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New York Regulator Sees Abuse Increasing Under New Insurance Rules

Several big life insurers are going to have to set aside a total of at least $4 billion because New York regulators believe they have been manipulating new rules meant to make sure they have adequate reserves to pay out claims.

The development stems from contentions by insurance companies that states’ regulations are forcing them to hold too much money in reserve. Many of them have engaged in secretive transactions to artificially bolster their balance sheets, often through shell companies in other states or countries. Regulators, who want to be sure companies have enough real liquid assets to pay all claims, have struggled to find a solution that all 50 states can agree on, and decided to test a new framework of rules.

On Friday, New York State plans to drop out of that agreement, according to a letter from Benjamin M. Lawsky, the financial services superintendent, to his fellow state insurance regulators. In the letter, which was reviewed by The New York Times, Mr. Lawsky said the test, which started in 2012, showed that the new framework did not work and was, in fact, making the “gamesmanship and abuses” in the industry even worse.

The move appears to be another attempt by Mr. Lawsky to address the much broader potential problem of the life insurance industry’s use of the secretive transactions. He has derided them as “financial alchemy” because they seem to create surplus assets out of thin air. In June, Mr. Lawsky called on other state insurance regulators to join him in blocking any more of these transactions. But other regulators said they wanted instead to keep pursuing a test of the new regulatory framework. The test covers a narrow segment of the life insurance business, but state regulators, through the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, are committed to extending the framework to all parts of the life insurance indutry over the next few years.

But the new framework is “so loose as to be practically illusory,” Mr. Lawsky said in his letter. A sample of 16 insurers in the test were expected to increase their reserves by $10 billion, he said, but instead only $668 million was added. And that was at just five of the 16 companies; the others did not report any reserve increase at all and in fact seemed inclined to reduce their reserves by about $4 billion.

“This cannot possibly be the ‘compromise’ that we as insurance regulators had in mind,” he told the other commissioners in his letter.

Starting on Friday, New York will revert to its previous way of calculating reserves, at least for the type of life insurance being tested, requiring insurers that offer it to add a total of $4 billion to their reserves. Known as universal life with secondary guarantees, the insurance offers both death benefits and a cash value to policyholders. Because its design is highly flexible, it has for years been subject to questions about the amount of reserves that should back it. Leading companies that sell such insurance include Lincoln National, Genworth, Principal, John Hancock, U.S. Life and Sun Life. When asked about New York’s move, company officials said they could not comment because they still knew little about it.

It was not clear what portion of the $4 billion each company would have to come up with, or how much time they would have. The total amount could ultimately be higher if regulators in other states decide to join Mr. Lawsky. People briefed on his decision said they did not expect any of the affected insurers to stop doing business in New York State but said they might start charging more for this type of policy in the future.

Mr. Lawsky also said he wanted the other insurance regulators to reconsider their commitment to adopting the new framework in its entirety, given its performance on the current test. Adopting it at this point “represents a potent cocktail that puts policyholders and taxpayers at significant risk,” he said.

Companies have been arguing for years that state insurance regulations are too formulaic, forcing them to hold far more reserves than necessary. The proposed new framework, known as “principle-based reserving,” would free insurance actuaries from having to follow statutory requirements in their calculations, allowing them instead to use their own data and assumptions.

While regulators grappled with the reserve question and one another, a wave of transactions washed through the life insurance industry, sweeping billions of dollars’ worth of business offshore, where reserve requirements are different. The transactions, known as captive reinsurance, often involve the creation of  subsidiaries, known as captives, that then sell reinsurance to their parent companies, which removes billions of dollars of policy obligations from the parents’ books.

In recent years, some states have been promoting themselves as good places to set up captives, promising insurers an offshore-style regulatory environment without the need to go offshore.

The transactions allow insurers to do other things with their money besides locking it up to pay future claims. But as they have become widespread, concerns have grown that insurers are lowballing their reserves and adding a large amount of hidden leverage to the life insurance industry.

In August, Moody’s Investors Service estimated that captive reinsurance had artificially bolstered life insurers’ balance sheets by $324 billion. The estimate covered a much wider sector than the one being monitored by New York State and included transactions conducted throughout the life insurance industry, as well as long-term care and disability insurance. Its finding suggests that as much as 85 percent of the sector’s aggregate capital and surplus is being enhanced by reinsurance through affiliated companies. Moody’s noted that the transactions did vary, and that not all of them caused hidden capital shortfalls. Some insurers do not engage in them at all.

The National Association of Insurance Commissioners has reacted to Mr. Lawsky’s June proposal with concern, saying he appeared to be giving the federal government reasons to step into the realm of insurance regulation, something the states generally oppose. The Dodd-Frank financial overhaul law created a body called the Federal Insurance Office within the Treasury Department, which has been studying state insurance regulation and is supposed to report on how current practices could be improved. Its report is more than a year overdue, but at an association meeting in late August, some officials said the report was imminent.



New Chapter in a Clash Over Bonds in Argentina

The United States Supreme Court could decide within weeks whether to take up a drawn-out battle between the Argentine government and creditors seeking repayment on bonds that Argentina defaulted on over 10 years ago.

The court will hold a private conference on Sept. 30 to decide whether to consider an appeal by Argentina of a ruling in favor of the creditors in October by the Second United States Circuit Court of Appeals. The Supreme Court could reach a decision as soon as Oct. 1.

The group of creditors, known as holdouts because they have refused to accept anything other than full repayment, includes Elliott Management, a hedge fund run by the billionaire Paul E. Singer, and Aurelius Capital Management.

Their case goes back to 2001, when Argentina defaulted on close to $100 billion in loans. Since then, the government has twice negotiated deals with the majority of bondholders to exchange the original debt for new “exchange” bonds worth a lot less.

The holdouts rejected these new bonds and instead have sued the Argentine government, arguing that the government is now capable of making full repayments. They have demanded to be paid more than $1.33 billion.

On Aug. 23, a three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York upheld the lower court decision.

