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With Huge War Chests, Activist Investors Tackle Big Companies

Microsoft executives faced an unusual challenge in April when a $12 billion hedge fund, ValueAct, announced that it had bought a nearly $2 billion stake in the company with the intention of shaking things up.

To many analysts, the possibility that ValueAct, with less than 1 percent of Microsoft’s stock, could succeed seemed improbable at best. The firm buys shares in companies, hoping to fight for board seats and change the targets’ corporate strategies.

But that small stake appears to have had outsize influence. On Friday, Microsoft agreed to let ValueAct meet regularly with some of its directors. And the hedge fund’s president, Mason Morfit, could join the board within several months.

Once considered purveyors of a niche investment strategy, so-called activists like ValueAct have leapt onto the big stage as hedge funds wage bolder battles against ever-bigger corporate targets like Apple, leaving executives wondering if they could be next.

Unlike their predecessors who often pursued aggressive takeovers for quick gains, this latest generation of activists are largely agitating for some sort of long-term change â€" a shift in business strategy, a different use of cash, even a complete overhaul of a company’s board.

Robust returns in recent years and new money racing into these funds at a rate not seen in seven years have given activist investors â€" as defined by industry experts like the firm Hedge Fund Research â€" a war chest of $84 billion, more than double the assets they oversaw just four years ago. That money has fueled activists’ ambitions, with mixed results.

Over the last two years, activists have taken aim at a number of blue-chip companies, like Procter & Gamble and PepsiCo. And one of the best-known players, Daniel S. Loeb, has even gone abroad, pushing for change at Sony, an icon of Japanese business.

Some battles have led to big victories. This spring, the hedge fund TPG-Axon successfully pushed for the ouster of SandRidge Energy’s chief executive, Tom Ward.

But others have led to tough losses: the billionaire William A. Ackman, who lost hundreds of millions of dollars in investor money in his campaign against Target, resigned from the board of J. C. Penney two weeks ago after unsuccessfully calling for the removal of its chairman; he sold his stake at a loss of nearly $500 million. And Mr. Loeb was unsuccessful in persuading Sony to partly spin off its huge entertainment arm.

This burst of activism is the latest evolution of efforts to push companies to change their behavior through investing.

In the 1980s, corporate raiders like T. Boone Pickens and Carl C. Icahn engaged in hostile takeovers or leveraged buyouts of companies, or sought to be bought out themselves at a profit. (Some of yesterday’s raiders, like Mr. Icahn, are today’s more public-relations-friendly “activists.”) In the 1990s, big pension funds like the powerful California Public Employees’ Retirement System took up the mantle, pressing for change not only in corporate governance but also on social issues like doing business in apartheid-era South Africa and protecting the environment.

Unlike the raiders, the current activists contends they are fighting for the interests of shareholders. To that end, the activists most often seek to appoint allies to board seats to help fight against what they see as complacent management and to bring more discipline to companies.

There is some evidence that the results bear that out. A study led by Lucian Bebchuk, a professor at Harvard Law School, published last month argues that companies singled out by these investors improved their operating performance within three years of an activist campaign.

Others are not so sure. Lawyers at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, one of the premier defenders against activists, said in a client note earlier this week that such campaigns had damaged American companies with an emphasis on the short term.

The hedge funds are financing activism with their healthy returns. Through the end of June, activist funds are up 9.6 percent, behind the 19.6 percent surge in the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index but ahead of the 7.7 percent gain by equity-focused hedge funds at the end of June, according to Hedge Fund Research. Activist funds returned on average nearly 13 percent between 2009 and last year.

In turn, investors have plowed nearly $4.7 billion so far this year into funds deemed activist by Hedge Fund Research, the highest inflows since 2006.

Analysts say that the environment is ripe for activists. The rebounding markets have opened the door for mergers, while companies continue to hoard cash. David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital and Mr. Icahn have each taken aim at Apple’s reserves â€" more than $146 billion as of June 29 â€" pressing the company to return more cash to investors.

If Mr. Icahn is to be believed, Apple is willing to listen. “Spoke to Tim. Planning dinner in September,” the septuagenarian activist wrote in a Twitter post last week, referring to Timothy D. Cook, Apple’s chief executive. “Tim believes in buyback and is doing one. What will be discussed is magnitude.”

And while the old guard, including Mr. Icahn, Mr. Ackman and Nelson Peltz remain active in numerous corporate battles, newcomers are trying their hands as well.

Earlier this summer, Larry Robbins’s Glenview Capital Management fought and won its first public activist campaign, persuading shareholders of the hospital chain Health Management Associates to replace the entire sitting board with eight independent nominees.

And an investment firm founded by David Gottesman, a director of Warren E. Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, shifted from its normal buy-and-hold strategy to wage war for control of the drug maker Vivus. In a letter sent to executives this spring, Mr. Gottesman’s firm, First Manhattan, noted its five-year tenure as a shareholder, followed by its conclusion that the company needed a more experienced and independent board.

Last month, the two settled, with First Manhattan gaining a majority of board seats and its choice of chief executive.

Traditional mutual funds and asset managers have become more open in supporting activist campaigns as well, after years of shying away from the hedge funds as loudmouthed, bare-knuckled brawlers. Mr. Icahn’s fight against the proposed takeover of Dell Inc. gained support from unlikely sources like T. Rowe Price and Franklin Mutual Advisers.

Corporate executives are taking activist investors more seriously than ever.

Companies monitor their shares for signs of an activist and are quick to hire advisers when an insurgent investor emerges. And more than ever, they are willing to offer a compromise â€" a board seat or two, an exploration of asset sales â€" to head off an all-out battle for control.

“Companies are trying to engage with the activists early, below the radar, so that things don’t have to bubble up to the surface and become public, which is extremely disruptive to the company,” said Damien Park, the founder of Hedge Fund Solutions, which consults with companies and hedge funds on activism.

Years of legal battles have also whittled away traditional corporate defenses against activists. Many companies now elect their boards annually, as opposed to “staggering” director elections every year, making it easier for dissidents to gain control.

Activists have grown up, too.

“Activism in general has become more sophisticated than it used to be,” said David Rosewater, a partner at Schulte Roth & Zabel who regularly represents activist investors. “You need to have a real plan, an in-depth understanding of the company and a compelling argument to shareholders about how you’re going to do it better.”



