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Tesco to Pay $550 Million in Supermarket Tie-up in China

HONG KONG-Tesco, the giant British supermarket chain that last month sold off its U.S. businesses, is turning instead to China.

Tesco said on Wednesday it would pay 4.3 billion Hong Kong dollars ($554 million) to set up a new Chinese retail joint-venture with a state- run partner.

The British company will also fold its loss-making China operations â€" with 134 stores and assets of about $1.1 billion â€" into the partnership with China Resources Enterprise, a huge Chinese supermarket and convenience store operator with around 3,000 outlets in China and Hong Kong.

Tesco will license its brand and own a 20 percent stake in the new, combined venture, which will be one of the biggest supermarket chains in China.

‘‘Through this deal we have a strong platform in one of the world’s most exciting markets and it will move us more quickly to profitability in China,’’ Philip Clarke, the chief executive of Tesco, said in a statement Wednesday.

Hong Jie, the chief executive of China Resources Enterprise, said the new partnership would be ‘‘a compelling combination of local customer insights and international retail best practice, creating success and value for both groups, as well as propelling the internationalization of China’s retail industry.’’

China Resources Enterprise is also one of the companies that has been identified as a bidder for the billionaire Li Ka-shing’s Hong Kong supermarket chain, ParknShop â€" a sale that could command $3 billion to $4 billion. Executives at the state-run Chinese retailer have said they would consider partnering with Tesco in a joint bid for ParknShop.

Morgan Stanley and UBS are the financial advisers to China Resources Enterprise on the deal.



Insider Trading Trial of Mavericks’ Owner Is Under Way

DALLAS â€" Mark Cuban is a “righteous man” whose stock trading practices are “inconsistent with someone who’s done something wrong.” Or he’s a brazen billionaire whose trading ran afoul of securities laws.

These dueling narratives were presented to a jury on Tuesday as the Securities and Exchange Commission and Mr. Cuban’s lawyers delivered opening arguments in his civil insider trading trial.

For more than two hours both sides outlined their arguments in what is likely to be a contentious courtroom battle, closely watched for the imposing personality that Mr. Cuban, the billionaire entrepreneur who owns the Dallas Mavericks basketball team, displays in the spotlight.

The trial, which opened this week at a federal courthouse in Dallas, stems from Mr. Cuban’s decision in June 2004 to dump his stake in the search engine Mamma.com. He did so after learning from Mamma.com’s chief executive that the company was planning a private offering of its stock â€" a deal likely to hurt the stock price and dilute the holdings of existing shareholders like Mr. Cuban.

By the S.E.C.’s account, Mr. Cuban’s trading amounted to fraud. The S.E.C. lawyer leading the case, Jan M. Folena, argued on Tuesday that Mr. Cuban agreed to keep the information confidential in a call with the firm’s chief, Guy Fauré.

In response to hearing that Mr. Fauré had “confidential information” to share, according to the S.E.C., Mr. Cuban replied, “Um hum, go ahead.” And at the end of the call, Mr. Cuban expressed frustration that “I can’t sell” the existing shares because he now had access to inside information.

And yet, Ms. Folena said, Mr. Cuban traded anyway, just hours before the information was made public. That move, she said, meant that Mr. Cuban avoided $750,000 in losses.

Likening it to “having the other team’s playbook,” Ms. Folena set up what is likely to be the S.E.C.’s trial strategy. The agency, it appeared, will portray Mr. Cuban as an insider who believed he deserved special status that the average investor lacked.

“The S.E.C. will show Mark Cuban had information the public did not â€" information he agreed to keep confidential.”

Striking that populist tone could score points with the jury of three men and seven women, whose members include a high school sex education teacher and a woman who described herself as “the C.E.O.” of her household.

Yet Mr. Cuban, a 55-year-old reality TV star best known for his courtside antics and outbursts at Mavericks games, is well liked in Dallas.

Thomas M. Melsheimer, one of Mr. Cuban’s lawyers, assured the jury that there were two sides to the case. In the defense’s opening statement, Mr. Melsheimer said he would tell a “very, very different story than what the government told you.”

To combat the S.E.C.’s portrayal of Mr. Cuban, Mr. Melsheimer highlighted his client’s more virtuous attributes. For one, Mr. Cuban was playing in a charity golf tournament when he received an e-mail from Mr. Fauré and called him back to discuss the private offering. Mr. Cuban, his lawyer added, voluntarily provided trading records and e-mails to anyone who asked, including the S.E.C.

“Fraud required deception and trickery,” said Mr. Melsheimer, who went on to invoke a biblical passage saying, “The wicked flee when no man pursues him, but the righteous are as bold as lions.”

Mr. Melsheimer also took aim at the heart of the S.E.C.’s case.

“No one told” Mr. Cuban “to hold the information as confidential,” Mr. Melsheimer said. He added that “Mr. Fauré doesn’t remember any of the exact words from Mark Cuban.”

There is no recording of Mr. Fauré’s call with Mr. Cuban, and Mr. Cuban does not recall the nine-year-old conversation. As such, the S.E.C.’s case hinges heavily on Mr. Fauré’s testimony, which Mr. Cuban’s lawyers dispute.

In a show of confidence to the jury, Mr. Melsheimer added: “I hope the government calls him. If they don’t, we will.”



Spain Is Expected to Extradite Ex-Trader in JPMorgan Case

Federal authorities expect that one of the former JPMorgan Chase employees facing criminal charges in connection with the bank’s multibillion-dollar trading loss in London will eventually be extradited to the United States, a senior prosecutor said on Tuesday.

The former trader, Javier Martin-Artajo, is living in Spain.

Although Mr. Martin-Artajo appears to be fighting extradition after briefly surrendering to police in Spain in August, Spanish authorities are expected to cooperate with prosecutors in New York.

“We have a pretty good extradition agreement with Spain,” Lorin L. Reisner, the chief of the criminal division at the United States attorney’s office in Manhattan, said on Tuesday. “I expect,” Mr. Reisner said,” that Mr. Martin-Artajo “will return to the U.S. via the extradition process.”

Another former trader charged in the case, Julien Grout, could prove more elusive, Mr. Reisner said. After leaving JPMorgan’s London offices, Mr. Grout returned to his native France, which typically does not extradite its citizens.

“It’s more complicated,” Mr. Reisner said.

Mr. Reisner made his remarks at a conference in Midtown Manhattan on white-collar crime. The conference featured panels with leading government officials and criminal defense lawyers, as well as senior lawyers from the Securities and Exchange Commission, which under new leadership has tried to step up its enforcement. Some of those efforts are directed at JPMorgan, the nation’s biggest bank, which is the target of a wider legal crackdown.

The Justice Department is in settlement talks with JPMorgan and is seeking more than $11 billion from the bank over its sale of questionable mortgage securities. The bank also faces lingering investigations into its debt collection practices and its dealings with Bernard L. Madoff, the creator of a multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme.

The investigation into JPMorgan’s trading loss in London reached a peak in August when the United States attorney’s office in Manhattan, along with the F.B.I., announced charges against the two. At the heart of the case was the contention that the two had deliberately “manipulated and inflated the value” of a derivatives bet to hide hundreds of millions of dollars in losses.

Both Mr. Martino-Artajo and Mr. Grout deny wrongdoing. Bruno Iksil, a third former trader, known as the “London Whale” for his role in the outsize derivatives trade, reached a nonprosecution deal with the government in exchange for testifying against his former colleagues.

Weeks after the charges, authorities took aim at JPMorgan for “lacking effective internal controls to detect” the traders’ conduct. The civil settlement â€" which resolved investigations from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Reserve, the British Financial Services Authority and the S.E.C. â€" imposed $920 million in penalties on the bank. The deal also required the bank to admit wrongdoing.

At the legal industry conference on Tuesday, the co-head of the S.E.C’s enforcement unit trumpeted JPMorgan’s admission as evidence of a broader policy shift. For decades, the agency permitted defendants to settle cases without acknowledging their misconduct.

“We will demand admissions, and if the defendant isn’t prepared to agree, we will litigate at trial,” said Andrew Ceresney, the S.E.C. official, who gave the keynote address at the conference, run by the Practising Law Institute.