If the Supreme Court chooses not to consider the appeal, the Argentine government will be one step closer to paying the creditors in full.

Legal specialists have said that a final ruling in favor of the creditors could send waves across the international debt market used by countries to help finance their governments.

The case has pitted the creditors against Argentina’s president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who has accused the holdout group of creditors of being “vultures.”

To help the group’s image, Mr. Singer joined the lobbying group American Task Force Argentina in bringing a small group of Argentine pensioners who are part of the holdout group to New York in January.

“There has been an enormous amount of gamesmanship of disproportion,” Anna Gelpern, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said in response to the back and forth between the holdouts and Mrs. Kirchner.



Ackman Questions Impartiality of Herbalife’s Auditor

William A. Ackman expanded his campaign against Herbalife on Wednesday, questioning the independence of its auditor, Pricewaterhouse Coopers, and warning of “serious accounting” issues at the company.

Mr. Ackman, the hedge fund billionaire who runs Pershing Square Capital Management, questioned whether PricewaterhouseCoopers has a conflict of interest because of nonauditing work it performed for Herbalife, the nutritional supplement company. He has accused the company of being a pyramid scheme and has made a $1 billion bet that its stock will fall.

In a two-page note addressed to Dennis M. Nally and Robert E. Moritz, the chairmen of PricewaterhouseCoopers, Mr. Ackman urged the auditor to “carefully study the issues that we have raised” as part of its audit review. Attached to the note, which was also sent to the Securities and Exchange Commission and members of Herbalife’s audit committee, were 50 pages outlining Mr. Ackman’s contention that Herbalife is a fraudulent company.

The letter also asks Mr. Nally and Mr. Moritz to “explain how PwC intends to overcome and resolve the appearance of impaired independence with respect to its in-progress and impending audit and review in light of nonaudit services performed by PwC and/or members of the PwC global network for Herbalife.”

Herbalife hired PricewaterhouseCoopers in May 2013 after its former auditor KPMG resigned amid revelations that a KPMG partner had leaked nonpublic information about Herbalife to a friend and stock trader.

In May, Herbalife disclosed in a filing that it had used PricewaterhouseCoopers for payroll and administrative services but added that an internal audit committee had determined the earlier services would not have any bearing on the auditor’s objectivity or impartiality.

The 50 pages of notes attached to Mr. Ackman’s letter are part of a three-hour presentation he gave at a Sohn Conference Foundation gathering in Manhattan in December.

At the event, Mr. Ackman disclosed he had taken an “enormous” short position in Herbalife’s stock. Since the presentation, Herbalife’s stock price has increased by more than 75 percent, to $66.51 a share from about $37.

The letter to PricewaterhouseCoopers is dated Aug. 29 and was first reported by The New York Post.

PricewaterhouseCoopers declined to comment. A representative for Herbalife could not be reached.



Slim Can Afford to Raise Bid for Dutch Firm

The billionaire Carlos Slim Helú can pay more for the Dutch telecommunications firm KPN. Unless the two sides agree a friendly deal, a poison pill will probably stop Mr. Slim’s América Móvil from buying the 70.2 percent of KPN that it does not already own.

Yet there are strategic and financial reasons for Mr. Slim to keep the deal alive. And because his current offer looks cheap, a sweetened bid could still stack up.

At 2.40 euros a share, Mr. Slim’s proposal is worth at most 7.2 billion euros. It represents a skinny 20 percent premium over KPN’s value before the offer was announced, and equates to an enterprise value of about 4.6 times 2014 earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, Breakingviews calculations show.

That looks meager. Without any takeover premium, European peers trade on about 4.8 times forward enterprise value-to-Ebitda ratios, according to Datastream. Worse, the offer is unchanged since KPN, at América Móvil’s prodding, won better terms for the sale of its German unit. That added roughly 11 cents a share to KPN’s value.

So, there should be room for maneuvering, even if América Móvil is insisting it will not budge. A bid at 2.70 euros a share would lift the premium to 35 percent, and the Ebitda multiple to about 5 times, without hurting América Móvil’s credit ratings.

What’s more, if the regulatory, technological and economic challenges hammering European telecommunications abate, valuation multiples and earnings should recover across the sector. And while there won’t be big synergies, América Móvil presumably believes that it can run KPN better than the current lot, unlocking extra value.

A successful deal has wider significance for Mr. Slim, too. He has already staked 4 billion euros on KPN, but gained limited influence in return, as the debate about the sale price of the German unit showed. He is also eager to diversify away from Mexico, where the government is taking on oligopolies. Doubling down both deepens his European presence and protects an important existing investment.

These broader strategic considerations are harder to value. But suppose they are worth 500 million euros to Mr. Slim. That could justify a further bump towards 2.85 euros a share. If Mr. Slim really is serious about his proposal, he can afford to show it.

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



After Goldman and a Book, Greg Smith Emerges to Aid Regulators

Greg Smith created a headache for Goldman Sachs last year when he resigned from the firm through a harshly worded Op-Ed article in the pages of The New York Times.

Now it appears that Mr. Smith is back on Wall Street’s case. But this time, he’s helping regulators draft rules intended to rein in risky trading.

Mr. Smith met with officials at the Securities and Exchange Commission in August to talk about the Volcker Rule, a regulation stemming from the Dodd-Frank financial overhaul that would limit banks’ ability to trade for their own accounts. The meeting was first reported Tuesday evening by Politico.

Armed with a five-point agenda, Mr. Smith advised the regulators not to trust Wall Street’s claim that the Volcker Rule would cause liquidity to dry up, according to an S.E.C. memo. He also emphasized the importance of regulating certain arcane financial products “where the vast majority of money gets made in the trading business.”

Mr. Smith’s agenda touched on some of the central debates surrounding the regulation, like the difference between “market making” â€" when a bank facilitates trading by customers â€" and proprietary trading, or trading that puts the bank’s own capital at risk.

