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Ackman Sees Expansion of Activist Investing to Europe

LONDON â€" The investor William A. Ackman said on Tuesday that he believeds activist investing by shareholders would be an increasing trend in Europe in the coming years.

Speaking at the University of Oxford’s Said Business School, Mr. Ackman, the chief executive of the hedge fund Pershing Square Capital, said that shareholder activism in Europe is about a decade behind where it is in the United States.

“I think it’s going to happen,” Mr. Ackman said. The demand for returns by pensioners in Britain and the rest of Europe “will drive shareholder-run activism.”

Mr. Ackman, who has recently started a fund that looks for global opportunities for investment, said he had mostly focused on the United States because of its familiarity but also because boards of directors are more open to listening to concerns raised by activist investors.

The Pershing Square Foundation, a charitable organization founded by Mr. Ackman and his wife, pays for scholarships at Oxford’s business school. He was the featured speaker at an event there on Tuesday night.

Mr. Ackman touched on a variety of topics on Tuesday, ranging from his unsuccessful bid to change the culture at J.C. Penney by bringing in a new chief executive to his ongoing public spat with the investor Carl C. Ichan about Herbalife.

On J.C. Penney, an investment where he said his firm lost $500 million, Mr. Ackman said he believed his thesis on turning around the company was “right.”

J.C. Penney was a faded brand that needed an update and had valuable real estate in some of the top retail locations in the country, Mr. Ackman said. He was also able to attract a well-respected retail veteran, Ron Johnson, as the new chief executive and to tie his compensation to the future growth of the business.

But Mr. Ackman said he found himself in a situation where he didn’t have the majority support of the board, as he did with his successful investment in Canadian Pacific Railway. So it became increasingly difficult to continue with the same strategy when results soured at the retailer.

Mr. Johnson, a veteran of Target and Apple, was forced out 15 months after taking the job, in part because his plan to eliminate what he felt was unnecessary discounting by the retailer drove away many of the retailer’s traditional customers. The company went from steady profits to posting large losses.

“I don’t think I’ll go on a board and have one of 11 seats,” Mr. Ackman said.

Mr. Ackman also said J.C. Penney could have benefited from testing its new concept of pricing, instead of rolling it out nationwide at once. At Apple, Mr. Johnson’s former company, testing wasn’t considered a crucial concept by its founder, Steve Jobs, Mr. Ackman said.

Separately, Mr. Ackman, who is never shy about sharing his opinion, said he continued to believe that Herbalife is the equivalent of a “pyramid scheme” that is driven primarily by costly sales of startup inventories of products to low-level sales people, rather than public interest in its nutritional supplement products, which he says are a commodity.

Mr. Ichan and Mr. Ackman have fought a very public battle in recent months over the supplement seller, including a back-and-forth on television in which Mr. Ichan called Mr. Ackman a “crybaby.” Mr. Ackman recently moved to cap the potential losses in his bet against the company.

Mr. Ackman’s prediction on Tuesday: “This business will be shut down, this business will collapse” within the next 12 months.

An Hebalife spokesman had no immediate comment.



Trepidation and Restrictions Leave Crowdfunding Rules Weak

Crowdfunding is becoming a reality, but the question is whether it will thrive or become largely a vehicle for fraud.

If it does turn out to be a disaster, don’t blame the Securities and Exchange Commission. The agency was merely following orders when it was told to adopt rules for crowdfunding.

Last week, the regulator proposed rules governing crowdfunding in a 568-page release. The idea behind the proposal â€" mandated by the 2012 Jump-start Our Business Start-ups Act, or JOBS Act â€" is born of our penchant for the kinds of popular ideas that emerge at TED talks. In the case of crowdfunding, the concept is that small companies can obtain the financing they need through the “wisdom of crowds.” The crowd in this instance will use the Internet to collectively pick the best investment. It is a win for all involved, particularly small companies that are starved for financing.

There are reasons to be skeptical, however.

For one, the experts in investing in start-ups â€" venture capitalists â€" are not terribly successful. According to the National Venture Capital Association, 40 percent of venture capital investments fail, 40 percent break about even and only 20 percent have a decent to high return.

Crowdfunding investors, that is, you or me, are likely to lack the diversification of venture capitalists, meaning that crowdfunding investors will not have the successes to even out the overwhelming majority of failures. Moreover, the crowd’s ability to pick winners may not be as good as the venture capitalists, meaning an even higher rate of failure.

Then there is the second problem associated with crowdfunding: fraud. Without proper identification, anyone can put a nifty sounding idea out there: Elaine from “Seinfeld” was right; we need to bring back the sponge! Or how about brushless toothbrushes! In the worst situation, the entrepreneur could take the money and run. Even without outright fraud, once the money comes in, there is no oversight. So entrepreneurs can fritter it away on their own expenses.

Take a recent campaign on Kickstarter, the crowdfunding site where companies raise money in exchange for products or services instead of shares. Some people compare the crowdfunding process of raising capital to what goes on at Kickstarter. In this case, an entrepreneur raised more than $122,000 on Kickstarter, preselling versions of a board game, the Doom that Came to Atlantic City, termed “a Lovecraftian game of urban destruction.” Months later, the entrepreneur canceled the project, having spent the money on things like moving to Portland, Ore. Atlantic City survived, and the only thing destroyed was the crowd’s money.

With crowdfunding, even if a company were successful, there is probably no way to exit or even control the company. As the S.E.C. acknowledged in its release last week, these companies are extremely unlikely to go public.

