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Banamex Fraud Exposes Challenges for Citi in Mexico

For some top Citigroup executives, it was a kind of little black book: an informal tally of Mexican companies that they feared could imperil the bank’s “crown jewel” â€" a sprawling retail lender called Banamex.

Using that list, which one top executive referred to as the “book of redlined clients,” the bank severed ties to multiple companies in Mexico in the financial crisis year of 2008, part of a broad scrubbing of risk throughout Citigroup, former executives said.

But a $400 million fraud at its Banamex unit that was discovered last month highlights the limitations of that kind of culling, and more broadly points to the challenges of finding solid lending clients in a country where the line between big business and political cronyism can become blurred.

The loss is also drawing attention to the longtime leadership of Citigroup’s Mexico chairman, Manuel Medina-Mora, 62, a star at the bank, where he is known for his dapper suits and corner-office polish.

Citigroup officials have largely blamed recent problems at Banamex on a combination of bad luck and bad actors. But a closer look at Banamex’s lending business reveals potentially more systemic challenges: The bank has been placing large bets on a few risky corporate borrowers.

The $400 million fraud involving an oil services company, Oceanografía, for example, erased 19 percent of the Banamex banking unit’s profits last year, according to one analyst’s estimate. Oceanografía, which is known in Mexico and in the corporate bond market for its checkered financial history, is one of Banamex’s 10 largest corporate clients, a person briefed on the matter said.

The bank’s problems, though, go beyond the troubled Oceanografía loans. Banamex officials were also caught short last year after roughly $300 million in loans to a handful of Mexican home builders suddenly soured. The loans, according to Moody’s Investor Services, amounted to about 3 percent of Banamex’s Tier One capital, a metric that regulators watch to determine a bank’s financial health. Many of the home builders’ assets are likely to have been “wiped out,” a lawyer for one of the troubled developers said. Citigroup officials say that they have built reserves to cushion any ensuing losses, noting that Banamex remains well capitalized.

The Mexican home builder setback, in which other banks also suffered losses, illustrates one of the peculiar challenges of doing business in emerging markets, where investments are often tied to decisions by government leaders. The problems for the Mexican builders, for example, began after a policy shift effectively killed the developers’ suburban projects, threatening their ability to pay back the loans.

Through his long career as one of Mexico’s top bankers, Mr. Medina-Mora has proved adept at navigating the political challenges, according to his former and current associates.

But the bank he built has been considered something of a “black box” â€" a highly profitable but not especially transparent unit that was run with great autonomy by its leader, according to current and former bank executives. Sometimes, though, that autonomy rankled other executives in New York, the people said.

Ever since Citigroup acquired Banamex in 2001, Mr. Medina-Mora made it clear that “I will take care of Mexico,” said one of the former executives who, like the other current and former executives interviewed for this article, declined to be identified.

Through a spokesman, Mr. Medina-Mora declined to comment.

“We dispute assertions that the management team is autonomous,” a bank spokesman said in a statement. “While Banamex is a subsidiary of Citigroup, it is absolutely subject to the same risk, control, anti-money laundering and technology standards and oversight which are required throughout the company.”

The relationship has worked well for more than a decade for Banamex, Citigroup and Mr. Medina-Mora personally. Mr. Medina-Mora has climbed to the top of Citigroup’s ranks: He was named the bank’s co-president last year. Yet with each new set of responsibilities he assumes at Citigroup â€" head of Latin America, head of consumer banking for North America, head of consumer banking worldwide â€" Mr. Medina-Mora has always retained a leadership role at the Mexican banking unit, raising questions about whether he is stretched too thin.

Mr. Medina-Mora is no longer running Banamex’s day-to-day operations, but as the bank’s Mexico chairman he broadly oversees Citigroup’s franchises in that country, including Banamex. Day-to-day operations are handled by Banamex’s chief executive, Javier Arrigunaga.

Serious concerns about oversight at the Mexican unit have rarely surfaced, at least in part because a fairly stable national economy has helped Banamex generate strong returns. In fact, Banamex has better returns than Citigroup as a whole, with a 2 percent return on assets, compared with about 1 percent at Citi, according to Michael Mayo, an analyst with CLSA.

But lending to corporations is not a big growth area for Banamex or other banks. Corporate lending has been growing at a far slower pace than consumer loans, according to analysts.

The bank has also faced increasing competition in recent years, as Mexican businesses found willing lenders in the corporate bond market.

More fundamentally, there are a limited number of borrowers that the banks deem creditworthy in Mexico, and many of those companies do business with the government.

“It is a reflection of the oligopoly we have in the Mexican economy,” said David Olivares Villagomez, a senior credit officer at Moody’s in Mexico City.

The 2008 efforts by Citigroup executives to reduce risk among corporate clients in Mexico led to a further consolidation of Banamex’s lending book, according to several former executives with knowledge of the matter.

As the book of so-called redlined clients filled up, there were fewer clients to whom Banamex was willing to lend, the former executives said.