But it also suggested a possible second act for Mr. Smith, who wrote a book last year after his Times essay made him briefly the talk of Wall Street. Mr. Smith gave media interviews after the publication of the book â€" “Why I Left Goldman Sachs: A Wall Street Story” â€" discussing what he saw as a culture of greed with little regard for clients.

Word of his meeting with the S.E.C. caused an online stir on Wednesday.

Matt Levine, a former Goldman employee who writes for Bloomberg View, had this comment: “Who better to tell you how to write the Volcker Rule than a disgruntled former midlevel derivatives salesman? Lots of people, probably!”

“Former Goldman Sachs Ping-Pong Star Is Keeping Busy,” read the headline on Mr. Levine’s post, a nod to Mr. Smith’s table tennis prowess.

The news also lit up Twitter, where the wise cracks were plentiful:



Google’s Stock Settlement May Not Do Much for Shareholders

Google and its co-founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, settled a shareholder lawsuit earlier this summer that most likely clears the way for Google to issue new nonvoting Class C shares. The settlement perpetuates the co-founders’ control, which is good for them, but it may not do much for Google’s shareholders, the majority of whom voted to oppose the maneuver.

When Google went public in 2004, it had a dual-class structure. Mr. Brin and Mr. Page were issued Class B shares with 10 votes apiece, while public shareholders received Class A shares with only one vote. The idea was to ensure that the co-founders kept control of Google even if they did not own a majority of the company.

But over time, Google has issued more Class A stock, and the two co-founders have sold Class B shares, bringing them closer to the threshold of losing control of Google.

So Mr. Brin and Mr. Page and their advisers approached Google’s board and proposed that Google issue new nonvoting Class C shares that would allow them to keep their grip on the company. These shares would then be issued for acquisitions, employee stock incentive plans and other stock sales.

Google’s board eventually voted to go along. But Google’s shareholders disagreed, protesting the move.

Only about 12.7 percent of Google’s Class A stockholders â€" other than Mr. Brin, Mr. Page and other Google directors and employees â€" voted in support of issuing the Class C stock. That’s a pretty poor showing by any measure. With little regard for the shareholders’ opinion, Google continued with the plan.

The only barrier to the plan thus became a shareholder class-action lawsuit filed in Delaware Chancery Court asserting that Google’s directors had breached their fiduciary duties in deciding to issue the Class C shares. The lawsuit argued that the directors were conflicted in deciding to issue this Class C stock because, among other reasons, their jobs depended on the continued good will of Mr. Brin and Mr. Page.

The plaintiffs may have a point, but more important, there is a principle in Delaware that control of a company is something of value that presumably should be paid for. Yet the Class C plan allows Mr. Brin and Mr. Page to maintain control for a longer period of time than they otherwise would have â€" and they were paying nothing for it.

The case had traction, but on the eve of trial, Google and the lawyers representing the plaintiffs settled.

It’s an odd settlement. Not only does it not really address the big issue involving the Class C shares â€" that they perpetuate the co-founders’ control â€" it also stretches the laws of corporate finance. The heart of the settlement is a mechanism intended to compensate Google shareholders for any difference in the value of the Class C shares and their Class A shares. The idea, no doubt, is that nonvoting shares typically trade at a discount to voting shares and so Google will pay the difference.

Let me explain. The heart of settlement is a mechanism intended to compensate Google shareholders for any difference in the value of the Class C shares and their Class A shares.

The settlement requires Google to pay the following amounts if, one year from the issuance of the Class C shares, the value diverges according to the following formula:

- If the C share price is equal to or more than 1 percent, but less than 2 percent, below the A share price, 20 percent of the difference;

- If the C share price is equal to or more than 2 percent, but less than 3 percent, below the A share price, 40 percent of the difference;

- If the C share price is equal to or more than 3 percent, but less than 4 percent, below the A share price, 60 percent of the difference;

- If the C share price is equal to or more than 4 percent, but less than 5 percent, below the A share price, 80 percent of the difference.”

- If the C share price is equal to or more than 5 percent below the A share price, 100 percent of the difference, up to 5 percent.

If you just skimmed through this, the idea is to pay some percentage of the difference in the price of the Class C shares and Class A shares after one year, with the amount capped at a difference of 5 percent.

There are multiple problems with this formula. Matt Levine at Dealbreaker highlighted one, noting that it is possible â€" though probably not practical â€" to use volume-weighted average trading prices to set up an arbitrage opportunity as the volume of the Class A and C shares differs.

But there’s also the issue that the formula is a finance puzzle. The best way to understand this puzzle is to use an example given to me by a finance professor.

If the Class A shares trade around $450 (after the split/C issuance) and the C shares trade at a 4.5 percent discount during the year (or $429.75 per share), then investors expect a payment of: 80 percent times $450 times 4.5 percent = $16.20. The value of C shares would then be $445.95 ($429.75 plus $16.20). But if this is the new trading value during the year, that’s only a discount of less than 1 percent to the A shares. So no payment would be made. But if no payment is made, we are back to the full discount and this continues ad infinitum.

In other words, the Class C formula appears designed not to pay out. I spoke with Jeffrey C. Block of Block & Leviton LLP, co-counsel for the plaintiffs, who confirmed this intention. Acknowledging that the plaintiffs were also wondering where the stock would trade, he said that the idea was to keep the Class C and Class A shares trading at the same value for the year so that investors could have time to decide which to sell of keep the shares.

But the Class C payout is a one-time-only affair after a year. Nonvoting stock tends to trade at a discount of 4 to 10 percent below voting stock. So after day 365, it should simply drop to that discount. But the market will price this in and push the Class C lower as the one-year mark approaches. That probably means some payment but one that is much lower than this formula would seemingly provide.

Of course, this assumes the discount ranges apply. It may be, as Mr. Levine noted, that because Google’s voting shares already don’t count since the co-founders control the votes, the nonvoting shares may not trade at the typical discount.

In any event, if there is a finance professor who would like to have a class look at this problem and forecast the trading, I’d be happy to post the results.

But the settlement does not make clear what, if any, value it gives to Google shareholders.