It all means that you will have better odds at the casino than investing in crowdfunded companies.

When Congress was considering the JOBS Act, the legislation that made crowdfunding possible, the S.E.C. was strongly opposed. Mary L. Schapiro, then the chairwoman of the agency, said that the law would “weaken important protection” for investors.

Congress largely ignored those concerns and dumped the rule-making for crowdfunding in the lap of the S.E.C. So the regulator has swallowed hard and tried to make the best of this situation.

The S.E.C. did not respond to requests for comment.

The final rules are a reflection of Congress and another force â€" Eugene Scalia.

Mr. Scalia, a partner at the law firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, has made a successful practice of challenging S.E.C. rules in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. His most prominent success so far has been persuading the court to overturn the agency’s rules that would permit shareholders to nominate directors directly, known as proxy access. The court found that the S.E.C.’s cost-benefit analysis of the proxy access was so poor as to be arbitrary.

The decision has given ammunition to opponents of the agency to challenge every rule as arbitrary. Because the court implied the need for statistical proof to justify a rule, it has set a high bar for the S.E.C. to overcome.

The decision has also had some unfortunate and unintended side effects. The lengthy release on its crowdfunding rules is a product of the S.E.C.’s attempt to meet the appellate court’s challenge. The result is not better analysis, but rather simply more words on the page as the agency strains to justify every decision to show it has proper empirical proof.

The court opinion has also led the commission to adopt a bunker mentality. Rather than risk yet another rule being overturned, the S.E.C. has instead preferred to adhere to the most conservative view of Congress’s dictates. The result has been less innovation.

In the case of crowdfunding, the agency largely parroted what Congress did without addressing its own concerns about investor safety. That would be a problem in any circumstance, yet Congress adopted these rules without any real thought.

The JOBS Act raced through Congress and was initially supposed to be about reviving the market for initial public offerings. But forces in favor of private markets pushed for a new section to permit crowdfunding. This was never intended to be included by the group of venture capitalists and other industry groups who first proposed the JOBS Act.

In the wake of concerns about the potential for fraud in crowdfunding, new provisions were added to the legislation that required that crowdfunding be done through third-party portals or brokers. In addition, requirements for financial statements for companies and background checks on executives were added.

For example, Congress required that if more than $100,000 were raised, then the company’s financial statements must be reviewed by an independent accountant. If the amount were more than $500,000, then the financial statements must be audited. Most companies will probably sidestep this requirement by raising less than $100,000. This means that small companies will predominate and the chance of fraud will only increase.

Crowdfunding could have been a chance to experiment, to try different ways to see which method raised capital best for companies with a minimal amount of fraud. The S.E.C. could have started by creating different markets with different rules. Or perhaps investing could have been done through funds that allow for diversification.

Instead, because of Congress’s straitjacket and the S.E.C.’s fear of innovation, we have a proposal that seems likely to have significant problems, if not with fraud than simply with how investors will get their money back, let alone make money.

The rules are merely proposals, and comments are due in 90 days. The agency made almost 300 requests for comment on various issues. But the rules are unlikely to change much.

The S.E.C. has resisted crowdfunding and might not have ever gone along with any effort to endorse the practice. But the agency is hamstrung, afraid to do what it could have to make crowdfunding work better for investors. That’s a shame generally, but maybe more so for the people who invest in these small companies and lose everything.



Terrific Sound in a Tiny Package

How will people remember 2013? As the year of the government shutdown? The year the N.S.A. revealed that the enemy is us? The year Miley Cyrus absolutely, positively stopped playing an adorable child actress?

In consumer tech, we may remember this as the year Bluetooth speakers finally outnumbered insects on the earth. Every company and its brother has been cranking out compact, colorful, battery-powered wireless speakers.

And no wonder: these things really are awesome. Every time some company offers a new tablet, laptop or phone, you can bet that it has a better, sharper, brighter screen - but what about the sound? It's stuck in 2004: tinny and weak. A Bluetooth speaker neatly remedies that enormous quality difference between audio and visual.

The Jawbone Jambox was one of the earliest hits. It's a sharp-edged rectangular box, $150, that comes in a choice of colors. It pumps out surprisingly loud, clear sound - for its size, which is 6 by 1.6 by 2.8 inches.

Then came the Big Jambox, a shoebox-size $300 version with big enough sound for a backyard.

And now comes the Jambox Mini, at $180.

I love this thing. It's actually not all that mini; in fact, it's about as long and tall as the original (6.1 by 2.3 inches) - but it looks like someone sliced the original in half with a saber.

It's actually not anywhere near half as thick; it's just two-thirds of an inch thinner (just under an inch thick). But somehow, that fraction of an inch changes how you perceive and feel this speaker.

Now you can reasonably carry this thing in a coat pocket, small purse or even a pants pocket, although the sharp edges will get you. It looks great, too; it's available in nine colors and five perforation patterns of shiny aluminum (not plastic like the original).

Now, in speakers, smaller size usually means smaller sound. So the big question is, how does the Mini sound?

It sounds fantastic on its own. Much richer, crisper and louder than the feeble speakers on your phone, tablet or laptop, that's for sure.

When you compare it (“A/B” it) with the original Jambox, though, you can hear what you're giving up. The Jambox has much better bass and plays louder than the Mini.

On the other hand, the Mini's midrange and treble seem crisper and more solid than the Jambox Original. And besides: Who but a tech-reviewing nerd would sit there flipping his music playback between two speakers?

