold its remaining shares in the fund while Newbury Partners and the Fortress Investment Group joined GP, which said it acquired its stake at a 48 percent discount to net asset value.

Mr. Wadhwaney called it a savvy move by GP, saying, “There is a whole bunch of stuff they are doing which is not obvious.”

That is in part why he is cool to NCH’s push for a stock buyback.

“GP has to invest in building businesses and new opportunities and can do a lot better in this environment than just buying back its stock,” Mr. Wadhwaney said.



Judge Rules Against Icahn’s Efforts to Reschedule Dell Meeting

A Delaware judge on Friday denied a request by Carl Icahn to reschedule Dell Inc.‘s annual meeting, dealing a blow to the activist investor’s fight against the deal.

Throughout Friday’s hearing, Chancellor Leo Strine of Delaware’s Court of Chancery defended the work by a special committee of the company’s board, saying that its efforts to secure a higher offer from Michael S. Dell and his partner, the investment firm Silver Lake, benefited shareholders. Mr. Icahn and his ally, Southeastern Asset Management, had accused the directors of working against investors’ interests.

The move by Chancellor Strine means that Mr. Dell’s takeover bid will likely proceed to a shareholder vote as scheduled on Sept 12.

Filing a preliminary proxy statement on Friday, Mr. Icahn and his ally, Southeastern Asset Management, reiterated their effort to replace Dell’s entire board.

The filing reiterated the two investors’ director candidates, including Mr. Icahn himself; A.B. Krongard, a former executive director of the Central Intelligence Agency; and Rahul N. Merchant, the chief information officer for New York City.

Both Mr. Icahn and Southeastern had hoped to force the Dell board to hold an annual meeting on Sept. 12, the same day that shareholders are scheduled to vote on Mr. Dell’s buyout proposal.

The board has currently scheduled a separate annual meeting on Oct. 17, which Mr. Icahn and Southeastern argued violates Delaware law. The two pressed a lawsuit in Delaware’s Court of Chancery in an effort to prevent the two votes from being held separately; during Friday’s hearing, lawyers for the dissident investors asked to fast-track their case.

Mr. Icahn and Southeastern also sought to nullify a decision by a special committee of Dell’s board to change both the voting requirements of the proposed sale and its record date, both meant to ease the chances that the deal will succeed.

Instead of requiring a majority of all independent shares be voted in favor of Mr. Dell’s takeover, the special committee will now accept only a majority of shares voted. And the director group also moved the record date, or the day by which shareholders must have held shares to qualify for the deal vote, to Aug. 13 from June 3, which would let in more shareholders considered likely to vote in favor of the transaction.

“Icahn and Southeastern are seeking to change the Dell board because they believe that the Dell board must be completely reconstituted to ensure that the interests of the stockholders, the true owners of Dell, are appropriately represented in the Dell boardroom,” the two shareholders said in a statement. “Icahn and Southeastern have nominated directors who have strong, relevant backgrounds and who are committed to fully exploring all opportunities to unlock stockholder value.”

Dell’s board has argued that the moves were meant to secure the best possible outcome for the company’s shareholders. In exchange for the concessions, Mr. Dell and Silver Lake agreed in early August to raise their bid to $13.75 a share plus a special dividend of 13 cents a share.



UBS Repays Loan It Received During Bailout

LONDON - The Swiss National Bank said Friday that UBS repaid in full a loan it received as part of a government bailout five years ago. The move clears the way for UBS to repurchase a portfolio of toxic assets that were moved off the UBS books during the financial crisis.

UBS said in July that it planned to buy back a fund set up by the Swiss central bank to include illiquid or high-risk assets as part of UBS’s bailout. Repaying its loan in full to the central bank was a condition for the purchase of the fund.

“This is an important step which will close this chapter in the firm’s history with a positive outcome,” UBS said in a statement.

Like some of its rivals, UBS needed government help when financial markets froze in the aftermath of the collapse of Lehman Brothers and losses mounted. The bank spun off $38.7 billion of toxic assets into a fund backed by the government and the central bank. As part of the rescue deal, UBS acquired an option to buy back the fund’s equity.