That may help explain why Banamex had such a large exposure to a single oil services company, Oceanografía. But it does not explain how the bank ended up extending $585 million in short-term credit to a company that had warned its own bond investors that it was “from time to time subject to various accusations, including accusations of corrupt practices.”

Oceanografía has long been the subject of speculation in Mexico over its quick rise after 2002, which some suspected was a result of ties to high-ranking Mexican officials. These connections, however, have never been proved. Since then, the company has won multiple contracts to become an important supplier of marine engineering services to Mexico’s state oil monopoly, Pemex.

Oceanografía provides construction, maintenance and vessel-chartering services to Pemex’s exploration and production subsidiary.

Oceanografía’s fortunes, however, changed sharply last month after it became the subject of a new government review that resulted in a suspension of government contracts to Oceanografía for the next 20 months. Banamex had advanced as much $585 million to Oceanografía through an accounts receivable program.

The program was supposed to work like this: Banamex would advance money to Oceanografía to provide services to Pemex. The oil giant would then pay back Banamex, verifying invoices provided by Oceanografía to confirm that the work had been completed. In theory, Banamex was relying on Pemex’s ability to pay back the bank.

Similar to the home builders, which relied on government subsidies to finance their suburban developments, Oceanografía’s business relied on government contracts from Pemex. But when those ties were cut, the problems quickly surfaced. Shortly after the suspension of government contracts to the oil services company, Citigroup said it discovered the fraud at its Mexican unit, involving Oceanografía.

The bank said Tuesday in a statement: “While we continue to investigate what took place in Mexico, we are working to identify any areas where we need to strengthen our controls through stronger oversight or improved processes.”



A Turnaround for Bitcoin at SXSW

AUSTIN, Tex. â€" At last year’s South by Southwest gathering, regarded as the place where are the hip technology companies showed up, Bitcoin was still such an underdog that it was not important enough to command a single event or panel.

This year, it is hard to avoid the upstart virtual currency. Bitcoin has been the subject of official events at SXSW’s largest venues, and was also the buzz at after-parties that had luminaries from the tech world in attendance.

It was soon after SXSW last year that Bitcoin won an informal stamp of approval from the Treasury Department. That helped send the price of a Bitcoin on a wild ride, starting at around $50 and rising to more than $250, before a quick crash.

Since then, it has experienced several run-ups and quick drops. Most recently the price was sent careening after the collapse of the first big Bitcoin exchange, Mt. Gox, which raised questions about the long-term viability of Bitcoin.

Still, the sheer number of events, and the level of interest in virtual currency, at SXSW underscored the degree of fascination that Bitcoin is generating in the mainstream tech sector, and the broad applications that some people are imagining for it.

“Anyone who has any interest in technology has to be interested in this,” said Russell Castagnaro, who was attending his second SXSW for his job with the Hawaii Information Consortium.

Mr. Castagnaro has attended as many of the Bitcoin events as he has been able to pack in, finishing with a meetup on Tuesday morning of Bitangels, a group that is trying to connect start-ups with angel investors.

Mr. Castagnaro is hoping that governments will begin to use the ledger that is a part of the Bitcoin system to transfer property and make payments easier. There were people from about a dozen different countries at the Bitangels events, and only a few of them were involved with Bitcoin companies.

Even at events not specifically about Bitcoin, the topic frequently came up. At a panel discussion on “The Future of Money,” hosted by Yahoo, one panelist was from PayPal and the other from BitPay, a company that enables merchants to accept virtual currency payments.

The rapper Nas brought it up during a panel discussion that featured the venture capitalist Ben Horowitz, co-founder of Andreessen Horowitz, a firm that has invested about $50 million in Bitcoin-related start-ups. Mr. Horowitz said he believed Bitcoin was like “the Internet of money.”

At one of the most exclusive parties at the conference, hosted by Nas and Mr. Horowitz, the two kibitzed with Fred Ehrsam, the chief executive of Coinbase, a Bitcoin company they have both recently invested in.

“Once you get people talking about this, you can’t get them to talk about anything else,” Mr. Ehrsam said.

For Bitcoin entrepreneurs, the rise from scrappy outsiders to tech world insiders has been a bit dizzying. A year ago, Coinbase, for instance, was barely up and running and consisted of just Mr. Ehrsam and a partner. This year, his first time at SXSW, Mr. Ehrsam was invited to be the main speaker at a session on Monday afternoon in one of the conference’s largest venues, which drew a large crowd.

Mr. Ehrsam’s event, and many others, have frequently had to address the scandals that have plagued the virtual currency, including the downfall of Mt. Gox, and the frequent use of it for illegal means.

At the Bitangels meeting, a man from Spain said, “I am really skeptical about Bitcoin, but I’m willing to learn,” while an entrepreneur from Los Angeles said he was concerned “about the snake oil aspects of it.”

