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Head of Retail Investing Departs K.K.R.

Michael M. Calbert, a 14-year veteran of Kohlberg Kravis Roberts who led the team that invests in the retail industry, has left the private equity giant, a spokeswoman said on Friday.

Mr. Calbert is retiring and has no immediate plans, a person briefed on the matter said. He has been succeeded by Nathaniel H. Taylor, a K.K.R. partner who joined the firm in 2005.

“Mike has played an important role in continuing our 30 year history of successful investing in the retail sector and we wish him well in his new endeavors,” the spokeswoman, Kristi Huller, said in an emailed statement.

“Nate Taylor has been a key member of the retail team and we are confident he will continue K.K.R.’s strong leadership in this space that has long benefited our investors,” she added.

Mr. Calbert was a partner in the Menlo Park, Calif., office of K.K.R. and led the firm’s investment in the discount retailer Dollar General, one of its most successful deals. He also worked on deals for Toys “R” Us and Pets at Home, a British retailer, among others.

Though he has left the private equity firm, Mr. Calbert will remain on the boards of US Foods and the retailer Academy Sports and Outdoors as a representative of K.K.R.

Before joining K.K.R. in 2000, Mr. Calbert was the chief financial officer of Randalls Food Markets, which in 1997 received an investment from the private equity firm, according to a biography of Mr. Calbert that until recently was on K.K.R.’s website. He also once worked as a consultant with Arthur Andersen Worldwide.

Mr. Taylor, who previously was at Bain Capital, worked on K.K.R.’s investments in companies including Toys “R” Us, SunGard Data Systems and Sun Microsystems. He also helped set up K.K.R.’s business in India.



Guy Hands Drops Lawsuit Against Citigroup in U.S.

The British financier Guy Hands has agreed to end a lawsuit against Citigroup in the United States, though the legal battle may continue in England.

Mr. Hands, who runs the private equity firm Terra Firma Capital Partners, had accused his longtime bankers at Citigroup of defrauding him when Terra Firma bought the music company EMI in 2007, not long before the financial crisis struck.

The lawsuit in this country, which wound through the courts for years and was revived in 2013, is now ending, after the parties agreed to dismiss their remaining claims, according to a filing on Friday in United States District Court in Manhattan.

The agreement is a qualified victory for Citigroup, which recently filed a motion to dismiss the case on the grounds that it wasn’t being heard in the proper forum. Now, if Terra Firma pursues the claims, they will be heard in England, where a jury trial would not be available.

For Terra Firma, a London venue could allow it to consolidate two sets of claims, the newer of which was filed late last year in England.

“Terra Firma and Citigroup have together decided that their disputes should be resolved in one set of proceedings,” Terra Firma and Citigroup said in a joint statement on Friday. “As a result, the parties have consented to the transfer of the claim before the New York court to England, to be consolidated with the proceedings that are ongoing before the English court.”

Citigroup suffered a setback in the case last year, when a federal appeals court vacated a 2011 jury verdict that had cleared the bank of any wrongdoing in the EMI deal. That gave Mr. Hands the opportunity to try again to prove his claim that he was deceived by the bank.

At that point, EMI had already been seized by Citigroup and sold off in pieces, so the dispute became one over money. The case went before Judge Jed S. Rakoff.

Now, the agreement on Friday may change the venue of a case that had sought to shine a spotlight on a questionable aspect of the private equity boom. Citigroup, in addition to advising Terra Firma, also provided billions of dollars in financing for the $6.8 billion takeover.

Mr. Hands, who lost billions of dollars on the investment when the crisis struck, claimed that his banker had tricked him into paying a high price by saying that a rival bidder was in the wings. In reality, the rivals had already dropped out.

Citigroup has said the suit is without merit.

 

 



Whistle-Blower Gets $63.9 Million as a Result of JPMorgan Settlement

In February, JPMorgan Chase agreed to a $614 million pact with federal prosecutors who accused the nation’s largest bank of violating rules related to federal mortgage insurance programs.Kathy Willens/Associated Press In February, JPMorgan Chase agreed to a $614 million pact with federal prosecutors who accused the nation’s largest bank of violating rules related to federal mortgage insurance programs.


A Louisiana man who helped federal prosecutors make their case against JPMorgan Chase’s mortgage lending practices has earned $63.9 million for his efforts.

The government will pay the amount to Keith Edwards, the whistle-blower who originally sued the bank last year, according to a filing in a United States District Court in Manhattan on Friday.

Last month, the bank agreed to pay $614 million to settle charges that it violated rules at the Federal Housing Administration and the Department of Veterans Affairs, which insure mortgages made by lenders. The bulk of the settlement, $564.6 million, went to the F.H.A.

Mr. Edwards will receive $56.46 million from the F.H.A. and the remainder from the settlement reached in the Veterans Affairs case.

Mr. Edwards worked for JPMorgan from 2003 to 2008, according to court filings. He helped oversee JPMorgan’s government insurance unit as it related to residential lending, and said that the bank pushed defective loans onto the two agencies.

He sued the bank in January of last year under the False Claims Act, a law that aims to encourage whistle-blowers to come forward by paying a portion of whatever money the government gets.

“Keith’s a courageous guy,” his lawyer, David Wasinger, said on Friday. “He wanted to step forward and do the right thing.”

In 2012, a former UBS banker received $104 million from the Internal Revenue Service for providing information about how the Swiss bank pushed American citizens to avoid taxes. The award was the largest the I.R.S. had ever paid as part of its whistle-blower program.



Icahn Discloses He’s Now on Facebook


Carl C. Icahn is liking Facebook a bit more these days.

The billionaire investor disclosed in a regulatory filing on Friday that he plans to start using the social network as another platform for his activism campaigns.

The septuagenarian, who has made shaking up technology companies his latest focus, set up his page on Valentine’s Day. Describing himself, he wrote: “Some people get rich studying artificial intelligence. Me, I make money studying natural stupidity.”

Facebook will supplement his already popular Twitter feed, where 154,858 followers have been tracking his almost daily barbs against eBay‘s board, and his Shareholders Square Table website.

Mr. Icahn’s disclosure was made to ensure that he complied with guidelines from the Securities and Exchange Commission about using social media. The agency clarified last year that companies may use their Facebook pages, Twitter feeds and corporate blogs to publish news. They just need to let investors know which channels that information will appear on first.

Plenty of people have already gotten the word about Mr. Icahn’s new Facebook presence. As of Friday afternoon, 3,542 people had liked his page.



Safeway Customers May Be Big Winners With Cerberus


Could Cerberus pay more for Safeway than the $9.4 billion it has offered? Based on the A.&P.-Pathmark merger in 2007, the synergies could be worth well over $5 billion to Cerberus, since it plans to combine the chain with its Albertsons operations. In theory that leaves room for a higher offer. But competition from the likes of Walmart means cost savings may need to go to shoppers, not investors.