Under the agreement, UBS would pay $1 billion to the Swiss National Bank for the fund and the remaining equity value of the fund would be split between the central bank and UBS. The fund reported a profit of $830 million for the first half of this year, according to the Swiss National Bank.

Switzerland’s central bank said the fund would now be valued and the repurchase would take about three months.

Buying back the fund would help the UBS chief executive, Sergio P. Ermotti, speed up the bank’s transformation from an unprofitable institution with a troubled investment banking strategy to a profitable bank with a sufficient capital cushion and a focus on wealth management. UBS reported last month that its earnings rose 32 percent in the three months that ended June 30 to 690 million Swiss francs ($740 million).

Investors have been welcoming UBS’s plan to buy back the fund in the fourth quarter of this year. UBS shares rose after the announcement in July that the purchase of the fund would increase UBS’s capital ratios, which are already higher than many of its competitors.

UBS said in July that the fund’s equity would increase the bank’s common equity ratio under new accounting rules called Basel III by 70 basis points to 90 basis points (One basis point equals 0.01 percentage point). UBS’s core Tier 1 capital ratio was 11.2 percent at the end of the second quarter.



Mayer, Yahoo’s C.E.O., Goes Chic

Marissa Mayer, the chief executive of Yahoo, has appeared on the cover of Bloomberg Businessweek, Fortune and other business magazines. But next month, she graces the pages of a decidedly more chic publication: Vogue.

Ms. Mayer, already a celebrity in Silicon Valley circles, was featured in a stylized photo shoot befitting a Hollywood star. Reclining backward on a shapely piece of lawn furniture, she gazes into Mikael Jansson’s camera, as she tosses back a tablet device.

“She is an unusually stylish geek,” the article, by Jacob Weisberg, says.

“Mogul, Mother, Lightning Rod,” reads the teaser headline on the cover of Vogue’s closely watched September issue, which weighs in at 902 pages.

This is not the first Vogue appearance for Ms. Mayer, who has long embraced her glamorous side. In 2009, while she worked at Google, the magazine photographed her holding a laptop computer. That year, she was also featured in Glamour magazine.

Other female executives have also been featured in glossy magazines in recent years.

In 2008, Erin Callan, then the chief financial officer of Lehman Brothers, appeared in the now-defunct Condé Nast Portfolio. Though Portfolio was a business title, the accompanying photo shoot highlighted Ms. Callan’s elegance, depicting her emerging from an apparently chauffeured car.

A large photograph of Ms. Callan ran with a Wall Street Journal article that year, with a caption that said she was known for being “frank” and “fashionable.”

In May this year, Marianne Lake, the chief financial office of JPMorgan Chase, was photographed for Marie Claire magazine in a black sleeveless top.

But the latest Vogue feature on Ms. Mayer emphasizes an angle that sometimes makes powerful women in business cringe: fashion choices.

An accompanying slideshow- headlined “What Would Marissa Mayer Wear?” â€" takes readers through a hypothetical week for the chief executive, narrated through dresses, shoes and accessories. On Monday, for example, an appropriate item might be a Balenciaga floral jacquard full-skirt dress, which sells for $4,903, according to the article. On Friday, a suitable choice might be Bulgari flower cat eye sunglasses, for which the price is “upon request.”

And yet, there is one sign that Ms. Mayer has not fully crossed over: she does not appear on the cover of the Vogue September issue, regarded as the most-coveted cover spot in the fashion industry. That honor went to the actress Jennifer Lawrence.

Below is some of the chatter on Twitter about the feature article.



Morning Agenda: Icahn’s Fight Over Dell Heads to Court

ICAHN’S FIGHT OVER DELL HEADS TO COURT  |  Carl C. Icahn is heading to the Delaware Court of Chancery in his effort to stop a buyout of Dell by its founder. On Friday, the court is scheduled to consider whether to expedite Mr. Icahn’s lawsuit against the board of the computer maker. (The hearing had originally been planned for earlier this week.) Mr. Icahn is seeking to have the court schedule a hearing to consider his claims that two meetings planned for Dell â€" to vote on the buyout and to elect directors â€" should be held on the same date. Steven M. Davidoff wrote in DealBook about the case this month.