Mr. Ehrsam, like many other Bitcoin backers, argued that Mt. Gox was a company that used Bitcoin, but it was not important to the underlying decentralized network that Bitcoin runs on. As a result, he said, its collapse should not threaten the basic technology that was invented in 2009 to allow digital money to be moved around the Internet. Many of the Bitcoin start-ups at the conference were pitching services that would make virtual currency accounts more secure with things like multiple-signature capabilities.

Bitcoin fans are hoping that the events at SXSW will help broaden the acceptance of virtual currencies beyond the early adopters and speculators who have driven many of the price moves until now.

But these fans are also imagining such rapid growth for the currency that they think a year from now, Bitcoin may be helping SXSW rather than the other way around.

“Bitcoin could help SXSW continue to evolve as some of the other trends drop away,” said Michael Terpin, the founder of Bitangels.



Chobani Said to Seek Investment That Would Value It at $5 Billion


Big investors are vying for a piece of Chobani, the fast-growing yogurt maker in upstate New York.

Chobani, less than a decade old, is in talks with six potential investors for a deal that could value it at $5 billion, a person with direct knowledge of the discussions said Tuesday. The company is looking to finalize an investment in the first half of the year, with an eye toward expanding internationally.

The bidders include two companies that would provide a strategic alliance, two equity investors and two lenders, said this person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The identities of the bidders could not be determined.

Chobani is looking to sell a stake of 15 percent or less, giving it a shot of capital to ramp up distribution and manufacturing, the person said. The company may seek to go public down the road, but no offering is expected this year.

Bank of America is working with Chobani as the company explores its options, said another person briefed on the matter.

Founded in 2005 by Hamdi Ulukaya, a Turkish immigrant, Chobani has capitalized on the explosive popularity of Greek yogurt in the United States, with its sales growing more than 30 percent last year to above $1 billion. But it remains closely held by its founder.

This month, Chobani invested about $4 million to expand its big manufacturing plant in Twin Falls, Idaho, but it is seeking more capital to propel an expansion overseas. Currently, the company sells yogurt only in the United States and Australia.

Politicians in New York have embraced yogurt production as a booming business in an otherwise sleepy region, and they rushed to Chobani’s defense when the Russian government blocked a shipment of the company’s yogurt bound for American athletes competing in the Winter Olympics in Sochi.

That standoff ended in disappointment for Chobani, with the company opting to donate its Sochi-bound yogurt to New York and New Jersey food banks. But with fresh capital, the company may yet have another shot at flexing its muscles in foreign markets.

News of the recent talks was reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal online.



Herbalife Shares Fall as Ackman Makes New Accusations


Shares in Herbalife fell by more than 2 percent on Tuesday as the hedge fund manager William A. Ackman accused the company, which sells vitamins, shakes and other supplements, of “operating illegally” in China.

Speaking during a conference call that lasted more than two hours, Mr. Ackman, the billionaire founder of the firm Pershing Square Capital Management, called the company’s accounting of its Chinese business as “highly misleading.”

Pointing to internal documents obtained from a former employee at Herbalife, Mr. Ackman argued that Herbalife’s Chinese operations were identical to its business in other countries such as the United States and Mexico. That would be problematic because Chinese laws prohibit any multilevel marketing and direct marketing, Mr. Ackman said.

Herbalife’s shares recovered slightly after the presentation but closed down 1.1 percent for the day at $65.39.

The call was the latest in a no-holds-barred brawl between Herbalife and Mr. Ackman, who in December 2012 announced a $1 billion wager betting that the stock price of Herbalife would fall. Over the past 14 months, Mr. Ackman has lobbied members of Congress to pressure state and federal regulators, particularly the Federal Trade Commission, to investigate Herbalife. He has also paid consultants to help organize protests, news conferences and letter-writing campaigns in four states, as part of an attempt to build momentum for regulators to step in.

Mr. Ackman, who is sitting on $500 million of paper losses on his bet so far, would profit only if the company’s stock spirals downward. During the call, Mr. Ackman remained steadfast in his conviction, saying, “There is no circumstance under which we are wrong,” while poking fun at the company.

But he also offered to compensate whistle-blowers who come forward for any losses they might incur, indicating he was continuing to pursue all avenues to push regulators to look into the company.

“Herbalife’s actions speak louder than their words,” he said, referring to the fact that Herbalife has not opened its doors to the regulators. “The company could exonerate itself by simply inviting the F.T.C. in to investigate.”

By booking royalty fees as hourly consultant pay, the company is hiding the fact that it makes money based on sales to distributors in its network, David Klafter, Mr. Ackman’s lawyer said on the call.

Herbalife is “violating civil and criminal law,” said Mr. Klafter. He later added that the company “will collapse in a flurry of litigation.”

During the call Mr. Ackman orchestrated presentations by Mr. Klafter; Ben Hakim, a Pershing Square partner; and Aaron Smith Levin, the founder of the OTG Research Group.

Mr. Ackman then opened the floor to questions from participants, who emailed them through a website Mr. Ackman has set up. One participant asked whether regulators would investigate knowing that a hedge fund stood to benefit from Herbalife’s collapse.