Nor does it address the issue that Mr. Brin and Mr. Page are getting firmer control of the company and not fully paying for it, if they end up paying anything. And let’s face it, control of Google is worth lots.

The rest of the settlement is similarly weak and favorable to Google, requiring the board to “consider” things but not actually do anything. The settlement, for example, requires that the Google board consider the best interests of the shareholders before issuing more than 10 million Class C shares. That’s fine but they’re already required to do this, and this provision only lasts for three years. Perhaps the strongest provision of the settlement is one that makes it harder for Mr. Brin and Mr. Page to sell Class C shares without selling a corresponding number of Class B shares, thereby ensuring that if they sold down their shares, they would at least reduce their voting control.

The question now is whether the Delaware court approves this settlement at a hearing scheduled for Oct. 28.

It is extremely rare for a Delaware court to reject a proposed settlement. But still, the court must find the settlement fair to Google’s shareholders. The judge could force the parties to explain what this formula is intended to do and what it is forecast to pay. There is also the possibility of objectors. Such objections are also rare, but given the prominence of this case, it may be more likely than normal.

When it reached the settlement, Google asserted that it “always believed our founder-led approach gives us the freedom to make long-term bets, like Android, Chrome and YouTube, that benefit consumers and shareholders alike.”

Ultimately, dual-class stock is often justified because all shareholders buy into it at the initial public offering. But that is not what is going on here. It may indeed be that this Class C proposal is a good thing. But it goes against the fundamentals of dual-class stock.

In the end, the real issue is not whether Google’s co-founders can do this. One would hope they wouldn’t without shareholder approval, but that is clearly an afterthought. Rather, the question is whether they can do this without having to paying for the privilege. That’s the real issue in this settlement, and it’s now in the judge’s hands.



Indian Tribes Press Their Online Loan Case Against New York

Since taking over as New York State’s top financial regulator in 2011, Benjamin M. Lawsky has aggressively pursued wrongdoing far beyond the state’s borders, investigating financial consultants in Washington, insurance industry practices nationwide and money laundering by foreign banks.

On Wednesday afternoon, two Indian tribes, their businesses under attack by Mr. Lawsky, will argue in Federal District Court in Manhattan that the regulator has overstepped his jurisdictional bounds.

The tribes, each halfway across the country, have found themselves in state’s cross hairs over the online lending operations they run from their reservations. Last month, Mr. Lawsky’s Department of Financial Services announced an aggressive campaign against the payday lending industry, seeking to stamp out Internet businesses that offer small, short-term loans at exorbitant interest rates.

But the American Indians have fought back. They have sued Mr. Lawsky, arguing that their sovereign status protects them from regulation by New York and other states. The two plaintiffs in the case are the Otoe Missouria Tribe, located in Red Rock, Okla., and the Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians, a tribe located in Watersmeet, Mich. The Otoe Missouria tribe operates American Web Loan and Great Plains Lending, and the Lac Vieux Indians run CastlePayday.com.

“This is a straightforward case that is about the real world importance of Native American sovereign rights,” said David Bernick, the lawyer representing the tribes. “Since Lawsky has ignored hundreds of years of precedent, he has left tribes with only one clear path: go to the courts to protect a bedrock principle of the law.”

Mr. Lawsky says that despite claims of tribal sovereignty, he has the power to protect vulnerable New York State consumers from American Indian-run businesses that reach beyond a reservation’s borders. He argues that insulating tribal businesses from regulation would hamstring New York State’s ability to enforce its laws against predatory lending.

“State laws like New York’s usury statutes may validly be applied to economic transactions between Native Americans and New York consumers when those transactions have significant and injurious off-reservation effects,” Mr. Lawsky’s lawyers wrote in a court filing last week.

As part of a growing effort by regulators across the country to crack down on payday loans, Mr. Lawsky sent letters last month to 35 online lenders â€" 11 with purported ties to Indian tribes â€" asking them to “cease and desist” from offering loans with interest rates that in some cases exceed 500 percent annually. He also sent letters to more than 100 banks, notifying them of his investigation and asking for their cooperation in his effort to eradicate the loans.

The state’s attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, subsequently filed a lawsuit against Western Sky Financial, an online lending business operated by the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe. Last week, Western Sky, based in Timber Lake, S.D., suspended its operations and laid off nearly 100 employees. An affiliated business, Cash Call, remains in operation. Western Sky has also accused New York State of overreaching.

A lawyer representing Western Sky, Katya Jestin of Jenner & Block, said that her client would move to dismiss the lawsuit next week on similar grounds as the tribes that had already brought action against Mr. Lawsky.

“Consumers voluntarily entered into the loans and agreed when they signed the loan agreements to be bound by the laws and the courts of the Cheyenne River tribe,” Ms. Jestin said. “New York’s lawsuit is an attempt to sidestep these agreements.”

The concept of tribal sovereignty predates the formation of the United States and is preserved in treaties between the federal government and Indian tribes. While Congress can regulate the affairs of Indian tribes and limit their sovereignty, states lack that power.

Lawyers for the Indian tribes argue that Congress, when it passed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform law in 2010, would have chosen to exercise authority over tribal nations’ lending businesses. Instead, Dodd-Frank placed states and Indian tribes on equal footing under federal consumer-finance regulations. The law, said the tribes’ lawyers in a court filing, “explicitly refused to subjugate tribal lenders to the jurisdiction of the states.”

The tribes liken their online lending businesses to the gambling operations that have proved lucrative for other tribes. They argue that New York State should not be able to stop its residents from voluntarily reaching out to obtain high interest-rate loans, just as a state’s anti-gambling laws cannot forbid tribal casinos from serving New York residents who travel to them. And both tribes say that they have created their own regulatory authorities to oversee the businesses.

Online lending has become a popular venture for Indian tribes over the last several years as states have cracked down on payday loans. The tribes say that in many cases, e-commerce activities have become a vital source of revenue, especially because their remote locations inhibit their ability to operate casinos. For the Otoe Missouria Tribe, lending revenue accounts for roughly half of the tribe’s nonfederal budget, according to a court filing.