The specs and features are much the same as the original Jambox: 10 hours of battery life, charges from a USB cable or a wall outlet, puts a battery-life indicator on your iPhone's status bar, speaks status messages (like “entering pairing mode”) aloud and acts as a speakerphone.

There's a 3-D mode that doesn't do very much. An app for iPhone or Android lets you adjust settings on the speaker (for example, to reprogram the function of its Play button, or to change voices for the spoken alerts); the iPhone version also lets you round up music from iTunes, Spotify, Rdio and Deezer into a single playlist.

The Jambox Mini isn't the only super-small Bluetooth speaker; in size, its closest rival is probably the $200 Beats Pill (7.5 inches long; it's a 1.8-inch-diameter cylinder). The Pill can get louder, but its battery life isn't as good and its Bluetooth circuitry is older. (The Mini offers Bluetooth 4.0, the kind that automatically stops using battery power when you're not sending it music.)

The bottom line is that anyone who unwraps a Jambox Mini this holiday season - even if it's you - will be delighted. It looks fantastic and sounds terrific for its size. You can certainly get louder sound or richer bass in a Bluetooth speaker, but not in one this small. Apparently, even Jawbone Inc. can't completely ignore the laws of physics.



David Pogue, Times Technology Columnist, Leaves for Yahoo

Pogue, Times Technology Columnist, Is Leaving for Yahoo

David Pogue, the technology writer for The New York Times, whose columns were among the most popular at the paper, said on Monday that he was leaving for Yahoo to start a consumer-focused technology site.

David Pogue, in 2009 at the Macworld Expo in San Francisco.

In addition to his State of the Art column, where he has reviewed new technology products for 13 years, Mr. Pogue created weekly videos for The Times and wrote a blog, Pogue's Posts, that won a Gerald Loeb award for distinguished business journalism in 2010.

In a statement on his Tumblr site on Monday morning, Mr. Pogue wrote: “Thirteen years is a long time to stay in one place; we all thrive on new experiences.”

He then elaborated on his new mission at Yahoo. “I'll be writing columns and blog posts each week, of course, and making my goofy videos,'' he wrote. “But my team and I have much bigger plans, too, for all kinds of online and real-world creations.''

Mr. Pogue always worked for other organizations besides The Times, and while at Yahoo he will continue to keep his outside assignments, which include technology correspondent for “CBS News Sunday Morning,” columnist for Scientific American and the host of a series on technology on the PBS program “Nova.”

Mr. Pogue's departure comes as technology coverage has become increasingly prized by media companies. Only weeks ago, Walter S. Mossberg, a leading reviewer of new devices, said he would be leaving The Wall Street Journal to start a technology writing and conference business with Kara Swisher, who is leaving AllThingsD. The business will be backed by new partners.

Mr. Pogue occasionally encountered problems during his tenure at the Times. He was criticized by the paper's public editor for breaching ethical guidelines, including an instance where he wrote a column praising a computer operating system without letting readers know that he was writing a user's manual about that system.

In a memo to the newsroom, Dean Murphy, The Times's business editor, and Suzanne Spector, the technology editor, wrote that Mr. Pogue's columns were “a delight to read'' and wished him well in his new job.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: October 21, 2013

An earlier version of this article misstated which publication Ms. Swisher was leaving. She is leaving the Dow Jones online publication AllThingsD, not The Wall Street Journal.



Sale of Dell Closes, Moving Company Into Private Ownership

After months of wrangling and tough negotiating, Dell Inc. is finally going private.

The computer company said on Tuesday that its $24.9 billion sale to its founder, Michael S. Dell, and the investment firm Silver Lake has closed. The closing comes more than a month after shareholders approved the deal and means that Dell shares will be delisted at the end of the day.

It also follows a bruising multimonth fight between Mr. Dell and the activist investor Carl C. Icahn, who bitterly argued that the takeover price was far too low. Ultimately, Mr. Dell and Silver Lake agreed to raise their bid slightly to $13.88 a share in cash.

Now will come the hard work of reviving a onetime pioneer of the computer industry, which has been battered by dropping sales of personal computers and the rise of mobile devices like smartphones and the iPad.

Mr. Dell has said that he believes the company already has the foundation for a new strategy: focusing on services for business customers. What comes next is extending that move in private, away from the glare of research analysts and public investors.

“Today, Dell enters an exciting new chapter as a private enterprise,” Mr. Dell said in a statement. “Our 110,000 team members worldwide are 100 percent focused on our customers and aggressively executing our long-term strategy for their benefit.”

Shares in Dell were roughly flat in midday trading at $13.86.



Deutsche Bank’s Trading Pain

Deutsche Bank’s third-quarter hit in fixed-income trading could presage a painful loss in market share. The German bank suffered a 48 percent fall in third-quarter debt sales and trading revenue - as bad as any peer. And things could get tougher still.

Deutsche Bank still has the third biggest fixed-income trading franchise in the industry, on a rolling four-month basis. The unit rakes in about 10 percent of the overall revenue pool, according to Breakingviews’ calculations. The bank’s co-chief executive, Anshu Jain, believes Deutsche can gain market share as rivals retrench - witness Credit Suisse’s recent decision to slash interest rates trading. But Deutsche Bank’s prized division has lost market share in each of the last two quarters, as well as missing consensus analyst estimates for revenue in each of the last four.