Mr. Ackman said he expected the government to get involved after the attention brought to the issue by a New York Times article on Monday, adding it was “not my favorite article but it was very helpful.”

Another participant asked Mr. Ackman whether he thought Herbalife would open operations in North Korea. “When they run out of other countries,” he replied, laughing.

Wrapping up the call, Mr. Ackman added: “We would not short Herbalife if we didn’t think it was important for the country.”

In a one-page statement sent in response to Mr. Ackman’s latest allegations, Herbalife said that it “remains confident in its business in China, which is built on customers enjoying and benefiting from our nutrition products each and every day.”



Inquiries to Change Dynamics of Currency Trading

Around the world, investigators are trying to find out if the largely unregulated foreign exchange market was manipulated. Even before the investigations are completed, the pace of change will pick up in the $5 trillion-a-day market, in both what moves currencies and the way business is done.

Regulators are investigating whether some traders profited from knowledge of how clients wanted to trade around the time that widely used benchmark prices were set. Chatter about rumored flows has long been a way of life in foreign exchange, and not just at benchmark-setting minutes.

The economic logic for talking is simple and strong, as a 2013 Bank for International Settlements working paper shows. Knowledge of customer order flows, particularly from asset managers, has “a significant economic value for a dealer.” Dealers’ gains are amplified as the market concentrates.

The investigations have awakened the traders’ employers. Several banks have curbed the use of online chatrooms, long used to swap rumors and nuggets of information. And the traders, after more than 20 of them have been suspended or fired, are being far more circumspect about what they share. Muffling the echo chamber of foreign exchange chatter will mute the impact of client orders, since fewer people will be able to jump on the bandwagon of rumored flows.

Because of the heightened sensitivity about fairness to clients, even more currency business is likely to be done on electronic trading platforms: humans can be accused of mishandling such information, machines can’t. Three-quarters of global foreign exchange trading volume is already processed electronically, according to financial research firm Greenwich Associates. It is 28 percent for the currency options part of the market. Because banks get higher margins on options than on spot trading, foreign exchange profits will be squeezed if “electronification” makes inroads in that part of the market.

It looks like regulators will take some time to decide whether the foreign exchange rates were manipulated and what to do about it. Currency markets, always quick to anticipate news, won’t wait for the final results. They will start adjusting to the new environment before it’s unveiled.

Aaron Byrd/The New York Times

Swaha Pattanaik is a markets columnist at Reuters Breakingviews. For more independent commentary and analysis, visit breakingviews.com.



New York Financial Regulator Solicits Virtual Currency Proposals

At a time when some government agencies are backing away from virtual currency, New York’s top financial regulator is taking a big step forward.

On Tuesday, Benjamin M. Lawsky, the superintendent of the state’s Department of Financial Services, issued his first public order on virtual currencies like Bitcoin, calling for proposals for creating regulated exchanges.

“The companies that are now being asked to come apply in this order are going to largely be the companies that say we have the desire, wherewithal and the resources to do this the right way,” Mr. Lawsky said in an interview. “We are creating a situation where we’ll hopefully be driving consumer confidence in the firms that want to come here now and set up their exchanges with all the appropriate protections in place.”

Soliciting companies to formally register with Mr. Lawsky’s office is notable, if only for the lack of regulation elsewhere.

Governments around the world are now struggling to figure out how to oversee Bitcoin, a computer-based form of money without a central location, amid mounting concerns about money laundering, drug trafficking and other illicit transactions.

“I think it’s a very big deal,” Gil Luria, a managing director at Wedbush Securities who has written about virtual currency, said of Mr. Lawsky’s order. “I think this is the type of regulatory treatment Bitcoin was hoping for.”

Bitcoin has quickly gained a loyal following of technology entrepreneurs, venture capital firms and anti-establishment libertarians drawn to a payment system that circumvents the traditional banking industry.

But the collapse of one of Bitcoin’s largest exchanges last month turned up the heat on federal authorities to issue better regulations. Mt. Gox, which at one point handled 80 percent of all Bitcoin transactions, filed for bankruptcy protection in the United States and Japan, claiming to have lost nearly 750,000 of its customers’ Bitcoins, worth close to $500 million.

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Wall Street’s self-regulator, put out a warning to investors on Tuesday about fraud and other risks it associates with the virtual currency.

Mr. Lawsky has in the past made his openness to Bitcoin clear. He said on Tuesday that his office will be looking for sufficient cybersecurity protections and capital reserves, and will conduct background checks on any potential management teams.

Mr. Lawsky’s office has not yet come out with the regulatory framework that would ultimately guide any proposals, however. In a statement, the office says it that intends to come out with such framework “no later than the end of the second quarter of 2014,” and that it was working on a “BitLicense” for companies operating in New York.

But until other states and countries implement their own virtual currency guidelines, registration in New York can only go so far for companies that operate in multiple jurisdictions.

“If we do it right, it could be a nice model for other states,” Mr. Lawsky said.



Will the Real Satoshi Nakamoto Please Stand Up?

TOKYO â€" Satoshi Nakamoto of Fujisawa, Japan, is a shoe repairman.