“Every Indian tribe worth its salt has to provide health care, public safety, education and a panoply of essential services to its members,” said Matthew Fletcher, a law professor at Michigan State University and an authority on Indian law. “These tribes must reach off the reservation to conduct business because there is a desperate need for revenue.”

Loan industry experts point out that if New York State barred the tribes from doing business here, they could still issue high interest-rate loans to consumers elsewhere. Payday loans â€" named because they are often secured by the borrower’s next paycheck â€" are illegal in just 15 states. The tribal businesses could also issue loans in New York State at no more than the state’s maximum interest rate of 16 percent.

And though not an issue in this case, regulators are also concerned about the so-called rent-a-tribe problem. In those cases, rogue payday lenders have associated with American Indians to use tribal sovereignty as a shield and try to make predatory loans beyond the reach of state usury laws.

Matthew Anderson, a spokesman for Mr. Lawsky’s office, said that while the state respects tribal sovereignty, the tribes lose that special protection when the loans are sold illegally to New Yorkers outside of tribal boundaries.

“It is a sad day when payday lenders are suing to make illegal predatory loans, which serve only to trap families in endless cycles of debt,” Mr. Anderson said.



Vivendi to Weigh Splitting Up

The French conglomerate Vivendi said on Wednesday that its board was considering cleaving itself in two, months after it struck deals to sell big holdings in the video game maker Activision Blizzard and a Moroccan phone company.

In a statement, Vivendi said that it was considering a plan to essentially spin off its SFR cellphone service arm, leaving the company with its core media holdings. Such a move would give SFR more freedom to consider deals and other strategic moves amid a sweeping overhaul of the telecommunications industry.

And it would leave Vivendi as an international media giant, whose businesses include the Universal Music Group, the giant of the music industry.

“The planned demerger would create significant value to shareholders as they would have the opportunity to invest in two clearly differentiated vehicles evaluated according to the specifics of their respective sectors,” the company said in a statement.

The announcement on Wednesday came after two already significant moves by Vivendi to slim itself down amid investor concerns for a broad overhaul of its corporate structure. In late July, the company announced that it would sell the bulk of its holdings in Activision Blizzard back to the video game publisher for about $8.2 billion.

Days earlier, Vivendi entered talks to sell its 53 percent stake in Maroc Telecom to the Emirates Telecommunications Corporation for about $5.5 billion.

The company’s board could decide on the break-up as soon as early next year, which would mean that shareholders could vote on its at the conglomerate’s annual meeting.



Verizon Set for $49 Billion Debt Sale

Verizon Communications prepared to sell $49 billion worth of bonds on Wednesday in what will be the largest investment grade corporate bond sale ever, trumping the previous record set by Apple’s $17 billion bond sale in April.

The huge issuance of corporate debt comes as Verizon moves to take advantage of low interest rates and finance its $130 billion deal to buy out Vodafone’s 45 percent stake in their Verizon Wireless joint venture.

Demand for the Verizon notes, which pay a generous yield compared with similar corporate bonds and government notes, far exceeded expectations, demonstrating the powerful appetite that institutional investors have for safe corporate debt with solid returns, and the ease with which big companies can raise large sums of money.

For companies looking to tap the debt markets to finance a deal, there has rarely been a better time than now. With interest rates low and investors eager to buy safe corporate bonds, Verizon had no problem financing the third-largest deal of all time.

“Timing is everything,” said Donna Hitscherich, a finance professor at the Columbia Business School. “There are deals happening now that we were talking about in the 90’s. The catalytic event here was willingness and available financing.”

Verizon and Vodafone had talked about unwinding their joint venture for years, but talks accelerated in recent months, largely because interest rates were low. Explaining the timing of the deal last week, Verizon‘s chief executive, Lowell McAdam, noted that it made sense to strike the deal now, before the Federal Reserve begins raising rates, as is expected.

“The capital markets environment is favorable,” Mr. McAdam said.

But bankers said the availability of cheap financing alone was unlikely to lead to a boom in mergers and acquisitions, as many companies remain hesitant to do risky deals. Rather, for those companies considering a big deal, there is incentive to get it done as soon as possible to take advantage of historically low interest rates.

In the last few months, as interest rates have crept up, deal-makers have watched the markets closely for signs that deal financing might grow more difficult. And while rates have not yet spiked, the small increases have already made an impact.

People involved with the sale of Heinz to 3G Capital and Warren E. Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway earlier this year say that that deal might not get done today. The premium paid for the company was already so high, that even slightly higher financing costs might have put a deal out of reach.

Verizon had taken out a $61 billion bridge loan in order to get the deal done. By selling bonds, the company will be quickly repaying the largest portion of that, a $49 billion capital markets bridge.

People briefed on the company’s financing said Verizon initially expected to sell about $35 billion in dollar-denominated debt, then turn to European markets to sell the rest. But because demand for the dollar bonds was so high, the company will not need to embark on a European sale at all.

For institutional investors, Verizon’s offering represents a welcome opportunity to lock in decent returns from a stable corporate issuer.

The yields on the bonds - a mix of fixed and floating rates notes stretching from three to 30 years - are better than most bonds being offered by similarly secure corporations, and more than government notes. A 10-year bond is offered at 2.25 percentage points more than the comparable Treasury note, or about 5.2 percent.

“Investors continue to sit on a lot of cash,” said Kevin Giddis, head of fixed income sales, trading and research at Raymond James. Mr. Giddis noted that with the equity and currency markets still shaky, locking in such rates was appealing.

“As investors look around with all the cash they have, 5 percent in recent memory doesn’t loo that bad,” he said.

Final pricing and allocation was expected to be announced Wednesday afternoon.