The change has already begun to “bear fruit,” Mr. Ceresney said, citing the JPMorgan case and a settlement with the hedge fund Harbinger Capital Partners. Like a guilty plea in a criminal case, an admission of wrongdoing is important to hold the defendant accountable and provides a form of catharsis to the investing public, he said.

Mr. Ceresney, a former defense lawyer at the law firm Debevoise & Plimpton, was recused from the JPMorgan case because he once defended the bank. He was hired by the agency’s new chairwoman, Mary Jo White, who also came from Debevoise. Both were federal prosecutors earlier in their careers.

Five months into the S.E.C. job, Mr. Ceresney argued that the new leadership had brought improvements to the agency, which was sharply criticized for missing financial frauds like the Madoff Ponzi scheme and failing to charge any top Wall Street executives tied to the financial crisis. “We wanted to bring the swagger back to the enforcement division, and I think we’re doing that,” he said.

The agency continues to face criticism. Even in the JPMorgan settlement, lawmakers and other critics questioned why the agency had charged the traders but declined to punish the bank’s leadership.

In one sign of change, however, the S.E.C. separately announced on Tuesday that it was paying more than $14 million to a whistle-blower who provided information that led to an enforcement action, by far the most significant payout in the two-year history of its whistle-blower office.

The agency did not identify the tipster or the case this person helped build. But under the whistle-blower program, created under the Dodd-Frank Act, tipsters can reap up to 30 percent of the money the S.E.C. collects when imposing fines, suggesting that the relevant case was a big one.

The white-collar crime conference coincided with the first day of the government shutdown. Mr. Reisner, the federal prosecutor, described the shutdown as a “complete mess” for his already resource-constrained office.

He said that with 10 criminal trials under way in Federal District Court in Manhattan, he spent much of Monday seeking to prevent the government paralegals working on those cases from being furloughed.



Spain Is Expected to Extradite Ex-Trader in JPMorgan Case

Federal authorities expect that one of the former JPMorgan Chase employees facing criminal charges in connection with the bank’s multibillion-dollar trading loss in London will eventually be extradited to the United States, a senior prosecutor said on Tuesday.

The former trader, Javier Martin-Artajo, is living in Spain.

Although Mr. Martin-Artajo appears to be fighting extradition after briefly surrendering to police in Spain in August, Spanish authorities are expected to cooperate with prosecutors in New York.

“We have a pretty good extradition agreement with Spain,” Lorin L. Reisner, the chief of the criminal division at the United States attorney’s office in Manhattan, said on Tuesday. “I expect,” Mr. Reisner said,” that Mr. Martin-Artajo “will return to the U.S. via the extradition process.”

Another former trader charged in the case, Julien Grout, could prove more elusive, Mr. Reisner said. After leaving JPMorgan’s London offices, Mr. Grout returned to his native France, which typically does not extradite its citizens.

“It’s more complicated,” Mr. Reisner said.

Mr. Reisner made his remarks at a conference in Midtown Manhattan on white-collar crime. The conference featured panels with leading government officials and criminal defense lawyers, as well as senior lawyers from the Securities and Exchange Commission, which under new leadership has tried to step up its enforcement. Some of those efforts are directed at JPMorgan, the nation’s biggest bank, which is the target of a wider legal crackdown.

The Justice Department is in settlement talks with JPMorgan and is seeking more than $11 billion from the bank over its sale of questionable mortgage securities. The bank also faces lingering investigations into its debt collection practices and its dealings with Bernard L. Madoff, the creator of a multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme.

The investigation into JPMorgan’s trading loss in London reached a peak in August when the United States attorney’s office in Manhattan, along with the F.B.I., announced charges against the two. At the heart of the case was the contention that the two had deliberately “manipulated and inflated the value” of a derivatives bet to hide hundreds of millions of dollars in losses.

Both Mr. Martino-Artajo and Mr. Grout deny wrongdoing. Bruno Iksil, a third former trader, known as the “London Whale” for his role in the outsize derivatives trade, reached a nonprosecution deal with the government in exchange for testifying against his former colleagues.

Weeks after the charges, authorities took aim at JPMorgan for “lacking effective internal controls to detect” the traders’ conduct. The civil settlement â€" which resolved investigations from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Reserve, the British Financial Services Authority and the S.E.C. â€" imposed $920 million in penalties on the bank. The deal also required the bank to admit wrongdoing.

At the legal industry conference on Tuesday, the co-head of the S.E.C’s enforcement unit trumpeted JPMorgan’s admission as evidence of a broader policy shift. For decades, the agency permitted defendants to settle cases without acknowledging their misconduct.

“We will demand admissions, and if the defendant isn’t prepared to agree, we will litigate at trial,” said Andrew Ceresney, the S.E.C. official, who gave the keynote address at the conference, run by the Practising Law Institute.

The change has already begun to “bear fruit,” Mr. Ceresney said, citing the JPMorgan case and a settlement with the hedge fund Harbinger Capital Partners. Like a guilty plea in a criminal case, an admission of wrongdoing is important to hold the defendant accountable and provides a form of catharsis to the investing public, he said.

Mr. Ceresney, a former defense lawyer at the law firm Debevoise & Plimpton, was recused from the JPMorgan case because he once defended the bank. He was hired by the agency’s new chairwoman, Mary Jo White, who also came from Debevoise. Both were federal prosecutors earlier in their careers.

Five months into the S.E.C. job, Mr. Ceresney argued that the new leadership had brought improvements to the agency, which was sharply criticized for missing financial frauds like the Madoff Ponzi scheme and failing to charge any top Wall Street executives tied to the financial crisis. “We wanted to bring the swagger back to the enforcement division, and I think we’re doing that,” he said.

The agency continues to face criticism. Even in the JPMorgan settlement, lawmakers and other critics questioned why the agency had charged the traders but declined to punish the bank’s leadership.

In one sign of change, however, the S.E.C. separately announced on Tuesday that it was paying more than $14 million to a whistle-blower who provided information that led to an enforcement action, by far the most significant payout in the two-year history of its whistle-blower office.

The agency did not identify the tipster or the case this person helped build. But under the whistle-blower program, created under the Dodd-Frank Act, tipsters can reap up to 30 percent of the money the S.E.C. collects when imposing fines, suggesting that the relevant case was a big one.

The white-collar crime conference coincided with the first day of the government shutdown. Mr. Reisner, the federal prosecutor, described the shutdown as a “complete mess” for his already resource-constrained office.

He said that with 10 criminal trials under way in Federal District Court in Manhattan, he spent much of Monday seeking to prevent the government paralegals working on those cases from being furloughed.



New York Set to Sue Wells Fargo Over Mortgages

Fielding complaints from borrowers struggling to save their homes, New York’s top prosecutor is readying a lawsuit against Wells Fargo, accusing the nation’s largest home lender of flouting the terms of a multibillion-dollar settlement aimed at stanching foreclosure abuses.

The lawsuit, which is expected to be filed as early as Wednesday, accuses Wells Fargo of violating the guidelines of a broad pact hashed out last year between five of the nation’s largest banks and 49 state attorneys general.

Under that deal, the banks have to comply with 304 servicing standards. The guidelines map out how banks should field and process requests from homeowners trying to reduce the size of their monthly payments.

Vickee J. Adams, a spokeswoman for Wells Fargo, said the bank had not been served with a copy of the lawsuit. But, she added, “if true, it is very disappointing that the New York attorney general continues to pursue his course, given our commitment to the terms of the National Mortgage Settlement and ongoing engagement.”

“Wells Fargo has been a leader in preventing foreclosures, helping families maintain home ownership with more than 880,000 modifications nationwide and 26,000 in New York over the last four years,” she said.

The New York attorney general, Eric Schneiderman, had earlier sent a warning shot to Bank of America and Wells Fargo, announcing in May that he had found that both banks violated the terms of the mortgage settlement. That announcement prompted negotiations between the New York prosecutor’s office and the two banks.