Satoshi Nakamoto of Hiroshima is preparing to open a men’s clothing store. And Satoshi Nakamoto in Tokyo is a Primal Scream-loving former worker at a rental music studio, according to the studio’s Twitter feed.

There are at least 28 other Satoshi Nakamotos with listed phone numbers in Japan, and even more on Facebook. Like Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto, the California man profiled in a recent Newsweek article, they all deny creating Bitcoin, the virtual currency.

The identity of the math genius credited as the architect of Bitcoin has been a long-running curiosity among Bitcoin believers but the public at large ever-since the online currency had been created. But since the Newsweek article emerged, there has been a renewed interest in pinning down the “real” Satoshi Nakamoto. And although it has been widely suggested that the name may just be a pseudonym for a person or group of people, those who are named such have been enjoying a lot of attention.

“It’s not me. I only heard of Bitcoin a few months ago, and it sounds risky,” Satoshi Nakamoto said from his “Leather Clinic” shoe-and-bag repair shop in Fujisawa, just south of Tokyo.

“I was amused to hear we had the same name, but I prefer real money to virtual money,” said Satoshi Nakamoto of Hiroshima, who recently moved to Tokyo to open “Decollo,” a clothing store for fashion-conscious “salarymen” in Tokyo.

Newsweek called the name Satoshi Nakamoto “distinctive.” But if the magazine’s investigation had extended to Japan, where that name originates, it would have found that neither of those names are, in fact, distinctive.

About 50,000 people share the Nakamoto family name in Japan, written here using at least five different combinations of characters, according to Hiroshi Morioka, an expert on the study of Japanese surnames. In its most common rendering â€" using the characters for “middle” and “main,” â€" Nakamoto is Japan’s 487th most common family name out of over 100,000 known surnames here, he said.

“In general, he said, any name in the top 500 is considered a major name,” Mr. Morioka said in an email. By comparison, the 487th common last name in the United States is Bryan, he said.

Satoshi, meanwhile, was among Japan’s top most common given names for boys in the 1960s and 1970s, though the moniker’s popularity has fallen in recent years, according to an annual survey of given names by Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance.

It does not help that the exact rendering in Japanese of the Satoshi Nakamoto of Bitcoin fame remain unknown. A Japanese translation exists of the 2008 paper in which Mr. Nakamoto famously laid out his design of a new digital currency.

Prepared by Roger Ver, a Bitcoin angel investor, the Japanese document is signed in Japanese. But the characters used was just guesswork, Mr. Ver said in an email. “There isn’t any evidence that the Bitcoin Satoshi ever wrote anything in Japanese, ever,” he said.

Written in a variety of ways, other Satoshi Nakamotos identified across Japan include an obstetrician, a councilman, a tour bus operator; an official in the Tottori prefecture office, the president of a company that makes food sterilization devices, a marketing consultant, as well as employees of Mitsubishi Electric, JFE Steel, Itochu and Asahi Calpis Beverage.

One of the likelier candidates, a researcher in telecommunications engineering at Kobe University, did not return a request for comment.

Of course, there is the issue of English language ability. Most Satoshi Nakamotos here were are unlikely to be able to write in the lucid English that characterize the Bitcoin founder’s known writing style.

If the name is indeed a pseudonym, one frequently cited candidate is the mathematician Shinichi Mochizuki, of Kyoto University. The professor shot to Bitcoin fame last year after Ted Nelson, the American technologist, singled him out as a figure who seemed to fit the known traits of the Bitcoin creator: genius, reclusiveness and English ability.

Mr. Mochizuki, has so far declined to give any statement to the media. A research assistant said that he “absolutely refused to comment.”



Men’s Wearhouse to Buy Jos. A. Bank

Updated, 12:33 p.m. | Men’s Wearhouse agreed on Tuesday to buy its rival Jos. A. Bank Clothiers for $65 a share in cash, ending months of hostilities between the two retailers.

The companies and their advisers worked through the weekend and finally agreed on a deal that values Jos. A. Bank at $1.8 billion, and will bring together the two leaders in affordable menswear.

Among the terms of the deal, Jos. A. Bank will terminate its agreement to acquire Eddie Bauer.

Despite months of public bickering between the two companies, Douglas S. Ewert, the Men’s Wearhouse chief executive, welcomed his new colleagues in a statement. “All of us at Men’s Wearhouse have great respect for the Jos. A. Bank management team and are eager to work with Jos. A. Bank’s talented employees,” he said.

Robert N. Wildrick, the chairman of Jos. A. Bank’s board who had led deal talks for the company, said that after months of negotiations, he had obtained the best possible deal for shareholders.

“The transaction we are announcing today clearly reflects the success of our efforts, providing a substantial premium over any price at which our stock has ever traded, including a 56 percent premium since our interest in Men’s Wearhouse became public last October, and allowing our shareholders to receive immediate consideration for their holdings,” he said in a statement.

The combined company expects to be the fourth-largest men’s apparel retailer in the United States, with annual revenue of about $3.5 billion.