Both Safeway and Albertsons executives said in their conference call with investors that there would be significant cost savings, but they didn’t quantify them. A.&P.’s purchase of Pathmark seems a reasonable guide. Though smaller, Safeway and Albertsons are otherwise similar - mature grocery chains facing tough times because of rising competition. That merger generated $150 million a year in synergies, or about 1.4 percent of combined sales of $10.9 billion.

Revenue at Cerberus’s grocery arm and Safeway combined is some $54.7 billion, according to Jefferies research. At this percentage rate, annual savings would run about $750 million. Taxed at 30 percent and put on a multiple of 10, that’s a present value bigger than $5 billion.

Yet even including all the components of the deal - some of which don’t offer certain value - Safeway shareholders are only getting a 17 percent premium, or about $1.4 billion in all, over where their shares traded last month before the company said it was in sale negotiations.

On typical merger logic, that would leave room for a higher bid. Yet although Safeway has an initial three weeks to hunt for one, it’s no certainty.

Kroger, another grocer, would also be able to reap synergies and news reports suggest it showed some interest in Safeway. Yet it is busy digesting its purchase of the Harris Teeter chain. And if any private equity shops think they can do better, even without synergies, they’d better hurry and make a bid. The break-up fee on the deal with Cerberus rises from $150 million to $250 million for bids that come in after the 21-day “go shop” period.

And Cerberus-Albertsons or another industry buyer might not feel able to pay more, anyway. Walmart, the nation’s biggest grocer, has gained market share with cheap prices.

Safeway’s executives made clear that many of the savings from the merger will be plowed back into lower prices. Cerberus may end up snagging Safeway, but customers could be winners, too.

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



Safeway Customers May Be Big Winners With Cerberus


Could Cerberus pay more for Safeway than the $9.4 billion it has offered? Based on the A.&P.-Pathmark merger in 2007, the synergies could be worth well over $5 billion to Cerberus, since it plans to combine the chain with its Albertsons operations. In theory that leaves room for a higher offer. But competition from the likes of Walmart means cost savings may need to go to shoppers, not investors.

Both Safeway and Albertsons executives said in their conference call with investors that there would be significant cost savings, but they didn’t quantify them. A.&P.’s purchase of Pathmark seems a reasonable guide. Though smaller, Safeway and Albertsons are otherwise similar - mature grocery chains facing tough times because of rising competition. That merger generated $150 million a year in synergies, or about 1.4 percent of combined sales of $10.9 billion.

Revenue at Cerberus’s grocery arm and Safeway combined is some $54.7 billion, according to Jefferies research. At this percentage rate, annual savings would run about $750 million. Taxed at 30 percent and put on a multiple of 10, that’s a present value bigger than $5 billion.

Yet even including all the components of the deal - some of which don’t offer certain value - Safeway shareholders are only getting a 17 percent premium, or about $1.4 billion in all, over where their shares traded last month before the company said it was in sale negotiations.

On typical merger logic, that would leave room for a higher bid. Yet although Safeway has an initial three weeks to hunt for one, it’s no certainty.

Kroger, another grocer, would also be able to reap synergies and news reports suggest it showed some interest in Safeway. Yet it is busy digesting its purchase of the Harris Teeter chain. And if any private equity shops think they can do better, even without synergies, they’d better hurry and make a bid. The break-up fee on the deal with Cerberus rises from $150 million to $250 million for bids that come in after the 21-day “go shop” period.

And Cerberus-Albertsons or another industry buyer might not feel able to pay more, anyway. Walmart, the nation’s biggest grocer, has gained market share with cheap prices.

Safeway’s executives made clear that many of the savings from the merger will be plowed back into lower prices. Cerberus may end up snagging Safeway, but customers could be winners, too.

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



With Its Stock Riding High, FireEye Sells More Shares for $1.1 Billion

With the Target hacking scandal, Edward Snowden and Chinese cyberattacks all in the news, there could hardly be a better environment for FireEye, the security software company that went public last fall.

Now, with its stock having risen fourfold since its market debut, the company is taking advantage by selling more shares.

The secondary offering Thursday evening raised $1.1 billion, as FireEye sold 14 million shares for both itself and some of its earlier backers. Among those selling are FireEye’s founder, Ashar Aziz, and chief executive, David G. DeWalt, as well as Norwest Venture Partners.

It’s the latest big news for the nine-year-old company, which specializes in defending against computer attacks by reading Internet traffic for potential threats. In January, the company bought Mandiant, a leading responder to hacking attacks, for more than $1 billion, a deal paid for in part with stock.

Those shares have leaped, making the company’s offering one of the most successful by any computer security provider. Pricing at $20 a share in its I.P.O., FireEye’s shares have reached as high as $97.35. (Its shares were down 9 percent, to around $81 a share, by late afternoon trading Friday, largely because of the new stock entering the market.)

Mr. DeWalt said in an interview on Friday that during an abbreviated road show for the secondary offering, investors continued to show strong interest in the company.

“Every single investor believes that cybersecurity is critical,” Mr. DeWalt said. “FireEye is the leader in that domain.”

With its share of the offering proceeds â€" nearly $458 million â€" the company plans to continue expanding, especially internationally. Among the areas that the company plans to focus on now are protecting mobile devices and cloud services, both of which are in need of stronger security. While FireEye plans to continue building out its offering, it will also look to make acquisitions, though probably at a smaller scale than the Mandiant deal.

Ultimately, Mr. DeWalt says he believes that demand for his company’s services will only grow in coming years.

“This is the new norm for cybersecurity,” he said. “We see increasing escalations around the world.”



With Its Stock Riding High, FireEye Sells More Shares for $1.1 Billion

With the Target hacking scandal, Edward Snowden and Chinese cyberattacks all in the news, there could hardly be a better environment for FireEye, the security software company that went public last fall.

Now, with its stock having risen fourfold since its market debut, the company is taking advantage by selling more shares.

The secondary offering Thursday evening raised $1.1 billion, as FireEye sold 14 million shares for both itself and some of its earlier backers. Among those selling are FireEye’s founder, Ashar Aziz, and chief executive, David G. DeWalt, as well as Norwest Venture Partners.

It’s the latest big news for the nine-year-old company, which specializes in defending against computer attacks by reading Internet traffic for potential threats. In January, the company bought Mandiant, a leading responder to hacking attacks, for more than $1 billion, a deal paid for in part with stock.

Those shares have leaped, making the company’s offering one of the most successful by any computer security provider. Pricing at $20 a share in its I.P.O., FireEye’s shares have reached as high as $97.35. (Its shares were down 9 percent, to around $81 a share, by late afternoon trading Friday, largely because of the new stock entering the market.)

Mr. DeWalt said in an interview on Friday that during an abbreviated road show for the secondary offering, investors continued to show strong interest in the company.

“Every single investor believes that cybersecurity is critical,” Mr. DeWalt said. “FireEye is the leader in that domain.”

With its share of the offering proceeds â€" nearly $458 million â€" the company plans to continue expanding, especially internationally. Among the areas that the company plans to focus on now are protecting mobile devices and cloud services, both of which are in need of stronger security. While FireEye plans to continue building out its offering, it will also look to make acquisitions, though probably at a smaller scale than the Mandiant deal.

Ultimately, Mr. DeWalt says he believes that demand for his company’s services will only grow in coming years.

“This is the new norm for cybersecurity,” he said. “We see increasing escalations around the world.”



In Safeway Buyout, a Reminder of a Painful Takeover Years Ago


Safeway, the latest target of a big private equity buyout, once caused a huge headache for the private equity industry.

More than two decades ago, the grocery store chain became a potent symbol of the human toll sometimes extracted when private equity uses large amounts of debt to take over a company. But Safeway is now standing on its own two feet, and for many of its workers, that initial pain is just an entry in the history books.

This week, Safeway again attracted the interest of a private equity firm, with Cerberus Capital Management leading a $9 billion leveraged buyout of the company. But the deal attracted none of the uproar of the earlier saga.

The acquisition shows how a defining flash point for the private equity industry has largely cooled since The Wall Street Journal published a front-page article in 1990 that, among other revelations, included the story of a longtime trucker for Safeway who took his own life a year after being laid off.

The article left a lasting impression on how the private equity business was perceived, coming after a decade in which buyout barons were celebrated in the business press. It particularly stung for Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, the firm that bought Safeway in 1986 and ultimately reaped billions of dollars of profit.

The Journal article continued to resonate as recently as 2009, when one K.K.R. partner who worked on the Safeway deal criticized the article at an investor conference, as part of a primer on private equity.

“The transaction is often looked at through the prism of The Wall Street Journal, which published a story focused on layoffs and wage reductions that occurred after the buyout,” the partner, James H. Greene Jr., said, according to a transcript. “Unfortunately, the article ignored the basic facts that Safeway was a deeply troubled business.”

Whether or not that criticism is fair, the article painted a troubling picture of the steps that owners will take to rehabilitate a business. About 63,000 workers lost their jobs after the buyout, and though many were hired back, their pay was significantly reduced, according to the article. In one case, a husband, wife and daughter who worked at Safeway all received pink slips the same day.

Beyond the trucker who committed suicide, at least two other workers tried to kill themselves, the article said. Peter Magowan, then the chief executive of Safeway, acknowledged that many of the people who were fired in 1986 were “very good” employees and that the cuts were done quickly.

Still, Safeway continued to grow after K.K.R. took it public in 1990. Its work force ultimately expanded to 193,000 employees, Mr. Greene said at the conference. K.K.R. sold the last of its shares in 1999.

“The reality is that value creation takes a long time,” Mr. Greene said.

Even with the criticism, the Safeway deal once inspired admiration and envy on Wall Street. Other investors also saw an opportunity in the grocery store business model, which features large revenue streams but thin profit margins, making it an attractive target for cost-cutting.

“After they did the Safeway deal, any number of private equity firms launched into buying grocery chains and got benefits just from running them well,” Paul S. Levy, managing director of the private equity firm JLL Partners, which he helped start in 1988, recalled on Friday.

Cerberus today is using a somewhat different strategy than K.K.R. did, planning to merge Safeway with Albertsons, which it owns. The news release announcing the deal included this sentence: “No store closures are expected as a result of this transaction.”

Still, Safeway’s current chief executive, Robert Edwards, acknowledged that some stores could be sold in connection with the deal.

A review by the Federal Trade Commission “may result in required divestitures,” Mr. Edwards said on a conference call with analysts on Thursday. “They’re not really classified as closures.”

That Safeway is again returning to private equity hands may help illustrate how the private equity industry has changed since the 1980s.

“In almost a quarter of a century, private equity has gone from a hot button to a mainstream investment activity supported by basically everybody,” Mr. Levy said. “Even in Congress, where they think the carried interest rate should be different, nobody is saying the private equity firms are terrible people.”

The writer of the Journal article, Susan C. Faludi, won a Pulitzer Prize for it in 1991. That prompted a renewed round of criticism from Safeway, which had railed against the story when it first appeared.

Ms. Faludi at the time seemed surprised the story had such a wide resonance. She joked in an interview with The New York Times in 1991 that she thought “only my mother and three other people” had read it.



Vodafone Said to Submit Tentative Bid for Ono

LONDON - Vodafone is turning out to be a persistent suitor.

The British telecommunications giant has submitted a tentative offer for the Spanish cable company Ono that values it at around 7 billion euros, or $10 billion, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The prospective bid will entail fast-tracked due diligence by Vodafone over the weekend. Ono’s board meets on Thursday to consider whether to approve an initial public offering, and a formal offer would have to be submitted before the meeting, the people said.

Rumors have circulated in recent months that Vodafone would make an offer for Ono, which would allow Vodafone to compete with Telefónica of Spain to offer high-speed broadband to its Spanish customers.

Despite the interest, Ono’s board has repeatedly stressed that it continues to focus on a potential I.P.O.

“The major reason for the I.P.O. is to have financial flexibility,” Ono’s chief executive, Rosalía Portela, said in an interview on Wednesday. “The bigger you are, the easier it is to get capital.”

But bankers and analysts have said that the company’s shareholders â€" which include private equity firms like Providence Equity Partners, CCMP Capital Advisors and Thomas H. Lee Partners â€" may prefer a sale to a larger telecoms rival over a potentially risky listing on the Madrid stock exchange.

Ono’s board is expected to discuss the existing I.P.O. plans at Thursday’s meeting. If Vodafone can complete an agreement with Ono’s majority shareholders, that proposed offer would also be discussed, according to one person with direct knowledge of the matter.

Representatives for Vodafone and Ono declined to comment on the takeover rumors.

Vodafone’s prospective bid for Ono is the second multibillion-dollar takeover effort in Europe’s telecoms industry this week.

On Thursday, the French media and telecoms conglomerate Vivendi said it had received two offers for SFR, its cellphone unit, that could value the business at more than $20 billion. The rival bids were made by the European cable and cellphone operator Altice and the French construction and cellphone company Bouygues.

Despite Europe’s tepid economic recovery, the Continent’s cellphone and cable sectors have provided some relief for local deal makers.

Announced takeovers involving such companies have reached $194 billion in the 12 months through March 7, a fourfold increase from the period a year earlier, according to data from Thomson Reuters. The figure is somewhat skewed because of Vodafone’s $130 billion sale of its 45 percent stake in Verizon Wireless last year.



A Deeper Conversation on Women in Hedge Funds


Whitney Tilson is the managing partner of the hedge fund firm Kase Capital Management, which he founded more than 15 years ago. Mr. Tilson is also the co-founder of Value Investor Insight, an investment newsletter, and the Value Investing Congress, a biannual investment conference.

Dozens of people responded to my recent column on Evaluating the Dearth of Female Hedge Fund Managers with thoughtful comments on why the problem exists and some ideas to address it.

Some certainly approached the problem with humor. “It is a standing joke that Wall Street rewards unbalanced personalities, so maybe women are astutely steering clear of all the outrageous personality combinations you’ll find working here … only half-kidding!”

But seriously, it was encouraging to hear from women who were bucking the trend, though it is clear that the industry has been a tough one to crack.

A fundamental problem seems to be the way hiring is done. As several readers pointed out, the job posting and interview process is the first hurdle. One person wrote: “You must either be extremely well educated and well connected, or have gotten lucky to even land an analyst position. Most buy-side shops don’t even post jobs; you need to know someone.” On top of this, it’s even tougher for women according to some: “Believe it or not, when I was going through recruiting, I had headhunters telling me many funds would never ever consider hiring a woman because it just ‘looks weird,’” wrote one woman.

To overcome the hiring problem, one writer had an intriguing suggestion: “Something like a self-imposed Rooney Rule (which requires N.F.L. teams to interview minority candidates for all coaching jobs) would be an obvious first place to start.”

The few women who break into the industry face meaningful barriers. Several wrote about the lack of mentorship and apprenticeship programs. “I’ve always envied my peers, all men of course, who have the ability to call their mentors for advice regarding their careers,” said one woman. “Sadly, I’ve never had a mentor in my entire career (shocking!) that I could call to seek advice or for support.”

Another woman echoed these sentiments. “When I think about my own career and those of my male and female friends, what really strikes me is how often men get second chances versus how tough it is for women to get even first chances,” she said. “There are several men I know who blow up over and over or else just get blown out for only returning 0-5% or whatever … yet they keep on landing again.”

This was especially true after the financial crisis, when many men and women lost their jobs. “But having a more senior mentor and/or a network of buddies at other funds was a lifeline for people who got displaced. Most women didn’t have access to the lifeline,” she said. “The thing about friend networks is that men help out other men in ways that are different from how they connect to women. I constantly see men hire their friends when they have an open spot.”

The handful of women who have the experience and credentials to start their own funds face both headwinds and tailwinds. One woman reported that “there is significant amount of capital that is available to minorities such as women,” but another wrote:

When trying to launch a new, women-owned fund, we finally had to face the reality that despite a great three-year track record at our previous fund, 25 years’ experience in our markets, and even strong interest from institutional investors, we couldn’t get anyone to be first. We watched men with far less experience and sketchy credentials breeze by us in new funds. The lack of diversity affects markets as the ‘herd mentality’ becomes literal.

Many readers seem to agree that there is an inherent double standard in how women are perceived in the industry, and that old perceptions seem to die hard. One commenter wrote, “Overconfidence in women may be perceived as brash and invoke responses of, ‘Who does she think she is?’”

The solution to that problem may be to take a page from the recent efforts by Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg to get women to “lean in,” said one observer: “Broadly speaking, men are praised and rewarded in our society for exuding these ‘alpha’ behaviors, while women are not.”

“As many observers including Sheryl Sandberg have noted, women often suffer ridicule for being ambitious when their actions are no different from their male counterparts’. As a result, women engage in self-limiting behavior even before the workplace, such as in business school, where men dominate the classroom conversation.”

The solution could be helping women in the hedge fund industry develop that swagger that allows them to “be able to look their male colleagues in the eye and say, ‘I’m the smartest in the room’ without being chided and feeling an artificial limitation that stems from upbringing or society.”

Several commenters suggested establishing better mentoring programs to nurture new young talent. One woman described how “life changing” it had been to have a female role model and boss at her first investing job:

I didn’t think it mattered. I always felt comfortable working in male-dominated environments. But it literally changed my life. Seeing a woman balance (elegantly!) her family and her investing career was inspiring. I gained a mentor, someone to look up. She inspired confidence and grace in everyone on our team.

I hope to be that for somebody in the next 15-20 years. And I really hope that the industry I chose (or accidentally fell in love with) … will be nimble enough to respond. I think it will be.

I’ve enjoyed this conversation and want to thank all of you for inspiring me to do a better job of teaching my three daughters about my business. Who knows? Maybe one of them will be my successor one day.



Morning Agenda: Cerberus and Safeway Strike $9 Billion Deal

SUPER DEAL: CERBERUS TO BUY SAFEWAY FOR $9 BILLION  |  In one of the largest leveraged buyouts since the financial crisis, a group led by the private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management agreed on Thursday to acquire Safeway in a deal worth more than $9 billion, Michael J. de la Merced and William Alden write in DealBook. The deal, which will be financed by $7.6 billion worth of borrowed money, is the biggest leveraged buyout so far this year. Cerberus plans to merge Safeway with Albertsons, a smaller grocery store chain that it owns.

Investors are expected to receive $40 a share, representing a 17 percent premium over Safeway’s stock price on Feb. 18, the day before the company disclosed that it was in sales talks with an unnamed bidder. The combination of Safeway and Cerberus’s holdings will have 2,400 stores and over 250,000 employees, bolstering the firm’s already sizable presence in the grocery store industry.

MAN IDENTIFIED AS MYSTERIOUS BITCOIN CREATOR DENIES IT  |  Newsweek on Thursday rattled Bitcoin aficionados when it published an article that claimed to reveal Bitcoin’s creator, whose mysterious identity has been central to the virtual currency’s mythic status, Nathaniel Popper and Rachel Abrams write in DealBook. Bitcoin’s developer went by the name Satoshi Nakamoto, and the man the magazine claimed to be behind Bitcoin has a similar name â€" Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto, but don’t get too excited just yet.

The Mr. Nakamoto identified in the article denied involvement in Bitcoin on Thursday after a car chase involving a crowd of reporters. He told The Associated Press that he had not heard of the virtual currency until his son told him about being contacted by a reporter three weeks ago. Even if Newsweek’s report is true, virtual currency proponents were outraged by what they viewed as a violation of the very privacy the currency was intended to protect.

“Whatever the conclusion, the furor on Thursday laid bare just how far Bitcoin had moved beyond its humble origins five years ago â€" and just how much it still relied on the mystique of those beginnings,” Mr. Popper and Ms. Abrams write. They add, “Bitcoin watchers said that the creator’s supposed anonymity had played a vital role in the growth of a virtual currency that has become a potent symbol for privacy advocates and critics of government power.”

From The Associated Press, which had an exclusive interview on Thursday with the Mr. Nakamoto identified in the Newsweek article: “Several times during the interview with AP, Nakamoto mistakenly referred to the currency as ‘bitcom,’ and as a single company, which it is not. He said he’s never heard of Gavin Andresen, a leading Bitcoin developer who told Newsweek he’d worked closely with the person or entity known as ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ in developing the system, but that they never met in person or spoke on the phone.”

FORMER LEADERS AT ONCE-MIGHTY LAW FIRM INDICTED  |  Four former top officials at the law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf were charged by New York prosecutors on Thursday with larceny and securities fraud, Matthew Goldstein writes in DealBook. Prosecutors said that the men, who used incriminating language in emails, orchestrated a nearly four-year scheme to manipulate the firm’s books to make it appear the firm was meeting certain financial conditions. The Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., said his office had already secured guilty pleas from seven other people who once worked for Dewey. Several others may also be cooperating with the two-year-old investigation.

The charges are the latest troubles for a once-mighty law firm, which filed for bankruptcy in May 2012. At its peak, the firm, created by the 2007 merger of Dewey Ballantine and LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae, had 26 offices around the globe and employed more than 1,300 people. But its bankruptcy revealed that, while Dewey was a brand-name operation, it failed to generate sufficient revenue to pay the big contracts of its star lawyers and meet its expensive overhead.

IT’S JOBS DAY  |  Brace yourselves. February’s jobs data, which the Labor Department is set to report at 8:30 a.m. on Friday, is harder than usual to predict because of conflicting signals from private payroll surveys and seasonal factors like weather, Nelson D. Schwartz writes in the Economix blog. With the last two monthly reports â€" for January and December â€" falling well short of expectations, economists are eagerly waiting to see whether the disappointing numbers were a weather-related anomaly or a sign that underlying momentum in the economy is weakening. The consensus among economists on Wall Street is for employers to have added 149,000 positions in February, with the jobless rate flat at 6.6 percent.

ON THE AGENDA  |  In addition to the jobs report, the international trade report is out at 8:30 a.m. William C. Dudley, the president of the New York Fed, speaks at noon. Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, is on CNBC at 7:30 a.m. Thomas E. Perez, the labor secretary, is on CNBC at 9:35 a.m. Marianne Lake, the chief financial officer of JPMorgan Chase, is on Bloomberg TV at 10 a.m. The annual South by Southwest festival begins in Austin, Tex.

EXAMINING CLAIMS OF INSIDER TRADING AT THE S.E.C.  |  Recent news reports, replete with eye-catching headlines like “The Incredible Stock-Picking Ability of S.E.C. Employees,” have suggested that staff members at the Securities and Exchange Commission were committing insider trading. But the likely truth is that S.E.C. staff members are no better than the rest of us at picking stocks, Steven M. Davidoff writes in the Deal Professor column.

The suggestion that S.E.C. staff traded on nonpublic information stems from the conclusion of an early draft of an academic paper that was not meant to be circulated publicly. But the authors’ actual conclusions are much more limited: The S.E.C. employees did not earn any abnormal return whatsoever when purchasing stock, though they did seem to be abnormally good at selling stocks at the right time. The S.E.C. responded with the explanation that any abnormal trading was because employees were forced to sell certain stocks if they were about to begin an investigation related to those companies.

If the paper’s empirical findings hold up, Mr. Davidoff writes, “this will be its value and it will be quite a good paper. It will show that the S.E.C. might want to rethink its sale rules for when investigations are initiated. The agency may also want to revisit its stock holding rules generally. But under no circumstance is there any evidence in this paper that the policy is promoting insider trading. Dumb luck maybe, but not insider trading.”

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Vivendi Gets Bids for SFR From Bouygues and AlticeVivendi Gets Bids for SFR From Bouygues and Altice  |  The French media and telecommunications conglomerate Vivendi said on Thursday that it had received offers for SFR, its cellphone unit, that could value the business at more than $20 billion.
DealBook »

Top Federal Antitrust Official Steps Back From Comcast Deal Inquiry  |  The federal government’s top antitrust official, William J. Baer, has recused himself from the Justice Department’s review of Comcast’s proposed $45 billion takeover of Time Warner Cable, Edward Wyatt reports in The New York Times.
NEW YORK TIMES

Comcast Buys Freewheel for $360 Million  |  The cable giant Comcast announced on Thursday that it had acquired Freewheel, an advertising start-up, in a deal valued at $360 million, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Spotify Buys Echo Nest in Latest Music Technology Deal  |  Spotify announced on Thursday that it had bought a company that analyzes music consumption patterns, as the competition over access to listeners’ data heats up, The New York Times reports. The terms of the deal were not disclosed.
NEW YORK TIMES

Privacy Groups Ask Regulators to Stop Facebook’s Deal for WhatsApp  |  Privacy advocates have asked United States regulators to halt Facebook’s $19 billion purchase of WhatsApp until there is a better understanding of how Facebook intends to use the personal data of WhatsApp’s users, Reuters writes.
REUTERS

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Book Deal Falls Apart for Parodist of GoldmanBook Deal Falls Apart for Parodist of Goldman  |  John Lefevre, the man behind the @GSElevator Twitter account, has lost his book deal after his true identity came to light.
DealBook »

2 Senior Citigroup Executives Retiring2 Senior Citigroup Executives Retiring  |  Eugene McQuade, the chief executive of Citibank, the entity that holds 70 percent of the company’s assets and runs its international businesses, is leaving, as is Cece Stewart, who runs Citigroup’s consumer and commercial banking operations in the United States.
DealBook »

Lloyds Bank Seeks to Swap More Than $8 Billion of BondsLloyds Bank Seeks to Swap More Than $8 Billion of Bonds  |  The Lloyds Banking Group, which is partially owned by the British government, said it would offer to swap bonds used to shore up its capital during the financial crisis for new securities or cash.
DealBook »

Deutsche Bank Wins Auction for Australian Loan Book  |  Deutsche Bank has won an auction for the $128 million loan portfolio of the collapsed Australian lender Gippsland Secured Investments, The Wall Street Journal writes.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

To Serve Wall Streeters, Long Hours and Exacting LaborTo Serve Wall Streeters, Long Hours and Exacting Labor  |  Rudy Milian sounds much like any junior Wall Street worker when he talks about the demands of his previous job at a barbershop that almost exclusively serves Goldman Sachs employees.
DealBook »

Why This Isn’t China’s ‘Bear Stearns Moment’  |  If the analogy with the crisis of 2008 has any use, writes Peter Thal Larsen of Reuters Breakingviews, it is as a reminder of which mistakes to avoid.
DealBook »

PRIVATE EQUITY »

As Shares Soar, Buyout Barons Selling Firms’ Stock  |  Top executives at three publicly traded private equity firms have sold more than $500 million of their firms’ stock over the past year, The Wall Street Journal writes.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Assets at Carlyle Commodities Fund Fell by Half  |  The private equity firm Carlyle Group said its commodities hedge fund Vermillion fell by more than half in the nine months to December, which could suggest that investors had decided to redeem at the fund after some negative returns.
CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Wall Street Leaders Seen at Art Show  |  Henry R. Kravis, the co-founder of the private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, and the hedge fund manager Daniel S. Loeb of Third Point Capital were spotted on Tuesday at the Art Dealers Association of America’s annual Upper East Side Art Show, The New York Post writes.
NEW YORK POST

HEDGE FUNDS »

Casablanca Names 6 Candidates for Cliffs Natural Resources’ Board  |  Casablanca Capital, the activist hedge fund pressing for change at Cliffs Natural Resources, started a proxy fight on Thursday, naming six candidates for the mining company’s board.
DealBook »

Okapi Partners, a Proxy Solicitor, Adds a Senior Executive  |  The addition of Michael Fein, the founder of an investment firm, comes as Okapi continues to expand and compete against more established rivals in the proxy solicitation industry.
DealBook »

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Initial Public Offerings Hit Fastest Pace in Years  |  Companies are going public at the fastest pace in years to take advantage of booming share prices and investor demand while they last, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Coupons.com Raises $168 Million in I.P.O.  |  Coupons.com raised $168 million in its initial public offering, pricing its shares above the marketed range, Bloomberg Businessweek reports. The stock will start trading on Friday on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “COUP.”
BLOOMBERG BUSINESSWEEK

Spotify Said to Seek Credit Facility, Hinting at I.P.O.  |  Spotify, the music streaming giant, is said to be speaking with banks about raising a credit facility in a move that could be a step toward an initial public offering, Bloomberg News writes.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Andreessen Horowitz Backs DigitalOcean, a Cloud Computing Start-Up  |  The growth of DigitalOcean enticed the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz to lead a $37.2 million financing round, a rare instance when it has invested “outside the Valley.”
DealBook »

Warner Brothers Leads Funding Round for Machinima  |  Machinima, a YouTube network for gamers, is closing an $18 million funding round led by the movie studio Warner Brothers, ReCode writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation.
RECODE

Foreign Influx Gives Annual Tech Event an International Flavor  |  Many Silicon Valley companies aren’t attending the South by Southwest festival, but companies from abroad are, Jenna Wortham writes in The New York Times.
NEW YORK TIMES

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

BNP Paribas and Bank of America Suspend Employees in Currency Investigation  |  Bank of America Merrill Lynch has placed Joseph Landes on leave, while BNP Paribas has suspended Robert de Groot, according to people familiar with the matter. More than 20 traders have been suspended or fired amid inquiries into potential manipulation of the currency markets.
DealBook »

Japan Won’t Impose Banking Laws on Bitcoin  |  The government of Japan released a six-page paper stating that Bitcoin is a commodity, not a currency, and will be subject to taxes but not regulations.
DealBook »

Solar Panel Maker Is First to Default in China’s Domestic Bond Market  |  That no rescue emerged was viewed by analysts as a signal that China is serious about its commitment to carrying out market-oriented financial reform.
DealBook »

Futures Commission Appointees Talk With Senate PanelFutures Commission Appointees Talk With Senate Panel  |  The nominees â€" Timothy Massad, who would become chairman, and Sharon Bowen and Christopher Giancarlo â€" now await a vote from the panel and full confirmation by the Senate.
DealBook »

Greek Bank Set to Be First in 5 Years to Tap Capital Markets  |  Piraeus Bank, Greece’s largest lender, is planning to issue a bond that will be a significant test of investor interest.
DealBook »

The Hurdles in Getting Past a Wall of SilenceThe Hurdles in Getting Past a Wall of Silence  |  The Justice Department may have feared reopening the debate about whether it adequately respects attorney-client privilege if it allowed regulators to pursue notes by JPMorgan Chase’s lawyers on the bank’s ties to Bernard L. Madoff, Peter J. Henning writes in the White Collar Watch column.
DealBook »



Morning Agenda: Cerberus and Safeway Strike $9 Billion Deal

SUPER DEAL: CERBERUS TO BUY SAFEWAY FOR $9 BILLION  |  In one of the largest leveraged buyouts since the financial crisis, a group led by the private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management agreed on Thursday to acquire Safeway in a deal worth more than $9 billion, Michael J. de la Merced and William Alden write in DealBook. The deal, which will be financed by $7.6 billion worth of borrowed money, is the biggest leveraged buyout so far this year. Cerberus plans to merge Safeway with Albertsons, a smaller grocery store chain that it owns.

Investors are expected to receive $40 a share, representing a 17 percent premium over Safeway’s stock price on Feb. 18, the day before the company disclosed that it was in sales talks with an unnamed bidder. The combination of Safeway and Cerberus’s holdings will have 2,400 stores and over 250,000 employees, bolstering the firm’s already sizable presence in the grocery store industry.

MAN IDENTIFIED AS MYSTERIOUS BITCOIN CREATOR DENIES IT  |  Newsweek on Thursday rattled Bitcoin aficionados when it published an article that claimed to reveal Bitcoin’s creator, whose mysterious identity has been central to the virtual currency’s mythic status, Nathaniel Popper and Rachel Abrams write in DealBook. Bitcoin’s developer went by the name Satoshi Nakamoto, and the man the magazine claimed to be behind Bitcoin has a similar name â€" Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto, but don’t get too excited just yet.

The Mr. Nakamoto identified in the article denied involvement in Bitcoin on Thursday after a car chase involving a crowd of reporters. He told The Associated Press that he had not heard of the virtual currency until his son told him about being contacted by a reporter three weeks ago. Even if Newsweek’s report is true, virtual currency proponents were outraged by what they viewed as a violation of the very privacy the currency was intended to protect.

“Whatever the conclusion, the furor on Thursday laid bare just how far Bitcoin had moved beyond its humble origins five years ago â€" and just how much it still relied on the mystique of those beginnings,” Mr. Popper and Ms. Abrams write. They add, “Bitcoin watchers said that the creator’s supposed anonymity had played a vital role in the growth of a virtual currency that has become a potent symbol for privacy advocates and critics of government power.”

From The Associated Press, which had an exclusive interview on Thursday with the Mr. Nakamoto identified in the Newsweek article: “Several times during the interview with AP, Nakamoto mistakenly referred to the currency as ‘bitcom,’ and as a single company, which it is not. He said he’s never heard of Gavin Andresen, a leading Bitcoin developer who told Newsweek he’d worked closely with the person or entity known as ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ in developing the system, but that they never met in person or spoke on the phone.”

FORMER LEADERS AT ONCE-MIGHTY LAW FIRM INDICTED  |  Four former top officials at the law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf were charged by New York prosecutors on Thursday with larceny and securities fraud, Matthew Goldstein writes in DealBook. Prosecutors said that the men, who used incriminating language in emails, orchestrated a nearly four-year scheme to manipulate the firm’s books to make it appear the firm was meeting certain financial conditions. The Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., said his office had already secured guilty pleas from seven other people who once worked for Dewey. Several others may also be cooperating with the two-year-old investigation.

The charges are the latest troubles for a once-mighty law firm, which filed for bankruptcy in May 2012. At its peak, the firm, created by the 2007 merger of Dewey Ballantine and LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae, had 26 offices around the globe and employed more than 1,300 people. But its bankruptcy revealed that, while Dewey was a brand-name operation, it failed to generate sufficient revenue to pay the big contracts of its star lawyers and meet its expensive overhead.

IT’S JOBS DAY  |  Brace yourselves. February’s jobs data, which the Labor Department is set to report at 8:30 a.m. on Friday, is harder than usual to predict because of conflicting signals from private payroll surveys and seasonal factors like weather, Nelson D. Schwartz writes in the Economix blog. With the last two monthly reports â€" for January and December â€" falling well short of expectations, economists are eagerly waiting to see whether the disappointing numbers were a weather-related anomaly or a sign that underlying momentum in the economy is weakening. The consensus among economists on Wall Street is for employers to have added 149,000 positions in February, with the jobless rate flat at 6.6 percent.

ON THE AGENDA  |  In addition to the jobs report, the international trade report is out at 8:30 a.m. William C. Dudley, the president of the New York Fed, speaks at noon. Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, is on CNBC at 7:30 a.m. Thomas E. Perez, the labor secretary, is on CNBC at 9:35 a.m. Marianne Lake, the chief financial officer of JPMorgan Chase, is on Bloomberg TV at 10 a.m. The annual South by Southwest festival begins in Austin, Tex.

EXAMINING CLAIMS OF INSIDER TRADING AT THE S.E.C.  |  Recent news reports, replete with eye-catching headlines like “The Incredible Stock-Picking Ability of S.E.C. Employees,” have suggested that staff members at the Securities and Exchange Commission were committing insider trading. But the likely truth is that S.E.C. staff members are no better than the rest of us at picking stocks, Steven M. Davidoff writes in the Deal Professor column.

The suggestion that S.E.C. staff traded on nonpublic information stems from the conclusion of an early draft of an academic paper that was not meant to be circulated publicly. But the authors’ actual conclusions are much more limited: The S.E.C. employees did not earn any abnormal return whatsoever when purchasing stock, though they did seem to be abnormally good at selling stocks at the right time. The S.E.C. responded with the explanation that any abnormal trading was because employees were forced to sell certain stocks if they were about to begin an investigation related to those companies.

If the paper’s empirical findings hold up, Mr. Davidoff writes, “this will be its value and it will be quite a good paper. It will show that the S.E.C. might want to rethink its sale rules for when investigations are initiated. The agency may also want to revisit its stock holding rules generally. But under no circumstance is there any evidence in this paper that the policy is promoting insider trading. Dumb luck maybe, but not insider trading.”

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Vivendi Gets Bids for SFR From Bouygues and AlticeVivendi Gets Bids for SFR From Bouygues and Altice  |  The French media and telecommunications conglomerate Vivendi said on Thursday that it had received offers for SFR, its cellphone unit, that could value the business at more than $20 billion.
DealBook »

Top Federal Antitrust Official Steps Back From Comcast Deal Inquiry  |  The federal government’s top antitrust official, William J. Baer, has recused himself from the Justice Department’s review of Comcast’s proposed $45 billion takeover of Time Warner Cable, Edward Wyatt reports in The New York Times.
NEW YORK TIMES

Comcast Buys Freewheel for $360 Million  |  The cable giant Comcast announced on Thursday that it had acquired Freewheel, an advertising start-up, in a deal valued at $360 million, Reuters reports.
REUTERS

Spotify Buys Echo Nest in Latest Music Technology Deal  |  Spotify announced on Thursday that it had bought a company that analyzes music consumption patterns, as the competition over access to listeners’ data heats up, The New York Times reports. The terms of the deal were not disclosed.
NEW YORK TIMES

Privacy Groups Ask Regulators to Stop Facebook’s Deal for WhatsApp  |  Privacy advocates have asked United States regulators to halt Facebook’s $19 billion purchase of WhatsApp until there is a better understanding of how Facebook intends to use the personal data of WhatsApp’s users, Reuters writes.
REUTERS

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Book Deal Falls Apart for Parodist of GoldmanBook Deal Falls Apart for Parodist of Goldman  |  John Lefevre, the man behind the @GSElevator Twitter account, has lost his book deal after his true identity came to light.
DealBook »

2 Senior Citigroup Executives Retiring2 Senior Citigroup Executives Retiring  |  Eugene McQuade, the chief executive of Citibank, the entity that holds 70 percent of the company’s assets and runs its international businesses, is leaving, as is Cece Stewart, who runs Citigroup’s consumer and commercial banking operations in the United States.
DealBook »

Lloyds Bank Seeks to Swap More Than $8 Billion of BondsLloyds Bank Seeks to Swap More Than $8 Billion of Bonds  |  The Lloyds Banking Group, which is partially owned by the British government, said it would offer to swap bonds used to shore up its capital during the financial crisis for new securities or cash.
DealBook »

Deutsche Bank Wins Auction for Australian Loan Book  |  Deutsche Bank has won an auction for the $128 million loan portfolio of the collapsed Australian lender Gippsland Secured Investments, The Wall Street Journal writes.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

To Serve Wall Streeters, Long Hours and Exacting LaborTo Serve Wall Streeters, Long Hours and Exacting Labor  |  Rudy Milian sounds much like any junior Wall Street worker when he talks about the demands of his previous job at a barbershop that almost exclusively serves Goldman Sachs employees.
DealBook »

Why This Isn’t China’s ‘Bear Stearns Moment’  |  If the analogy with the crisis of 2008 has any use, writes Peter Thal Larsen of Reuters Breakingviews, it is as a reminder of which mistakes to avoid.
DealBook »

PRIVATE EQUITY »

As Shares Soar, Buyout Barons Selling Firms’ Stock  |  Top executives at three publicly traded private equity firms have sold more than $500 million of their firms’ stock over the past year, The Wall Street Journal writes.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Assets at Carlyle Commodities Fund Fell by Half  |  The private equity firm Carlyle Group said its commodities hedge fund Vermillion fell by more than half in the nine months to December, which could suggest that investors had decided to redeem at the fund after some negative returns.
CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Wall Street Leaders Seen at Art Show  |  Henry R. Kravis, the co-founder of the private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, and the hedge fund manager Daniel S. Loeb of Third Point Capital were spotted on Tuesday at the Art Dealers Association of America’s annual Upper East Side Art Show, The New York Post writes.
NEW YORK POST

HEDGE FUNDS »

Casablanca Names 6 Candidates for Cliffs Natural Resources’ Board  |  Casablanca Capital, the activist hedge fund pressing for change at Cliffs Natural Resources, started a proxy fight on Thursday, naming six candidates for the mining company’s board.
DealBook »

Okapi Partners, a Proxy Solicitor, Adds a Senior Executive  |  The addition of Michael Fein, the founder of an investment firm, comes as Okapi continues to expand and compete against more established rivals in the proxy solicitation industry.
DealBook »

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Initial Public Offerings Hit Fastest Pace in Years  |  Companies are going public at the fastest pace in years to take advantage of booming share prices and investor demand while they last, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Coupons.com Raises $168 Million in I.P.O.  |  Coupons.com raised $168 million in its initial public offering, pricing its shares above the marketed range, Bloomberg Businessweek reports. The stock will start trading on Friday on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “COUP.”
BLOOMBERG BUSINESSWEEK

Spotify Said to Seek Credit Facility, Hinting at I.P.O.  |  Spotify, the music streaming giant, is said to be speaking with banks about raising a credit facility in a move that could be a step toward an initial public offering, Bloomberg News writes.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Andreessen Horowitz Backs DigitalOcean, a Cloud Computing Start-Up  |  The growth of DigitalOcean enticed the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz to lead a $37.2 million financing round, a rare instance when it has invested “outside the Valley.”
DealBook »

Warner Brothers Leads Funding Round for Machinima  |  Machinima, a YouTube network for gamers, is closing an $18 million funding round led by the movie studio Warner Brothers, ReCode writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation.
RECODE