Week in Review: A $125 Billion Bet on a Multitrillion-Dollar Market

Verizon Communications is in talks with Vodafone to buy the British telecommunication giant’s 45% stake in Verizon Wireless. The deal, worth at least $125 billion, would be one of the biggest takeovers in history, but the burgeoning wireless industry makes the buyout attractive.

“With 10 billion connections worldwide, the number of cellular subscriptions is on track to outgrow the human population,” reports Michael J. de la Merced.

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

THURSDAY, AUG. 29

JPMorgan Hiring Put China’s Elite on an Easy Track | The program was originally called “Sons and Daughters.” And although it was supposed to protect JPMorgan Chase’s business dealings in China, the program went so off track that it is now the focus of a federal bribery investigation in the United States. DealBook »

Verizon Seeks Rest of Its Wireless Unit | The lucrative wireless industry, already worth $1.6 trillion, is expected to become a multitrillion-dollar market in the next decade. DealBook »

Shutdown at Nasdaq Is Traced to Software | “Code has this nefarious way of working and then not working,” Robert Greifeld, Nasdaq’s chief executive, said. DealBook »

Scrutiny for Firm’s Hiring of Ex-Army Officer | Col. Norbert E. Vergez headed a unit that awarded lucrative business to a helicopter company owned by Lynn Tilton’s firm. DealBook »

U.S. and Switzerland Reach Agreement on Penalties for Banks That Aided Tax Cheats | The deal does not cover 14 Swiss banks and Swiss branches of international banks that are under criminal investigation by the United States authorities. DealBook »

Blackstone Settles Suit Over I.P.O. | By settling, Blackstone has avoided a securities class-action trial that was scheduled to begin next month. DealBook »

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 28

U.S. and Switzerland Are Close to Deal on Penalizing Banks in Tax Case | Banks that had helped Americans evade taxes would be required to admit wrongdoing and pay penalties in exchange for deferred prosecution agreements, in addition to handing over information on account holders. DealBook »

Hedge Fund Chiefs Write Small Checks for Mayoral Hopefuls in New York | The loudest and boldest of hedge funds have been the quietest in this election. DealBook »

TUESDAY, AUG. 27

Merrill Lynch in Big Payout for Bias Case | Merrill Lynch has agreed to pay $160 million to settle a racial bias lawsuit that wound through the federal courts for eight years. DealBook »

Regulators Prepare Penalties for Chase | Under the terms of the civil orders, the bank will have to acknowledge internal flaws and dole out at least $80 million in fines. DealBook »

Former JPMorgan Employee Surrenders in Spain in ‘London Whale’ Case |
Javier Martin-Artajo kicked off what could be a lengthy extradition process. DealBook »

Deal Professor: A Simple Solution That Made a Hard Problem More Difficult | Congressional leaders, in their rage against ever-rising executive compensation and income inequality, have created more murkiness, says Steven M. Davidoff. DealBook »

MONDAY, AUG. 26

Two Exchanges to Merge, Taking on Larger Rivals | Combining BATS and Direct Edge will vault the new company past Nasdaq to become the second-largest exchange operator in the United States. DealBook »

Growth in Global Disputes Brings Big Paychecks for Law Firms | At least a dozen law firms based in the United States are in line for huge paydays stemming from myriad international issues. DealBook »

DealBook Column: Five Years After Tarp, Misgivings on Bonuses | Henry Paulson tells Andrew Ross Sorkin that “there was such a total lack of awareness from the firms that paid big bonuses during this extraordinary time.” DealBook »

His Links Severed, Ackman Moves to Sell Stake in J.C. Penney | William A. Ackman’s hedge fund sold its 18 percent stake in J. C. Penney after a public battle with the retailer’s board. DealBook »

Third Point Hedge Fund Increases Sotheby’s Stake | The activist investor Daniel S. Loeb is a prominent art collector and the walls at his Park Avenue office are covered with paintings. DealBook »

SUNDAY, AUG. 25

Keeping Wall St. in the Black (or Maybe Brown) | In-house shoeshine service has proved resilient, surviving the rise of technology and even the 2008 financial crisis, which snuffed out many of Wall Street’s quirks. DealBook »

Amgen Buys Producer of Drugs for Cancer | Although Amgen is the world’s biggest biotechnology company, the drug maker has been mostly absent from one of the industry’s biggest and fastest-growing markets: cancer drugs. DealBook »

SATURDAY, AUG. 24

Platinum Card and Text Alert, Via Pawnshop | As banks zero in on more affluent customers, close branches in poor areas and remain stingy with credit, pawnshops are revamping their image and stepping into the void to offer financial services. DealBook »

Amgen Is Said to Be Near a $10.5 Billion Deal to Buy Onyx | Amgen is the world’s largest biotechnology company by sales, with $17.3 billion in revenue last year. But its top-selling products are older and many are selling more slowly, or even declining. DealBook »

WEEK IN VERSE

‘Call Me’ Al Green has been singing about the importance of telecommunications for years. YouTube »



Ex-Goldman Trader Fined $500,000

A former Goldman Sachs trader who pleaded guilty in a criminal case earlier this year to fabricating huge positions to protect his bonus agreed on Friday to pay a $500,000 fine in a related civil matter.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission said Friday that Judge Richard J. Sullivan of Federal District Court in Manhattan approved the civil penalty against the former trader, Matthew M. Taylor. As part of a consent order, Mr. Taylor was also barred from trading commodities.

In November 2012, the regulatory agency accused Mr. Taylor, who traded equity derivatives products in New York, of hiding an $8.3 billion position he had taken in electronic futures contracts tied to the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index. Though his superiors had ordered him to reduce the risk on his trading book, he instead ratcheted up the position. To conceal the size of the position, he entered “multiple false entries” into a Goldman trading system, booking trades that he never actually made. The bogus trades gave the false impression that his portfolio was well balanced.

The C.F.T.C. also sanctioned Goldman for failing to supervise Mr. Taylor, and the bank paid $1.5 million to settle the case in December 2012.

At the time, Goldman said that the trades did not affect customer money. “Since these events, we have enhanced our controls,” the bank said, adding that “Taylor admitted his conduct following market close and was subsequently terminated.”

In April, Mr. Taylor pleaded guilty to a single count of wire fraud. He is scheduled to be sentenced Oct. 25.



Tax Haven Closes for Wealthy Americans

LONDON â€" A tax deal reached between Switzerland and the United States on Thursday effectively puts an end to the status of the small Alpine country as a tax haven for wealthy Americans.

The agreement, which came after more than three years of intense discussions between the two countries, is expected to punish Swiss banks that helped wealthy Americans hide money from United States tax authorities in offshore accounts and require them to disclose information about United States account holders.

Even before the agreement, many banks in Switzerland had started to turn away American clients, fearing at least additional administrative burdens from the United States authorities. The deal is expected to accelerate that trend and make it even harder for American expatriates in Switzerland to find banking services.

“It’s pretty close to the end for Swiss banking for wealthy Americans,” Ben Jones, principal associate at law firm Eversheds in London, said. “But then again you had to be a pretty naïve U.S. taxpayer if you were thinking you could still hide funds in Swiss banks.”

The formal agreement, which was announced on Thursday by the Justice Department in Washington and which was presented by Swiss authorities on Friday, calls for stiff measures that lift the veil of Swiss banking secrecy. As part of the deal, banks will be required to provide the details on accounts in which American taxpayers have an interest through treaty channels, disclose all cross-border activities and close the accounts of Americans who are evading taxes.

The Swiss government said the deal allows Switzerland to draw a line under past tax disputes with the United States and create some certainty for the Swiss banking industry. “It’s a solution we can live with,” Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf, the Swiss finance minister and president of the Federal Council, said at a news conference in Switzerland Friday morning. “It provides the possibility for us to move forward and not have to continue fighting with the past.”

Without an agreement, the reputation of Switzerland as a financial center would have continued to suffer for years to come, she said. But she also said it was still possible that a bank could collapse under the heavy financial burden of fines imposed by American authorities.

The Swiss government has been resisting cooperation until now because the secrecy of its banking system has long made the country an offshore money haven for wealthy foreigners. But scrutiny in Europe of tax havens has been widening and pressure from the United States, including a number of arrests of Swiss bankers who traveled to the United States, started to increase pressure on Switzerland to come to an agreement.

For Swiss banks, the agreement ends uncertainty about possible prosecution, but the final size of the penalties remains to be decided. Even banks that will not have to pay large penalties that could hurt their finances and operations are bracing for spiraling costs because of the additional data they will be required to dig up and provide to authorities.

Sindy Schmiegel Werner, a spokeswoman for the Swiss Bankers Association, said the deal was “the least bad solution.” “There’s no doubt that this will be very, very painful for the banks,” she said.

Despite greater tax scrutiny, money continued to flow into Swiss banks from abroad over the past years. Amid the chaos of the European debt crisis and growing fears about the safety of deposits in some European banks, Switzerland continued to be considered a safe haven for investments. Switzerland was the top destination for offshore wealth, defined as assets booked in a country where the investor has no legal residence or tax domicile, in 2012, registering $2.2 trillion, followed by Hong Kong and Singapore, according to the Boston Consulting Group 2013 Global Wealth report.

Ms. Schmiegel Werner said American taxpayers would continue to be “a very important client group” for Swiss banks. The banking association said it started to urge its members in 2009 to only accept money from American clients who are taxed in the United States. It was in 2009 that UBS, the largest Swiss bank, agreed to enter into a deferred-prosecution agreement with the United States, turning over thousands of client names and paying a million dollar fine. But soon after UBS admitted criminal wrongdoing in selling tax-evasion services to wealthy Americans, the Justice Department authorities were incensed that other Swiss banks offered shelter to American clients fleeing UBS.

In 2012, the United States Justice Department indicted Wegelin & Company, Switzerland’s oldest bank, for misconduct from the early 2000s until 2011. The once prestigious Swiss bank pleaded guilty in January, putting it out of business after 272 years. The Swiss government feared that more indictments could follow, seriously threatening the existence of some banks.

The recent tax deal does not include 14 Swiss banks and Swiss branches of international banks that are already under criminal investigation by the United States authorities. They include Credit Suisse, Bank Julius Baer, Pictet, Bank Frey, Züricher Kantonalbank and Basler Kantonalbank. Swiss banks that follow the program will be eligible to enter nonprosecution agreements that do not involve guilty pleas or criminal penalties. Those that enabled tax evasion after the United States authorities began their investigation will face more severe punishment.



A Lesson for Boardroom Battles

Proxy access may be dead in the United States, but it lives in Israel, to the great regret of Taro Pharmaceutical Industries.

Taro is facing a proxy battle involving two external directors nominated by the asset management firm BlueMountain Capital Management. While unfortunate for Taro, it all shows an alternative universe of what, for better or worse, could have happened had proxy access been in place in the United States.

Taro Pharmaceuticals is a $3 billion pharmaceutical company founded and organized under the laws of Israel. But like many other Israeli companies, it is not listed on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange. Instead Taro’s stock is listed and traded only on the New York Stock Exchange.

As securities lawyers know, this creates hybrid regulation governing the company. Because Taro is a foreign-based company, a so-called foreign private issuer, it is exempt from many of the United States securities laws. This includes the proxy rules as well as quarterly reporting requirements for American companies.

But it also means that Taro is still subject to Israeli rules governing companies incorporated there.

And Israel has rules intended to give substantial protection to minority shareholders. Israeli companies must have two external directors selected by noncontrolling shareholders. These directors serve three year terms and have certain defined duties, including sitting on the companies’ audit committee and signing off on any conflicted transactions with management or controlling shareholders.

This is not so unusual, and the United States effectively requires that boards of public companies without controlling shareholders have a majority of independent directors.

What is unusual is that Israel has adopted proxy access for these directors.

Proxy access was a Securities and Exchange Commission rule that allowed shareholders who in the aggregate owned at least 3 percent of the company for at least three years to nominate up to 25 percent of a company’s board. The kicker was that the company would have to include these names in its own proxy. This would spare the nominating shareholders the expense of hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not millions, required to prepare and circulate their own separate proxy statement.

The idea was to hold boards and directors more accountable, something that many feel is lacking. A recent study I co-authored found that, after the financial crisis, directors of financial institutions had only a 0.99 percent greater chance of being ousted for poor performance.

Proxy access was bitterly opposed by public companies and blocked by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia on controversial grounds, namely that the S.E.C. had not conducted sufficient cost-benefit analysis of the rule. In the wake of the rule’s defeat, the S.E.C. has moved on, and new proxy access rules are unlikely any time soon.

The case of Taro highlights the potential benefits and possible problems of proxy access. Taro has a controlling shareholder: India-based Sun Pharmaceuticals, which owns 66.5 percent of Taro, a stake it acquired in 2010.