The outcomes for the lenders are starkly different. While Wells Fargo is bracing for a lawsuit, Bank of America is poised to announce a series of additional protections that they have adopted following discussions with Mr. Schneiderman’s office. Those additional protectionsâ€"including an agreement to designate a “high-level” employee dedicated to fielding and responding to questions from housing counselorsâ€"appear to have won Bank of America a reprieve from a lawsuit.

“We are pleased to resolve these matters without litigation,” said a spokesman for Bank of America, Dan B. Frahm. “Along with the settlement monitoring committee, we continue to improve the experience for eligible customers and groups that represent them.”

More state attorneys general may follow Mr. Schneiderman’s lead. The Massachusetts attorney general, Martha Coakley, has also sent a letter to Joseph A. Smith, the settlement monitor, outlining “recurring issues” with mortgage servicers, according to a copy of the letter reviewed by The Times.

For Wells Fargo, though, the discussions with the New York attorney general’s office resulted in a standoff. Mr. Schneiderman’s office, people briefed on the matter said, had pushed Wells Fargo to acknowledge a systematic pattern of mortgage servicing errors and to commit to a new agreement codifying changes to the way the bank services mortgages. Wells Fargo balked, the people said, and the talks broke down last week.

Amid the languishing talks, the bank sent a letter to Mr. Schneiderman’s office, reiterating its commitment to “helping borrowers maintain homeownership and achieve long-term financial success,” according to a copy of the letter reviewed by The New York Times.

The New York attorney general had found 210 separate violations involving the bank and 96 borrowers. Four of those borrowers, the letter said, were not Wells Fargo customers. In its letter, the bank said it “disagrees with allegations” related to the remaining borrowers.

Of the remainder, the bank has approved loan modifications for 39 customers and made a final decision on the loan modification applications for 28 others. Beyond assisting the homeowners identified by Mr. Schneiderman’s office, Wells Fargo voluntarily improved its processes, the bank argued in its letter.

Those concessions apparently did not appease Mr. Schneiderman’s office. Part of the problem, the people briefed on the matter said, was that Wells Fargo refused to formalize improvements to their processes in an agreement.

Some within the attorney general’s office also felt the bank’s proposed fixes constituted a whack-a-mole approach in which Wells Fargo addressed only the cases originally highlighted, the people briefed on the matter said. The New York attorney general’s office still receives more complaints about Wells Fargo’s servicing than any other lender, they added.

The settlement guidelines include requirements that banks provide homeowners with a single point of contact and notify borrowers of missing documentation within five days.
They are intended to help homeowners who are looking to modify their mortgagesâ€"a process that can prove frustrating for homeowners asked to submit the same documents again and again and again.

Such delays can mean the difference between saving a home and losing it to foreclosure, according to housing counselors. When applications for relief languish with borrowers caught in a bureaucratic maze, homeowners amass additional costs, like late fees and property taxes.

Ms. Adams of Wells Fargo said that the bank “continuously implements additional customer-focused measures based on the constructive feedback we receive from our customers, the monitoring committee and individual states, including New York.” She added that the bank believes a “collaborative approach” is better for homeowners than “protracted litigation.”

The move against Wells Fargo is the first time that an attorney general has sued one of the five participating banks on charges related to the settlement. That settlement, reached in February 2012, sprung from an investigation into mortgage servicing from all 50 state attorneys general that began in 2010 amid a national outcry that banks were relying on mass-produced documents to evict homeowners wrongfully.



Ex-Employees Allege Sexual Harassment at Women’s Networking Group

Four former employees of the National Association of Professional Women, a women’s networking group, have sued the organization and three of its executives, claiming that a manager had sexually harassed them and that their paychecks had been docked in violation of New York labor law.

In a complaint filed in Federal District Court in Central Islip, N.Y,, on Sept. 25, the four â€" Lisa DeLisi, Crystal Alexander, Monique McCabe and Anika Cosbert â€" said that their former manager, Krissy L. DeMonte, had regularly pinched and grabbed their buttocks and called them vulgar names. After they complained, they said, they were fired or forced to resign because of intolerable working conditions.

In a separate lawsuit filed in New York State court in Nassau County in January, Rose Costantino, another former association employee, said that Ms. DeMonte had approached her from behind on many occasions as she sat at her desk and grab, squeeze or rub her neck and then drop her hands “to touch, rub and/or feel the top” of her breasts.

In a written statement on Tuesday, the association called the allegations “completely unfounded,” adding that four of the five plaintiffs had been terminated for documented deficiencies in performance and violations of policies and procedures. One plaintiff herself, the association said, had exhibited “a pattern of inappropriate and unprofessional conduct.”

The association went on to say that an independent investigation unearthed no evidence to corroborate “the ridiculous allegations” against Ms. DeMonte.”

Same-sex harassment cases are rare, “but are on the rise,” said Gary Phelan, an employment lawyer at the Connecticut law firm Cohen & Wolf. Sex harassment does not have to be motivated by sexual desire to violate the law, Mr. Phelan said. “It illustrates the basic premise that sex harassment is about power, not sex.”

The four plaintiffs in the case filed in federal court all had jobs that required them to call businesswoman to promote association certifications that cost as much as $995 (mahogany-framed “Woman of the Year” plaque included). They said that the association illegally withheld commissions and bonuses if employees were late more than three times in a quarter, or if they did not completely follow sales scripts. They are separately seeking status as a class on behalf of “at least 80” employees whose pay was docked, according to the complaint.

In addition to Ms. DeMonte, Chris Wesser, the association’s general counsel, and Matthew Proman, the association’s president, were named as defendants. Mr. Wesser referred inquiries to the group’s New York law firm, Gordon & Rees, which issued the statement

The networking group, founded in 2007, has described itself as “America’s most inclusive network â€" containing nearly half a million professional women.”



Owner of Empire State Building Prices at $13 a Share

King Kong swung from it. Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr planned to meet at its top in “An Affair to Remember.” And now, the Empire State Building has a new claim to fame: It has gone public.

Shares of Empire State Realty Trust Inc., whose office properties include the iconic 102-story Art Deco tower, raised $929.5 million in one of the largest initial public offerings of a United States real-estate investment trust.

The 71.5 million shares priced at $13, at the low end of the expected range. The REIT will trade under the symbol ESRT on the New York Stock Exchange.

In the eyes of some, the public offering, coming after more than a year of behind-the-scenes rancor, is a significant victory. There are still a few outstanding questions and challenges, including continued litigation and multiple offers from other individuals and groups to buy the Empire State Building outright. But the public offering allowed unit holders, whose stakes in the building date back to the early 1960s, the flexibility many sought to cash out by selling their REIT shares.

The big winners are Peter L. Malkin and his son, Anthony E. Malkin. The public offering allows them to consolidate their intricate empire of buildings that they either owned or controlled in Manhattan and in Stamford, Conn. The offering values their stake at about $460 million. Anthony Malkin is chairman and chief executive of the trust.

While some investors may have bought into the public offering on the romantic idea that they now owned a piece of one of the most famous buildings in the world, one analyst said there it could wind up a good investment.

“There’s a lot of upside opportunity,” said Michael Knott, a managing director with the real-estate research firm Green Street Advisors. He said the REIT could improve occupancy in the buildings, raise rents and increase cash flow. And the not-so-secret secret weapon is the famous observatory in the Empire State Building, which “prints cash,” Mr. Knott said.

But the months of heated battles between the Malkins and a small but vocal group of unit holders who opposed the offering came at a hefty price. The Malkins spent more than a year reaching out to the individuals who held the 3,300 units, trying to persuade them to vote in favor of going public. Various legal challenges were also thrown up in an attempt to derail the offering.

Total costs for the public offering, which include underwriting fees, legal expenses and transfer taxes, add up to about $280 million, Mr. Knott said.

“The cost of this has been incredible,” Mr. Knott said. “The lesson from this is that it’s expensive to live in a courtroom.”



As J.C. Penney Flounders, a Lack of Control Becomes Evident

The latest events at J. C. Penney provide a hard lesson: With today’s public company, it is sometimes difficult to be sure who is in control.