Jos. A. Bank attempted to acquire Men’s Wearhouse in October for $48 a share, or $2.3 billion, in a surprise takeover bid just months after George Zimmer, the Men’s Wearhouse founder, was pushed out as chairman of the company.

Men’s Wearhouse swiftly rejected the offer, and was soon exploring buying the shoemaker Allen Edmonds in a deal some viewed as a defensive move.

By late October, pressure for Men’s Wearhouse to engage in deal talks was ratcheting up, with Jos. A. Bank offering to raise its bid if it gained access to Men’s Wearhouse’s books, and the hedge fund Eminence Capital called for Men’s Wearhouse to engage in talks.

But by mid-November, Jos. A. Bank dropped its bid, and just weeks later Men’s Wearhouse struck back, offering $1.5 billion for its onetime suitor and paving the way for the deal announced on Tuesday.

Men’s Wearhouse will finance the deal with debt financing from Bank of America Merrill Lynch and JPMorgan Chase, but said it expected to deliver quickly because of the strong cash flow from the combined companies.

Bank of America and JPMorgan advised Men’s Wearhouse, and Willkie Farr & Gallagher was the company’s legal adviser. Goldman Sachs and Financo were the financial advisers for Jos. A. Bank, and Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom and Guilfoil Petzall & Shoemake provided legal advice.



Bitcoin Foundation Bolsters Its Ranks

The Bitcoin Foundation is adding to its ranks as regulators around the world struggle with how to oversee the evolving world of digital currency.

The foundation announced on Tuesday that it had hired Jim Harper, director of information policy studies at the libertarian research group the Cato Institute, as global policy counsel. Mr. Harper will act as a liaison to governments around the world for the foundation, a nonprofit advocacy group that has previously met with federal regulators in an effort to push for a broader understanding and adoption of Bitcoin.

“Like many in the Bitcoin community, he is passionate about doing his part in achieving Bitcoin’s social and economic potential,” a spokeswoman for the foundation, Jinyoung Lee Englund, said in an email.

Mr. Harper’s appointment with the foundation is effective immediately. He will remain at Cato in the reduced role of a senior fellow.

In addition to Mr. Harper, the foundation announced it had hired Amy Weiss as a consultant, bringing the group’s total number of full-time employees to eight, all of whom are paid in Bitcoin. Ms. Weiss has previously served as a White House deputy press secretary under Bill Clinton and as vice president of public affairs for the United Nations Foundation.

The hirings come at a turning point in the world of computer-driven virtual currency, as regulators weigh how to manage a rapidly evolving marketplace with no central regulator or authority. The announcements came the same day as the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Wall Street’s self-regulator, issued an investor alert warning of Bitcoin’s risks.

“As with so many other ‘hot’ or new trends, fraudsters may see the latest digital currency trend as a chance to steal your money through old-fashioned fraud,” the warning stated.

Last month, the Bitcoin community was rattled by the collapse of Mt. Gox, which was at one point the largest online Bitcoin exchange.

Mt. Gox filed for bankruptcy protection in the United States on Sunday after announcing that nearly 750,000 of its customers’ Bitcoins, worth close to $500 million, had gone missing. The company has also filed for bankruptcy in Japan.

The bankruptcy brought even more scrutiny to a fledgling currency that already has some regulators worried about its potential use in drug trafficking and other illegal activities. Federal prosecutors are currently investigating Silk Road, the now-defunct online marketplace accused of aiding money laundering and other illicit transactions.

Authorities in other countries are also struggling with just how to oversee Bitcoin. Russia, for example, has banned the currency altogether, while other countries, including Germany, have generally favored the new technology.

Mr. Harper previously served as a member of the Department of Homeland Security’s Data Privacy and Integrity Advisory Committee. He was already a member of the Bitcoin Foundation before his appointment as global policy counsel, and he has made it clear that he favors integrating Bitcoin into existing regulation rather than creating new rules specific to virtual currency.

“Technology-specific regulation is generally eschewed by most people,” Mr. Harper said on Tuesday. “So the idea that Bitcoin should be specifically regulated doesn’t make a lot of sense.”



Puerto Rico’s Debt Sale Is Met With Strong Demand

Faced with very strong demand from hedge funds and wealthy individuals, Puerto Rico on Tuesday sold 17 percent more debt than it originally planned, a sign that the commonwealth still has ample access to the capital markets.

Puerto Rico sold $3.5 billion of debt at an 8.72 percent yield, a high rate that attracted investors willing to bet that the financially troubled commonwealth  has the means to pay back its debts. The commonwealth had originally planned to sell $3 billion on Tuesday, but its bankers found about five times as many buyers for the bonds as they could accommodate, according to a person briefed on the matter.

The sale, which comes amid fears that Puerto Rico will need to restructure its existing debt, is a coup for the island’s lead bankers on the deal: Barclays, Morgan Stanley and RBC Capital Markets.