On Thursday, Dell reported earnings that highlighted its continuing challenges. The company reported that net income in its fiscal second quarter fell 72 percent to $204 million from $732 million a year earlier. Revenue was $14.5 billion, virtually flat from a year earlier but better than the $14.18 billion that analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters had expected. The adjusted earnings per share of 25 cents were a penny better than analysts’ expectations.

The results might motivate shareholders to support the effort by Michael S. Dell and Silver Lake to take the company private. “The PC market continues to trend below expectations. It will play into Michael Dell’s plea to take the company private,” Jayson Noland, an analyst at Robert W. Baird & Company, told Bloomberg News.

A DEAL FOR THE DEVILS  |  Two private equity investors â€" Joshua Harris, a co-founder of Apollo Global Management, and David S. Blitzer, the head of tactical opportunities for the Blackstone Group â€" agreed on Thursday to buy the New Jersey Devils hockey team for about $320 million. Both men are members of the group that bought the Philadelphia 76ers basketball team, with Mr. Harris serving as principal owner, DealBook’s Michael J. de la Merced writes.

“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,” Mr. de la Merced writes. “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.”

ON THE AGENDA  |  Investors in SAC Capital Advisors have a deadline tonight to ask for their money back. Data on housing starts in July is out at 8:30 a.m. The Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment index for August is out at 9:55 a.m. Matthew Maloney, the chief executive of GrubHub Seamless, is on Bloomberg TV at 8:45 a.m.

INDIA SEEKS TO OVERHAUL CORPORATE OVERSIGHT  |  “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,” Jen Swanson reports in DealBook. “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.”

Mergers & Acquisitions »

L’Oreal Offers to Buy Chinese Company for $840 Million  |  L’Oreal has bid for Magic Holdings International, a maker of facial masks, in an effort to expand its presence in China’s cosmetics market, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Goldman and Morgan Stanley Said to Consider Investing in Chinese Bank  |  Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank and Morgan Stanley have had talks with the Chinese bank Huarong about investing in a $1.5 billion share offering before a planned I.P.O. in Hong Kong next year, according to The Financial Times, which cites unidentified people close to the process.
FINANCIAL TIMES

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 were not disclosed.
DealBook »

Sony and Viacom Agree, Tentatively, to Streaming Cable Channels  |  “In a deal that may signal the start of a new era of competition for entrenched cable and satellite providers, Viacom has tentatively agreed to let its popular cable channels â€" like Nickelodeon and MTV â€" be carried by an Internet TV service that Sony is creating,” Brian Stelter of The New York Times writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Betting Fannie and Freddie Will Be Sold to Private Investors  |  The mutual fund manager Bruce Berkowitz is reopening his $8 billion Fairholme Fund to new investors to look for opportunities that may include increasing his stake in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

In China, a Worrisome Link Between Banks and Bonds  |  A sell-off in China’s bond market gave ammunition to critics “who point to its bond market as an underrecognized risk to the country as it struggles to control surging lending amid a weakening economy,” The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Nomura Hires From Bank of America in Asia  |  Nomura Holdings hired bankers from Bank of America Merrill Lynch for its Asian equities business, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Cayne, Former Bear Stearns Chief, Looks to Sell Park Ave. Apartment  | 
WALL STREET JOURNAL

PRIVATE EQUITY »

Owner of IMG Worldwide Said to Seek Buyers  |  Forstmann Little & Company, the private equity firm that owns IMG Worldwide, “has begun formally soliciting buyers for the talent and marketing agency, distributing financial information to potential suitors within the last week, according to people familiar with the matter,” The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Silver Lake Unit Invests in Maker of Accounting Software  |  Silver Lake Sumeru, the middle-market group for the investment firm Silver Lake, is leading an investment in BlackLine Systems, a maker of accounting software.
DealBook »

HEDGE FUNDS »

Despite a Sale, Paulson Sticks With Gold  |  Paulson & Company sold more than half of its shares in an exchange-traded fund backed by gold, but it offset that by buying gold swaps, The Financial Times reports, citing an unidentified person familiar with the matter.
FINANCIAL TIMES

