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Fed Appeals Rejection of Rule on Debit Card Fees

A fierce legal battle that pits financial firms against the retailing industry took a new turn on Wednesday when the Federal Reserve said it would appeal a recent decision involving debit card transaction fees.

Judge Richard J. Leon of Federal District Court for the District of Columbia shocked banks and companies like Visa and MasterCard last month when he struck down a Fed regulation that governs how much retailers must pay to lenders and other companies when customers swipe their debit cards. The retailers applauded the decision because it could force the Fed, a major banking regulator, to rewrite the rule in such a way that they would pay far less to the banks in debit card fees. Lower fees, in theory, could indirectly benefit consumers, although retailers have no obligation to pass along the savings on debit card fees to customers.

But at a hearing in the court on Wednesday, the Fed’s top lawyer, Scott G. Alvarez, told the judge the central bank would appeal his decision.

The Fed’s move raises a spate of important issues five years after the financial crisis of 2008.

The appeal will be a crucial test of the courts’ power to overturn the financial regulations that stemmed from the sweeping banking overhaul after the crisis. In most instances, the courts have sought to change the new rules in ways that favor banks. But in this case, Judge Leon’s decision could diminish a lucrative revenue stream for banks and others. The Fed’s appeal could also stoke criticism that the central bank makes unnecessary concessions to the banking industry.

“We are very disappointed to see the Fed giving in to the banks,” J. Craig Shearman, an official with the National Retail Federation, an industry group, said in a statement. “The Fed has taken a position that will drag this out while retailers and their customers continue to pay billions of dollars in inflated fees.”

The banks said they supported the Fed’s decision to fight the decision by Judge Leon, who was appointed to the district court by President George W. Bush.

“The Federal Reserve’s decision to appeal is the right thing to do for consumers who value debit cards and the financial institutions that serve them,” Frank Keating, the president of the American Bankers Association, an industry group, said in a statement.

The case stems from the Dodd-Frank Act, which Congress passed in 2010 to overhaul the financial industry. The act contained a section whose intent was to cap the fees retailers pay when customers use debit cards. The Fed was given the task of writing specific regulations based on language in the act.

But in his July 31 opinion, which threw out the Fed’s debit card rule, Judge Leon said the Fed had seen ambiguity in Dodd-Frank where none existed. When setting the fee cap, the Fed made an interpretation of Dodd Frank that was “irreconcilable with the statute,” he wrote.

The judge has suspended his decision to throw out the Fed’s rule while the parties involved decide what do next.

On Wednesday, Judge Leon suggested that one option for him was to direct the Fed to write a replacement, or interim, rule to satisfy his objections while the appeal continues.

Shannen W. Coffin, a partner at the law firm Steptoe & Johnson who represented the retailers in the case on Wednesday, said there was precedent for a district judge to instruct a federal agency to write a new rule in a situation like this.

Mr. Alvarez, the Fed lawyer, said the agency opposed installing an interim rule during an appeal. Doing so might undermine the Fed’s position during the appeal, Mr. Alvarez said. He also said such a rule might create uncertainty for banks and others.

“The industry would not be aware of what to do,” Mr. Alvarez said. “Nor would the merchants.”

Retailers now pay roughly 21 cents a transaction on debit card purchases. When the Fed introduced its rule that set the fee around that level, it was considered a blow to the banks, because debit fees had been around 48 cents a transaction. The rule reduced debit fee revenue at banks, though it is not clear how much profit from this business has been dented.

Still, the retailers opposed the Fed’s cap because they felt the language in the Dodd-Frank Act should have produced even lower fees.

When the Fed proposed its rules, it made an interpretation that would have capped the fee at 12 cents. In increasing the cap to 21 cents in the final rule, the Fed considered some costs related to debit cards.

Judge Leon objected to the inclusion of these costs. He said the bill did not permit the Fed’s approach.

On Wednesday, it became clear that there was a potential outcome from the case that retailers would particularly want to avoid. If the Fed’s current rule ceases to have effect because of Judge Leon’s actions and the Fed puts nothing in its place, the banks would theoretically be free to increase fees above 21 cents a transaction. Representatives for both the banks and retailers said they favored a continuation of the 21-cent status quo while the case plays out.

Still, Judge Leon seemed concerned that the appeals process could take too long. He asked Mr. Alvarez to file briefs by Aug. 28 that would include arguments why the district court did not have the authority to direct the Fed to write a replacement debit fee rule.