Take the messy way that the struggling retailer raised capital last week. CNBC and others reported that J. C. Penney’s chief executive, Myron E. Ullman, had told a trade group on Wednesday that he didn’t see “conditions for the rest of the year that would warrant raising liquidity.”

Those conditions apparently didn’t last long. On Thursday, J. C. Penney announced the sale of as many as 96 million shares with Goldman Sachs as sole book runner. This is a staggering number of shares, equivalent to about 43 percent of J. C. Penney’s existing share capital.

Faced with such a dilution, the share price of J. C. Penney plunged 13 percent. Despite New York Stock Exchange rules that generally require a shareholder vote if a company issues more than 20 percent of its shares, the sale could proceed because exchange voting rules do not apply for a general offering of shares for cash, as opposed to a small group of individuals.

The share sale was an illustration of how J. C. Penney had lost the confidence of the markets.

Still, the company probably had little choice. Although J. C. Penney is a department store, it is akin to a bank in some ways because it relies on vendor credit to survive. If that credit dries up, then J. C. Penney becomes another Lehman Brothers. The capital-raising was most likely done in such a hasty and disorganized way because J. C. Penney needed to stop a run on the bank in the form of vendors refusing to provide goods on credit. As a further sign that its credit was drying up, the company disclosed on Friday that its cash reserves were forecast to be $1.3 billion as of year-end before the share offering, down from a previous forecast of $1.5 billion.

How did such a storied name get in such a difficult spot? Founded more than 100 years ago, J. C. Penney was a sizable but lagging retailer with $17.2 billion in sales in 2011, when William A. Ackman and his hedge fund, Pershing Square Capital Management, bought 16.5 percent of the retailer.

Mr. Ackman focused his criticism on Mr. Ullman, the chief executive, whom Mr. Ackman accused of failing to fix J. C. Penney’s “uncompetitive cost structure.” Mr. Ackman also criticized J. C. Penney’s sales strategy, asserting it was dependent on excessive price discounts and cluttered stores.

The hedge fund titan won the first round as the board quickly folded, Ron Johnson was brought in as chief executive and Mr. Ackman was appointed a director of the company. Mr. Johnson, fresh from this his retail success with Apple, was a rock star leader who then proceeded to fail in a spectacular way. Mr. Johnson followed Mr. Ackman’s game plan, transforming J. C. Penny with a “dream team” of other executives. The team did away with J. C. Penney’s promotions and discounts and tried to declutter the store with stores within a store, luring away Martha Stewart from Macys.

The change merely served to drive customers away, and Mr. Johnson was fired. The formerly docile board re-emerged. J. C. Penney’s chairman, Thomas Engibous, led the charge to bring Mr. Ullman back. Earlier in the year, Goldman Sachs, which had advised J. C. Penney in its defense against Mr. Ackman, arranged a $2.6 billion loan to shore up the company’s liquidity.

Mr. Ackman left skid marks departing from the J. C. Penney board. He sold his stock for a $700 million loss, but only after issuing a huffy letter complaining about the board’s decisions. In the wake of Mr. Ackman’s departure, George Soros bought about 9 percent of J. C. Penney, as did Glenview Capital. Another hedge fund, Perry Capital, bought an 7.3 percent stake.

Mr. Ullman quickly went back to the old strategies and even ditched Martha Stewart. Advisers were rotated out, and AlixPartners and Blackstone were replaced with Centerview Partners. Things got worse.

The strategy of simply being the old lagging J. C. Penney instead of the imploding J. C. Penney has not comforted Wall Street. The effort to raise capital was the final straw for many investors. The company’s stock price, which reached a high of $87.18 in 2007, has fallen 55 percent so far this year. Insurance on the company’s debt in the form of credit-default swaps is estimating a bankruptcy probability in the next five years of more than 50 percent.

In response to a request for comment, the company provided information as to why the share offering did not require a shareholder vote, but did not respond to a request for broader comment. So who is responsible for this sad state of affairs?

In the old days, identifying the person in charge was easy. The chief executive was viewed as the company’s leader, with the directors were usually handpicked by him. When a problem hit, he took control and was responsible. Shareholders and even directors were largely absent from the decision-making process.

Today, the board is increasingly prominent, and chief executives serve at the whim of a sometimes fractious board. Shareholders are also increasingly active, willing to struggle with a board over company strategy and direction. And advisers are always circling, willing to charge fat fees to help, and in doing so, they end up driving the bus.

Shareholder activism and board control has many benefits, but there is a downside. The result is that too often, many people are trying to steer the company. It also means that increasingly executives are not sure who they work for as multiple constituencies struggle to control the company. And all of these constituencies must be paid heed. The result is mishmash governance, lack of direction, or even worse, lemminglike direction following the path of least resistance and well-paid advisers.

This in part explains the mess at J. C. Penney. Capital-raising is about moving quickly and smoothly to bolster market confidence. But J. C. Penney’s capital-raising was done in a way that guaranteed a lawsuit and looked like no one at J. C. Penney was in control.

The board of J. C. Penney took a stand against Mr. Ackman, but bringing back an old, declining strategy and begging customers to return does not seem like a long-term solution. Instead, it looks simply like a reaction to Mr. Ackman.

Basically, having rejected the hedge fund manager’s strategy, the board is left with nothing but its old views. As J. C. Penney struggles, the new hedge fund investors are not likely to sit on such large losses lightly, meaning more struggles for control (Perry Capital announced on Monday it had sold half its stake). And Mr. Ullman will continue to try to placate multiple masters without perhaps the experience to fix a struggling operation.

So, without the board doing what is expected â€" setting a strong, viable direction â€" expect more turmoil at J. C. Penney. The question of who is driving that change and for what end is, unfortunately, also a problem for many other companies today.



Tribes Lose Effort to Block New York From Regulating Their Online Lending

A federal judge has denied a request by two American Indian tribes to stop New York State’s top financial regulator from cracking down on their online lending businesses.

The tribes argued that Benjamin Lawsky, superintendent of the state’s Department of Financial Services, overstepped his jurisdictional bounds in trying to regulate business activity taking place on Indian reservations in Oklahoma and Michigan.

Late Monday, Judge Richard Sullivan, of Federal District Court in Manhattan, issued a ruling dismissing the Indians’ claims, suggesting that because the Internet allows the tribes to reach beyond their reservations’ borders, they had lost their unique protections as sovereign nations.

“Plaintiffs have built a wobbly foundation for their contention that the state is regulating activity that occurs on the tribes’ lands,” Judge Sullivan wrote. “The state’s action is directed at activity that takes place entirely off tribal land, involving New York residents who never leave New York State.”

The Indian tribes had argued that their sovereign status protected them from regulation by New York. The two plaintiffs in the case are the Otoe Missouria Tribe, in Red Rock, Okla., and the Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians, in Watersmeet, Mich. The Otoe Missouria tribe operates American Web Loan and Great Plains Lending, and the Lac Vieux Indians run CastlePayday.com.

“We obviously disagree with how the court has resolved this issue and we will be pursuing an appeal in the hopes of getting a different answer from the court of appeals,” said David Bernick, the lawyer representing the tribes.

At a hearing last month, Mr. Bernick had argued that his clients’ businesses were being ruined by Mr. Lawsky, who was trampling on their federally protected rights as sovereign nations.

“My clients’ businesses are being destroyed because New York has decided that tribal sovereignty doesn’t matter to them,” Mr. Bernick said at the hearing. “This is an exercise in arrogance, and people are suffering as a result.”

In August, Mr. Lawsky’s office unveiled an aggressive campaign against the payday lending industry, seeking to stamp out Internet businesses that offer small, short-term loans at exorbitant interest rates that violate state usury laws. Among the businesses he attacked were several that are run by, or have connections to, Indian tribes across the country.

Mr. Lawsky has argued that he has the power to protect New York consumers from Indian-run businesses that reach beyond their reservations’ borders. The judge appeared to agree with Mr. Lawsky’s position, concluding that the activity New York seeks to regulate is taking place within the state.

“These consumers are not on a reservation when they apply for a loan, agree to the loan, spend loan proceeds or repay those proceeds with interest,” Judge Sullivan said. “These consumers have not, in any legally meaningful sense, traveled to tribal land.”