What’s more, a regulatory focus on gross leverage positions may make it harder for Deutsche to stay in fixed income’s top three. Deutsche wants to cut 250 billion euros of assets from its balance sheet. In the third quarter alone the bank achieved 15 percent - 38 billion euros - of this, mainly by managing its derivative contracts more efficiently. But its repurchase agreement business, or repo book, still constitutes over 10 percent of its total balance sheet, and is especially bloated in the United States.

There’s scope for Deutsche to hack this back - and a need, given that U.S. regulators want European banks with subsidiaries in New York to hold more capital. But that could come at the expense of fixed-income trading. Investment bank repo businesses are strongly correlated with fixed-income prowess. Every $100 billion of gross repo positions equate to about 2 percent of market share, according to Citigroup research.

There are two potential silver linings for Deutsche. The first is that of its two closest fixed-income rivals, Barclays is exposed to the same U.S. headwinds, while Goldman Sachs suffered a similarly large third-quarter revenue drop. The other is that banks may successfully lobby to exclude repo business from leverage calculations in the U.S. Against that, an additional 1.2 billion euros in litigation reserves showed that there are other distractions for management. Deutsche’s third-quarter trading pain could endure.

Dominic Elliott is a columnist at Reuters Breakingviews. For more independent commentary and analysis, visit breakingviews.com.



Deutsche Bank’s Trading Pain

Deutsche Bank’s third-quarter hit in fixed-income trading could presage a painful loss in market share. The German bank suffered a 48 percent fall in third-quarter debt sales and trading revenue - as bad as any peer. And things could get tougher still.

Deutsche Bank still has the third biggest fixed-income trading franchise in the industry, on a rolling four-month basis. The unit rakes in about 10 percent of the overall revenue pool, according to Breakingviews’ calculations. The bank’s co-chief executive, Anshu Jain, believes Deutsche can gain market share as rivals retrench - witness Credit Suisse’s recent decision to slash interest rates trading. But Deutsche Bank’s prized division has lost market share in each of the last two quarters, as well as missing consensus analyst estimates for revenue in each of the last four.

What’s more, a regulatory focus on gross leverage positions may make it harder for Deutsche to stay in fixed income’s top three. Deutsche wants to cut 250 billion euros of assets from its balance sheet. In the third quarter alone the bank achieved 15 percent - 38 billion euros - of this, mainly by managing its derivative contracts more efficiently. But its repurchase agreement business, or repo book, still constitutes over 10 percent of its total balance sheet, and is especially bloated in the United States.

There’s scope for Deutsche to hack this back - and a need, given that U.S. regulators want European banks with subsidiaries in New York to hold more capital. But that could come at the expense of fixed-income trading. Investment bank repo businesses are strongly correlated with fixed-income prowess. Every $100 billion of gross repo positions equate to about 2 percent of market share, according to Citigroup research.

There are two potential silver linings for Deutsche. The first is that of its two closest fixed-income rivals, Barclays is exposed to the same U.S. headwinds, while Goldman Sachs suffered a similarly large third-quarter revenue drop. The other is that banks may successfully lobby to exclude repo business from leverage calculations in the U.S. Against that, an additional 1.2 billion euros in litigation reserves showed that there are other distractions for management. Deutsche’s third-quarter trading pain could endure.

Dominic Elliott is a columnist at Reuters Breakingviews. For more independent commentary and analysis, visit breakingviews.com.



The Things Traders Say, Dutch Bank Edition

Rabobank, which began life as an agriculture cooperative in the Netherlands in the late 19th century, has become the largest Dutch lender and a modest player on the stage of world finance.

On Tuesday, it also joined the ranks of institutions tarnished by the global rate-setting scandal.

Rabobank is the fifth financial firm to settle investigations related to its role in manipulating the benchmark rate known as the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, which helps set consumer and corporate borrowing rates around the world.

The settlement documents from British and United States regulators offer the latest in incriminating messages.

The Financial Conduct Authority of Britain says that Rabobank tried to manipulate yen Libor rates by colluding with brokers. It gives this November 2010 exchange:

Broker 1: ok we need lower libors tomorrow yes?

Trader 1: Yeah . . .

Broker 1: ok ill work some magic for tomorrow

Such discussions were frequent. One trader noted that traders were used to “help[ing] ourselves to the Libors,” according to the British reregulator.

Submissions for the United States dollar Libor were made out of Rabobank’s office in London, according to authorities.

From the middle of 2005 through 2008, a senior derivatives trader known as the “Ambassador” made requests for preferential Libor submissions, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission says in its order. If the Ambassador’s requests were not honored, he “complained and angrily expressed his displeasure,” says the order, which gives the following 2006 exchange (all caps in the original):

U.S. Dollar Trader: HI MATE, LOW 1S HIGH 3S LIBOR PLS!!! DONT TELL THE MBASS HAA HAAAAAAA. SOLD THE MARKET TODAY DOOOOHHHH!

Senior Manger 1: OK MATE, WILL DO MY BEST….SPEAK LATER

U.S. Dollar Trader: CHEERS GEEZ, BANG ON THE MONEY!

Senior Manager 1: NO WORRIES, I HAD TO WORK MY WAY OUT OF AN AMBASS HEADLOCK TO GET THOSE IN!

Some of the exchanges cited by regulators indicate how commonplace and easy it was for traders to submit rate requests, like this October 2008 yen Libor exchange:

Yen Desk Manager 1: Morning, mate, aright? …. LIBORS today, LIBORS, LIBORS, same?