Global Corporate Investment Grade Bonds: All Time Largest Deals

PROCEEDS, IN BILLIONS DATE ISSUER
Source: Thomson Reuters
$16.958 April 2013 Apple
16.328 February 2009 Roche Holdings
16.324 March 2001 France Telecom SA
14.657 November 2012 Abbott Laboratories-Research
14.544 June 2000 Deutsche Telekom


9/11 Through the Emotional Lens of Cantor Fitzgerald

Howard Lutnick is known best by reputation, for being a ruthless competitor, even by Wall Street’s cutthroat standards.

Those who know Mr. Lutnick, the 52-year-old chief executive of the bond trading house Cantor Fitzgerald, also agree he is an incredibly complicated person, and that side of him is explored in a new documentary on Cantor and its comeback from the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001.

The film, “Out of the Clear Blue Sky,” tracks Mr. Lutnick’s very public journey from victim, a man whose firm lost 658 employees over the course of a morning 12 years ago, to villain, when just four days after the attack he cut off the paychecks to the families of his employees â€" some dead, some still listed as missing â€" and then back again.

The firm’s story is painfully familiar, but “Out of the Clear Blue Sky” â€" which weaves together interviews with Mr. Lutnick, family members of those who were killed, home video and rarely seen before clips of Cantor executives from the months after the attacks â€" draws Mr. Lutnick out in a way that has not been seen before publicly.

“It smelled like it, it felt like, it tasted like, I was just back there, wham,” he says of that fateful day and how it reminded him of the days after his father died. Mr. Lutnick had just started college. His mother had died when he was 16, meaning he and his siblings were now orphans.

The film opened in New York earlier this month and there is a special screening tonight in select theaters across the county.

I interviewed Mr. Lutnick in 2011 for an article on the 10th anniversary of the attacks. In preparation, I read almost every interview he had given on what happened that day and those that followed. During our initial discussion, his words began to sound familiar, borrowed from the dozens of other interviews he had given. It made him sound rehearsed at best, insincere at worst. He conceded his approach was a hazard of telling the same story over and over.

“Out of the Clear Blue Sky” covers a lot of old ground, but in this rare instance Cantor and Mr. Lutnick’s stories are told in one sitting; the film runs almost two hours. It gives Mr. Lutnick some breathing room, letting him weave in and out of memories, be they from that day, or the exchange he had with an uncle after his father died. It’s also likely that the filmmaker’s relationship to Cantor â€" Danielle Gardner’s brother worked at Cantor and died in the attacks â€" put Mr. Lutnick at ease.

In addition, the film provides fresh insight into the weeks that followed the disclosure that Mr. Lutnick had cut off the paychecks of employees who had died.

The film scrolls through some of the hundreds of messages and death threats Mr. Lutnick received after news broke of his decision to cut families off the payroll. “You must die a painful death,” one person threatened. “You have no right to be alive,” another said.

The firm also spotlights the role of Mr. Lutnick’s sister Edie Lutnick, a lawyer who had been running her practice out of Cantor’s offices, as head of a charity that administers a program that Cantor put in place to help the families of employees who lost family members, an effort that turned out to be one of the most generous of its kind.

“Denial will never ever leave you if you are directly affected by this,” David Eagan, who lost two daughters on Sept. 11, told Ms. Gardner. “You will always, in the course of a day, think this could not have happened.”



Sotheby’s to Weigh Financial Moves Amid Investor Pressure

Sotheby’s announced on Wednesday that it was reviewing its financial policies, after a number of high-profile hedge funds built up significant long positions in the auction house.

The company said that it was considering moves like a share repurchase or raising its dividend, taking into account a number of factors, including taking on new debt, the value of its real estate and possible tax issues.

“Each of these options present possible advantages and disadvantages; all are complex,” Bill Ruprecht, Sotheby’s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. “We are determined to fully exploring every avenue and we are committed to pursuing return of capital alternatives.”

As of June 30, the company reported having about $699.6 million in cash and short-term investments and $515.2 million in long-term debt.

The auction house’s announcement comes several weeks after Third Point, the big hedge fund run by Daniel S. Loeb, raised its stake in the company to 5.7 percent. The activist investor, known for forcing big changes at Yahoo and challenging Sony, is now one of Sotheby’s biggest shareholders.

In a filing disclosing its stake, Third Point wrote that it would “engage in a dialogue” with the company’s board.

Other hedge funds also own big stakes as well. Marcato Capital Management, a hedge fund run by a protégé of William A. Ackman, reported owning about 6.7 percent of Sotheby’s, while Nelson Peltz’s Trian Partners holds about 3 percent.

A spokeswoman for Third Point declined to comment. Representatives for Marcato and Trian weren’t immediately available for comment.

Shares in Sotheby’s rose 1.3 percent in early morning trading on Wednesday, to $48.01. They have climbed 4.9 percent since Third Point disclosed its increased stake.



Deutsche Bank Plans to Extend Contract of Co-C.E.O.

LONDON - Deutsche Bank announced on Wednesday that it planned to extend the tenure of its co-chief executive, Jürgen Fitschen, in a move aimed at pre-empting leadership questions at Germany’s largest financial institution.

The employment contract of Mr. Fitschen, 65, was set to expire in early 2015 but will now be extended until March 31, 2017, and match that of Deutsche Bank’s other co-chief executive, Anshu Jain.

Mr. Jain, 50, and his German counterpart became joint leaders of the German bank last year after Deutsche Bank’s former chief, Josef Ackermann, stepped down. The departure of Mr. Ackermann was mired in questions over who would succeed him.

Deutsche Bank’s co-heads have faced opposition recently from shareholders, who have voiced their anger over a number of legal disputes that hit the bank. The bank is being investigated in connection to the global rate-rigging scandal and has faced allegations of tax evasion related to the trading of European carbon emissions credits.

On Wednesday, the bank said that its supervisory board would vote on extending Mr. Fitschen’s contract at a meeting in late October. Mr. Fitschen is the former head of Deutsche Bank’s German unit, while Mr. Jain previously ran the firm’s investment banking division.

“Jürgen Fitschen and Anshu Jain together requested the renewal,” Paul Achleitner, chairman of Deutsche Bank’s supervisory board, said in a statement.