Investors in credit card processors seemed to view the Fed’s move favorably. Visa’s share price rose 3 percent to close at $178.39 on a day when the broader markets were lower. MasterCard, however, closed down 0.5 percent at $619.31.



Why Royal Bank of Scotland Should I.P.O. Its Bank Branches

Royal Bank of Scotland should list the branches it must shed, not sell them. The British bank is likely to decide shortly between three bids for the assets that the European Commission wants it to offload, after a failed attempt last year to sell them to Santander. The best choice would be one that allows R.B.S. to share in any upside.

The three bids on the table help R.B.S. achieve different things. An institutional investor-backed bid by W&G Investments is offering to pay 1.1 billion pounds upfront, and allows the bank to retain 400 million pounds of the profit it would make in the two years it will probably take for the branches to be hived off. If Brussels forces R.B.S. to sell all 315 branches by the end of this year, W&G would provide a quick exit near book value. It would also remove uncertainty ahead of the planned sale of the 81-percent government stake in the bank.

The other bids, one fronted by AnaCap and the Blackstone Group and the other by Corsair Capital and Centerbridge Partners, would see the buyers provide 600 million to 800 million pounds as cornerstone investors in a future listing. The buyers’ ultimate stake would depend on the actual initial public offering price. That would be a good option â€" if R.B.S. can persuade Brussels to allow more time for the sale. That is likely: the European Commission is sympathetic about R.B.S.’ predicament, according to a person familiar with the situation.

Freed from the deadline, R.B.S. should eventually be able to fetch a better price than 1.5 billion pounds. True, the current offers reflect the need for information-technology investment from the standalone branches. Furthermore, small business banking may face a British competition commission inquiry in the near future. Still, the 305 million pounds of operating profit the assets made in 2012 imply the branches’ return on equity is above their 11 percent cost of equity. That suggests a valuation above book value.

The downside with the offers is that the money pumped in as down payment could be in the form of a bond, with interest paid by R.B.S. to the buyers until the branches are finally separated. Of course, if the bank is feeling confident, it could, like its peer, Lloyds Banking Group, ignore all three bids and press forward with an I.P.O. by itself.

George Hay is a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. For more independent commentary and analysis, visit breakingviews.com.



JPMorgan Chase Not Akin to Nazis, Report Finds

An outside review of Bloomberg L.P.’s practices found that a controversial report that compared the damage in an Italian town after a bad deal with JPMorgan to the fallout from the Nazis’ occupation in World War II went “too far.”

The 2011 article, which JPMorgan complained about at the time and Bloomberg declined to change, has long been a sore spot between the bank and Bloomberg and was recently mentioned in a New York Times article that focused on the friction between Wall Street and Bloomberg.

“In one of the great campaigns of World War II, Monte Cassino was completely destroyed in a wave of battles that claimed 75,000 casualties and the lives of hundreds of townspeople. To suggest that a bond deal gone sour, curtailing daycare for 60 children and services for the poor, is comparable to the terror and cataclysm of war is inconsistent with BN’s high standards,” Clark Hoyt, an editor-at-large at Bloomberg News and a former public editor of The Times, found in his review, which focused on the relationship between Bloomberg’s news and commercial operations.

Mr. Hoyt’s report stemmed from complaints made earlier this year by Goldman Sachs and other banks that Bloomberg journalists could see what the banks thought was private information about the way their employees were using their Bloomberg data terminals.

The complaints caused an uproar on Wall Street and prompted Bloomberg to conduct a review of its operations. In addition to Mr. Hoyt’s report, Bloomberg commissioned a separate but related study that confirmed the bank’s suspicions, that Bloomberg journalists were able to see information that was not available to other users of the Bloomberg terminals and that this information was occasionally used to inform Bloomberg’s articles. Reporters no longer have access to this information, the report found.

Jamie Dimon, the chairman and chief executive of JPMorgan, said Wednesday that Bloomberg “handled all aspects of the review very well.”

Mr. Hoyt recommends in his report that Bloomberg appoint a senior editor to handle complaints like the one from JPMorgan, and the company says it plans to do so. In addition, Bloomberg plans to adopt another recommendation that it create a newsroom standards editor. That position, Mr. Hoyt wrote, should be filled by a senior journalist who will ensure reporters adhere to high standards.

Bloomberg, however, does not plan to alter the original report about JPMorgan to address the concerns raised by Mr. Hoyt, according to a person briefed on the matter.



Ackman Acknowledges ‘Mistakes’ in Letter to Investors

The activist investor William A. Ackman had some explaining to do.

After a turbulent few months, in which he resigned from the board of J.C. Penney and continued to suffer losses on his bet against Herbalife, Mr. Ackman, the head of Pershing Square Capital Management, wrote to his investors on Tuesday to provide some context on the recent headlines.

In the recent quarter, Pershing Square’s funds were virtually flat, Mr. Ackman told his investors in the letter, which was reviewed by DealBook. For the first half of the year, the returns ranged from 5.3 percent to 6.3 percent, net of fees, he said.

Mr. Ackman sounded a note of contrition, saying his firm’s investment in Penney has been a “failure.” As of Aug. 16, Penney’s stock was trading more than 40 percent below the hedge fund’s average cost in buying it, according to the letter.

“Clearly, retail has not been our strong suit, and this is duly noted,” Mr. Ackman said in the letter, in a section titled “Mistakes.”

While Mr. Ackman expressed optimism that Penney would be able to revive its sales, he said the timeframe was “difficult to determine.” He said the company’s “intrinsic value” had been “impaired.”

Mr. Ackman, who left Penney’s board last week after a public dispute with the other directors, is not alone in betting on the retailer’s turnaround, however. According to Bloomberg News, the hedge fund manager J. Kyle Bass has recently been buying the company’s secured loans.

But with Herbalife, a nutritional supplements company, investors have increasingly been taking positions against Mr. Ackman, who claims the company is an abusive pyramid scheme and is betting the stock will fall. That position has suffered hundreds of millions of dollars in losses. The company denies Mr. Ackman’s assertion.

In the letter, Mr. Ackman said he believed that the government may be closer to taking action against Herbalife â€" an outcome that would bolster his thesis.

“Over the past eight months, we have made material progress in attracting federal, state and international regulatory interest in Herbalife,” Mr. Ackman wrote. “We are not at liberty to disclose the nature of these developments, but we believe that the probability of timely aggressive regulatory intervention has increased materially.”

Mr. Ackman is also pursuing a product safety angle against the company, saying in the letter that he has been in contact with a former employee whom he calls a “whistleblower.”

Despite the losses, Mr. Ackman does not consider the Herbalife investment a failure, he said. He put it in the “undecided column.”

The media attention surrounding the firm’s recent exploits is “a natural outcome of our high-profile strategy,” Mr. Ackman said in the letter. “Activist investing requires a thick and calloused skin, and recent press coverage reinforces this point.”

The investor letter was reported earlier by The New York Post.



Report Details Lapses at Bloomberg

An outside review of Bloomberg L.P.’s practices found that the company’s journalists had access to private data about the company’s clients until earlier this year, long after the issue first came to the attention of Bloomberg’s top executives, according to a report on the review released Wednesday.

Bloomberg hired the law firm Hogan Lovells and the consulting firm Promontory Group to review its internal policies after a few banks complained that Bloomberg journalists could see private information about the way bank employees were using their Bloomberg data terminals.

The report released on Wednesday said that Bloomberg journalists were able to see information that was not available to other users of the Bloomberg terminals and that this information was occasionally used to inform Bloomberg’s articles. The investigators found that when the issue was first brought to the company’s attention in 2011, top executives decided to stop giving journalists access to the data but that no concrete steps were taken to shut down the access “due to misunderstandings about who was responsible for doing so.”

The primary complaint voiced by banks earlier this year was that Bloomberg journalists could see when bank employees had last used their Bloomberg terminals. But the review also found that some journalists were given access to a supposedly anonymous chat room for commodities traders, and, in one case, to
information about an financial product that was about to be issued by banks.

The review found that Bloomberg had already blocked its journalists from access to all of this information.

The company’s chief executive, Daniel L. Doctoroff, said in a statement: “We know we needed to evolve, and we have learned from our mistakes. We are already implementing many of the recommendations we received.”

The complaints that emerged in April threatened Bloomberg’s relationships with its terminal users, each of whom pays about $25,000 for an annual subscription to Bloomberg’s data service. Bloomberg’s journalism was initially viewed as another service for the terminal’s users, but it became a source of tension with the banks that use the terminals and who are often the subject of Bloomberg reports.

A related but separate review of the company’s journalistic practices recommended that Bloomberg no longer allow its journalists to accompany the company’s sales force in their efforts to sell Bloomberg terminals.

The review of the company’s journalism, completed by Clark Hoyt, an editor-at-large at Bloomberg News and the former public editor of The New York Times, found that Bloomberg had inconsistently applied its policy of not covering its parent company.

In one recent case, Mr. Hoyt’s report said that Bloomberg’s journalists gave “extensive coverage (far more than
competitive news services)” to a regulatory dispute about new trading facilities for derivatives at the same time that the Bloomberg parent company was trying to set up one of those trading facilities. The coverage, Mr. Hoyt wrote, did not provide “significant coverage of counter-arguments, or of the full scope of the company’s economic
interest in the dispute.”

The company said it had immediately accepted almost all of Mr. Hoyt’s recommendations and was creating new permanent positions to oversee newsroom standards.



Wall Street Courts ‘Princelings’

Wall Street’s biggest banks have for years hired the children of senior Chinese government officials in the hopes that they can open doors and secure deals, David Barboza reports in The New York Times. The hirings, while not well publicized, were no secret. But they are gaining new attention after a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation has raised the question of whether such practices crossed a line at JPMorgan Chase.

The focus of the investigation “has prompted a scramble among the Hong Kong rivals of the New York bank to assess the potential risks of their own hirings,” Mr. Barboza writes. Bankers and lawyers said in interviews that the practice of hiring the children of government officials was so widespread that banks competed to hire the most politically connected recent college graduates. JPMorgan, for its part, has not been accused of wrongdoing and has said it is cooperating with the inquiry.

“For international banks, if you don’t have any of them, it’s difficult for you to get into the circle,” said Jeffrey Sun, a lawyer at Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe who is based in Shanghai. “You need intelligence. You need access to information. And this is one way to get that. Even though it’s an ‘inconvenient fact’ for most Chinese like me, that’s real life.”

STOCK OPTIONS ERROR AT GOLDMAN  | A programming error at Goldman Sachs on Tuesday sent errant orders of stock options into the market, the latest technological glitch to strike Wall Street in recent years, Bloomberg News reports.

An internal system that helps Goldman buy options “inadvertently produced orders with inaccurate price limits and sent them to exchanges, said a person familiar with the situation, who asked not to be named because the information is private,” Bloomberg News writes. “The size of the losses depends on which trades are canceled, the person said. Some have already been voided, data compiled by Bloomberg show.” The error comes about a year after a computer problem at the Knight Capital Group produced a blizzard of erroneous orders to buy stocks and caused steep losses.

BARNES & NOBLE FOUNDER DROPS BID FOR BOOKSTORES  |  Leonard S. Riggio, the founder and chairman of Barnes & Noble, has shelved a bid to buy the company’s bookstores, amid uncertainty over the retailer’s future, DealBook’s Michael J. de la Merced reports. The disclosure on Tuesday came as Barnes & Noble reported a loss that more than doubled from the period a year earlier. The company’s stock tumbled more than 12 percent.

After announcing his intention to bid for the company’s 675 stores in February, “Mr. Riggio struggled with whether to follow through on his proposal, according to a person briefed on the matter,” Mr. de la Merced reports. “Mr. Riggio never made a formal offer to the board, and in recent weeks became leery of both the shareholder lawsuits that might arise from any bid and the distraction it might become to the company.”

ON THE AGENDA  |  Staples, Target and Lowes report earnings before the market opens. Hewlett-Packard reports results this evening. Data on sales of existing homes in July is out at 10 a.m. The Federal Reserve releases minutes of the recent meeting of its policy making committee at 2 p.m. Hugh E. McGee III, chief executive of Barclays for the Americas, is on CNBC at 4 p.m.

ACKMAN FACES HIS INVESTORS  | Despite suffering hundreds of millions of dollars in losses, the hedge fund manager William A. Ackman continues to bet the government will shut down Herbalife, the nutritional supplements company he has called an illegal pyramid scheme. “We are not at liberty to disclose the nature of those developments, but we believe that the probability of timely aggressive regulatory intervention has increased materially,” Mr. Ackman wrote in a quarterly letter to investors, according to The New York Post.