Porsche Faces a New Tactic From Hedge Funds in Legal Battle  | 
BLOOMBERG NEWS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Third Point Reinsurance Climbs in First Day of Trading  |  The reinsurance arm of Third Point, the hedge fund run by Daniel S. Loeb, opened at $12.25 a share, below its initial public offering price, before closing the day at $13.06 a share.
DealBook »

Why a Twitter I.P.O. Should Go Dutch  |  The modified Dutch auction that was used by Google founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, in its initial public offering successfully mitigated some of the hype Facebook couldn’t, Jeffrey Goldfarb of Reuters Breakingviews writes.
REUTERS BREAKINGVIEWS

VENTURE CAPITAL »

At SumAll, Making Pay Transparent  |  Dane Atkinson, chief executive of SumAll, a data analytics company, tells The New York Times: “When we first started with this, we’d send out the package details of every new hire to the entire team. That caused a lot of stress. So we’ve switched that and now just their peer group will know the new hire’s compensation and be forced to a vote.”
NEW YORK TIMES

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

BHP Billiton May Face Corruption Crackdown Over Olympics  |  The Telegraph reports: “U.S. authorities have warned BHP Billiton, the world’s largest miner, it could face action over potential breaches of anti-corruption laws related to terminated exploration activities and its sponsorship of the Beijing Olympics.”
THE TELEGRAPH

Conrad Black Is Barred From Serving on U.S. Boards  |  The Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday banned Conrad Black, the fallen newspaper baron, from serving as a director of a company in the United States and said he had to pay $4.1 million in restitution.
REUTERS

Trading of Everbright Securities Is Suspended in Shanghai  |  Shares of Everbright Securities, a Chinese brokerage firm, were suspended because of a trading error, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS



Morning Agenda: Icahn’s Fight Over Dell Heads to Court

ICAHN’S FIGHT OVER DELL HEADS TO COURT  |  Carl C. Icahn is heading to the Delaware Court of Chancery in his effort to stop a buyout of Dell by its founder. On Friday, the court is scheduled to consider whether to expedite Mr. Icahn’s lawsuit against the board of the computer maker. (The hearing had originally been planned for earlier this week.) Mr. Icahn is seeking to have the court schedule a hearing to consider his claims that two meetings planned for Dell â€" to vote on the buyout and to elect directors â€" should be held on the same date. Steven M. Davidoff wrote in DealBook about the case this month.

On Thursday, Dell reported earnings that highlighted its continuing challenges. The company reported that net income in its fiscal second quarter fell 72 percent to $204 million from $732 million a year earlier. Revenue was $14.5 billion, virtually flat from a year earlier but better than the $14.18 billion that analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters had expected. The adjusted earnings per share of 25 cents were a penny better than analysts’ expectations.

The results might motivate shareholders to support the effort by Michael S. Dell and Silver Lake to take the company private. “The PC market continues to trend below expectations. It will play into Michael Dell’s plea to take the company private,” Jayson Noland, an analyst at Robert W. Baird & Company, told Bloomberg News.

A DEAL FOR THE DEVILS  |  Two private equity investors â€" Joshua Harris, a co-founder of Apollo Global Management, and David S. Blitzer, the head of tactical opportunities for the Blackstone Group â€" agreed on Thursday to buy the New Jersey Devils hockey team for about $320 million. Both men are members of the group that bought the Philadelphia 76ers basketball team, with Mr. Harris serving as principal owner, DealBook’s Michael J. de la Merced writes.

“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,” Mr. de la Merced writes. “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.”

ON THE AGENDA  |  Investors in SAC Capital Advisors have a deadline tonight to ask for their money back. Data on housing starts in July is out at 8:30 a.m. The Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment index for August is out at 9:55 a.m. Matthew Maloney, the chief executive of GrubHub Seamless, is on Bloomberg TV at 8:45 a.m.

INDIA SEEKS TO OVERHAUL CORPORATE OVERSIGHT  |  “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,” Jen Swanson reports in DealBook. “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.”