Senior Manager 1: Where want ‘em?

Yen Desk Manager 1: …. smidgen lower?”

A December 2008 email from a senior manager in Rabobank’s Asian offices says of a yen-trader submitter that the “only question mark for me is him sending out daily Rabo Libor fixing. He told me he will just ‘copy, paste’ the previous days Libors.”

The requests from traders could be relentless.

Submitter B: you’re ringing about six-month Yen Libor again aren’t you?

Trader 1: Yes, yes, yeah

Submitter B: That’s all you’re, that’s all you care about for the moment, isn’t it?

In rate manipulation schemes, as with many things, communication can be key as this 2010 missive makes clear:

WHY DID YOU PUT ALL THE YEN LIBORS HIGHER FOR TODAY WITHOUT TELLING ME? WHERE IS THE TEAM PLAY? YOU KNOW WHAT MY POSITION IS? I CAN”T BELIEVE YOU DID THIS WITHOUT TELLING ME



The Things Traders Say, Dutch Bank Edition

Rabobank, which began life as an agriculture cooperative in the Netherlands in the late 19th century, has become the largest Dutch lender and a modest player on the stage of world finance.

On Tuesday, it also joined the ranks of institutions tarnished by the global rate-setting scandal.

Rabobank is the fifth financial firm to settle investigations related to its role in manipulating the benchmark rate known as the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, which helps set consumer and corporate borrowing rates around the world.

The settlement documents from British and United States regulators offer the latest in incriminating messages.

The Financial Conduct Authority of Britain says that Rabobank tried to manipulate yen Libor rates by colluding with brokers. It gives this November 2010 exchange:

Broker 1: ok we need lower libors tomorrow yes?

Trader 1: Yeah . . .

Broker 1: ok ill work some magic for tomorrow

Such discussions were frequent. One trader noted that traders were used to “help[ing] ourselves to the Libors,” according to the British reregulator.

Submissions for the United States dollar Libor were made out of Rabobank’s office in London, according to authorities.

From the middle of 2005 through 2008, a senior derivatives trader known as the “Ambassador” made requests for preferential Libor submissions, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission says in its order. If the Ambassador’s requests were not honored, he “complained and angrily expressed his displeasure,” says the order, which gives the following 2006 exchange (all caps in the original):

U.S. Dollar Trader: HI MATE, LOW 1S HIGH 3S LIBOR PLS!!! DONT TELL THE MBASS HAA HAAAAAAA. SOLD THE MARKET TODAY DOOOOHHHH!

Senior Manger 1: OK MATE, WILL DO MY BEST….SPEAK LATER

U.S. Dollar Trader: CHEERS GEEZ, BANG ON THE MONEY!

Senior Manager 1: NO WORRIES, I HAD TO WORK MY WAY OUT OF AN AMBASS HEADLOCK TO GET THOSE IN!

Some of the exchanges cited by regulators indicate how commonplace and easy it was for traders to submit rate requests, like this October 2008 yen Libor exchange:

Yen Desk Manager 1: Morning, mate, aright? …. LIBORS today, LIBORS, LIBORS, same?

Senior Manager 1: Where want ‘em?

Yen Desk Manager 1: …. smidgen lower?”

A December 2008 email from a senior manager in Rabobank’s Asian offices says of a yen-trader submitter that the “only question mark for me is him sending out daily Rabo Libor fixing. He told me he will just ‘copy, paste’ the previous days Libors.”

The requests from traders could be relentless.

Submitter B: you’re ringing about six-month Yen Libor again aren’t you?

Trader 1: Yes, yes, yeah

Submitter B: That’s all you’re, that’s all you care about for the moment, isn’t it?

In rate manipulation schemes, as with many things, communication can be key as this 2010 missive makes clear:

WHY DID YOU PUT ALL THE YEN LIBORS HIGHER FOR TODAY WITHOUT TELLING ME? WHERE IS THE TEAM PLAY? YOU KNOW WHAT MY POSITION IS? I CAN”T BELIEVE YOU DID THIS WITHOUT TELLING ME



Nextdoor, a Start-Up, Raises $60 Million

Nextdoor, a social network for neighbors, is moving into elite territory.

The San Francisco start-up on Tuesday announced a $60 million investment led by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Tiger Global Management, two prominent venture capital firms. Comcast Ventures, Benchmark, Greylock Partners and Shasta Ventures also participated in the fund-raising round.

With the investment, Nextdoor has raised more than $100 million in the last 18 months, and that is bound to set off questions about whether venture capitalists are inflating another technology bubble by throwing money at unprofitable start-ups.

Nextdoor has no revenue yet, but believes it is well positioned to capture some of the multibillion-dollar local advertising market. Moreover, the company has used little of its cash pile. With this round, Nextdoor will have more than $90 million in the bank to expand in the United States and abroad.

The company did not disclose its valuation after the new fund-raising round, but its chief executive, Nirav Tolia, said employees and the founding team still had more than 50 percent of equity in the company.

Nonetheless, Nextdoor is now worth at least a few hundred million dollars, making it the latest example of fashionable and fast-growing start-ups commanding startling valuations despite the lack of a proven business model. So far this year, the photo-sharing site Pinterest was valued at $3.8 billion, unprofitable online retailer Fab.com was valued at $1 billion, and photo messaging sites Snapchat is reported to be seeking a $3.5 billion valuation.