In 2012, Sun offered to acquire the rest of Taro for $39.50 a share. The offer was approved by Taro’s board, including its two external directors. The Taro board found Sun’s offer to be fair. Notably, the final deal was a marked improvement over Sun’s initial offer of $24.50.

Still, the proposed buyout was criticized as being underpriced. Using these arguments, the investment funds IsZo Capital Management and Black Horse Capital Advisors successfully forced Taro and Sun to cancel the transaction.

One of the main reasons IsZo and Black Horse succeeded was another protection Israel has for minority shareholders. This is a flat-out requirement that any buyout by a controlling shareholder be approved by the majority of the noncontrolling shareholders. (This feature is also being employed to good effect by shareholders in the Dell buyout). Taro and Sun simply couldn’t get enough shareholders to approve the buyout under this threshold.

IsZo and Black Horse were right. Taro’s stock now trades at about $65 a share.

Now, BlueMountain is asking for accountability. BlueMountain is not normally an activist investor, but in this case, it wants to replace the external directors who signed off on the failed buyout.

The reason is simple: as IsZo stated in support of BlueMountain’s nominees, “We do not believe that the incumbents should be rewarded.”

And BlueMountain, which only owns 1.5 percent of the shares, is doing this in a simple way. It is using proxy access to nominate two new candidates as external directors. Taro has opposed this nomination and stated that it is not sure whether the candidates have adequate “financial and accounting expertise.”

Taro did not reply to an e-mail request for comment.

But Taro is on its back foot. First, BlueMountain doesn’t have to do much to oust the old external directors. Under Israeli law, the external directors need to get a majority of the minority vote as well as a majority of all the votes to be elected.

There is a twist. If that vote is not obtained, the candidates can be rejected if 2 percent of shares vote against them.

The consequence is that if a majority of the minority shareholders representing at least 2 percent of the shares vote against Taro’s candidates, then re-election of Taro’s candidates will be blocked even if Taro’s own candidates don’t win. If this happens, there would be no external directors on Taro’s board.

This would put Taro at a disadvantage, because it would need the approval of the external directors to sign off on conflict transactions, including any future potential buyout by Sun. Without external directors, no such transaction could take place.

BlueMountain is also aware of this and while it would like its own candidates to serve as external directors on the board, it has also said that it would settle for this type of stalemate.

Taro’s shareholder meeting on these nominations is scheduled for Sept. 12. But there are already lessons for the United States.

Proxy access was opposed because many companies thought it would be too disruptive to their business. Many other people, though, thought that the requirement for a three-year holding period would mean it would go unused.

The case of Taro shows that there are likely to be shareholders who will use proxy access and that, yes indeed, it will be used disruptively to oust directors. In Taro’s case, the provision is being used to hold directors accountable.

Still, this does not mean that proxy access is a good thing. It may arguably be good in Taro’s case, but in today’s activist environment, it could easily be used by hedge funds and institutional investors for less-useful purposes.

In the United States, proxy access is dead, but like zombies, regulatory ideas have a habit of being hard to kill. If proxy access does re-emerge, we will have some 120 Israeli companies that are like Taro - listed in the United States but with Israeli governance - as an example.



Verizon-Vodafone Deal Would Be a Big Payday for Deal Makers

Though deal makers often complain about the slow pace of business in the summer, it appears that one of the biggest takeovers in years is near.

Should Verizon Communications successfully buy out Vodafone’s 45 percent stake in Verizon Wireless â€" analysts suggest that the transaction would be valued at more than $125 billion â€" it would consummate one of the largest takeovers on record.

At that level, it would trail only Vodafone’s $202.8 billion acquisition of Mannesmann and the $181.6 million union of AOL and Time Warner, according to data from Thomson Reuters. And it would easily displace AT&T‘s $89.4 billion purchase of BellSouth, Pfizerâ€s $88.8 billion takeover of Warner-Lambert and Exxon’s $85.1 billion deal for Mobil.

Such a big deal could mean huge fees for the bankers and lawyers who have labored to make one of the decade’s most anticipated deals finally materialize. Beyond the advisory fees, banks would could also reap fees from the tens of billions of dollars in loans that would support Verizon’s purchase.

Virtually every big bank on Wall Street has clamored to land a role in the deal, since having credit in the deal would instantly bolster a bank’s standing in the deal-maker rankings. Here’s where the league tables stood as of Thursday, according to Thomson Reuters:

  1. Goldman Sachs, with 238 deals valued at $342 billion
  2. Bank of America Merrill Lynch, 136 deals, $281.5 billion
  3. JPMorgan Chase, 174 deals, $271.5 billion
  4. Morgan Stanley, 192 deals, $248.2 billion
  5. Deutsche Bank, 125 deals, $180 billion
  6. Citigroup, 146 deals, $155.5 billion
  7. Credit Suisse, 139 deals, $145.3 billion
  8. Barclays, 117 deals, $140.9 billion
  9. Lazard, 158 deals, $137.1 billion
  10. UBS, 112 deals, $105.1 billion


Morning Agenda: JPMorgan’s ‘Sons and Daughters’ Program

AT JPMORGAN, A PROGRAM TO HIRE CHINA’S ELITE  |  JPMorgan Chase started a program in 2006 called “Sons and Daughters,” as friends and family of China’s ruling elite were clamoring for jobs at the bank, Jessica Silver-Greenberg and Ben Protess report in DealBook. Although it was originally supposed to protect the bank’s business dealings in China, it went so off track that it is now the focus of a federal bribery investigation in the United States, according to interviews and a confidential government document.

“Saying they wanted to weed out nepotism and avoid bribery charges in the United States, JPMorgan employees in Asia started the program to hire well-connected candidates on a separate track from ordinary applicants, the employees and executives said. Without the program and its heightened scrutiny of the candidates, the employees argued, JPMorgan might improperly hire the children of Chinese officials to win business,” DealBook writes.

“But in the months and years that followed, the two-tiered process that could have prevented questionable hiring practices instead fostered them, according to the interviews as well as the confidential government document. Applicants from prominent Chinese families, interviews show, often faced few job interviews and relaxed standards. While many candidates met or exceeded the bank’s requirements, some had subpar academic records and lacked relevant expertise.”