Mergers & Acquisitions »

L’Oreal Offers to Buy Chinese Company for $840 Million  |  L’Oreal has bid for Magic Holdings International, a maker of facial masks, in an effort to expand its presence in China’s cosmetics market, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Goldman and Morgan Stanley Said to Consider Investing in Chinese Bank  |  Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank and Morgan Stanley have had talks with the Chinese bank Huarong about investing in a $1.5 billion share offering before a planned I.P.O. in Hong Kong next year, according to The Financial Times, which cites unidentified people close to the process.
FINANCIAL TIMES

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 were not disclosed.
DealBook »

Sony and Viacom Agree, Tentatively, to Streaming Cable Channels  |  “In a deal that may signal the start of a new era of competition for entrenched cable and satellite providers, Viacom has tentatively agreed to let its popular cable channels â€" like Nickelodeon and MTV â€" be carried by an Internet TV service that Sony is creating,” Brian Stelter of The New York Times writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Betting Fannie and Freddie Will Be Sold to Private Investors  |  The mutual fund manager Bruce Berkowitz is reopening his $8 billion Fairholme Fund to new investors to look for opportunities that may include increasing his stake in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

In China, a Worrisome Link Between Banks and Bonds  |  A sell-off in China’s bond market gave ammunition to critics “who point to its bond market as an underrecognized risk to the country as it struggles to control surging lending amid a weakening economy,” The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Nomura Hires From Bank of America in Asia  |  Nomura Holdings hired bankers from Bank of America Merrill Lynch for its Asian equities business, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Cayne, Former Bear Stearns Chief, Looks to Sell Park Ave. Apartment  | 
WALL STREET JOURNAL

PRIVATE EQUITY »

Owner of IMG Worldwide Said to Seek Buyers  |  Forstmann Little & Company, the private equity firm that owns IMG Worldwide, “has begun formally soliciting buyers for the talent and marketing agency, distributing financial information to potential suitors within the last week, according to people familiar with the matter,” The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Silver Lake Unit Invests in Maker of Accounting Software  |  Silver Lake Sumeru, the middle-market group for the investment firm Silver Lake, is leading an investment in BlackLine Systems, a maker of accounting software.
DealBook »

HEDGE FUNDS »

Despite a Sale, Paulson Sticks With Gold  |  Paulson & Company sold more than half of its shares in an exchange-traded fund backed by gold, but it offset that by buying gold swaps, The Financial Times reports, citing an unidentified person familiar with the matter.
FINANCIAL TIMES

Porsche Faces a New Tactic From Hedge Funds in Legal Battle  | 
BLOOMBERG NEWS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Third Point Reinsurance Climbs in First Day of Trading  |  The reinsurance arm of Third Point, the hedge fund run by Daniel S. Loeb, opened at $12.25 a share, below its initial public offering price, before closing the day at $13.06 a share.
DealBook »

Why a Twitter I.P.O. Should Go Dutch  |  The modified Dutch auction that was used by Google founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, in its initial public offering successfully mitigated some of the hype Facebook couldn’t, Jeffrey Goldfarb of Reuters Breakingviews writes.
REUTERS BREAKINGVIEWS

VENTURE CAPITAL »

At SumAll, Making Pay Transparent  |  Dane Atkinson, chief executive of SumAll, a data analytics company, tells The New York Times: “When we first started with this, we’d send out the package details of every new hire to the entire team. That caused a lot of stress. So we’ve switched that and now just their peer group will know the new hire’s compensation and be forced to a vote.”
NEW YORK TIMES

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

BHP Billiton May Face Corruption Crackdown Over Olympics  |  The Telegraph reports: “U.S. authorities have warned BHP Billiton, the world’s largest miner, it could face action over potential breaches of anti-corruption laws related to terminated exploration activities and its sponsorship of the Beijing Olympics.”
THE TELEGRAPH

Conrad Black Is Barred From Serving on U.S. Boards  |  The Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday banned Conrad Black, the fallen newspaper baron, from serving as a director of a company in the United States and said he had to pay $4.1 million in restitution.
REUTERS

Trading of Everbright Securities Is Suspended in Shanghai  |  Shares of Everbright Securities, a Chinese brokerage firm, were suspended because of a trading error, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS