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Banks Keep Their Mortgage Litigation Reserves a Secret

From JPMorgan Chase’s $13 billion settlement over mortgage securities to lawsuits brought by bondholders, a barrage of litigation has been raining down on Wall Street banks. Yet the banks are not disclosing a number that is crucial for assessing their ability to deal those legal costs. And, curiously, the regulator that has sway over companies’ disclosure practices has not called on the industry to reveal this important figure so that investors can weigh the institutions’ health.

The banks are choosing to settle lawsuits for their roles in shoddy mortgage practices before the financial crisis of 2008, paying out multibillion-dollar sums to make amends. The size of JPMorgan’s settlement with the Justice Department, struck late last year, shocked many in the industry. Now, other large banks â€" in particular, Bank of America, with its enormous exposure to sour precrisis mortgages â€" are expected to announce painful deals with the government in the coming months.

As these legal threats loom, the nagging question is whether the banks have properly girded themselves for the payouts. The banks are supposed to build up a financial cushion in advance to absorb the estimated cost of the payouts.

Knowing the size of this cushion, called the litigation reserve, is extremely important to outsiders trying to weigh the financial strength of banks. For instance, if a bank’s litigation reserve turns out to be much too small for the agreed-to settlements, it could call into question the strength and management of the bank.

Yet most banks are not disclosing the overall size of their litigation reserves. That has left investors and analysts groping in the dark. “I definitely feel that the disclosures around this aren’t great,” said Richard Ramsden, a bank analyst with Goldman Sachs.

Banking experts say they don’t think the large banks are surreptitiously sitting on litigation reserves that are catastrophically low. The analysts have been able to piece together roughly how much banks have paid into litigation reserves, but it is hard to know what the banks have paid out from the reserves to settle cases.

In some instances, the payments into the reserve appear large. Bank of America, for example, has paid roughly $50 billion into its reserve to cover mortgage-related legal costs since the crisis, according to Bernstein Research.

Still, even if the banks aren’t facing huge shortfalls, the failure to reveal the size of the litigation reserve sits at odds with longstanding industry practices. Banks, for example, regularly reveal the size of another critical financial cushion: the reserve for bad loans.

Investors might also have expected regulators to push the banks to reveal the size of their litigation reserves. In the turbulent years since the crisis, the authorities have pressed the banks to reveal more details about troubled areas of their businesses, so that shareholders and others can be better informed.

The Securities and Exchange Commission sent out a public memo in 2012 to the banking industry, telling lenders to bolster disclosures on their holdings of European government bonds, which were perceived to be particularly risky at the time. The banks complied, and the public now gets comparable, and comprehensive, numbers on banks’ European holdings every quarter.

But the commission has not sent out a similarly broad communiqué on litigation reserves, even though the banks’ mortgage-related payouts are almost certainly causing more financial pain than Europe is right now.

As mortgage lawsuits became a material threat, the commission’s staff corresponded frequently with the banks, asking them to improve disclosures on their exposure to the litigation, according to public filings. Notably though, the correspondence did not appear to prompt the industry to disclose the size of its litigation reserves.

American accounting rules appear to give the banks some leeway to keep the size of their litigation reserves under wraps. That, in theory, might have made it harder for the commission to command the industry to release that number.

Bankers certainly are not fans of disclosing the size of their litigation reserves. Doing so, they contend, would seriously undermine their ability to negotiate fair settlements. If investors or government authorities suing the banks know how much banks have set aside, bank executives assert, they will be emboldened to increase their demands. And since bank shareholders effectively are liable for legal payouts, they should support management’s desire to keep the size of the litigation reserve secret, the bankers argue.

Still, it is not clear that revealing the size of the litigation reserve would weaken a bank’s legal fight.

For instance, Credit Suisse, which is battling its fair share of mortgage lawsuits, has been regularly disclosing the size of its litigation reserve for some time (and it presents its financials under American accounting rules). Deutsche Bank also recently provided the size of its litigation reserve.

What is more, JPMorgan chose to reveal the size of its litigation reserve in October, before it closed its deal with the Justice Department. When revealing the litigation reserve, which was $23 billion at the end of the third quarter of 2013, JPMorgan’s chief financial officer, Marianne Lake, said the bank was not going to get in the habit of giving out the number. It didn’t do so when it released its fourth quarter results this week.

Even so, some banking specialists were hopeful that JPMorgan’s move might prompt other institutions to follow suit. But so far, its rivals have stayed silent on this figure. “I thought JPMorgan disclosing it was going to put pressure on more banks to start doing it,” said Mr. Ramsden, the analyst.



Fixed Income Drops at Some Big Banks, but Who’s to Blame?


Bank executives may want to blame an uncertain economic climate for steep drops in fixed income, but some analysts are questioning that rationale.

At Citigroup, fixed-income revenue was down 15 percent, to $2.3 billion, from the period a year earlier, and off 16 percent from the previous quarter.

Citigroup offered a range of explanations for the slowdown. Its chief executive, Michael Corbat, cited a trading environment, complicated by the lingering effects of the government shut down.

Citi’s chief financial officer, John Gerspach, said a decline in “client activity” was behind the fall. The bank said that the Volcker Rule also played a role because it required the bank to spin of some of its proprietary hedge fund and private equity businesses which had previously contributed to fixed income revenue.

Mike Mayo, a CLSA banking analyst, was skeptical.

“I am not buying that the environment is tough,’’ he said. “Citigroup executed poorly in trading.”

The fact that Bank of America said its trading revenue surged in the fourth quarter also had some analysts scratching their heads. BofA said the economic mood helped its results, while Citi said the end of the Fed’s bond-buying program hurt, noted Kayla Tausche, a correspondent for CNBC, in a Twitter post.

Publicly, Citi officials shrugged off the problem as a quarterly phenomenon that didn’t require any major fixes. But Mr. Mayo expected some big shake-ups. “Internally, I can’t believe it will be business as usual across Citi’s trading desks,” he said.

Goldman’s fixed-income revenue also declined 15 percent from the period a year earlier, to to $1.72 billion in the fourth quarter.

That’s still better than the firm’s third-quarter performance, when fixed income plummeted 44 percent, its lowest decline since the height of the financial crisis at the end of 2008.

But Goldman, the trading wizard of Wall Street, isn’t backing off fixed income any time soon. The bank plans to remain committed to the division, which generated nearly half of all revenue just a few years ago.

That stands in stark contrast to other firms like Morgan Stanley, which have cut trading in favor of what they see as more stable operations, like wealth management.



Oscar Snub Is Applauded by SeaWorld Investors

Fans of “Blackfish,” a documentary that casts SeaWorld in a harsh light, were dismayed to learn Thursday morning that the film had not been nominated for an Academy Award.

Stock market investors, on the other hand, were overjoyed.

Shares of SeaWorld Entertainment surged 8.39 percent on Thursday to close at $33.59 a share, the stock’s highest level since August. On a day with little news about SeaWorld, based in Orlando, Fla., it’s not a stretch to suggest that the Oscar snub was fueling the stock’s rise.

“Blackfish” created a headache last year for SeaWorld, which had its debut as a public company in April. The company, taken public by the Blackstone Group, initially seemed to shrug off the early buzz surrounding the film, which focuses on an Orca whale’s fatal attack on a trainer at the company’s Orlando park.

But the stock price entered a prolonged slump in July, the month of the film’s release. SeaWorld undertook an unusually aggressive campaign against the film, sending out a detailed critique. And yet the stock languished for months, hovering just a few dollars above the I.P.O. price.

“Blackfish” wasn’t the only factor putting pressure on the stock. The company lowered ticket prices after experiencing a 9 percent drop in attendance at its theme parks in the second quarter.

The company’s chief executive, James D. Atchison, told Bloomberg TV on Wednesday that the film “hasn’t affected our performance or results.”

The film, directed by Gabriela Cowperthwaite, makes the case that killer whales in captivity suffer physical and mental distress. In a review in The New York Times, Jeannette Catsoulis wrote that the movie “uses the tragic tale of a single whale and his human victims as the backbone of a hypercritical investigation into the marine-park giant SeaWorld Entertainment.”

Until Thursday morning, it had been widely expected to receive an Oscar nomination in the documentary feature category. A nomination alone would have brought renewed attention to the film.

Now, investors may be hoping that SeaWorld can put last year’s public relations brouhaha in the past.

Bloomberg News reported earlier on the stock price movement.

In a research note, Timothy Conder, a Wells Fargo analyst, wrote on Thursday that investors “will now likely return to solely focusing on core fundamentals.”



Corvex Turns Down CommonWealth Board Seat

A long, contentious spat between the activist hedge fund Corvex Management and CommonWealth REIT, a real estate investment trust, took another twist on Thursday, as the founder of Corvex, Keith Meister, declined an invitation to join the CommonWealth board.

Mr. Meister, a former deputy of Carl C. Icahn, has been working to shake up CommonWealth for nearly a year now, criticizing the structure of the company and the amount of fees paid to its controlling family, the Portnoys.

Corvex is working with Related Fund Management, part of the Related Companies real estate group, which is developing the Hudson Yards project in Midtown Manhattan. Together, the two firms own 9.6 percent of CommonWealth shares. Last year, they ran a consent solicitation process to remove the board, and claim to have had the support of the majority of shareholders. But the vote was invalidated on technical grounds.

Instead of joining the board, Mr. Meister pledged to continue his campaign to replace the existing slate of directors, and, with Related, announced the nomination of five new directors.

“Our slate of truly independent, accountable trustees will enable us to achieve our sole goal from the beginning â€" ceasing the value destruction caused by the Portnoys and enabling CommonWealth shareholders to take back their company,” Mr. Meister and Jeff T. Blau, the chief executive of Related, said in a statement.

With Mr. Meister declining the invitation to join the board, CommonWealth said it would look for other nominees.

“The CommonWealth Board is disappointed that Keith Meister of Corvex declined our invitation to join the board and work with us constructively for the benefit of all CWH shareholders,” the company said in a statement. “Corvex’s response is further evidence that Corvex and the Related Companies are pursuing a hostile takeover of CWH for their own benefit and are not committed to advancing the best interests of and creating value for all CWH shareholders.”



Judge Rejects Detroit’s Deal to Exit Swap Contracts

A federal bankruptcy judge ruled on Thursday that Detroit could not proceed with a plan to extricate itself from some costly long-term financial contracts by paying $165 million to two big banks.

Judge Steven Rhodes said in his decision that Detroit had hurt itself financially in the past by going forward with hasty and imprudent decisions and that the practice “must stop.”

At the same time, Judge Rhodes said that Detroit could go ahead with a special $120 million loan from another bank, Barclays, which Detroit has said it urgently needs to provide municipal services in bankruptcy.

Detroit had asked the court to approve a bigger loan from Barclays, for $285 million, but it had planned to use the first $165 million to pay Bank of America and UBS to end the financial contracts, known as interest-rate swaps.

Officials have said that without the special loan from Barclays, Detroit would soon run out of cash and not be able to pay its workers. But because Detroit is already in default on some of its bonds, it could not take on new debt without pledging collateral, and the only money it could pledge was tied up in the interest-rate swaps.

Creditors have argued that the interest-rate swaps, which were set up in 2005 as part of a $1.4 billion borrowing that Detroit undertook to shore up its pension system, have never been valid or enforceable and should simply be voided.

Mary M. Chapman contributed reporting from Detroit.



At Goldman in Europe, There’s Salary, Bonus and a New Option

LONDON â€" To navigate pesky bonus caps in Europe, Goldman Sachs will offer a new kind of pay class for bankers in Britain and on the Continent, a person briefed on the firm’s plans said.

Call it the third way of pay.

Starting this year, certain Goldman employees will earn a salary, a bonus and some “role-based pay.” This pay will be paid monthly and will not be used when tallying pension contributions. The bank may be able to claw some of it back, and it can change from year to year. But it will have the effect of driving up base salaries.

Role-based pay, which Barclays also plans to use, is a response to bonus caps passed by European Commission for employees unceremoniously labeled “code staff.” Code staff includes those engaged in risk-taking and in control functions, senior managers and employees who make over a certain threshold of income. Starting in 2014, bonuses for code staff will be limited to 100 percent of an employee’s fixed salary, or two times salary, if shareholders approve it.

Typically bankers earn a fraction of their pay in salary and are rewarded with large bonuses.In 2012, for example, Goldman Sachs paid its 115 code staff $86.1 million in salaries and $450.7 million in cash and stock bonuses. That averages out to about $4.7 million per each individual, or a bonus equal to 5.2 times salary.

In September, the British Treasury filed a lawsuit in the European Court of Justice challenging the bonus caps, arguing that they would shift compensation from bonuses to fixed salaries. It said the caps were an overextension of what was permitted in the European Union Treaty.

Not surprisingly, limiting compensation has not gone over well in the City of London. Right before the government filed the suit, the British Bankers’ Association said about 35,000 employees at banks around the world could be affected. When asked on Wednesday whether he thought the European Union’s decision to push through “crude” bonus caps of 200 percent was the wrong approach, Mark Carney, governor of the Bank of England, said, “Absolutely.”

Goldman said Thursday that profits for the fourth quarter fell 19 percent to $2.3 billion, with weak fixed income results. But full year net income rose 8 percent to $8.04 billion. Compensation, which at one point rose as high as nearly 50 percent of net revenues, is down to 36.9 percent.

Goldman’s annual earnings announcement typically coincides with “compensation communication day,” also known as bonus day. But while bankers were told their bonuses for 2013, they were not told their 2014 salaries as the bank is still working to understand who will be affected by the role-based pay.

Stephen Brooks, a people and change management specialist at PA Consulting Group in London, said he opposed the bonus caps because they limited banks’ financial flexibility. He also said the caps would deprive the British government of a lot of money, since it gets 60 cents of every bonus dollar. But he was optimistic that the bankers would find ways to get paid.

“That it is their core skill â€" coming up creative financial ideas.”



‘The Wolf of Wall Street,’ in the Hunt for Oscars

The debauched tale of Jordan Belfort’s rise and fall has prompted a lot of controversy.

But “The Wolf of Wall Street,” the Martin Scorsese movie based on Mr.Belfort’s memoir of the same name, has garnered five Academy Award nominations, including for best picture. Beyond the big prize, the film also collected nominations for:

  • best director, for Mr. Scorsese
  • best actor, for Leonardo DiCaprio
  • best supporting actor, for Jonah Hill
  • best adapted screenplay, for Terence Winter

That’s on top of Mr. DiCaprio winning a Golden Globe award for best actor on Sunday night.

Though the five nominations are a fraction of the 10 nods that “American Hustle” and “Gravity” each collected, that “Wolf of Wall Street” received any at all is surprising to some. (The movie was up for only two Golden Globe awards.)

As Brooks Barnes and Michael Cieply note in The New York Times, the film “was one of the year’s most divisive pictures because of its depiction of sex and drug use that pushed the boundaries of the R rating.”

Beyond that, the film has been criticized for glorifying the boozy, drugged-out excess that Mr. Belfort describes in his book, as well as for ignoring the plight of the victims of his scheme. The former federal prosecutor Joel M. Cohen wrote in Another View:

In the film, behind Mr. Belfort and Mr. DiCaprio is a large sign advertising the name of Mr. Belfort’s real motivational speaking company. I suppose the filmmakers’ point is that there perpetually remain audiences for fraudulent scams.

But there are consequences for blurring the lines too much. The real Belfort story still includes thousands of victims who lost hundreds of millions of dollars that they never will be repaid. This began with bogus scripts that Mr. Belfort personally wrote for his legion of brokers to use against them.



Why It May Take More Than Former Google Stars to Turn Yahoo Around

The Googleization of Yahoo has hit a pricey speed bump.

Yahoo’s chief executive, Marissa Mayer, has fired the chief operating officer she lured from her former employer, costing Yahoo as much as $60 million for Henrique de Castro’s 15 months on the job. She may have made the right call, but it’s a reminder that a sprinkling of Google dust won’t on its own get Yahoo growing again.

Ms. Mayer has plainly brought vigor to Yahoo. The company’s move to untangle its overseas web by selling half its holding in Chinese internet auction firm Alibaba raised more than $4 billion and excited investors - as did using most of the proceeds to buy back stock. She also helped give Yahoo a future by acquiring a bunch of smaller businesses, including Tumblr for $1.1 billion.

Even free food in the office and a ban on working from home should increase employees’ commitment and morale. Ms. Mayer has been rewarded with a 150 percent increase in the stock price since taking the reins.

For all this, Yahoo still has a fundamental problem. Its sites are a hodgepodge. Tumblr may be exciting, but it doesn’t provide much revenue. And in the third quarter of 2013, Yahoo sales declined 5 percent, compared with the same period a year earlier.

Meanwhile, the company’s disappointing search agreement with Microsoft accounts for almost a third of the top line. Ms. Mayer has made clear she would like to get out of this deal, but the alternative could be working with Google, which would set off antitrust alarm bells.

While Mr. de Castro didn’t goose Yahoo’s top line, news reports suggest he also had bad chemistry with Ms. Mayer. The C.E.O. said in a memo to employees obtained by the Recode website that she decided to fire Mr. de Castro as part of her New Year “reflection.” If she didn’t know him well from Google or failed to vet him properly, handing him such a big pay package was a rash move.

Another possible explanation for his firing is even more unsettling. In an echo of ex-Apple retail star Ron Johnson’s failure as J.C. Penney chief executive, Yahoo’s business may simply be too messy for even a bunch of former Google whiz-kids to turn around.

Richard Beales is assistant editor and Robert Cyran is a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. For more independent commentary and analysis, visit breakingviews.com.



Treasury Sells $3 Billion Stake in Ally Financial

The Treasury Department said on Thursday that it had sold $3 billion worth of its shares in Ally Financial, bringing taxpayers’ stake in the auto lender below 50 percent.

The Treasury priced a sale of 410,000 shares of Ally at $7,375 each, according to the statement, reducing the government’s stake to 37 percent from 64 percent. Ally, the former financing arm of General Motors, received a $17.2 billion rescue in the financial crisis.

With the latest sale, the government will have recovered about $15.3 billion, or 89 percent of that bailout, the Treasury said. The government did not disclose the names of the institutional buyers that participated in the deal.

The sale, conducted as a private placement, helps resolve questions about how the government would dispose of its Ally stake. Ally had long been expected to hold an initial public offering.

On Thursday, the Treasury left open the possibility of an offering, saying the company might pursue “a public offering, private sale of its common shares, or other alternatives.”

“This is a very positive outcome for Ally and for the U.S. taxpayer, and the strong investor interest is a testament to the significant transformation of the company,” Michael A. Carpenter, the chief executive of Ally, said in a statement on Thursday.

In December, General Motors sold the last of its holdings in Ally, an 8.5 percent stake, through a $900 million private placement.

Citigroup and Bank of America Merrill Lynch served as the placement agents in Ally’s sale this week. Lazard is providing financial advice to the Treasury.



A Game for Would-Be Deal Makers

For young finance professionals, an investment banking deal usually conjures images of spreadsheets, weekend work and late-night emails from managers.

It does not usually inspire thoughts of a game.

But on Thursday, Ansarada, which provides virtual data rooms for merger and acquisition transactions, released the “M&A Game,” aimed at bringing some levity to the soul-crushing work of investment banking.

“Deal making is not that glamorous when you’re stuck at the end of the day,” said Sam Riley, the chief executive of Ansarada. “People should lighten up and have a bit of fun.” The game was created to appeal primarily to bankers, he said, giving them an outlet to express their competitive side in a risk-free setting.

But whether young bankers, who already spend countless hours working on M.&.A. deals, would want to invest time in negotiating fictitious deals remains to be seen.

Ten hours after the game’s release in Sydney, Australia, it had attracted about 1,000 users who had played the game over 3,300 times, Mr. Riley said in an email. More than 50 percent of games lasted less than two minutes, while 10 percent had sessions lasting nearly an hour. On average, users played the game for about 10 minutes.

The premise of the game, available free on iTunes, is that players make deals to build portfolios of companies. They select their industry, company name, personal skills (for example, charisma, deception, X-factor), and the chief executive’s appearance. Users then choose a team to help them negotiate offers with counterparties and decide whether to buy, merge or sell companies to grow their empire.

Mr. Riley said he and his team wanted to make a simple game that would allow bankers to unwind, and perhaps appeal to others outside the industry, but acknowledged that all of the clicking can make the game “a bit heavy at the start.”

For what it’s worth, DealBook’s own M.&.A. reporters were underwhelmed. One said he quickly became bored. All the swiping and tapping action (swipe left for a skinnier face, right for more arched eyebrows) brought back memories of the Sims game.

But the game is nevertheless attracting some attention on Twitter and on the online finance community website, Wall Street Oasis, which provided a link to download the game on Wednesday morning before it was officially released.

Some of the interest may be driven by the game’s promotional video, which shows a young banker enjoying an increasingly lavish lifestyle as he closes more deals. At the beginning of the video, the man, dressed in slacks and a button-down shirt, receives $20 million from an angel investor as he boards a bus to presumably go to work. After each deal, the man’s transportation improves â€" first a black Audi, then a silver Aston Martin, a yacht, a limo, and finally, a helicopter.

Though the game is eliciting a few groans â€" “This is one sick joke,” one Twitter user posted on Thursday morning â€" it is also receiving nods of approval.

“I’ve spent wayyyyy too much time today on this game,” one user, whose profile says he is an analyst in asset management, posted in a Wall Street Oasis forum dedicated to the game. “I’ll probably have to delete it soon, or this will become my full time job.”



A Game for Would-Be Deal Makers

For young finance professionals, an investment banking deal usually conjures images of spreadsheets, weekend work and late-night emails from managers.

It does not usually inspire thoughts of a game.

But on Thursday, Ansarada, which provides virtual data rooms for merger and acquisition transactions, released the “M&A Game,” aimed at bringing some levity to the soul-crushing work of investment banking.

“Deal making is not that glamorous when you’re stuck at the end of the day,” said Sam Riley, the chief executive of Ansarada. “People should lighten up and have a bit of fun.” The game was created to appeal primarily to bankers, he said, giving them an outlet to express their competitive side in a risk-free setting.

But whether young bankers, who already spend countless hours working on M.&.A. deals, would want to invest time in negotiating fictitious deals remains to be seen.

Ten hours after the game’s release in Sydney, Australia, it had attracted about 1,000 users who had played the game over 3,300 times, Mr. Riley said in an email. More than 50 percent of games lasted less than two minutes, while 10 percent had sessions lasting nearly an hour. On average, users played the game for about 10 minutes.

The premise of the game, available free on iTunes, is that players make deals to build portfolios of companies. They select their industry, company name, personal skills (for example, charisma, deception, X-factor), and the chief executive’s appearance. Users then choose a team to help them negotiate offers with counterparties and decide whether to buy, merge or sell companies to grow their empire.

Mr. Riley said he and his team wanted to make a simple game that would allow bankers to unwind, and perhaps appeal to others outside the industry, but acknowledged that all of the clicking can make the game “a bit heavy at the start.”

For what it’s worth, DealBook’s own M.&.A. reporters were underwhelmed. One said he quickly became bored. All the swiping and tapping action (swipe left for a skinnier face, right for more arched eyebrows) brought back memories of the Sims game.

But the game is nevertheless attracting some attention on Twitter and on the online finance community website, Wall Street Oasis, which provided a link to download the game on Wednesday morning before it was officially released.

Some of the interest may be driven by the game’s promotional video, which shows a young banker enjoying an increasingly lavish lifestyle as he closes more deals. At the beginning of the video, the man, dressed in slacks and a button-down shirt, receives $20 million from an angel investor as he boards a bus to presumably go to work. After each deal, the man’s transportation improves â€" first a black Audi, then a silver Aston Martin, a yacht, a limo, and finally, a helicopter.

Though the game is eliciting a few groans â€" “This is one sick joke,” one Twitter user posted on Thursday morning â€" it is also receiving nods of approval.

“I’ve spent wayyyyy too much time today on this game,” one user, whose profile says he is an analyst in asset management, posted in a Wall Street Oasis forum dedicated to the game. “I’ll probably have to delete it soon, or this will become my full time job.”



New Ratings Agency Hopes to Compete With Big 3 Outside U.S.

LONDON - Challengers have come and gone, but no viable alternative has emerged to supplant the so-called Big 3 credit rating agencies when it comes to international debt financing.

A group of smaller credit rating agencies outside the United States now think they have come up with a solution by focusing on midsize companies in Europe and the emerging markets.

On Thursday, five credit rating agencies in Portugal, Brazil, India, Malaysia and South Africa introduced Arc Ratings, a service they think will give up-and-coming companies access to the capital markets outside their home countries.

Executives at the new company acknowledge that they have a long way to go to take business away from the United States-based rating agencies Standard & Poor’s, Fitch Ratings and Moody’s Investors Service.

But they think they will succeed by focusing on the next generation of large companies by offering them access to international capital.

Midsize companies in the emerging markets have been “a segment insufficiently covered and served by the incumbents,” said José Poças Esteves, the chief executive of Arc Ratings.

The entry of a new player comes as regulators and the investing public have raised questions about the independence of the main credit raters. Ratings are typically paid for by the issuers, and some critics have suggested the rating agencies, driven by profit goals, were too closely tied to their clients when making risk assessments before the financial crisis.

Arc Ratings hopes to alleviate those concerns by creating a different style of rating that does not focus on whether a debt offering is investment grade, but on the level of potential risk of default, said Uwe Bott, the company’s chief ratings officer and a former executive at GE Capital.

Critical thinking and qualitative analysis, rather than simply plugging numbers into a model, will be a priority at the company, Mr. Bott said.

“Many executives will tell you, ‘My door is always open,’ but are their minds?” Mr. Bott said.

Ratings for financial stability will range from low risk â€" a traditional AAA rating â€" to imminent or actual default. A second rating will focus on systemic risk, taking into account factors like political uncertainty.

Arc Ratings was formed through the restructuring of Companhia Portuguesa de Rating, a 25-year-old rating agency in Portugal. The company is owned by five rating agency partners: Care Ratings in India, GCR in South Africa, MARC in Malaysia, SR Rating in Brazil and SaeR, a Portuguese agency that was the 100 percent owner of Companhia Portuguesa de Rating.

The partners will continue to run their own ratings businesses in their home markets and will team up to provide ratings for international debt through Arc Ratings. They are hoping to expand their reach by adding partners in China, Japan and Russia in the future.

The five partners represent more than 6,000 clients and hope to tap that client base for Arc Ratings.

Arc Ratings does not plan to issue ratings in the United States.

“Ratings have been around since 1909,” Mr. Bott said. “It’s time for a change.”



Goldman Sachs Keeps a Lid on Pay

Goldman Sachs, a bank once famous for its rich bonuses, is clamping down on pay.

The value of Goldman’s compensation and benefits for 2013 is the lowest it has been since 2009, measured as a proportion of net revenue, according to results released on Thursday. That figure peaked in 2011 and has now declined for two years.

Goldman has sought to bring down costs amid challenging markets and a punishing year for bond trading, zeroing in on compensation, its biggest expense by far. In the third quarter of last year, the bank cut sharply the amount of money it set aside for compensation, an unusual move for the Wall Street titan.

Goldman said on Thursday that it earned $8.04 billion last year, an 8 percent increase from the previous year. In a sign that cost-cutting is helping the firm make money, net revenue in 2013 was virtually flat at $34.2 billion.

Goldman is paying $12.61 billion in compensation and benefits for the year, 3 percent lower than in 2012. The ratio of compensation to net revenue - a widely used yardstick - is 36.9 percent for the year.

That figure was comfortably above 40 percent in the years before the financial crisis. Goldman’s compensation ratio was 43.9 percent in 2007 and 49.2 percent in 2008, amid a steep decline in revenue. (In 2008 and earlier, Goldman’s fiscal year ended in November.)

The ratio came down sharply in 2009, to 35.8 percent, before rising to 39.3 percent in 2010 and 42.4 percent in 2011. Since then, it has been on a path downward.

“Goldman is showing a discipline on compensation that no other bank is showing,” Brad Hintz, an analyst with Sanford Bernstein, told DealBook.

Still, investors greeted the latest results with trepidation. Goldman’s shares fell about 1.5 percent in morning trading on Thursday.

Morgan Stanley, a main rival, is scheduled to report its results on Friday.



Carlyle Buys Johnson & Johnson Testing Division for $4.15 Billion

The private equity firm Carlyle Group said on Thursday that it had agreed to acquire the clinical testing division of Johnson & Johnson for $4.15 billion, its first big buyout of the year.

The deal for the unit, Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics, comes after several weeks of negotiations. Carlyle is using cash from its sixth buyout fund, a $13 billion pool of money it finished raising in November.

Subject to regulatory approvals, the deal is expected to close in the middle of this year.

“Through accelerated investment in research and product development and continued expansion into both emerging and established markets, we expect to tap into rising demand for sophisticated medical diagnostic products and services worldwide,” Stephen H. Wise, a Carlyle managing director, said in a statement on Thursday.

Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics, based in Raritan, N.J., with operations around the world, runs several medical tests, most prominently those for blood.

For Carlyle, the deal is the latest in a string of health care investments over the years, including in the clinical drug testing company Pharmaceutical Product Development and the nursing home operator ManorCare. Carlyle, which is based in Washington, has invested $6.3 billion of equity in health care deals since its inception.

“In combination with Carlyle’s global reach and deep experience in the health care sector, O.C.D. will have the opportunity to invest in new, innovative products and services for its customers and provide an environment for its professionals to excel in a competitive global marketplace,” Eric Compton, the worldwide president of Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics, said in a statement.

Barclays and Goldman Sachs provided financial advice to Carlyle, while Barclays, Goldman, Credit Suisse, UBS and Nomura committed debt financing. Latham & Watkins was Carlyle’s legal adviser.



At SAC Trial, Doctor Tells of Surprise at Ex-Trader’s Drug Trial Knowledge

Dr. Joel S. Ross took the witness stand for a second day at the insider trading trial of Mathew Martoma, a former hedge fund manager at SAC Capital Advisors. During his testimony, Dr. Ross told the jury of seven men and five women how Mr. Martoma knew so much detail about a confidential presentation on a clinical drug trial that Dr. Ross had attended, “it was like he was in the room with me,” Alexandra Stevenson reports in DealBook.

The presentation detailed results of a clinical trial for an Alzheimer’s drug, which were not made public until the following day. The shares of the companies developing the drug, Elan and Wyeth, fell sharply when news of the disappointing outcome surfaced. The government contends that Mr. Martoma’s advance knowledge of the clinical trial’s failure helped SAC avoid losses and generate profits of $276 million for the firm.

Mr. Martoma’s lawyers tried to cast doubt on Dr. Ross’s motives, questioning whether the doctor had suffered financially because of Mr. Martoma’s indictment. Dr. Ross answered that he had lost business after his name became associated with Mr. Martoma’s.

GOLDMAN REPORTS EARNINGS BEFORE THE BELL  |  Goldman Sachs is reporting fourth-quarter earnings at 7:30 a.m. today. Net income for the period a year ago was $2.89 billion, or $5.60 a share.

Goldman’s fourth-quarter results follow strong quarterly results from Bank of America, which reported fourth-quarter earnings on Wednesday of $3.4 billion, or 29 cents a share, up from $732 million, or 3 cents a share, in the period a year earlier. Net revenue rose 15 percent, to $21.7 billion.

Wells Fargo also posted a strong quarterly report on Tuesday, with earnings of $5.6 billion, slightly beating expectations. JPMorgan Chase fell slightly below analyst expectations on Tuesday, posting net profit of $5.28 billion, a 7.3 percent year over year drop driven by the bank’s legal costs.

YAHOO FIRES NO. 2 EXECUTIVE  |  Marissa Mayer, the chief executive of Yahoo, fired Henrique de Castro, her No. 2 executive, on Wednesday, only slightly more than a year after she had lured him from Google to help her transform the once-robust company, Vindu Goel reports in The New York Times.

Mr. de Castro was let go unceremoniously, with Yahoo refusing to issue a comment apart from a two-sentence document filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission after the market closed on Wednesday saying he would be leaving the company on Thursday.

Yahoo has lost much of its former luster, slipping out of its position as the second-largest digital ad seller, driven in part by the company’s failure to transition its advertising from desktop to mobile.

ON THE AGENDA  |  The Consumer Price Index for December is out at 8:30 a.m. The January Housing Market Index is released at 10 a.m. John C. Williams, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, gives a speech on lessons from the Great Recession in Washington at 9:15 a.m. Ben S. Bernanke, the departing chairman of the Federal Reserve, speaks in Washington at 11:10 a.m. on the challenges facing central banks. The Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs holds a progress report on public transportation at 10 a.m. Financial institutions of note reporting fourth-quarter results: Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and BlackRock release details before the bell. American Express and Capital One report after the market closes. Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, is on CNBC at 6 a.m.

‘BE THE WORLD’S GREATEST DEAL MAKER’  |  Ansarada, a company based in Sydney that provides virtual data rooms for deal-making activity, released a game for mobile devices on Thursday called the M.&A. Game, which encourages users to become “the world’s greatest deal maker.”

The game, which simulates the M.&A. transaction process, has generated considerable excitement from young finance professionals on Twitter and on the online finance community website Wall Street Oasis. The website, where Wall Street’s young set shares grievances and seeks industry advice, posted a link to download the game on Wednesday in advance of its official release.

 

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Apollo to Buy Out Chuck E. Cheese Parent for $1.3 Billion  |  Apollo Global Management has agreed to acquire CEC Entertainment, which operates 577 Chuck E. Cheese’s restaurants, for $1.3 billion, including the assumption of debt. DealBook »

At JPMorgan’s Health Care Conference, Deal Talk AboundsAt JPMorgan’s Health Care Conference, Deal Talk Abounds  |  Few events are bigger in the world of corporate health care than JPMorgan Chase’s annual conference in San Francisco. And this year, much of the buzz seems to surround the prospect of more deals. DealBook »

Handybook Purchases Exec in Deal for On-Demand World  |  Handybook, a website for booking household services, has purchased Exec, a start-up based in San Francisco that enables users to book house cleaners using a mobile application, the Bits blog reports. The $10 million deal, which joins two on-demand companies, was paid out in Handybook stock, said an unidentified person familiar with the matter. NEW YORK TIMES BITS

A Case of Mistaken Identity Sends a Worthless Stock SoaringA Case of Mistaken Identity Sends a Worthless Stock Soaring  |  After Google announced it was buying Nest Labs on Monday, shares jumped for a stock with the ticker symbol NEST â€" a different, and defunct, company. DealBook »

China’s Tencent Aims for Growth in E-Commerce  |  Tencent, a Chinese online services operator, announced on Wednesday it had agreed to purchase a 9.9 percent stake in China South City Holdings, a logistics firm, for $193 million, taking aim at the e-commerce giant Alibaba, The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL

INVESTMENT BANKING »

After Crisis, Iceland Holds a Tight Grip on Its BanksAfter Crisis, Iceland Holds a Tight Grip on Its Banks  |  Iceland is a living experiment in what can happen when a country forces its financial firms to go under, rather than bailing them out. DealBook » | 

Richard Parsons’s New Restaurant Receives AccoladesRichard Parsons’s New Restaurant Receives Accolades  |  The New York Times on Wednesday gave high marks to the Cecil, a restaurant that counts Richard Parsons, Citigroup’s former chairman, and Alexander Smalls, a former opera singer, as owners. DealBook »

How Banks Work, as Told by ABN Amro’s Chairman (in Drag)  |  To help explain ABN Amro’s core values this week, Gerrit Zalm dressed up as his “sister,” Priscilla, wearing a bright blue dress and a vivid red wig. Oh, and his fake sibling just happens to be a brothel owner. DealBook »

Research Analysts Fantasize About Bank Mergers  |  Analysts, who are accustomed to influencing the markets with their reports, also engage in “fantasy M.&A.” reports that discuss takeover targets and deals between companies, Quartz writes. Recently, these analysts have focused on banks, spurring rumors of spinoffs and deals that could influence the industry. QUARTZ

Skeptics Question Banks’ Bottom LinesSkeptics Question Banks’ Bottom Lines  |  While Bank of America and Wells Fargo reported healthy profits in the last quarter, some observers are concerned that the banks are quickly depleting their rainy day funds. DealBook »

Junior Bankers May Not Benefit From Weekend Work Limits  |  “Even a good rule isn’t the best way to make junior investment bankers’ lives better. The best solution is for senior investment bankers to be better managers,” Ben Walsh writes on the Reuters Counterparties blog. REUTERS

PRIVATE EQUITY »

Carlyle Is Said to Be Near a Deal for Johnson & Johnson Unit  |  The Carlyle Group is near a deal to buy Johnson & Johnson’s clinical testing arm for about $4.1 billion, a person briefed on the matter said on Wednesday. DealBook »

Kelso Targets Smaller Fund  |  The private equity investment firm Kelso & Company is aiming to raise $2.5 billion to $3 billion for its next fund, smaller than the $5.1 billion target for its previous fund, Bloomberg News reports, citing an unidentified person familiar with the situation. BLOOMBERG NEWS

HEDGE FUNDS »

Want Better Hedge Fund Returns? Try One Led by a WomanWant Better Hedge Fund Returns? Try One Led by a Woman  |  In the years since the financial crisis, hedge funds managed by women performed better than a broader index reflecting the performance of the industry, a report found. DealBook »

Auction Houses Woo Big Sellers With a Cut  |  Auction houses like Christie’s and Sotheby’s, which is owned by the activist hedge-fund investor Daniel S. Loeb, are luring sellers of artwork by forgoing commission on the sales, leading analysts to wonder if the houses are running oversize risks, The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES

German Financier Documents Rise and Fall  |  Florian Homm, a former fund manager from Germany who faces extradition to the United States on security fraud, has willingly documented his exploits, Jack Ewing writes in The New York Times. “Mr. Homm has been more than willing to recount his womanizing and cocaine abuse, his ties to dubious characters, and his five years living incognito in South America,” Mr. Ewing writes. NEW YORK TIMES

Deutsche Bank Spinout Seeks $250 Million  |  Philippe Azoulay, a former head of trading at Deutsche Bank, is aiming to increase the assets under management for his managed futures hedge fund from $50 million to $250 million in the next year, The Financial News writes. FINANCIAL NEWS

Former Hedge Fund Chief’s Investment in Treasure Hunt Proves Costly  |  Dean Barr, the former head of Citigroup’s hedge fund business, invested in the X-marks-the-spot Emerald Reef venture after a real estate investor showed him a treasure map that led to a trove of emeralds on the sea floor, Bloomberg Businessweek reports. But the emeralds Mr. Barr had been shown to entice him to invest in the venture disappeared, costing him over $1 million. BLOOMBERG BUSINESSWEEK

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Zendesk Prepares for I.P.O.  |  Zendesk, a start-up based in San Francisco that makes online customer service software, has hired Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to prepare for an initial public offering, The Wall Street Journal reports, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. WALL STREET JOURNAL

France to Sell a Piece of Airbus Group  |  France announced on Wednesday that it was planning to sell a 1 percent stake in the Airbus Group, the European aerospace company, to raise cash, Reuters reports. REUTERS

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Contently Raises $9 Million  |  Contently, a start-up that advertisers use to create blog posts for websites, has raised $9 million, which it will use to increase its staff size and improve its software, Bloomberg News reports. The company has raised $11.7 million since it was founded in 2010 and expects to have revenue of $20 million this year. BLOOMBERG NEWS

Investments in Online Games Increased in 2013  |  Investment in online games increased 16 percent in 2013 from the previous year, signifying a return to the levels before Zynga’s disappointing initial public offering scared off investors, ReCode reports.
RECODE

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Lawmakers Seek Curbs on Trading Commodities  |  Lawmakers on Wednesday pressed the Federal Reserve to act more forcefully, and quickly, to limit investment banks’ involvement in the physical commodities business, activity that has been blamed for inflating prices on everyday items like electricity and canned beverages, David Kocieniewski reports in The New York Times. NEW YORK TIMES

Lawmakers Consider Next Candidate for Volcker Rule Change  |  Congress and industry members are fighting for a change to the Volcker Rule that currently requires many banks that own collateralized loan obligations to divest them, The Wall Street Journal writes. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Officials Had Knowledge of Rate-Fixing Long Before Investigation  |  Senior currency dealers and the Bank of England discussed trading practices that contributed to manipulating foreign exchange rates 18 months before the regulators began formally investigating the practice, Bloomberg News reports. BLOOMBERG NEWS

Washington’s Victory Over Wall Street  |  Washington began fighting Wall Street’s banks in 2009, and five years later, the “war is largely over. And Washington won in a blowout,” Ben White writes in Politico. POLITICO

Central Bank Advocates Threshold for Stress Test  |  The European Central Bank said lenders should have to show that their capital would not fall below 6 percent of their assets when analyzed in a simulated stressful economic environment, Bloomberg News reports. BLOOMBERG NEWS



Citigroup Earnings Disappoint

Citigroup reported fourth-quarter earnings on Thursday that failed to live up to Wall Street’s expectations, as trading revenues faltered.

The bank said that its quarterly net income was up sharply from a year ago to $2.7 billion, or 85 cents a share, while its revenue fell slightly to $17.8 billion.

But after factoring in accounting adjustments, Citigroup’s earnings were slightly lower at $2.6 billion, or 82 cents a shares. Wall Street analysts had been expecting earnings of 95 cents a share on $18.2 billion in revenue.

At the center of the bank’s fourth-quarter miss was the relatively poor performance of the company’s fixed-income trading business. In the third quarter, disappointing trading results also weighed on Citigroup’s earnings.

The trading problems at the bank look particularly stark in the fourth quarter compared with results from JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America earlier this week.

Citigroup’s trading and banking business was down $200 million to $4.6 billion from a year earlier, with particular weakness coming from its fixed-income trading desks.

The earnings miss comes at a critical time for Citigroup’s chief executive, Michael L. Corbat, who is only about 15 months into his job at the helm of the nation’s third-largest bank by assets.

“Although we didn’t finish the year as strongly as we would have liked, we made substantial progress toward our key priorities in 2013,’’ Mr. Corbat said in a statement.

Shares of Citigroup were lower in premarket trading.

Large banks like Citigroup are increasingly dependent on revenues from trading and investment banking, as consumer lending remains sluggish in a weak economy. Citigroup’s consumer banking revenue fell $346 million, to $9.4 billion. Like its rivals, Citigroup cited a drop in mortgage refinancing activity as weighing on its consumer lending.

Analysts had hoped that Citi’s vast international businesses units could help offset losses in its U.S. units. But even solid growth in Latin America wasn’t enough to pick up all of the slack.
Bank of America’s better-than-expected earnings on Wednesday had helped spark a broad rally in financial shares, as investors cheered signs that the once battered sector was still on the mend.

Citigroup’s miss shows how fickle the banking business remains at a time of tepid economic growth.



Ranking the Biggest Restaurant Leveraged Buyouts

Apollo Global Management’s $1.3 billion takeover of the Chuck E. Cheese restaurant empire means a number of things.

One is that the private equity giant’s top executives have probably bought themselves all the gooey pizza and arcade game tokens they could ever want. The other is that they have struck the fifth-biggest leveraged buyout of an American restaurant chain ever, according to Standard & Poor’s Capital IQ.

Here’s a list of the top 10 L.B.O.’s in the restaurant industry. Apollo is responsible for two of them; Bain Capital is the title of reigning champion, having struck three.

TARGET BUYER DEAL VALUE ANNOUNCEMENT DATE
Burger King Worldwide 3G Capital $4.2 billion Sept. 2, 2010
OSI Restaurant Partners (parent of Outback Steakhouse) Catterton Partners, Bain Capital $3.5 billion Nov. 5, 2006
Dunkin’ Brands Carlyle Group, THL Partners, Bain Capital $2.4 billion Dec. 12, 2005
Burger King Worldwide Goldman Sachs, TPG Capital, Bain Capital $1.5 billion July 25, 2002
CEC Entertainment (parent of Chuck E. Cheese) Apollo Global Management $1.3 billion Jan. 16, 2014
Domino’s Pizza Bain Capital $1.1 billion Sept. 25, 1998
P. F. Chang’s China Bistro Centerbridge Partners $1.1 billion May 1, 2012
CKE Restaurants (parent of Carl’s Jr.) Apollo Global Management $1 billion April 20, 2010
Peet’s Coffee & Tea Joh. A. Benckiser, BDT Capital $1 billion July 23, 2012
Dave & Buster’s Oak Hill Capital Partners $778 million May 3, 2010
Source: Standard & Poor’s Capital IQ


BlackRock Has Strong Quarter

The giant money manager BlackRock on Thursday reported strong fourth-quarter profits as new money flowed into a wide range of its investment products.

The company earned $841 million, or $4.86 a share in the fourth quarter, up from $690 million, or $3.93 a share a year ago. The quarterly earnings were significantly more than the $4.33 a share expected by analysts polled by Thomson Reuters. The company’s total profit a share for all of 2013 jumped 22 percent, to $16.87, from a year earlier.

While BlackRock has been helped in recent quarters by strong interest in its popular exchange trade funds, in the fourth quarter the growth was more widespread, especially among the company’s retail customers. Investors showed a particular desire for the company’s stock products during a quarter when the benchmark Standard & Poor’s 500 shot up nearly 10 percent.

At a time when many investors are worried about a rise in interest rates and a slowdown in the bond market, BlackRock saw new money flowing into its actively-managed bond funds, which could be better placed to deal with rising rates. There was even more interest in flexible multi-asset products, which attracted $17 billion in new money in the quarter.

“Throughout the year we demonstrated the collective strength and stability of our diversified, multi-client platform,” the company’s chief executive, Laurence D. Fink, said in a statement. “We saw growth across all of our businesses.”

Overall, the company’s assets under management grew $228 billion during the course of the fourth quarter and ended the year at a staggering $4.3 trillion â€" helping it keep its place as the world’s largest asset manager. BlackRock’s profits were helped by its growing operating margin, which rose 1.2 percent from a year earlier.

The company announced that it would use its profits to increase its quarterly dividend 15 percent, to $1.93.



Investors Turning to Riskier Investments for Returns, BlackRock Survey Finds

Investors looking for bigger returns are increasingly turning to riskier but potentially more rewarding opportunities like real estate and hedge funds, according to BlackRock.

In a survey of 100 institutions released on Thursday, BlackRock found that nearly half planned on raising their exposure to real estate investments. About 40 percent were considering putting more money into so-called real assets, including infrastructure.

And roughly one-third planned to reduce their cash holdings, seeking better returns on their money elsewhere.

Traditional investments in stocks and bonds will continue, BlackRock found, but more exotic asset classes may yield better ways to fill out portfolios.

“Institutional investors are seeking to build portfolios better suited for an investment landscape characterized by low yields, sluggish growth, volatile markets and rising correlation between stocks and bonds,” Robert Goldstein, the head of BlackRock’s institutional client business and BlackRock Solutions arm, said in a statement.

Meanwhile, investors â€" largely American ones â€" also planned to focus more on so-called alternative asset managers in hopes of finding higher yields, with nearly 30 percent of the surveyed institutions considering larger investments in hedge funds. Among American firms, that percentage was more than 40 percent.

Private equity firms should expect a smaller bump, with about one-third of respondents indicating that they will put money into the leveraged-buyout business. Institutions in Europe and the Middle East, as well as money managers with less than $20 billion in assets, said they planned to maintain their current level of investments in the business or even cut their exposures.