JPMorgan declined to comment and has not been accused of wrongdoing. No one has indicated that the children of Chinese officials helped the bank win business deals, and public documents do not offer a concrete link between the bank’s hiring practices and its ability to secure deals.

NASDAQ SHUTDOWN IS TRACED TO SOFTWARE  |  The Nasdaq market, which calls itself a home for the stocks of the world’s biggest technology companies, acknowledged on Thursday that a three-hour halt in trading arose from a problem with its software, DealBook’s Michael J. de la Merced reports. The exchange’s parent company released preliminary findings that provided the clearest official insight into what caused the trading halt.

“A series of attempts by a market operated by the NYSE Euronext to connect with the Nasdaq system that reports the prices of recent trades generated a surge of data. That led to a failure of Nasdaq’s backup systems, forcing the market to go offline to fix the problem,” Mr. de la Merced writes.

On Thursday, Nasdaq said that it was “deeply disappointed” in its performance on Aug. 22 and called it “unacceptable to our members, issuers and the investing public.”

ZURICH INSURANCE TO INVESTIGATE EXECUTIVE’S SUICIDE  |  “Zurich Insurance said Friday that its board of directors would look into whether undue pressure was put on the company’s chief financial officer before he died in an apparent suicide, an event that led to the resignation of the Zurich chairman, Josef Ackermann, and shook Switzerland’s tidy financial capital,” Jack Ewing reports in The New York Times.

Top managers of Zurich Insurance sought to reassure skeptical stock analysts that the apparent suicide on Monday of Pierre Wauthier, a 53-year-old father of two, did not signal deeper problems at the company, Switzerland’s third-largest insurer. Still, it was clear that the death of Mr. Wauthier had shaken confidence in Zurich Insurance’s financial performance.

ON THE AGENDA  |  Happy birthday to Warren E. Buffett, who turns 83 today! Data on personal income and outlays in July is released at 8:30 a.m. The final Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment index for August is out at 9:55 a.m.

A WATERSHED DEAL ON TAX CHEATS  |  “Switzerland and the United States reached a watershed deal on Thursday to punish Swiss banks that helped wealthy Americans stash money in hidden offshore accounts, closing the door on an era of bank secrecy and tax evasion,” Lynnley Browning reports in DealBook. “The formal agreement, which was announced on Thursday by the Justice Department in Washington and will be presented by Swiss authorities on Friday, outlined formulas for Swiss banks to pay up to billions of dollars in fines and disclose information about American account holders, a joint statement said.”

Mergers & Acquisitions »

America Movil Threatens to Pull Bid for Dutch Cellphone Operator  |  The Latin American telecommunications giant has threatened to walk away from its proposed 7.2 billion euro, or $9.5 billion, bid for the Dutch cellphone operator KPN after a local foundation moved to block the takeover.
DealBook »

Apache to Sell Stake in Egyptian Holdings to Sinopec for $3.1 Billion  |  The deal is part of the company’s continued effort to sell off assets and rebalance its portfolio.
DealBook »

L’Oreal May Sell Stake in Sanofi to Finance Acquisitions, Chief Says  |  “The cash is there to use,” Jean-Paul Agon, the chief executive of L’Oreal, said on Friday, according to Reuters. “We will see if the opportunities are there to use it.”
REUTERS

Verizon Banks on Wireless Future in Talks With VodafoneVerizon Banks on Wireless Future in Talks With Vodafone  |  Verizon has long sought to buy out Vodafone’s stake in its wireless unit, a deal that would rank among the biggest purchases in history. With complete ownership of its wireless business, the company would be able to shift from receiving dividends to being able to fully incorporate all of its profit. And it will have full control over what it does with that profit.
DealBook »

Vodafone Needs to Deliver for Shareholders if Deal Goes Through  |  A successful sale of Vodafone’s stake in Verizon Wireless would help define Vittorio Colao’s tenure as chief executive, Christopher Hughes of Reuters Breakingviews writes.
REUTERS BREAKINGVIEWS

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Bank of England Head Calls for End to ‘Uncertainty’ Over R.B.S.  |  “It is absolutely imperative that the uncertainty around” the Royal Bank of Scotland, which is backed by the government, “is dissipated,” Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of England, told The Daily Mail.

DAILY MAIL

Global Regulator Moves to Tighten Rules for Shadow Banks  |  The Financial Times reports: “Banks, investment managers and brokers would face tough new restrictions on their ability to temporarily trade securities for cash under far-reaching proposals put forward on Thursday by global regulators meeting as the Financial Stability Board.”
FINANCIAL TIMES

With Banks on the Mend, Fewer Failures  |  “The gradual strengthening of the U.S. banking industry has largely ended one of the hallmarks of the financial crisis: the Friday night scramble to close scores of failing banks,” The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

At Canadian Bank, Chairwoman Would Be a First  |  Kathleen Taylor is set to take over as chairwoman of the Royal Bank of Canada in 2014, making her the first woman to head the board of the bank, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

PRIVATE EQUITY »

U.S. Scrutinizes Private Equity Hiring of Ex-Army Officer  |  Government lawyers have asked the private equity firm headed by the prominent financier Lynn Tilton for information related to its recent hiring of a former Army official.
DealBook »

Blackstone Settles I.P.O. Class Action SuitBlackstone Settles I.P.O. Class Action Suit  |  Blackstone has agreed to pay $85 million to settle a lawsuit brought by a group of investors that accused it of misrepresenting some investments ahead of its 2007 initial public offering.
DealBook »

HEDGE FUNDS »

Icahn Raises Stake in Nuance Communications  |  The activist investor Carl C. Icahn increased his stake in Nuance Communications, a maker of speech recognition software, to 16.9 percent from 16.03 percent, saying he may push for seats on the board, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Harbinger to Take an Insurance Business Public  |  Harbinger Capital Partners has filed to take one of its insurance businesses public shortly after the hedge fund agreed to a tougher compromise with the government over accusations of market manipulation.
DealBook »

General Electric to Spin Off Consumer Finance Business  |  General Electric is preparing to divest a business that issues store credit cards for 55 million Americans, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Microsoft Said to Be in Talks Over Foursquare Investment  |  Microsoft is competing with American Express to take an equity stake in Foursquare Labs, whose app lets people “check in” to show where they are, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

A Class of Start-Ups Trying to Be the Next Big Thing  |  Jenna Wortham of The New York Times provides a run-down of interesting start-ups to watch right now, including Snapchat, WhatsApp and Oculus VR.
NEW YORK TIMES