Foreign Influx Gives Annual Tech Event an International Flavor  |  Many Silicon Valley companies aren’t attending the South by Southwest festival, but companies from abroad are, Jenna Wortham writes in The New York Times.
NEW YORK TIMES

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

BNP Paribas and Bank of America Suspend Employees in Currency Investigation  |  Bank of America Merrill Lynch has placed Joseph Landes on leave, while BNP Paribas has suspended Robert de Groot, according to people familiar with the matter. More than 20 traders have been suspended or fired amid inquiries into potential manipulation of the currency markets.
DealBook »

Japan Won’t Impose Banking Laws on Bitcoin  |  The government of Japan released a six-page paper stating that Bitcoin is a commodity, not a currency, and will be subject to taxes but not regulations.
DealBook »

Solar Panel Maker Is First to Default in China’s Domestic Bond Market  |  That no rescue emerged was viewed by analysts as a signal that China is serious about its commitment to carrying out market-oriented financial reform.
DealBook »

Futures Commission Appointees Talk With Senate PanelFutures Commission Appointees Talk With Senate Panel  |  The nominees â€" Timothy Massad, who would become chairman, and Sharon Bowen and Christopher Giancarlo â€" now await a vote from the panel and full confirmation by the Senate.
DealBook »

Greek Bank Set to Be First in 5 Years to Tap Capital Markets  |  Piraeus Bank, Greece’s largest lender, is planning to issue a bond that will be a significant test of investor interest.
DealBook »

The Hurdles in Getting Past a Wall of SilenceThe Hurdles in Getting Past a Wall of Silence  |  The Justice Department may have feared reopening the debate about whether it adequately respects attorney-client privilege if it allowed regulators to pursue notes by JPMorgan Chase’s lawyers on the bank’s ties to Bernard L. Madoff, Peter J. Henning writes in the White Collar Watch column.
DealBook »



Service to Aid Start-Ups Raises $35 Million in New Round of Financing

With more people harboring hopes of building the next hot Web or mobile start-up â€" and perhaps reaping a big payday â€" General Assembly, a school of sorts for budding entrepreneurs, is growing as well.

On Friday, the three-year-old General Assembly said that it had raised more than $35 million in a new round led by Institutional Venture Partners, which will gain a seat on its board. Other investors included GSV Capital and Western Technology Investment, the latter of which provided debt financing that could help lower the company’s cost of capital over time.

Since opening its doors in early 2011, the company has grown to more than 100,000 students, about 6,000 of whom have finished from coursework taught at eight locations. The new round of financing, General Assembly’s third, is meant to support the company as it continues to expand into an academy for coders, designers and marketers, according to Jake Schwartz, a co-founder and chief executive of the start-up.

“We’ve always had a big vision of General Assembly,” he said in a telephone interview. “We’ll hopefully be around for the next 50 to 75 years, if not longer.”

Among the moves that the company plans to make are building more campuses and creating new teaching initiatives. And the company wants to build its offerings for other companies, including big corporations like NYSE Euronext and American Express.

“What we really focus on is being a full-service provider,” Mr. Schwartz said.



Service to Aid Start-Ups Raises $35 Million in New Round of Financing

With more people harboring hopes of building the next hot Web or mobile start-up â€" and perhaps reaping a big payday â€" General Assembly, a school of sorts for budding entrepreneurs, is growing as well.

On Friday, the three-year-old General Assembly said that it had raised more than $35 million in a new round led by Institutional Venture Partners, which will gain a seat on its board. Other investors included GSV Capital and Western Technology Investment, the latter of which provided debt financing that could help lower the company’s cost of capital over time.

Since opening its doors in early 2011, the company has grown to more than 100,000 students, about 6,000 of whom have finished from coursework taught at eight locations. The new round of financing, General Assembly’s third, is meant to support the company as it continues to expand into an academy for coders, designers and marketers, according to Jake Schwartz, a co-founder and chief executive of the start-up.

“We’ve always had a big vision of General Assembly,” he said in a telephone interview. “We’ll hopefully be around for the next 50 to 75 years, if not longer.”

Among the moves that the company plans to make are building more campuses and creating new teaching initiatives. And the company wants to build its offerings for other companies, including big corporations like NYSE Euronext and American Express.

“What we really focus on is being a full-service provider,” Mr. Schwartz said.



BNP Paribas, Bank of America Suspend Employees in Currency Investigation

LONDON - Two more banks have suspended employees in the latest escalation of an investigation into potential manipulation of the $5 trillion-a-day foreign exchange markets, according to people with knowledge with the matter.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch has placed Joseph Landes, the head of spot foreign exchange trading in Europe, on leave, while BNP Paribas has suspended Robert de Groot, its head of spot currency trading, according to the people, who were not authorized to speak publicly.

Mr. Landes is currently listed as inactive in a register of bank employees maintained by the Financial Conduct Authority, the British financial regulator.

Mr. Landes and Mr. de Groot couldn’t be reached for comment on Friday.

Bank of America and BNP Paribas declined comment.

The Wall Street Journal reported the suspensions on Thursday.

Regulators in Britain, the United States and other countries are investigating whether traders at the world’s largest banks colluded to manipulate key currency benchmarks, such as the 4 p.m. fix for pound sterling to United States dollar.

More than 20 traders have been placed on leave or fired as a result of internal investigations at several large institutions in foreign exchange trading, including Barclays, JPMorgan Chase and UBS.

Deutsche Bank, the largest player in the currency trading market, with a share of about 15.2 percent, and Citigroup have fired employees as a result of their own investigations.

None of the banks nor any of the suspended or fired traders has been accused of wrongdoing.

Earlier this week, the Bank of England announced that it had suspended an employee amid its own internal review into whether bank officials knew of or condoned manipulation of the currency markets.

The central bank has said that an “extensive” internal review of documents, emails and other records found no evidence that Bank of England staff members colluded in any way in manipulating the currency market or in sharing of confidential client information.

But a staff member was suspended pending an investigation into whether the employee complied with its internal control processes, the central bank said. The Bank of England staff member hasn’t been identified.

Mark J. Carney, the Bank of England governor, is expected to appear before the Treasury Select Committee next week, and will be questioned about the currency trading investigation.

Andrew Tyrie, the Treasury Select Committee chairman, has called for a stronger board at the Bank of England in light of the investigation.

The central bank has faced questions in recent months about communications between its staff members and traders on an industry subcommittee that discussed issues affecting the currency markets.

Mr. de Groot, the suspended BNP trader, is one of several traders who served on the subcommittee; a number of them have been fired or suspended by their employers.

The subcommittee, which was made up of Bank of England officials, industry leaders and trade group members, met three or four times a year to discuss developments in the markets. The last time the subcommittee met was in February 2013.

According to minutes of the subcommittee released earlier this week, the issue of potential manipulation of currency benchmarks was discussed by the panel as far back as July 2006.

“It was noted that there was evidence of attempts to move the market around popular fixing times by players that had no particular interest in that fix,” according to the minutes of the July 2006 meeting.