Money Manager Takes Big Stake in News Corp.

Southeastern Asset Management, the money manager that fought the buyout of Dell, has taken a 12 percent voting stake in the News Corporation, making it the second largest investor behind the company’s chairman, Rupert Murdoch.

By acquiring nearly 24 million Class B shares, Southeastern becomes one of the most influential shareholders of News Corp., which owns The Wall Street Journal and The New York Post, along with several Australian media properties.

But in disclosing its holdings with Securities and Exchange Commission late on Tuesday, Southeastern filed a form 13G, suggesting its stake was a passive investment for now. Its stake was “not acquired for the purpose and do not have the effect of changing or influencing the control” of the company, according to the filing.

Southeastern and could not be reached for comment and News Corp. declined to comment.

News Corp. has a dual class stock structure, and most investors hold Class A stock, which does not include voting rights. It was not immediately clear why Southeastern acquired Class B shares if it did not intend to influence the company.

Mr. Murdoch split his media empire in two earlier this year. His newspapers and Australian properties retained the name News Corp., and now make up a public company with a market value of about $6.3 billion. Meanwhile Fox News and the Fox broadcast network, as well as the 21st Century Fox movie studio, trade under the name Twenty-First Century Fox, which has a market value of nearly $75 billion.

By investing in News Corp. on the heels of its high-profile battle with Dell, Southeastern has gone after another marquee company with a larger than life founder.

Southeastern has about $34 billion under management. Though it initially proposed the idea of going private to Mr. Dell and asked to participate in the deal, it was sidelined when he decided to go forward with the proposal. Southeastern then became one of the most outspoken voices against the deal, joining forces with Carl C. Icahn and proposing a number of alternative transactions that failed to derail the buyout.

After months of tense negotiations with Dell, both Southeastern and Mr Icahn said this week they would no longer opposed the deal, which is expected to be approved by shareholders on Thursday in Austin, Tex.



Vodafone’s Bid for Kabel Deutschland Awaits Shareholder Approval

LONDON â€" The British telecommunications giant Vodafone faces a nervous wait on Wednesday as the shareholder voting deadline approaches for its proposed takeover of the German cable operator Kabel Deutschland for 7.7 billion euros, or $10.1 billion.

The deadline for Kabel Deutschland investors to accept or reject the offer is midnight Wednesday in Germany, which is 7 p.m. Wednesday in New York.

Although the offer has the backing of Kabel Deutschland’s board, Vodafone still appeared to be far short of the threshold of 75 percent of the German company’s shareholder votes that are required for approval. Vodafone had so far only secured around 20 percent of investors’ support for the takeover, according to a statement from the British company early Wednesday.

Vodafone, which made its bid for Kabel Deutschland in June, reiterated in a statement this week that it would not improve its offer of 87 euros a share. The company called on Kabel’s shareholders to tender their outstanding shares in favor of the deal.

A number of hedge funds, including Paul Singer’s Elliott Management, hold sizable minority stakes in Kabel Deutschland, Germany’s largest cable company, setting up a battle over whether Vodafone will have to increase its offer to seal the deal.

Many investors may still tender their shares just before the deadline on Wednesday, as some shareholders could still be holding out for a last-minute rival bid from the likes of John C. Malone‘s Liberty Media, which owns Germany’s second largest cable operator, Unity Media.

Analysts warn, however, that any rival bid might face antitrust scrutiny from both German and European Union officials. And they said it was unlikely that Vodafone would increase its offer for Kabel Deutschland.

”Vodafone is already paying a full price,” said Will Draper, a telecom analyst at Espirito Santo in London. ”It’s not their style to put in a low-ball offer just to come back with a higher offer later on.”

A spokesman for Vodafone declined to comment. A representative for Elliott Management, which owns around a 11 percent stake in Kabel Deutschland, was not available for comment.

The stand-off comes just over a week after Vodafone agreed to sell its 45 percent stake in Verizon Wireless to its American partner, Verizon Communications, in a blockbuster deal valued at $130 billion.

Amid rumors that Vodafone may now be looking to scoop up telecom and cable assets across Europe, the company has announced that it is handing its shareholders around 70 percent, or $84 billion, of the windfall from the Verizon Wireless sale.

Vodafone also plans to invest $9.2 billion over the next three years to upgrade its network infrastructure, as more consumers use their smartphones and mobile devices to surf the Web.

Still, for the British company, the acquisition of Kabel Deutschland would represent an important step in expanding its business in Germany, Europe’s strongest economy.

Vodafone has extensive fixed-line and mobile customers in Germany, but the company is trying to beef up its cable offerings to compete with the likes of Deutsche Telekom, the country’s dominant provider.



Morning Agenda: Corzine Fights Back

CORZINE SEEKS CASE’S DISMISSAL  |  Lawyers for Jon S. Corzine, the former New Jersey governor accused of a failure of leadership at the helm of the brokerage firm MF Global, filed a motion late Tuesday to dismiss a civil case against him brought by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the federal agency that regulated MF Global until its demise in 2011, DealBook’s Ben Protess reports. The 30-page motion outlined Mr. Corzine’s defense and leveled a sharp critique of the commission.

“There is no evidence demonstrating that Mr. Corzine knowingly directed unlawful conduct or acted without good faith,” wrote the lawyers from Dechert, Andrew J. Levander and Benjamin E. Rosenberg. “Rather than acknowledge that reality and move on, the C.F.T.C. has clung to its baseless presumptions and manufactured charges of wrongdoing that are supposedly connected to Mr. Corzine.”

VERIZON’S BIG BOND SALE  |  Verizon Communications plans to sell up to $49 billion of bonds in record debt offering that could come as soon as Thursday, Bloomberg News reports, citing unidentified people with knowledge of the transaction. The offering, to finance Verizon’s $130 billion deal to take full control of its wireless business, is said to include fixed-rate debt with maturities ranging from three to 30 years, as well as floating-rate securities, according to the report.