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Fearful of a Ruling on Argentina  |  A decision on Argentina’s debt from the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York has caused considerable concern at institutions like the Treasury Department and the International Monetary Fund, Floyd Norris, a columnist for The New York Times, writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

Indonesia Raises Benchmark Interest Rate  |  The move by the Indonesian central bank on Thursday was a “desperate effort to shore up a currency that has been badly hit by the recent sell-off in emerging markets worldwide,” The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

Report Says Fed Broke Its Rules for Secrecy  |  The Associated Press reports: “The Federal Reserve’s inspector general said the Fed violated its own rules for handling confidential material when it inadvertently issued the minutes of a policy meeting a day before the scheduled release in April.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Two Former Traders Plead Guilty in Venezuela Bribery Case  |  Two former employees of Direct Access Partners, a New York broker-dealer, pleaded guilty on Thursday to conspiring to pay bribes to Venezuelan state banking officials, Reuters reports.
REUTERS



Morning Agenda: JPMorgan’s ‘Sons and Daughters’ Program

AT JPMORGAN, A PROGRAM TO HIRE CHINA’S ELITE  |  JPMorgan Chase started a program in 2006 called “Sons and Daughters,” as friends and family of China’s ruling elite were clamoring for jobs at the bank, Jessica Silver-Greenberg and Ben Protess report in DealBook. Although it was originally supposed to protect the bank’s business dealings in China, it went so off track that it is now the focus of a federal bribery investigation in the United States, according to interviews and a confidential government document.

“Saying they wanted to weed out nepotism and avoid bribery charges in the United States, JPMorgan employees in Asia started the program to hire well-connected candidates on a separate track from ordinary applicants, the employees and executives said. Without the program and its heightened scrutiny of the candidates, the employees argued, JPMorgan might improperly hire the children of Chinese officials to win business,” DealBook writes.

“But in the months and years that followed, the two-tiered process that could have prevented questionable hiring practices instead fostered them, according to the interviews as well as the confidential government document. Applicants from prominent Chinese families, interviews show, often faced few job interviews and relaxed standards. While many candidates met or exceeded the bank’s requirements, some had subpar academic records and lacked relevant expertise.”

JPMorgan declined to comment and has not been accused of wrongdoing. No one has indicated that the children of Chinese officials helped the bank win business deals, and public documents do not offer a concrete link between the bank’s hiring practices and its ability to secure deals.

NASDAQ SHUTDOWN IS TRACED TO SOFTWARE  |  The Nasdaq market, which calls itself a home for the stocks of the world’s biggest technology companies, acknowledged on Thursday that a three-hour halt in trading arose from a problem with its software, DealBook’s Michael J. de la Merced reports. The exchange’s parent company released preliminary findings that provided the clearest official insight into what caused the trading halt.

“A series of attempts by a market operated by the NYSE Euronext to connect with the Nasdaq system that reports the prices of recent trades generated a surge of data. That led to a failure of Nasdaq’s backup systems, forcing the market to go offline to fix the problem,” Mr. de la Merced writes.

On Thursday, Nasdaq said that it was “deeply disappointed” in its performance on Aug. 22 and called it “unacceptable to our members, issuers and the investing public.”

ZURICH INSURANCE TO INVESTIGATE EXECUTIVE’S SUICIDE  |  “Zurich Insurance said Friday that its board of directors would look into whether undue pressure was put on the company’s chief financial officer before he died in an apparent suicide, an event that led to the resignation of the Zurich chairman, Josef Ackermann, and shook Switzerland’s tidy financial capital,” Jack Ewing reports in The New York Times.

Top managers of Zurich Insurance sought to reassure skeptical stock analysts that the apparent suicide on Monday of Pierre Wauthier, a 53-year-old father of two, did not signal deeper problems at the company, Switzerland’s third-largest insurer. Still, it was clear that the death of Mr. Wauthier had shaken confidence in Zurich Insurance’s financial performance.

ON THE AGENDA  |  Happy birthday to Warren E. Buffett, who turns 83 today! Data on personal income and outlays in July is released at 8:30 a.m. The final Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment index for August is out at 9:55 a.m.

A WATERSHED DEAL ON TAX CHEATS  |  “Switzerland and the United States reached a watershed deal on Thursday to punish Swiss banks that helped wealthy Americans stash money in hidden offshore accounts, closing the door on an era of bank secrecy and tax evasion,” Lynnley Browning reports in DealBook. “The formal agreement, which was announced on Thursday by the Justice Department in Washington and will be presented by Swiss authorities on Friday, outlined formulas for Swiss banks to pay up to billions of dollars in fines and disclose information about American account holders, a joint statement said.”

Mergers & Acquisitions »

America Movil Threatens to Pull Bid for Dutch Cellphone Operator  |  The Latin American telecommunications giant has threatened to walk away from its proposed 7.2 billion euro, or $9.5 billion, bid for the Dutch cellphone operator KPN after a local foundation moved to block the takeover.
DealBook »

Apache to Sell Stake in Egyptian Holdings to Sinopec for $3.1 Billion  |  The deal is part of the company’s continued effort to sell off assets and rebalance its portfolio.
DealBook »

L’Oreal May Sell Stake in Sanofi to Finance Acquisitions, Chief Says  |  “The cash is there to use,” Jean-Paul Agon, the chief executive of L’Oreal, said on Friday, according to Reuters. “We will see if the opportunities are there to use it.”
REUTERS

Verizon Banks on Wireless Future in Talks With VodafoneVerizon Banks on Wireless Future in Talks With Vodafone  |  Verizon has long sought to buy out Vodafone’s stake in its wireless unit, a deal that would rank among the biggest purchases in history. With complete ownership of its wireless business, the company would be able to shift from receiving dividends to being able to fully incorporate all of its profit. And it will have full control over what it does with that profit.
DealBook »

Vodafone Needs to Deliver for Shareholders if Deal Goes Through  |  A successful sale of Vodafone’s stake in Verizon Wireless would help define Vittorio Colao’s tenure as chief executive, Christopher Hughes of Reuters Breakingviews writes.
REUTERS BREAKINGVIEWS

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Bank of England Head Calls for End to ‘Uncertainty’ Over R.B.S.  |  “It is absolutely imperative that the uncertainty around” the Royal Bank of Scotland, which is backed by the government, “is dissipated,” Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of England, told The Daily Mail.