The survey holds special interest because of the firm conducting it: BlackRock, an undisputed behemoth of the money management world. The firm, which reports earnings on Thursday, oversees nearly $4.1 trillion in assets around the world on behalf of a variety of clients.



Investors Turning to Riskier Investments for Returns, BlackRock Survey Finds

Investors looking for bigger returns are increasingly turning to riskier but potentially more rewarding opportunities like real estate and hedge funds, according to BlackRock.

In a survey of 100 institutions released on Thursday, BlackRock found that nearly half planned on raising their exposure to real estate investments. About 40 percent were considering putting more money into so-called real assets, including infrastructure.

And roughly one-third planned to reduce their cash holdings, seeking better returns on their money elsewhere.

Traditional investments in stocks and bonds will continue, BlackRock found, but more exotic asset classes may yield better ways to fill out portfolios.

“Institutional investors are seeking to build portfolios better suited for an investment landscape characterized by low yields, sluggish growth, volatile markets and rising correlation between stocks and bonds,” Robert Goldstein, the head of BlackRock’s institutional client business and BlackRock Solutions arm, said in a statement.

Meanwhile, investors â€" largely American ones â€" also planned to focus more on so-called alternative asset managers in hopes of finding higher yields, with nearly 30 percent of the surveyed institutions considering larger investments in hedge funds. Among American firms, that percentage was more than 40 percent.

Private equity firms should expect a smaller bump, with about one-third of respondents indicating that they will put money into the leveraged-buyout business. Institutions in Europe and the Middle East, as well as money managers with less than $20 billion in assets, said they planned to maintain their current level of investments in the business or even cut their exposures.

The survey holds special interest because of the firm conducting it: BlackRock, an undisputed behemoth of the money management world. The firm, which reports earnings on Thursday, oversees nearly $4.1 trillion in assets around the world on behalf of a variety of clients.



Goldman Profit Declines 19 Percent

Goldman Sachs reported a drop in fourth-quarter profit on Thursday, still hurt by a decline in its fixed-income business but reporting strong results in equity underwriting.

Net income fell 19 percent, to $2.33 billion, or $4.60 a share, compared with $2.89 billion, or $5.60 a share, in the period a year earlier.

The most recent results beat average analysts’ expectations of $4.21 a share, according to data from Thomson Reuters.

The bank made its profit on net revenue of $8.78 billion, beating average expectations of $7.7 billion.

Goldman also disclosed it had set aside $12.61 billion, or 36.9 percent of net revenue, for compensation in 2013. Those figures are down from 2012, when the bank set aside $12.94 billion, or 37.9 percent.

“Our work in advancing our client franchise and in ensuring continued cost discipline has allowed us to provide solid returns even in a somewhat challenging environment,” said Lloyd C. Blankfein, Goldman’s chief executive. “We believe that we are well positioned to generate solid returns as the economy continues to heal and provide considerable upside for our shareholders as conditions materially improve.”

Net revenue in the firm’s fixed-income, currency and commodities division, which includes bond trading, was $1.72 billion, down 15 percent from the period a year earlier. The results are an improvement from third quarter, when Goldman’s fixed-income revenue dropped 44 percent from the previous year, the worst quarter for fixed-income revenue since the height of the financial crisis in 2008.

Strong results in the United States equities markets drove Goldman’s annual return on equity up to 11 percent from 10.7 percent in 2012.

Goldman also announced a dividend of 55 cents a share.

Goldman’s fourth-quarter results come on the heels of a strong quarterly report from Wells Fargo, which reported earnings of $5.6 billion, slightly beating expectations. JPMorgan Chase reported profit on Tuesday of $5.28 billion, a 7.3 percent drop, in large part because of the bank’s legal costs from its various investigations.



Goldman Profit Declines 19 Percent

Goldman Sachs reported a drop in fourth-quarter profit on Thursday, still hurt by a decline in its fixed-income business but reporting strong results in equity underwriting.

Net income fell 19 percent, to $2.33 billion, or $4.60 a share, compared with $2.89 billion, or $5.60 a share, in the period a year earlier.

The most recent results beat average analysts’ expectations of $4.21 a share, according to data from Thomson Reuters.

The bank made its profit on net revenue of $8.78 billion, beating average expectations of $7.7 billion.

Goldman also disclosed it had set aside $12.61 billion, or 36.9 percent of net revenue, for compensation in 2013. Those figures are down from 2012, when the bank set aside $12.94 billion, or 37.9 percent.

“Our work in advancing our client franchise and in ensuring continued cost discipline has allowed us to provide solid returns even in a somewhat challenging environment,” said Lloyd C. Blankfein, Goldman’s chief executive. “We believe that we are well positioned to generate solid returns as the economy continues to heal and provide considerable upside for our shareholders as conditions materially improve.”

Net revenue in the firm’s fixed-income, currency and commodities division, which includes bond trading, was $1.72 billion, down 15 percent from the period a year earlier. The results are an improvement from third quarter, when Goldman’s fixed-income revenue dropped 44 percent from the previous year, the worst quarter for fixed-income revenue since the height of the financial crisis in 2008.

Strong results in the United States equities markets drove Goldman’s annual return on equity up to 11 percent from 10.7 percent in 2012.

Goldman also announced a dividend of 55 cents a share.

Goldman’s fourth-quarter results come on the heels of a strong quarterly report from Wells Fargo, which reported earnings of $5.6 billion, slightly beating expectations. JPMorgan Chase reported profit on Tuesday of $5.28 billion, a 7.3 percent drop, in large part because of the bank’s legal costs from its various investigations.



Apollo to Buy Out Chuck E. Cheese Parent for $1.3 Billion

It’s where “a kid can be a kid.” Can it also be where a private equity firm reaps a big return?

Leon Black’s Apollo Global Management announced on Thursday that it had agreed to acquire CEC Entertainment, which operates 577 Chuck E. Cheese’s restaurants, for $1.3 billion, including the assumption of debt.

The offer of $54 a share represents a premium of 25 percent over CEC’s closing stock price on Jan. 7 before “media speculation regarding a possible transaction.” The stock closed on Wednesday at $48.43. The Financial Times earlier reported that Apollo had clinched a deal.

CEC, based in Irving, Tex., has about $370 million in debt, according to Standard & Poor’s Capital IQ.

Parents of young children in 47 states know Chuck E. Cheese and its unusual combination of robotic entertainment, games, rides, play areas - and yes, food: pizza, sandwiches, wings, salads and desserts and the like. The first restaurant was in San Jose, Calif., in 1977. It was started by Nolan Bushnell, a founder of Atari, the video game company â€" and one of the first and few bosses that Steven P. Jobs ever had.

Goldman Sachs and the law firm of Weil, Gotshal & Manges are advising CEC. Deutsche Bank, Morgan Stanley and UBS are serving as financial advisers to Apollo, and, together with Credit Suisse, provided debt financing commitments Wachtell Lipton, Rosen & Katz and Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison are serving as Apollo’s legal advisers.