Mr. Tolia said the fund-raising round was more about partnering with talented venture capitalists than it was about filling the company’s coffers. John Doerr, a Kleiner partner leading the investment, famously advised Google as it scaled, while another Kleiner partner, Mary Meeker, was one of the best web analysts of her generation. Tiger Global, meanwhile, is skilled at international expansions.

“Much more than the money, we’re trying to bring in the right people to get to the next level,” Mr. Tolia said in an interview, defending the company’s valuation despite its lack of revenue. “If we didn’t have strong underlying metrics, we probably wouldn’t have raised $100 million in the last 18 months.”

Venture capital firms often pile into well-established start-ups with large late-stage rounds as a way to hedge their bets on smaller, unproven ventures. “We didn’t go out looking for money,” Mr. Tolia said. “To some extent the guys who were interested wouldn’t take no for an answer.”

It was only in February that Nextdoor raised $21.6 million from investors including Greylock, an early investor in LinkedIn and Facebook.

“The entrepreneurs that are building really great companies are raising lots of money before they’re cash-flow positive,” Mr. Doerr said in an interview. “Funding brings in strategic options.”

Kleiner’s investment is coming from its $1 billion Digital Growth Fund, which already has late stage investments in Twitter, Spotify and Square.

Nextdoor does not disclose details about its user base, but Mr. Tolia said the site had fewer than 10 million active users. That growing community is highly dispersed across more than 22,000 neighborhoods around the United States.

Despite Nextdoor’s lack of revenue, there is reason to believe the company may succeed.

Mr. Tolia pointed to Yelp, the customer reviews site, and Zillow, the real estate site, as examples of companies that have successfully tapped the local ad market. Both grew popular as unprofitable start-ups, but eventually began to generate meaningful revenues. Since going public in recent years, both companies have more than doubled in value, with Yelp now worth $4.4 billion, and Zillow worth $2.9 billion.

And Mr. Tolia said Nextdoor is adding members at a healthy clip and believes it can fill the information void left by the erosion of local newspaper readership and local television viewing. The company is also attracting classified advertising, robust discussions on its message boards about everything from crime to local businesses and services, and becoming a forum for neighbors to meet one another.

“We now know fewer of our neighbors than ever before as we are immersed in screens,” said Mr. Doerr, who added that he had recently had in-person meetings with neighbors he connected with on Nextdoor.



Rabobank to Pay More Than $1 Billion in Libor Settlement; Chairman Resigns

LONDON â€" The Dutch lender Rabobank will pay more than $1 billion in criminal and civil penalties to settle investigations by United States, British and other authorities into its role in setting global benchmark interest rates.

The bank is the latest lender to settle charges related to the manipulation of the London interbank offered rate, or Libor. The settlement with Rabobank is the second-largest agreement after the $1.5 billion penalty imposed on UBS related to the interest-rate scandal.

Rabobank will pay a $325 million criminal penalty to the Department of Justice in the United States, as well as $475 million to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, $170 million to Britain’s Financial Conduct Authority and about $96 million to Dutch authorities.

As part of the settlement, Rabobank reached a so-called deferred prosecution agreement in which it will avoid criminal charges by making changes in its compliance mechanisms, by continuing cooperating with investigators and by avoiding further wrongdoing.

Piet Moerland, Rabobank’s chief executive, also has resigned immediately as a result of the findings in the investigation.

“I fully understand and share the sense of indignation that the findings of the Libor and Euribor investigations will cause,” Mr. Moerland said in a statement. “I wish to send a strong message on behalf of the bank and on behalf of the executive board: we sincerely apologize for, and strongly condemn, this inappropriate behavior.”

He will be succeeded as interim chairman by Rinus Minderhoud, who has been a member of the supervisory board.

The investigations focused on suspected inappropriate conduct related to Libor and another benchmark rate, the Euro interbank offered rate, or Euribor, between 2005 and 2011.

United States authorities said that derivatives swaps traders at Rabobank and other banks requested that Rabobank employees make rate submissions used in the calculation of Libor and Euribor that would benefit their trading positions. The Justice Department said in court papers that such accommodations were a regular part of the rate-setting process at Rabobank.

Rabobank said that 30 employees were involved in some fashion in the inappropriate conduct. Those employees, if they remained with the bank, have been disciplined and employees who engaged in the most serious conduct are no longer with the firm, Rabobank said.

The bank said it cooperated fully in the investigations and did not sufficiently appreciate at the time the risk associated with Libor and Euribor.

Last week, Britain’s Serious Fraud Office said it had identified 22 individuals at various banks as potential co-conspirators in its wide-ranging inquiry into the manipulation of Libor.

So far, only three individuals have been charged criminally in Britain: Tom A.W. Hayes, a former Citigroup and UBS trader; and James Gilmour and Terry Farr, two former brokers at RP Martin Holdings in London. Mr. Hayes is also facing criminal charges in the United States.

The three have yet to enter pleas in the case.

Barclays agreed to pay $453.6 million in June 2012, and the Royal Bank of Scotland reached a $612 million deal in February. Last month, British and American authorities fined the British financial firm ICAP a combined $87 million for its role.

Citigroup, Deutsche Bank and other banks also remain under investigation by American and British authorities in the matter.



Rabobank to Pay More Than $1 Billion in Libor Settlement; Chairman Resigns

LONDON â€" The Dutch lender Rabobank will pay more than $1 billion in criminal and civil penalties to settle investigations by United States, British and other authorities into its role in setting global benchmark interest rates.