Some analysts had earlier questioned whether Puerto Rico would be able to sell the bonds at all, given its precarious financial condition. Others predicted that Puerto Rico would have to pay rates of as much as 10 percent to attract bond buyers.

“The reception on the deal reflects the market’s confidence that the situation in the commonwealth is improving,” Ken Friedrich, a managing director in RBC’s municipal sales, trading and syndication, said in a statement.

The successful bond sale will help ease some of Puerto Rico’s near-term liquidity issues by helping to refinance debt and ease budgetary strains. But it does not solve the island’s long-term problems, such as a stubbornly high unemployment and shrinking population. The island still faces a municipal debt load of $70 billion, which is a relatively high burden for its residents.

Last week, Puerto Rico’s fiscal agent, the Government Development Bank, announced that it had hired Millco, an affiliate of the well-known restructuring firm Millstein & Company to help it sort through its obligations and cash flow needs.

The proceeds from the $3.5 bond deal should ease the need for a restructuring of the island’s debts, but it does not entirely eliminate the possibility that it would happen in the future, investors say.

Millstein & Co. was founded by James Millstein, a former Treasurer Department official who oversaw the overhaul of of the bailed-out insurance giant American International Group after the financial crisis.

Tuesday’s bond sale reflects a new development in the municipal debt market. The biggest demand for Puerto Rico’s debt came from hedge funds, a person briefed on the sale said. These investors have typically stayed away from the municipal market because the returns have not been high enough.

Amid near record low interest rates, hedge funds are starving for high-yielding, dollar-denominated debt investments.

In addition to Puerto Rico’s high yields â€" which are more than double that of a highly-rated municipal bond - the latest bonds also included some unusual enticements for investors, including a provision that would allow legal disputes to be settled in New York courts, rather than in Puerto Rico.

That provision was designed to soothe fears that investors would be at a disadvantage arguing their case a Puerto Rico court.

Still, the bonds carry considerable risks. As a United States territory, Puerto Rico cannot file for bankruptcy, which means any possible restructuring of its debt carries many unknowns. But investors are looking past those risks, citing the commonwealth’s recent progress at closing its budget deficit and its enhanced disclosure of financial information.

 

 



Blackstone to Acquire Cybersecurity Firm Accuvant

With the prospect of cyberattacks keeping corporations on edge, the Blackstone Group is investing in a company that aims to counteract such threats.

Blackstone, the world’s largest private equity firm, announced on Tuesday that it had agreed to buy a majority stake in Accuvant, a 12-year-old company that offers cybersecurity software and consulting services to companies and governments. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Sverica International, a private equity firm that owns a stake in Accuvant, is investing alongside Blackstone, according to the announcement. Accuvant’s management is also investing in the deal.

The investors are betting that the time is right for Accuvant to expand and try to win new customers. Hacking attacks like the recent one at Target are weighing on the minds of many corporate executives.

Accuvant, which is based in Denver, tries to stand out from its rivals by acting as an adviser in addition to a software provider. Its clients include the United States government, according to its website.

Blackstone has invested in a number of cybersecurity companies over the past couple years, often adopting their services for its own portfolio companies. These investments include Carbon Black (which later merged with Bit9) and iSight Partners, which gave Blackstone’s portfolio companies discounted access to its cybersecurity intelligence program last year.

But while those investments were for minority stakes, this one stands out because Blackstone is taking control. The deal is expected to close in April, pending regulatory approval.

“With this investment, we are excited to build upon Blackstone’s growing information security expertise as the sector becomes increasingly relevant across industries,” David Johnson, a senior managing director in Blackstone’s private equity group, said in a statement. (Mr. Johnson joined Blackstone last year from Dell, where he oversaw corporate strategy.)

Blackstone received advice from its own advisory arm and from the law firm Simpson Thacher & Bartlett.



Bank of England Governor Pledges More Integrity After Currency Inquiry

Aaron Byrd/The New York Times

LONDON - The Bank of England’s reputation is at stake as its independent directors conduct a review into whether bank officials knew of or condoned potential manipulation of the currency markets, Mark J. Carney, the bank’s governor, told lawmakers on Tuesday.

Last week, the central bank suspended one of its own employees after a series of investigations by regulators in Britain, the United States and elsewhere into whether currency traders colluded to manipulate the $5 trillion-a-day foreign exchange markets. A staff member was suspended pending the outcome of an investigation into whether the employee complied with its internal control processes, the Bank of England said.

The central bank has to be “beyond reproach,” Mr. Carney said in testimony before the Treasury Select Committee. As a result, the bank has adopted stricter policies requiring employees to escalate internally any reports of they receive of improper conduct and to attest to whether they were aware of any potential wrongdoing in the past.

“We can’t come out of this at the back end with a shadow of doubt about the integrity of the Bank of England,” Mr. Carney said. “We will not.”

As part of a restructuring of the organization to be revealed in detail next week, Mr. Carney said the Bank of England plans to create a new deputy governor position responsible for markets and banking.

The person’s first task will be to conduct a review of how the central bank conducts market intelligence and make sure its policies are consistently applied, he said.