DAILY MAIL

Global Regulator Moves to Tighten Rules for Shadow Banks  |  The Financial Times reports: “Banks, investment managers and brokers would face tough new restrictions on their ability to temporarily trade securities for cash under far-reaching proposals put forward on Thursday by global regulators meeting as the Financial Stability Board.”
FINANCIAL TIMES

With Banks on the Mend, Fewer Failures  |  “The gradual strengthening of the U.S. banking industry has largely ended one of the hallmarks of the financial crisis: the Friday night scramble to close scores of failing banks,” The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

At Canadian Bank, Chairwoman Would Be a First  |  Kathleen Taylor is set to take over as chairwoman of the Royal Bank of Canada in 2014, making her the first woman to head the board of the bank, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

PRIVATE EQUITY »

U.S. Scrutinizes Private Equity Hiring of Ex-Army Officer  |  Government lawyers have asked the private equity firm headed by the prominent financier Lynn Tilton for information related to its recent hiring of a former Army official.
DealBook »

Blackstone Settles I.P.O. Class Action SuitBlackstone Settles I.P.O. Class Action Suit  |  Blackstone has agreed to pay $85 million to settle a lawsuit brought by a group of investors that accused it of misrepresenting some investments ahead of its 2007 initial public offering.
DealBook »

HEDGE FUNDS »

Icahn Raises Stake in Nuance Communications  |  The activist investor Carl C. Icahn increased his stake in Nuance Communications, a maker of speech recognition software, to 16.9 percent from 16.03 percent, saying he may push for seats on the board, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Harbinger to Take an Insurance Business Public  |  Harbinger Capital Partners has filed to take one of its insurance businesses public shortly after the hedge fund agreed to a tougher compromise with the government over accusations of market manipulation.
DealBook »

General Electric to Spin Off Consumer Finance Business  |  General Electric is preparing to divest a business that issues store credit cards for 55 million Americans, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Microsoft Said to Be in Talks Over Foursquare Investment  |  Microsoft is competing with American Express to take an equity stake in Foursquare Labs, whose app lets people “check in” to show where they are, Bloomberg News reports.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

A Class of Start-Ups Trying to Be the Next Big Thing  |  Jenna Wortham of The New York Times provides a run-down of interesting start-ups to watch right now, including Snapchat, WhatsApp and Oculus VR.
NEW YORK TIMES

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Fearful of a Ruling on Argentina  |  A decision on Argentina’s debt from the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York has caused considerable concern at institutions like the Treasury Department and the International Monetary Fund, Floyd Norris, a columnist for The New York Times, writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

Indonesia Raises Benchmark Interest Rate  |  The move by the Indonesian central bank on Thursday was a “desperate effort to shore up a currency that has been badly hit by the recent sell-off in emerging markets worldwide,” The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

Report Says Fed Broke Its Rules for Secrecy  |  The Associated Press reports: “The Federal Reserve’s inspector general said the Fed violated its own rules for handling confidential material when it inadvertently issued the minutes of a policy meeting a day before the scheduled release in April.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Two Former Traders Plead Guilty in Venezuela Bribery Case  |  Two former employees of Direct Access Partners, a New York broker-dealer, pleaded guilty on Thursday to conspiring to pay bribes to Venezuelan state banking officials, Reuters reports.
REUTERS



Not Crying for Argentina but Fearful of a Ruling

Not Crying for Argentina but Fearful of a Ruling

Juan Mabromata/Agence France-Presse â€" Getty Images

President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner of Argentina. Her country lost an appellate decision.

In the world of sovereign debt defaults, it is hard to imagine a less sympathetic debtor than Argentina. It has defaulted again and again for nearly two centuries, with few apologies. After the country’s most recent default, in 2001, it refused to negotiate for four years and then offered creditors a deal worth about 30 cents on the dollar â€" and vowed that those who refused would receive nothing.

After a second offer â€" on the same terms â€" in 2010, all but 7 percent of the bonds have been exchanged. But some of the remaining ones were owned by hedge funds that went to court. Last week they won a decision from the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York that has caused considerable concern at institutions like the Treasury Department and the International Monetary Fund.

The decision essentially says that Argentina cannot pay any creditors if it does not pay all of them, and says banks â€" in the United States and perhaps around the world â€" could face contempt charges if they allow Argentina to make payments to only those lenders it wishes to pay.

“While we strongly disagree with Argentina’s actions in the international financial arena,” a senior Treasury official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said this week, “we have serious concerns that the Second Circuit’s decision will undermine the orderliness and predictability of sovereign debt restructuring and could roll back years of progress.”

The United States government, in a brief filed with the appeals court before it made its decision, urged that it not take the course it ultimately took, warning that the decision could damage the status of New York as a chief world financial center and cause “a detrimental effect on the systemic role of the U.S. dollar” by encouraging countries to denominate their debt in other currencies and put them outside the jurisdiction of United States courts.

The International Monetary Fund, in a paper issued earlier this year, warned that the decision could “risk undermining the sovereign debt restructuring process.”

Such fears were brushed aside in the appeals court decision.

“We do not believe the outcome of this case threatens to steer bond issuers away from the New York marketplace,” said the opinion, written by Judge Barrington D. Parker. “On the contrary, our decision affirms a proposition essential to the integrity of the capital markets: borrowers and lenders may, under New York law, negotiate mutually agreeable terms for their transactions, but they will be held to those terms. We believe that the interest â€" one widely shared in the financial community â€" in maintaining New York’s status as one of the foremost commercial centers is advanced by requiring debtors, including foreign debtors, to pay their debts.”

Most international bonds are issued under either New York law or English law. The I.M.F., in its paper, states that under English law bondholders have no rights to file suits. Only the bond’s trustee can do that, and the trustee can be compelled to act only if a large number of bondholders demand it. It was concern that countries would flock to English law that led to the United States government warning that New York’s status as a world financial center could be damaged.

In the past, as the I.M.F. paper noted, it has been easy to get an American court to render a judgment against a country that defaulted on its bonds, but “it has been far more difficult to find assets that can be used to satisfy the judgment.”

That is because a federal law severely limits the assets that bondholders can seek to attach. Diplomatic missions are off limits, as are many other assets. And it is obvious that the courts of the nation that defaulted are not going to help the unfortunate creditors. So having the judgment has in the past proved to be worth very little.