The bank is the latest lender to settle charges related to the manipulation of the London interbank offered rate, or Libor. The settlement with Rabobank is the second-largest agreement after the $1.5 billion penalty imposed on UBS related to the interest-rate scandal.

Rabobank will pay a $325 million criminal penalty to the Department of Justice in the United States, as well as $475 million to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, $170 million to Britain’s Financial Conduct Authority and about $96 million to Dutch authorities.

As part of the settlement, Rabobank reached a so-called deferred prosecution agreement in which it will avoid criminal charges by making changes in its compliance mechanisms, by continuing cooperating with investigators and by avoiding further wrongdoing.

Piet Moerland, Rabobank’s chief executive, also has resigned immediately as a result of the findings in the investigation.

“I fully understand and share the sense of indignation that the findings of the Libor and Euribor investigations will cause,” Mr. Moerland said in a statement. “I wish to send a strong message on behalf of the bank and on behalf of the executive board: we sincerely apologize for, and strongly condemn, this inappropriate behavior.”

He will be succeeded as interim chairman by Rinus Minderhoud, who has been a member of the supervisory board.

The investigations focused on suspected inappropriate conduct related to Libor and another benchmark rate, the Euro interbank offered rate, or Euribor, between 2005 and 2011.

United States authorities said that derivatives swaps traders at Rabobank and other banks requested that Rabobank employees make rate submissions used in the calculation of Libor and Euribor that would benefit their trading positions. The Justice Department said in court papers that such accommodations were a regular part of the rate-setting process at Rabobank.

Rabobank said that 30 employees were involved in some fashion in the inappropriate conduct. Those employees, if they remained with the bank, have been disciplined and employees who engaged in the most serious conduct are no longer with the firm, Rabobank said.

The bank said it cooperated fully in the investigations and did not sufficiently appreciate at the time the risk associated with Libor and Euribor.

Last week, Britain’s Serious Fraud Office said it had identified 22 individuals at various banks as potential co-conspirators in its wide-ranging inquiry into the manipulation of Libor.

So far, only three individuals have been charged criminally in Britain: Tom A.W. Hayes, a former Citigroup and UBS trader; and James Gilmour and Terry Farr, two former brokers at RP Martin Holdings in London. Mr. Hayes is also facing criminal charges in the United States.

The three have yet to enter pleas in the case.

Barclays agreed to pay $453.6 million in June 2012, and the Royal Bank of Scotland reached a $612 million deal in February. Last month, British and American authorities fined the British financial firm ICAP a combined $87 million for its role.

Citigroup, Deutsche Bank and other banks also remain under investigation by American and British authorities in the matter.



Sears Considers Split of Lands’ End and Auto Centers

A separation of Lands' End and the Sears Auto Center businesses would allow the company to better focus on its Sears and Kmart stores.

Lloyds Profit Soars to $2.5 Billion as It Reduced Costs and Bad Loans

LONDON - Lloyds Banking Group, the British lender partly-owned by the government, said Tuesday that earnings in the third quarter rose 83 percent as it continued to reduce costs and the quality of its loans improved.

Profit for the three months to the end of September rose to 1.5 billion pounds, or $2.5 billion, up from 831 million pounds in the same period last year. The bank said it was ahead of its plan to streamline its operations and focus on its customers at home but had to take an additional charge to compensate clients who were sold improper loan insurance.

The government in September started to sell a 6 percent stake in Lloyds after a multibillion pound bailout from the taxpayers five years ago. Investors picked up the shares after Lloyds had recently returned to posting a profit and many expect the bank, a bellwether of the British economy, to improve earnings as an economic recovery strengthens.

“The outlook for the U.K. economy now looks more positive and the group’s business model is well matched to the economic environment,” Lloyds chief executive officer, António Horta-Osório, said in a statement.

Britain still owns 33 percent in Lloyds and is expected to continue reducing its stake further in the beginning of next year. The shares were priced at 75 pence each. Lloyds’ shares have gained more than 60 percent this year.

The share price increase is good news for Mr. Horta-Osório, who is in line for a bonus of 2.5 million pounds if the share price remains at that level for some time. The share price dropped 2.7 percent to 77 pounds on Tuesday morning in London.

Under Mr. Horta-Osório, Lloyds has shed many businesses that were not part of its main strategy to focus on lending to British customers. It sold its Australian operation and its Spanish retail banking business earlier this year. Lloyds ended or is in the process of ending operations in 21 countries, it said.

Now, Mr. Horta-Osório plans to expand the bank’s market share in products such as credit cards. The bank is also in discussions with Britain’s financial regulator to start paying a dividend again, which it had stopped as the financial crisis forced it to seek government support.

The bank said Tuesday that the amount it had to set aside for bad loans and other impairment charges almost halved to 670 million pounds in the third quarter. It also said that costs to compensate customers for the improper payment-protection insurance exceeded the company’s earlier estimates.

Lloyds took an additional charge on this so-called payment protection insurance of 750 million in the third quarter. Lloyds had already set aside 7.3 billion pounds to compensate claims.



UBS Discloses Foreign Exchange Probe as It Reports Slightly Higher Earnings

LONDON â€" UBS, the giant Swiss bank, said on Tuesday that it has received requests for information from regulators in Switzerland, the United States and elsewhere related to its foreign exchange business and is cooperating with those investigations.

The bank said in its quarterly earnings report that it has launched an internal review of the business following a media report in June of “widespread irregularities in the foreign exchange markets.”