This is the second decision that has gone against the Indian tribes in as many weeks. On Sept. 26, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rebuffed a bid by three Indian online lenders to halt the federal agency from investigating whether their business practices violated federal laws. Richard Cordray, the bureau’s director, rejected the argument that his agency had no jurisdiction over Indian tribes.

“Indian tribes, like individual states, do not enjoy immunity from suits by the federal government,” Mr. Cordray said.



Dividing Up the Job of Legal Counsel

Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan have managed to get at least one job split right. Neither bank will cleave the chairman and chief executive roles, but they’ve figured out that allowing the general counsel to also run regulatory compliance invites trouble. Interpreting the rules and ensuring they’re followed too often conflict. Rival financial institutions â€" and companies in other industries, too â€" should follow suit.

In the past, one individual could safely preside over corporate lawsuits, contract negotiations and standards of conduct. Medicare rules, Sarbanes-Oxley financial reforms and other state and federal regulations, however, quickly overloaded top legal officers with complexity and competing interests.

Tenet Healthcare’s general counsel, for example, was forced to resign in 2003 over her conflicting roles as the company’s defender and watchdog in a Medicare fraud inquiry. Investigations of WellCare for Medicaid cheating and Pfizer for marketing scams prompted the companies to split their legal and compliance departments. In 2010, new federal sentencing guidelines gave a break to wrongdoers at companies with compliance officers who reported directly to the board of directors.

Goldman and JPMorgan say best practices prompted them to create independent legal and compliance departments. While Goldman did so in 2004, JPMorgan waited until earlier this year, after regulators started scrutinizing the $6.2 billion London Whale trading losses and other matters. The British banks HSBC and Barclays have also split legal and compliance in recent years.

Whatever the impetus, the policy makes sense. Defending a company against regulators is different from making sure it meets their standards. Keeping the jobs separate allows one to act as a check on the other while also showing that a company takes compliance seriously. Yet 41 percent of companies tuck the task into the legal department, while only 8 percent have an independent compliance officer reporting directly to the board, according to a 2011 survey by Compliance Week and PricewaterhouseCoopers.

There can be no guarantee, of course, that a more independent officer would have, say, curbed certain practices at JPMorgan, just as separating the chairman and chief executive positions doesn’t ensure missteps won’t happen. The aim, however, is to put a company in the best position to avoid trouble. In either context, two heads are better than one.



Icahn Reviews Dinner on Twitter

Carl C. Icahn, the billionaire activist hedge fund manager with a penchant for rattling corporate boards, is poised to fight his next battle over Apple on Twitter.

In less than 140 characters, Mr. Icahn said on Tuesday that he “pushed hard” for Apple to do a $150 billion stock buyback during a “cordial dinner with Tim last night.” The Tim he is referring to, of course, is Timothy D. Cook, the chief executive of Apple.

But what Mr. Icahn means by “cordial” may come down to interpretation.

Speaking later on CNBC, Mr. Icahn said he thought the dinner, which took place at his apartment, “went well” but added that he was unlikely to be invited to anyone’s home for Christmas dinner. But, he added, “I can promise you that I’m not going to go away.”

It’s also not clear whether the atmosphere became a little heated when the dinner conversation turned to how the board would respond to Mr. Icahn’s requests.

“The board doesn’t have the divine right of kings,” Mr. Icahn said on CNBC, as he recounted the dinner.

He is agitating for Apple to borrow money to buy back more shares. “The fact that you can borrow money so cheaply” presents a “golden opportunity” for Apple to return cash to shareholders, he said.

A spokesman for Apple could not be immediately reached for comment.

Mr. Icahn’s campaign began on Aug. 13 with a tweet that disclosed he had accumulated a “large” position in Apple and said he thought the company was “extremely undervalued.” A week later, again through Twitter, Mr. Icahn said that Mr. Cook “believes in a buyback” but that the size would be discussed.

This is not Mr. Cook’s first encounter with a colorful hedge fund manager. Earlier this year, David Einhorn, of Greenlight Capital, accused the company of hoarding cash. In April, the company buckled under pressure from Mr. Einhorn and said it would increase the amount of shares it would repurchase to $60 billion from $10 billion.

Shares of Apple were up by as much as 2.1 percent in midday trading on Tuesday, to $486.67, compared with a 0.9 percent gain for the Nasdaq.



New Owner for Harlem Globetrotters

The Harlem Globetrotters are changing hands.

Herschend Family Entertainment, a private group that operates Dolly Parton’s Dollywood theme parks among other quintessentially American attractions, agreed to buy the acrobatic basketball troupe from Shamrock Capital Advisors, a private equity firm based in Los Angeles. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Founded in 1926 as the Savoy Big Five, the Globetrotters helped popularize basketball with their whimsical take on the sport. Employing novelty acts like “One-Armed Boid Buie,” who averaged 18 points a game, and Robert “Showboat” Hall, known for his fast passing game and flashy ball handling skills, the Globetrotters occasionally beat professional teams, including the Lakers, in exhibition games.

“The Globetrotters enjoy a huge global popularity that spans all continents,” the Globetrotters chief executive Kurt Schneider said in a statement. “Our brand is hotter than ever.”

Today, the Globetrotters perform more than 400 live events each year. Herschend said that the Globetrotters last year recorded record-high revenues from live events, sponsorships and merchandise sales.

“For nearly nine decades, the Harlem Globetrotters have had a rich tradition of creating family memories through sports and entertainment,” Herschend’s chief executive Joel Manby said in a statement. “Becoming the new owners of this legendary team is a natural step as H.F.E. continues to develop wholesome, immersive entertainment that parents can trust â€" entertainment that brings families closer together.”

Shamrock, founded in 1978 as the Disney family investment company, has more than $700 million under management. The firm bought the Globetrotters in 2005 for an undisclosed sum.

Genesis Capital Group advised Herschend, and McKenna Long & Aldridge provided legal counsel. Piper Jaffray Companies advised the Globetrotters, with Kirkland & Ellis providing legal counsel.



Fabrice Tourre Seeks a New Trial

Fabrice Tourre, the former Goldman Sachs trader, has asked a federal judge to give him a new trial - or throw out the charges against him.

Mr. Tourre was found liable in August on six counts of civil securities fraud after a three-week jury trial in Lower Manhattan. He was accused of misleading a small group of investors about the role of a big client in a 2007 trade he helped structure. That client, the hedge fund Paulson & Company, made about $1 billion on the trade while others lost big.

Late Monday, Mr. Tourre’s lawyers filed a motion in court saying that there was a lack of evidence to support the jury’s decision on some counts and that evidence was not presented to the jury in other instances. The jury’s findings, Mr. Tourre’s lawyers wrote, “are so contrary to the weight of the evidence that it would work a manifest injustice to Mr. Tourre if they were permitted to stand.”

The judgment against Mr. Tourre was important for the Securities and Exchange Commission, giving it its first big courtroom victory in a case stemming from the financial crisis.

Mr. Tourre’s lawyers raised several points in their motion. A main one is that Mr. Tourre did not receive money or property through an untrue statement, which his lawyers say is a crucial element required in a liable finding by the jury.

Mr. Tourre received an annual base salary and bonus during his years at Goldman. His lawyers said no evidence was presented to show his compensation was linked to the transaction at the heart of the case, and in fact “the only logical inference from the evidence was that his bonus was likely lower” at one point because Goldman had a piece of the trade that lost money.

The jury, during deliberations, asked about Mr. Tourre’s compensation and Mr. Tourre’s lawyers said the jury “incorrectly concluded” that the trader’s base salary was sufficient to fulfill the requirements needed to return a finding of liable.

Mr. Tourre’s legal team also argues that the S.E.C. failed to prove that the trade he helped structure was a “domestic offer” made to United States investors, another requirement needed to justify a liable finding.

Mr. Tourre no longer works at Goldman and is enrolled in the economics doctoral program at the University of Chicago.