The huge debt offering would eclipse a $17 billion bond deal by Apple earlier this year. As DealBook’s Michael J. de la Merced wrote recently, Verizon’s deal highlights what bankers describe as the continued health of the debt markets. “The demand for the debt has surprised even the banks selling the bonds, said people familiar with the plans,” according to The Wall Street Journal.

ON THE AGENDA  |  Today is the 12th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center. Data on wholesale inventories in July is released at 10 a.m. The veteran hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller is on Bloomberg TV at 11 a.m. Carl C. Icahn is on CNBC at 4:10 p.m.

A TRADING FRENZY OVER LINKEDIN SHARES  | 
LinkedIn’s recent sale of stock worth $1.2 billion at $223 a share was no doubt good for the company and its advisers, Steven M. Davidoff writes in the Deal Professor column. But do such deals benefit shareholders? Or do they simply feed a trading frenzy?

Despite the company’s tremendous growth potential, the stock price “is in nosebleed territory,” Mr. Davidoff writes. “LinkedIn trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of 722. For comparison, Facebook stock trades at a ratio of 165 times price to earnings and Google 27 times price to earnings.” What is more, “research on secondary stock offerings, offerings of stock once the company has already traded, has shown that in general, they tend to underperform the market.”

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Icahn’s Last Chance on Dell  |  Carl C. Icahn says he will seek appraisal rights in the Delaware courts, a legal maneuver that lets a judge decide how much Dell shares are worth. A new analysis from the law firm Fish & Richardson finds that in most cases courts find for a higher price.
DealBook »

AT&T Buys Spectrum From Verizon Wireless For $1.9 Billion  | 
REUTERS

Tesco Sells U.S. Grocery Chain to Burkle  |  Tesco, the British supermarket chain, completed its retreat from the United States on Tuesday after selling most of its Fresh & Easy convenience stores to an affiliate of the money-management firm run by the billionaire Ronald W. Burkle.
DealBook »

Cisco to Buy Flash-Storage Company  |  The $415 million deal for Whiptail may increase tensions between Cisco and EMC, the large storage company that has been a longtime partner.
DealBook »

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Dow Index Drops Bank of America, Alcoa and H.P.Dow Index Drops Bank of America, Alcoa and H.P.  |  Three stalwarts of corporate America that have fallen out of favor lately with investors will be replaced in the Dow Jones industrial average by Goldman Sachs, Visa and Nike.
DealBook » | Economix Blog: The Not-So-Industrial Average

Sanford Weill Pledges $100 Million More for Cornell Medical School  |  Sanford I. Weill, the former Citigroup chief, announced on Tuesday that he and his wife, Joan, are giving an additional $100 million to Weill Cornell Medical College, bringing the total amount they have given to the school to more than $600 million.
CNBC

Class Divisions Seen at Harvard Business School  |  Even within the elite confines of Harvard Business School, class is seen as a divisive issue, with one student from the class of 2013 calling it “a pervasive problem,” Jodi Kantor of The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

A Recovery for the Rich  |  “The top 10 percent of earners took more than half of the country’s total income in 2012, the highest level recorded since the government began collecting the relevant data a century ago, according to an updated study by the prominent economists Emmanuel Saez and Thomas Piketty,” Annie Lowrey writes on the Economix blog.
NEW YORK TIMES ECONOMIX

Housing Slump Weighs on India  |  “The real estate market in cities across India is crumbling as the Indian economy slows,” The New York Times writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

PRIVATE EQUITY »

For Warburg Pincus, a Spate of ‘Exits’  |  The private equity firm Warburg Pincus has recently been moving to get out of several prominent investments, Fortune’s Dan Primack notes. “Private equity firms know that exit windows can close suddenly, particularly for large portfolio companies.”
FORTUNE

HEDGE FUNDS »

Hedge Fund Chief Sounds Off on Big Banks  |  Kenneth C. Griffin, head of the Chicago-based hedge fund Citadel, tells The Financial Times: “If I had been the Treasury secretary back in 2009, I’d have broken these megabanks up.”
FINANCIAL TIMES

Vodafone Calls Hedge Fund’s Bluff  |  The British wireless giant says it won’t tweak its $10 billion offer for Kabel Deutschland, even as Elliott Management builds a possible blocking stake. That’s sensible, Quentin Webb of Reuters Breakingviews writes.
REUTERS BREAKINGVIEWS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

With a New Hire, Outbrain Stokes I.P.O. Speculation  |  The content-recommendation service Outbrain hired a chief financial officer, but a possible initial public offering is likely a ways off, AllThingsD writes.
ALLTHINGSD

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Greylock Partners Raises $1 Billion for New Fund  |  The venture capital firm Greylock Partners, which raised its 14th fund, “has now fully reinvented itself as a Silicon Valley power player,” AllThingsD writes.
ALLTHINGSD

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Embracing an Economist Who Saw the Crisis Coming  |  Wynne Godley of the Levy Economics Institute, who died in 2010, developed a model that predicted the financial crisis. “His influence has begun to spread,” The New York Times writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

Commodities Businesses by Banks May Face New Curbs  |  “Financial-industry executives expect the Federal Reserve to issue guidelines as soon as this month limiting bank participation in so-called physical-commodities businesses,” The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

A Popular Maneuver Offers Capital Relief for Banks  |  Reuters writes: “U.S. banks are increasingly giving up the right to sell tens of billions of securities in their investment portfolios, a shift that helps them avoid the pain of weaker bond markets but will cut into future profits as interest rates rise.”
REUTERS

European Plan for Transaction Tax Runs Into Legal Hurdle  |  An opinion by a legal group advising the European Commission concludes that the proposed tax “exceeds member states’ jurisdiction for taxation” and “is discriminatory and likely to lead to distortion of competition.”
DealBook »

Court Says Privacy Case Against Google Can Proceed  |  A federal appeals court in San Francisco said on Tuesday that a lawsuit accusing Google of illegal wiretapping could proceed.
NEW YORK TIMES