“We have taken and will take appropriate action with respect to certain personnel as a result of our review, which is ongoing,” the bank said.

The revelation came as the bank announced that its profit rose to 577 million Swiss francs ($643.9 million) in the third quarter, but that its results continued to be dragged down by charges for litigation and regulatory concerns.

A year ago, the bank reported a loss of 2.13 billion Swiss francs ($2.38 billion) after it booked billions of dollars related to its debt and the restructuring of its investment bank. The bank cut 10,000 jobs last year as part of a major overhaul designed to shift its focus from more risky trading activity in its investment bank to its wealth management arm.

UBS, Switzerland’s largest bank, said that Swiss regulators have asked it to temporarily set aside an additional 28 billion Swiss francs beginning in the fourth quarter to account for potential litigation charges from risky assets. UBS has reduced its so-called risk-weighted assets by 80 billion Swiss francs, or 27 percent, since last year.

The bank said that it was taking a charge of 586 million Swiss francs in the third quarter to account for litigation and regulatory issues and expected elevated charges to continue through 2014.

In addition to the charges, the bank’s quarterly results were hurt by lower client activity and trading in its wealth management business in the Americas and a seasonal slowdown in its investment bank. UBS’s results beat Wall Street expectations of 537 million, according to analysts surveyed by Reuters.

“Our results this quarter provide more evidence that our business model works in a variety of market conditions,” said Sergio P. Ermotti, UBS’s chief executive. “One year into the acceleration of our strategy we are ahead of plan on execution.”

UBS was one of the hardest-hit banks during the financial crisis, receiving a direct injection of 6 billion Swiss francs from the government in October 2008. However, the Swiss government sold its 9 percent stake in the bank for more than $1 billion nearly a year later.

In August, a fund set up as part of the bank’s bailout fully repaid a loan it received from the Swiss National Bank, paving the way for UBS to buy back a portfolio of distressed assets moved off its books as part of the rescue.

UBS said operating profit from its wealth management business declined slightly to 555 million Swiss francs from the second quarter. Operating profit declined 13 percent to 202 million in its Wealth Management Americas business quarter over quarter.

In the investment bank, operating profit fell 68 percent to 251 million Swiss francs from the second quarter. Operating profit rose 7 percent to 402 million Swiss francs in its Retail & Corporate business quarter over quarter.

The bank said its core Tier 1 capital ratio, a measure of a bank’s ability to weather financial disturbances, rose to 11.9 percent by the end of the third quarter under the industry regulations known as Basel III. The core capital level had been 9.8 percent in the prior-year quarter.

UBS continues to target a 13 percent Tier 1 ratio for 2014, but its target of a 15 percent ratio for 2015 is expected to be delayed by a year because of the litigation add-on charge required by Swiss regulators.



Deutsche Bank earnings drop to $70 million on trading and legal headwinds

FRANKFURT â€" Deutsche Bank said on Tuesday that profit in the third quarter fell sharply as Germany’s largest bank suffered from uncertainty in financial markets and set aside another big sum to cover legal charges.

Anshu Jain, the bank’s co-chief executive, had warned in September that earnings would drop this quarter because of lower commissions from trading in bonds and other forms of debt, one of the bank’s most important businesses.

In addition, Deutsche Bank set aside 1.2 billion euros ($1.65 billion) to cover the cost of legal proceedings, bringing the total reserves for litigation to 4.1 billion euros. Like many of its rivals, the bank is the target of numerous lawsuits and official inquiries, and is one of the institutions suspected of manipulating benchmark interest rates.

Profit in the quarter fell to 51 million euros, from 754 million euros in the same period a year earlier. Revenue plunged 10 percent to 7.7 billion euros, Deutsche Bank said.

“In the third quarter we met several challenges,” Mr. Jain and Jürgen Fitschen, who shares the chief executive job, said in a statement. “We took substantial litigation charges and saw reduced profits in investment banking, leading to a lower quarterly result.”

Deutsche Bank is the only German bank still able to compete in investment banking with giants like J.P. Morgan and Goldman Sachs, and it is one of the last European banks playing in the big leagues. But like almost all other large investment banks, it is coping with the aftermath of the financial crisis, including its involvement in the subprime mortgage market in America.

The bank said part of the profit decline was due to markets being unsettled as they anticipate the United States Federal Reserve backing off its purchases of bonds. The Fed has been buying bonds to stimulate the American economy.

Revenue from sales and trading, including bonds and other debt, fell by almost half in the quarter to 1.3 billion euros, Deutsche Bank said.

In addition to its investment bank based in London, with a large presence on Wall Street, Deutsche Bank has a substantial network of retail banking branches in Germany. That business has been more stable, but it also lost ground in the third quarter.

Revenue in the private and business clients unit, which includes the German Postbank branch network, fell 5 percent to 2.3 billion euros compared with the third quarter of 2012. Pretax profit in the unit fell 14 percent to 347 million euros.

Deutsche Bank’s capital, the proportion of its own funds that it uses to conduct business in relation to borrowed money, also slipped. Common equity tier one, a measure of capital, fell to 9.7 percent from 10 percent.

The bank’s capital is still well above the levels required by new regulations that will take effect in coming years. But the decline marks a setback for the company, which has struggled to overcome a reputation for being thinly capitalized.

“We’re moving forward, step by step, on our three-year strategic journey of building a world-class platform for Deutsche Bank,” Mr. Jain and Mr. Fitschen said. “Along the way, we have confronted challenges and will meet others in coming quarters.”