New Head of R.B.S. Plans to Emphasize Retail Business

LONDON â€" Five years after the Royal Bank of Scotland was saved from collapse by a capital infusion from the British government, the newly anointed chief executive, Ross McEwan, said on Tuesday that the bank must win back the trust of its customers.

“It is important to me that we rebuild the pride of this organization, we rebuild the connection with our customers and we repay the U.K. for the money and the faith they put in us,” Mr. McEwan said in a speech to employees Tuesday. “We are such a big part of this economy. We need to take our place in it.”

The 56-year-old Mr. McEwan joined the bank a little over a year ago as head of its retail business.

Royal Bank of Scotland remains 81 percent owned by taxpayers after it received billions of dollars in a government bailout during the financial crisis.

The British finance ministry is expected to decide in the coming weeks whether to recommend that the bank move its poorly performing loans into a separate legal entity, potentially easing pressure on the bank going forward.

Last month, Royal Bank of Scotland separately announced plans to sell a stake in its branch network to a consortium of investors led by Corsair Capital and Centerbridge Partners. The bank was ordered to sell more than 300 branches in its £600 million, or $974 million, network to satisfy European Union rules over state aid.

“Ross is a customer banker through and through and is determined to transform the bank into a real asset for the U.K. economy,” the chairman of RBS, Sir Philip Hampton, said in a statement.

A New Zealand native with extensive experience in retail banking, Mr. McEwan said Tuesday that he wanted R.B.S. to be “absolutely customer focused” and compared the task to his time at the executive in charge of the retail bank at Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

Commonwealth Bank, during that time, went from a reputation of having the worst customer service in Australia to the best, Mr. McEwan said.

“We have to make it really easy for those people who deal with customers to serve our customers,” he said. “I’ve seen in this organization that we are just too difficult to deal with in too many situations.”

He went on: “We need, as an organization, to actually start taking away those barriers so we can again begin serving our customers well. But, more importantly, we need to support our people to serve our customers well.”



Batista’s Oil Firm Defaults on Interest Payment

OGX, the petroleum exploration and production firm founded by the Brazilian entrepreneur Eike Batista, was pushed closer to bankruptcy after it announced Tuesday that it would default on a $44.5 million interest payment. OGX now has a 30-day grace period to negotiate with creditors.

Luana Helsinger, a petroleum analyst with Grupo Bursátil Mexicano in Rio de Janeiro, said “the logical next step is for OGX to request a court-supervised reorganization.”

Should a bankruptcy occur, it would be the largest corporate default in Latin America’s history.

Foreign investors hold most of OGX’s bonds, with the world’s largest bond investor, Pimco, a major owner.

Under Brazilian law, if OGX prepares a plan to avoid liquidation and a court approves it, the company will have 180 days to continue negotiations without having to make any further debt payments.

That extra delay would be crucial for OGX, which has to make another $110 million payment in December.

Negotiations have been going on for months, with OGX reportedly trying to persuade its creditors to swap debt for equity and to invest additional funds in the company, whose offshore fields may hold billions of barrels of petroleum.

Ms. Helsinger said creditors were likely interested in making a deal with OGX. If the oil concern is forced into liquidation, a fire sale of its assets will likely provide only a fraction of the $3.6 billion that it owes bondholders.

Another option is bringing in a new investor, such as the Malaysian petroleum company Petronas, which is known to be interested in one of OGX’s offshore petroleum fields.

Without new money to develop OGX’s petroleum reserves, even a court-supervised restructuring might end in liquidation, a bankruptcy lawyer in Rio de Janeiro said. The lawyer requested anonymity since he has clients involved with OGX.

OGX was the crown jewel of Mr. Batista’s six publicly traded companies, which together were supposed to develop Brazil’s rich petroleum and mining resources, generate electricity, and build ships and ports to facilitate exports.

When OGX went public in 2008, it raised $4.1 billion and become Brazil’s largest private-sector petroleum company. By the end of 2010, its share price had more than tripled from the I.P.O. price, as the firm announced petroleum discoveries and foreign investors sought a piece of Brazil.

But in 2012 OGX revealed difficulties and delays in developing its petroleum finds. Several wells that it had triumphantly announced proved economically unviable.

Its share price began a collapse that only accelerated this year. An investor who bought OGX shares at the initial offering price would now have lost over 97 percent of the original investment.

Similar problems have hurt shares of his other five companies on the São Paulo stock exchange. Mr. Batista has already sold off controlling stakes in two, and the sale of a third company is expected soon. A fourth is selling off assets, and the fifth, the naval construction company OSX, is also expected to seek court-supervised reorganization soon.

Brazil’s securities and exchange commission, the CVM, has opened inquiries into whether OGX’s management, including Mr. Batista, may have violated disclosure rules about the company’s operations and about their personal ownership stakes. A group representing retail investors has also announced a lawsuit.

But Mr. Batista’s net worth, once over $30 billion, is now estimated at less than a billion, and even that may be dwindling.

In October 2012, Mr. Batista signed a contract that permitted OGX to require him to personally inject $1 billion into the company.

At the time, Mr. Batista said the contract indicated his confidence in the company.

OGX tried to exercise this option on Sept. 6, but Mr. Batista has gone to court to attempt to avoid the $1 billion payment, which he may not have the funds to fulfill.

Just as Mr. Batista for a time was a symbol of Brazil’s economic mightâ€"Time magazine chose him in 2012 as one of the 100 most influential people in the worldâ€"he has now come to represent his country’s growing pangs.

Brazil’s finance minister, Guido Mantega, said Monday that “OGX’s situation has already caused problems for the country’s image” and “I hope they stop this bloodletting soon.”

Despite rich natural resources, Brazil has not yet managed to realize its full potential.

Last year the economy grew only 0.9 percent, and on Monday Brazil’s central bank lowered its growth forecast for this year to 2.5 percent.

In 2007, Brazil discovered offshore petroleum reserves which could make the country as rich in oil as Russia or Kuwait. But progress in developing these reserves has been slow. After several years of energy independence, Brazil recently became a net importer of petroleum products.

Brazil is now hoping to attract foreign investment in its energy sector. The first big test for Brazil will come Oct. 21, when it will auction rights to invest in an offshore petroleum exploration block, named Libra, which may have as much as 12 billion barrels in reserves and will require over $200 billion to develop.



Batista’s Oil Firm Defaults on Interest Payment

OGX, the petroleum exploration and production firm founded by the Brazilian entrepreneur Eike Batista, was pushed closer to bankruptcy after it announced Tuesday that it would default on a $44.5 million interest payment. OGX now has a 30-day grace period to negotiate with creditors.

Luana Helsinger, a petroleum analyst with Grupo Bursátil Mexicano in Rio de Janeiro, said “the logical next step is for OGX to request a court-supervised reorganization.”

Should a bankruptcy occur, it would be the largest corporate default in Latin America’s history.

Foreign investors hold most of OGX’s bonds, with the world’s largest bond investor, Pimco, a major owner.

Under Brazilian law, if OGX prepares a plan to avoid liquidation and a court approves it, the company will have 180 days to continue negotiations without having to make any further debt payments.

That extra delay would be crucial for OGX, which has to make another $110 million payment in December.

Negotiations have been going on for months, with OGX reportedly trying to persuade its creditors to swap debt for equity and to invest additional funds in the company, whose offshore fields may hold billions of barrels of petroleum.

Ms. Helsinger said creditors were likely interested in making a deal with OGX. If the oil concern is forced into liquidation, a fire sale of its assets will likely provide only a fraction of the $3.6 billion that it owes bondholders.

Another option is bringing in a new investor, such as the Malaysian petroleum company Petronas, which is known to be interested in one of OGX’s offshore petroleum fields.

Without new money to develop OGX’s petroleum reserves, even a court-supervised restructuring might end in liquidation, a bankruptcy lawyer in Rio de Janeiro said. The lawyer requested anonymity since he has clients involved with OGX.

OGX was the crown jewel of Mr. Batista’s six publicly traded companies, which together were supposed to develop Brazil’s rich petroleum and mining resources, generate electricity, and build ships and ports to facilitate exports.