But the appeals court has turned that around, at least in the case of Argentina. It concluded that Argentina is required by the “pari passu” clause that, in one form or another, is standard in bond contracts, to treat all its bondholders alike. So if it pays the interest payments owed on its restructured bonds, it must also pay the money owed on the bonds whose holders refused to restructure. And because those bonds are in default, that means the entire amount of principal and interest is owed and must be paid.

The United States brief says that interpretation of “pari passu” is simply wrong. “The settled understanding of pari passu clauses is that selective repayment does not violate the clause, even if it is the result of sovereign policy,” the brief stated. “This view has been expressed not only by the United States, but by academics, governmental bodies, and market participants.” It noted that similar clauses had not been impediments to debt restructurings in the 1980s and 1990s.

That, in and of itself, would have little effect. Argentina could simply ignore the ruling and continue to make payments on the restructured bonds while ignoring the other ones.

Floyd Norris comments on finance and the economy at nytimes.com/economix.

A version of this article appears in print on August 30, 2013, on page B1 of the New York edition with the headline: Not Crying For Argentina But Fearful Of a Ruling.

China Brokerage Fined $85 Million Over ‘Fat-Finger’ Trades

HONG KONG-China’s securities regulator issued a fine of 523 million renminbi ($85 million) on Friday against a brokerage firm whose erroneous trades caused a sudden but short- lived 6 percent increase in Shanghai’s main share index on Aug. 16.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission ruled that the abnormal trades conducted by the brokerage firm, Everbright Securities, had constituted ‘‘a number of legal and regulatory violations,’’ Xinhua, the state-run news agency, reported Friday. In addition to the fine the regulator banned four Everbright staff members from the securities industry for life and ordered the brokerage firm to cease all proprietary trading activities for three months, Xinhua said.

The Shanghai composite index had been trading down on Aug. 16, a Friday, until 11:05 a.m., when it spiked 5.96 percent higher over the course of two minutes â€" with shares in China’s biggest banks and energy companies, and other blue-chip stocks, surging to the 10 percent daily limit â€" for no apparent reason.

Shares in Everbright Securities were suspended from trading that day, and the brokerage said it was investigating a problem within its trading systems. News outlets immediately began speculating that someone at the brokerage firm had committed a so-called fat-finger trade, in which a trader inputs the wrong number. In Chinese, it is called an ‘‘oolong-finger’’ trade, after the slang term for a soccer player’s kicking the ball into his own net.

On Aug. 18, the securities regulator issued a preliminary finding that traders at Everbright had caused the spike by submitting erroneous buy and sell orders worth a total of 23.4 billion renminbi ($3.8 billion).

Of those orders, the brokerage firm was on the hook for 7.3 billion renminbi worth of trades that had been successfully executed â€" much to Everbright’s chagrin, as the market promptly reversed the spike and ended the session down. Everbright estimated that it lost 194 million renminbi on the trades, based on Aug. 16 closing prices.

On Aug. 22, Xu Haoming, Everbright’s president, resigned to take responsibility for the glitch. Mr. Xu was one of the four brokers suspended Friday for life from the securities industry. The others were Yang Chizhong, Shen Shiguang and Yang Jian.

Everbright shareholders will no doubt share the pain. The fine announced Friday appears to be a record for China, and is equal to nearly two- thirds of the 810 million renminbi in net profit that Everbright reported for the first half of the year.

Everbright Securities, listed in Shanghai, is part of the state-run China Everbright Group, whose chairman is Tang Shuangning. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is currently conducting a bribery investigation of JPMorgan Chase, which had employed Mr. Tang’s son, The New York Times has reported.

Investigators are looking at whether the American bank made the hire in an attempt to win business from the Everbright Group.



America Movil Threatens to Pull Bid for Dutch Cellphone Operator

LONDON - The Latin American telecommunications giant América Móvil threatened on Friday to walk away from its proposed 7.2 billion euro, or $9.5 billion, bid for the Dutch cellphone operator KPN after a local foundation moved to block the takeover.

América Móvil, which is owned by the Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim Helú, had planned to use the KPN deal as a foothold into the European market, but has faced vocal opposition to its multibillion-dollar offer.

The latest setback came after a Dutch independent foundation connected to KPN announced late on Thursday that it was exercising its right to acquire preference stock in the Dutch mobile phone operator, which would give it just under 50 percent of the voting rights in the company. KPN’s investors must still vote to approve the proposed takeover by the Latin American company.

The foundation, which under Dutch law has the right to block takeovers if it believes they are not in the best interests of the company, said it had taken the steps because América Móvil’s had not informed KPN about its plans before making its approach.

The independent body said it was concerned about the rights of minority shareholders and the impact of the deal on KPN’s employees.

“The foundation believes that América Móvil has knowingly opted for a hostile approach by not first trying to reach agreement on a merger protocol with KPN,” the foundation said in a statement. “As a result, uncertainty has arisen among a number of stakeholders concerning their position.”

América Móvil, which already has vast operations in both Central and South America, defended its offer on Friday, saying that it had helped to reinforce KPN’s balance sheet and to extract a higher price for the Dutch company’s German subsidiary, E-Plus, which is currently being sold to the Spanish telecommunications company Telefónica for around $11.5 billion.

América Móvil has progressively built up a 30 percent stake in KPN over the last year, while the Dutch company’s shares have fallen 48 percent over the last 12 months. KPN’s stock price tumbled 6 percent in morning trading in Amsterdam on Friday.

Despite its large minority stake in KPN, América Móvil said it was “prepared to withdraw its offer” if the foundation continued to block its bid.

KPN said that it had been informed of the foundation’s decision to exercise its rights to the company’s preference shares. A spokesman declined to comment further on the standoff. Representatives for the foundation and América Móvil were not immediately available for comment.

The foundation’s move to block América Móvil’s bid follows Telefónica’s decision earlier this week to increase its cash-and-stock offer for KPN’s German business, E-Plus.
As KPN’s largest shareholder, América Móvil, which competes with Telefónica in Latin America, had been noncommittal about the original deal for E-Plus, which valued the German unit at around $10.7 billion.

Analysts said that América Móvil’s decision to bid for KPN probably played a part in Teléfonica increasing its offer to $11.5 billion, and América Móvil cited its role in the German deal on Friday as proof that it was acting in the best interests of KPN’s investors.

“América Móvil’s efforts allowed KPN to receive 500 million euros more for the sale of its German asset than had been offered by Telefónica,” the company said.