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Lloyds Sells German Insurance Unit for $403 Million  |  The Lloyds Banking Group, which is partially owned by the British government, sold Heidelberger Leben, its German life insurance business, to a joint venture of the private equity firm Cinven and Hannover Re, Reuters reports. REUTERS

Former Chesapeake Chief Starts a New Energy Company  |  Aubrey K. McClendon, who retired this year as chief executive of Chesapeake Energy, “has lined up about $1.2 billion in equity and debt financing for deals in Ohio, much of it coming from two energy-focused private equity firms, according to people close to the matter,” The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL

America Movil Lines Up Financing for KPN Bid  |  But the offer by the Latin American telecommunications giant América Móvil “may be too late to influence the sale of KPN’s German unit in October,” Reuters reports. REUTERS

Glencore Xstrata Takes Write-Down After Merger  |  The mining giant Glencore Xstrata reported sharply lower results on Tuesday after it wrote down $7.7 billion on the value of assets it acquired as part of the merger that created the company. DealBook »

Mining Giants Adjust to Austere Times  |  Results for Glencore Xstrata and BHP Billiton showed both companies girding themselves for a long, slow period for the industry, Kevin Allison of Reuters Breakingviews writes. REUTERS BREAKINGVIEWS

INVESTMENT BANKING »

JPMorgan Said to Identify 2 Candidates for Board  |  JPMorgan Chase “is close to naming two new directors with finance and risk management expertise to its board,” Reuters reports, citing an unidentified person close to the matter. REUTERS

JPMorgan Said to Hire Law Firm in Asia Inquiry  |  JPMorgan Chase has hired Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison to conduct an internal investigation into its hiring practices in Hong Kong, The Financial Times reports. FINANCIAL TIMES

Fluctuations in Currencies Roil MarketsCurrency Volatility Is Unnerving Investors  |  The experiences in many emerging markets are the flip side of the economic situation in the United States, where the economic data has recently been improving. DealBook »

Bank of America Intern in London Dies  |  The death of a 21-year-old intern at Bank of America Merrill Lynch shocks bank employees in London’s financial district. DealBook »

PRIVATE EQUITY »

Louis Gerstner III, Son of Ex-I.B.M. Chief, Dies at 41  |  Louis V. Gerstner III, the son of the former chief executive of International Business Machines, served as president of the Gerstner Family Foundation. DealBook »

Carlyle Hires G.E. Executive for Power Investment Team  |  The Carlyle Group has hired Matthew J. O’Connor from General Electric as a new co-head of its power investments group, the latest move to expand its energy practice. DealBook »

HEDGE FUNDS »

Perry Capital Is Said to Take Position in Herbalife  |  The hedge fund Perry Capital, with a stake in Herbalife of less than 5 percent, is the latest hedge fund to take the opposite side of William A. Ackman’s bet that the company is a pyramid scheme, CNBC reports. CNBC

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

NYSE Euronext Is Said to Choose Banks for I.P.O. of Euronext  |  NYSE Euronext, which is being acquired by the IntercontinentalExchange Group, has chosen JPMorgan Chase and Société Générale to manage the initial public offering of its European equity business, Bloomberg News reports, citing four unidentified people with knowledge of the matter. BLOOMBERG NEWS

Facebook Seeks to Lower Barriers to Internet Access  |  “On Wednesday, Facebook plans to announce an effort aimed at drastically cutting the cost of delivering basic Internet services on mobile phones, particularly in developing countries, where Facebook and other tech companies need to find new users,” Vindu Goel writes in The New York Times. NEW YORK TIMES

VENTURE CAPITAL »

New York State Comptroller to Promote Investments in Silicon AlleyNew York State Comptroller to Promote Investments in Silicon Alley  |  As New York City continues to publicize the rise of Silicon Alley start-ups, the state comptroller’s office is doing its part for the cause. DealBook »

Birst, a Data Analysis Provider, Raises $38 Million in New Round  |  Birst, a start-up that draws on cloud computing to power its data analysis services, said on Tuesday that it had collected $38 million in a new round of financing. DealBook »

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

How to Put Banking Rules Into Practice  |  “In addition to urging regulators to hurry up,” the editorial board of The New York Times writes, President Obama “has to use his bully pulpit both to support regulators (and rules) who might anger Wall Street and tell Congressional Democrats who would derail strong rules to back off.” NEW YORK TIMES

Judge Approves $730 Million Citigroup Settlement  |  A federal judge approved Citigroup’s agreement to pay bondholders $730 million over claims that the bank hid its exposure to toxic mortgage assets, Reuters reports. REUTERS

Before Detroit’s Bankruptcy Proceeds, a Question of Eligibility  |  The bankruptcy clause of the Constitution should triumph over state laws as Detroit seeks to prove that it is eligible to file for Chapter 9, Stephen J. Lubben writes in the In Debt column. DealBook »

A Period of Turnover at the S.E.C.  |  Longtime employees of the Securities and Exchange Commission “say they can’t remember another time when so many high-ranking officials have come and gone. But the exits seem to be having little or no noticeable impact on the agency’s work, according to insiders,” The Wall Street Journal writes. WALL STREET JOURNAL