When OGX went public in 2008, it raised $4.1 billion and become Brazil’s largest private-sector petroleum company. By the end of 2010, its share price had more than tripled from the I.P.O. price, as the firm announced petroleum discoveries and foreign investors sought a piece of Brazil.

But in 2012 OGX revealed difficulties and delays in developing its petroleum finds. Several wells that it had triumphantly announced proved economically unviable.

Its share price began a collapse that only accelerated this year. An investor who bought OGX shares at the initial offering price would now have lost over 97 percent of the original investment.

Similar problems have hurt shares of his other five companies on the São Paulo stock exchange. Mr. Batista has already sold off controlling stakes in two, and the sale of a third company is expected soon. A fourth is selling off assets, and the fifth, the naval construction company OSX, is also expected to seek court-supervised reorganization soon.

Brazil’s securities and exchange commission, the CVM, has opened inquiries into whether OGX’s management, including Mr. Batista, may have violated disclosure rules about the company’s operations and about their personal ownership stakes. A group representing retail investors has also announced a lawsuit.

But Mr. Batista’s net worth, once over $30 billion, is now estimated at less than a billion, and even that may be dwindling.

In October 2012, Mr. Batista signed a contract that permitted OGX to require him to personally inject $1 billion into the company.

At the time, Mr. Batista said the contract indicated his confidence in the company.

OGX tried to exercise this option on Sept. 6, but Mr. Batista has gone to court to attempt to avoid the $1 billion payment, which he may not have the funds to fulfill.

Just as Mr. Batista for a time was a symbol of Brazil’s economic mightâ€"Time magazine chose him in 2012 as one of the 100 most influential people in the worldâ€"he has now come to represent his country’s growing pangs.

Brazil’s finance minister, Guido Mantega, said Monday that “OGX’s situation has already caused problems for the country’s image” and “I hope they stop this bloodletting soon.”

Despite rich natural resources, Brazil has not yet managed to realize its full potential.

Last year the economy grew only 0.9 percent, and on Monday Brazil’s central bank lowered its growth forecast for this year to 2.5 percent.

In 2007, Brazil discovered offshore petroleum reserves which could make the country as rich in oil as Russia or Kuwait. But progress in developing these reserves has been slow. After several years of energy independence, Brazil recently became a net importer of petroleum products.

Brazil is now hoping to attract foreign investment in its energy sector. The first big test for Brazil will come Oct. 21, when it will auction rights to invest in an offshore petroleum exploration block, named Libra, which may have as much as 12 billion barrels in reserves and will require over $200 billion to develop.



A Step Toward ‘Peer-to-Peer’ Lending Securitization

Fresh ideas are scarce right now in financial markets, but a New York hedge fund has closed a deal that took an innovation - and innovated on it.

Eaglewood Capital was set up two years ago to invest in loans made by Lending Club, a relatively young company that matches individual borrowers with all sorts of investors who want to lend to them. Fans of this type of “peer-to-peer” lending say it fulfills a big need in the economy. Banks, they say, sometimes fail to reach certain types of borrowers. Lending Club’s investors include Google, which led a $125 million deal earlier this year to buy a stake from earlier shareholders.

Enter Eaglewood, which is run by Jonathan Barlow, a 35-year-old former Lehman Brothers trader. In a new development, Eaglewood took some of its Lending Club loans and sold them in a securitization, the industry term for a deal in which investors buy bonds backed with a type of financial asset. In this deal, that asset is Lending Club loans that Eaglewood had selected. Cash flows from the loans effectively pay the interest and principal on the bonds.

Since the financial crisis showed the risks of securitizing riskier loans, investors have avoided anything too experimental. Still, on Friday, Eaglewood managed to pull off a $53 million deal.

“We believe this transaction will be the first of many for Eaglewood,” Mr. Barlow said.

Securitization may be a crucial development for peer-to-peer lending because it might allow a wider array of investors to buy such loans. The Eaglewood deal mostly went to a large insurance company, according to a person familiar with the transaction. That buyer probably operates under restrictions that prevent it from directly investing in Lending Club loans. The Eaglewood deal, however, effectively allows it to gain financial exposure to such loans.

Eaglewood, which has $130 million of assets under management, declined to identify the insurance company. It also said it did not want to reveal the actual yield that the insurance company is getting on the deal, claiming that it could damage Eaglewood competitively.

It’s not clear how many peer-to-peer loans could become available for securitization. It ultimately depends on how much money is injected into the peer-to-peer companies. And the securitization may not end being the best distribution model for such loans.

One of securitization’s big flaws was exposed in the crisis. Banks made shoddy loans and then dumped them into bonds, saddling the investors in the bonds with searing losses. Since the crisis, financial experts have said firms that do securitizations need to keep a portion of the loans on their own books, so that they have “skin in the game.”

Eaglewood says it is doing that, agreeing to take losses of up to $13 million before other investors take a hit. That works out as a loss buffer of around 25 percent on the $53 million pool of loans, which, according to Mr. Barlow, is high for deals that contain similar loans to individuals. He added that Eaglewood is legally vouching that the Lending Club loans meet agreed-upon standards.

Of course, Eaglewood stands to profit from the transaction. It may be able to book a gain on the loans it sold. And the deal also provides it with cash that it can now invest in other loans. In some ways, the deal allows the hedge fund to take on leverage, the financial term for borrowing money to enhance returns.

“What we’ve told our investors is that we do not intend to take on leverage of north of four times our equity, Mr. Barlow said. “But, today, we are below three times leverage in our fund.”

The risk is that losses end up higher than Eaglewood or the insurance company expect.

But Mr. Barlow notes that Lending Club has six years of loan history to analyze. In that period, credit losses have run at a little more than 3 percent of the value of the loans, he said. In the Eaglewood deal, a majority of the assets are debt consolidation loans. These group together loans in the hope of reducing the overall debt service costs for the borrower.

Lending Club says its loans are made to people with relatively high credit scores.

If they are strongly creditworthy, why haven’t ordinary banks already made such loans to the borrowers? Banks might have perceived them as too much of a risk. A typical Lending Club borrower might have low savings and high levels of credit card debts, but, at the same time, they may benefit from higher-than-average income levels.

In Mr. Barlow’s opinion, the loans hit a sweet spot. He thinks their credit quality is solid, they have an attractive yield and a relatively short maturity.

“Very rarely can you find that combination,” he said.



Morning Agenda: Wariness as Government Shuts Down

Investors cautiously pulled back from the markets as a flurry of political moves in Washington on Monday evening failed to end a budget standoff, setting up the first government shutdown in nearly two decades, The New York Times reports. Stock markets around the world fell on Monday, though the declines were relatively modest in the United States while negotiations in Congress remained stalled, Nathaniel Popper writes in DealBook. Markets in Europe were higher on Tuesday, while stock index futures in the United States pointed to a higher opening Tuesday morning in New York.

Many on Wall Street think the direct effect of a shutdown will be relatively minimal from the stock market’s perspective. About 800,000 federal workers are to be furloughed and more than a million others will be asked to work without pay, as roughly two-thirds of the government â€" the so-called essential functions â€" will continue operating. But some economists have said the shutdown would most likely have a broader effect on market psychology if it lasted for more than a few days, Mr. Popper writes.

“You have an economy that has already shown some hesitation,” said Diane Swonk, the chief economist at Mesirow Financial. “That’s the last thing we need right now.”

President Obama is scheduled to meet on Wednesday with members of the Financial Services Forum, including the chiefs of banks like JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs, who are in Washington for an annual meeting. The group is expected to discuss a range of financial issues.

FINANCIAL WATCHDOG TO DEPART AGENCY  |  David Meister, who is waging legal battles against some of the biggest names in finance, is poised to step down from his role as head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s enforcement unit, a move that may put the future of those cases in question, DealBook’s Ben Protess reports. The commission announced his departure early on Tuesday, capping Mr. Meister’s effort to embolden an agency once dismissed as “the watchdog that didn’t bark.”

“Over a nearly three-year stretch, Mr. Meister helped write new rules to expand the enforcement unit’s authority, overhauled the unit’s management ranks and filed a record number of actions against the financial industry. An investigation into the banking industry’s manipulation of benchmark interest rates â€" a crackdown on banks like UBS and Barclays â€" defined his tenure,” Mr. Protess writes. Still, his exit â€" and the exit of Gary Gensler, the agency’s chairman, whose term expires in December â€" comes at an awkward time.

One of the most prominent cases is an investigation into whether JPMorgan Chase traders in London built a position so big that they manipulated the market for financial contracts known as derivatives. That comes as the Justice Department and other regulators are trying to negotiate a settlement with JPMorgan over allegations of mortgage abuses â€" a case that, to many on Wall Street, seems unfair, DealBook’s Peter Eavis writes. “But JPMorgan may not be the martyr some think it is.”

In the Justice Department’s effort over mortgages, a person inside the bank is providing valuable assistance to the government, according to The Wall Street Journal, citing unidentified people familiar with the matter. “The cooperating person has provided information â€" including e-mails â€" suggesting the bank vastly overstated the quality of mortgages that were being bundled into securities and sold to investors before the financial crisis, the people said.”

DOUBTS RAISED ON THE VALUE OF CONSULTANTS TO PENSIONS  | “At a time when individual investors are increasingly demanding transparency in performance track records, the biggest slice of the investment world â€" pension funds â€" has conspicuously turned a blind eye to demanding track records from their most influential advisers, investment consultants,” Andrew Ross Sorkin writes in the DealBook column. “A new study by professors at the University of Oxford is causing a stir in the staid pension investment industry, highlighting the subpar performance of most consultants and, more important, the lack of disclosure that would allow the public to even know about it.”

ON THE AGENDA  |  It is the first day of a government shutdown. Walgreen is scheduled to report earnings before the market opens. Empire State Realty Trust, owner of the Empire State Building, is expected to price its I.P.O. on Tuesday evening. Pierre Cailleteau, managing director for sovereign ratings at Moody’s, is on Bloomberg TV at 11:15 a.m.

AN OCCUPY WALL STREET DEBIT CARD  | To commemorate the second anniversary of the Occupy Wall Street movement in September, a surprising undertaking began with little fanfare: creating a prepaid Occupy debit card, Colin Moynihan reports in The New York Times. “The idea, led by a group that includes a Cornell law professor, a former director of Deutsche Bank and a former British diplomat, is meant to serve people who do not have bank accounts, but it also aims to make Occupy a recognized financial services brand.”

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Mergers Holding SteadyMergers Holding Steady  |  For the first nine months of the year, Goldman Sachs claimed the top spot among financial advisers, having worked on 285 deals worldwide worth nearly $517 billion. DealBook »

Cooper Tire Shareholders Approve Sale to Indian Tire Maker  |  The shareholder approval was a big step forward for the $2.5 billion sale of Cooper Tire and Rubber to Apollo Tyres of India, but the deal still faces hurdles. REUTERS

How the Deal for Rue21 Could Fall ApartHow the Deal for Rue21 Could Fall Apart  |  A report of weak sales by the retailer rue21 has spooked potential investors in a private equity deal to buy the company. The question now is whether the three banks on the deal want to risk their reputations by trying to kill it, Steven M. Davidoff writes in the Deal Professor column. DealBook »

Frontier Airlines to Be Acquired by Investment Firm  |  “The man who turned Spirit Airlines Inc. into one of the industry’s stingiest but most profitable carriers agreed in principle to buy Denver-based Frontier Airlines, a transaction that likely signals the expansion of the ultralow-cost sector of the U.S. airline industry, according to a person familiar with the deal,” The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Nielsen Completes Acquisition of Arbitron  |  Nielsen Holdings said on Monday that its $1.26 billion acquisition of the radio ratings company Arbitron would allow it to monitor eight hours a day of the public’s media consumption across television, radio and a range of electronic devices. NEW YORK TIMES

INVESTMENT BANKING »

An Ex-Trader Looks at the Changes in GoldmanFormer Trader Looks at the Changes in Goldman  |  “What Happened to Goldman Sachs” examines the bank’s evolution from an elite private partnership to a vast public corporation - and the effects of that transformation on its culture. DealBook »

Berkshire Hathaway to Receive $2 Billion of Goldman Stock  |  Berkshire is getting Goldman Sachs stock worth nearly $2.15 billion through warrants it acquired as part of a deal in 2008, Reuters reports. REUTERS

Barclays Names Top Aerospace Banker  |  Barclays has announced that Jay Caldwell will join the bank as global head of its aerospace and defense team. DealBook »

Freddie Mac Names Ally Executive as Finance Chief  |  Freddie Mac said on Monday it had chosen James Mackey, a top executive at Ally Financial, to be its chief financial officer, succeeding Ross Kari. REUTERS

Mutual Fund Billionaire Gives $250 Million to YaleMutual Fund Billionaire Gives $250 Million to Yale  |  Charles B. Johnson, the retired chairman of the money management company Franklin Resources, has pledged $250 million to Yale. DealBook »

Bank Fees Rise for 15th Straight Year  | 
USA TODAY

PRIVATE EQUITY »

Apollo’s Energy I.P.O. Gives New Life to Quick Flips  |  Apollo Global Management is showing that private equity can still dig into its old bag of tricks, Christopher Swann of Reuters Breakingviews writes. REUTERS BREAKINGVIEWS

Active Network in $1.05 Billion Buyout  |  Active Network, which provides online tools and data management for events, has agreed to be acquired by the private equity firm Vista Equity Partners in a deal valued at $1.05 billion. DealBook »

HEDGE FUNDS »

Perry Capital Cuts Stake in J.C. PenneyPerry Capital Cuts Stake in J.C. Penney  |  The hedge fund began to cut its stake on Friday, coinciding with J.C. Penney’s disclosure of a planned sale of as much as 96.6 million new common shares. DealBook »

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Container Store Aims to Raise $200 Million in I.P.O.  |  The Container Store Group, a 35-year-old retail chain based in Texas, filed for an initial public offering, saying it planned to use the proceeds to pay a dividend to holders of its senior preferred stock and to repay debt. REUTERS

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Cybersecurity Firm Cigital Raises $50 Million  |  Cigital, which helps enterprise customers maintain software applications to protect against cyber threats, announced on Tuesday that it raised $50 million from LLR Partners, to support its expansion and growth. CIGITAL

Payments Start-Up Leaf Raises $20 Million  |  Leaf, a competitor to Square and other payments companies, attracted $20 million from Heartland Payment Systems, a big payments processing company, AllThingsD reports. ALLTHINGSD

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Despite Cries of Unfair Treatment, JPMorgan Is No VictimDespite Cries of Unfair Treatment, JPMorgan Is No Victim  |  Some banking experts say they believe the government is picking on JPMorgan Chase, but the bank may not be the martyr some think it is. News Analysis »

No Limit on Strikes for JPMorgan ChaseNo Limit on Strikes for JPMorgan Chase  |  Simply paying money to get rid of investigations raises questions about whether JPMorgan Chase should be viewed as a recidivist, and if so how the law should treat the bank, Peter J. Henning writes in the White Collar Watch column. DealBook »

Wells Fargo Settles With Freddie Mac Over Loans  |  Wells Fargo agreed to pay $780 million in cash to Freddie Mac to resolve repurchase liabilities on home loans sold to the mortgage finance giant before 2009, Reuters reports. REUTERS

For Sweden’s Banks, Fast Growth Isn’t Seen as the Goal  |  “The dream scenario would be that the economy grows a little bit faster than the bank sector,” Peter Norman, Sweden’s financial markets minister, told Bloomberg News. BLOOMBERG NEWS

Former Morgan Stanley Broker Pleads Guilty in Insider Case  |  A former financial adviser with Morgan Stanley admitted to tipping off a childhood friend to Gilead Sciences’ plan in 2011 to buy Pharmasset, before the takeover was announced. REUTERS



Protest Wall Street, Get the Debit Card

Coming Soon? An Occupy Wall Street Debit Card

To mark the second anniversary of the Occupy Wall Street movement last month, an assortment of protests, marches and rallies were held, to support or oppose mostly predictable causes.

Some associated with the Occupy movement dislike a debit card idea.

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