Mr. Carney said the central bank was made aware of accusations regarding one of its employees by a member of the private sector on Oct. 16. That same day, Mr. Carney said that he discussed it with the Bank of England’s governors and they began an internal review.

The central bank’s general counsel also spoke with the head of enforcement at the Financial Conduct Authority, the British financial regulator, he said.

Mr. Carney said an internal review of documents, emails and other records found no evidence that Bank of England staff members colluded to manipulate the currency market or share confidential client information.

But, the central bank felt it was necessary to suspend an employee pending the outcome of an investigation now being conducted by its Oversight Committee, which is made up of the bank’s independent directors. The bank also is sharing information it uncovers with the F.C.A., Mr. Carney said.

The Bank of England 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.

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.

One lingering question has involved how long officials have known about issue. Minutes of the subcommittee indicate that the issue of potential manipulation of benchmark currency rates was discussed by the panel as early as July 2006.

Paul Fisher, the Bank of England executive director for markets, told the Treasury Select Committee on Tuesday that the minutes were referencing traders complaining about hedge funds or others executing large orders near the so-called fix - brief periods each day when foreign exchange trades are sampled to determine key currency rates.

“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.

A large trade near the fix could move the currency price dramatically and potentially cost currency dealers money since they promise to deal traders to their clients near the fix at certain times during the day, Mr. Fisher said.

“The shocking thing about this is dealers between different firms may be colluding,” Mr. Fisher said. “That’s the shocking thing” about the current investigations into the industry.

Mr. Carney said currency traders - facing pressure over the volatile nature of the markets near the fix - may have decided to game the system in order to reduce their risk.

“They decided to cheat, to make their life easier,” Mr. Carney told lawmakers. “That is not acceptable and has to be prosecuted to fullest extent of the law.”

Regulators worldwide are looking into whether currency traders colluded to manipulate benchmark currency rates for their own benefit.

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 percent, and Citigroup have fired employees as a result of their own investigations.

None of the banks or any of the suspended or fired traders has been accused of wrongdoing by the authorities.

Lloyds Banking Group suspended a senior currency trader last month amid questions about whether the trader improperly shared information about a large currency trade being made by Lloyds with a trader at another company, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The suspension was reported by Bloomberg News earlier Tuesday.

“We take individual allegations of this nature very seriously and we immediately launched an investigation into the specific allegations raised,” Lloyds said. “The investigation is ongoing and at this stage it would be inappropriate to speculate on its outcome. It is group policy not to comment on individual employees.”



A New Name for SAC Capital: Point72

The new name for the billionaire investor Steven A. Cohen’s family office is a signal that he is not about to move anytime soon from the headquarters of his hedge fund SAC Capital Advisors in Stamford, Conn.

In settling upon Point72 Asset Management as the name for the firm’s flagship operation, Mr. Cohen appeared to find inspiration in the address for SAC’s roughly 98,900 square-foot office at 72 Cummings Point Road. The new name, which the firm announced on Tuesday in a letter to employees, should end speculation that Mr. Cohen might seek to relocate to a less spacious building, if his new firm got much smaller than its current 850 employee work force.

“It reminds us of a sense of continuity: our headquarters has been at 72 Cummings Point Road for more than a decade, and we anticipate it will be our home for many years to come,” Tom Conheeney, SAC’s president, said in the letter. “Perhaps more important, the name emphasizes we point to a successful future.”

There has been a good deal of talk on Wall Street and among hedge fund managers about what Mr. Cohen would call the firm that will manage mostly his own money in the aftermath of SAC’s guilty plea in November to securities fraud charges and its agreement to pay a $1.2 billion penalty.

Some thought Mr. Cohen, 57, might opt to name the firm after some variation of Crown Lane, the name of the exclusive street in Greenwich, Conn., the location of his 35,000-square-foot home.

The new name will become official on April 7, just three days before Judge Laura Taylor Swain of Federal District Court in Lower Manhattan is scheduled to either approve or reject SAC’s guilty plea. Mr. Cohen is hoping the selection of the new name and Judge Swain’s acceptance of the firm’s plea will bring to a close an investigation into allegations of insider trading that has dogged SAC for nearly 10 years.

Last summer, federal prosecutors labeled SAC a breeding ground for illegal traders when it indicted the firm. Eight employees of SAC have either pleaded guilty to insider trading or been convicted at trial.

The most recent verdict came on Feb. 6, when a federal jury in New York convicted Mathew Martoma, a former SAC portfolio manager, of participating in the most lucrative insider trading scheme on record. The evidence during trial put an uncomfortable spotlight on Mr. Cohen, after a crucial government witness testified that an agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation told him that the primary target of the investigation was Mr. Cohen.

Federal prosecutors have not charged Mr. Cohen with any wrongdoing. But the Securities and Exchange Commission has a pending administrative action against him, accusing him of turning a blind eye to misconduct at his fund. Federal authorities continue to investigate SAC, but a person briefed on the matter said the inquiry was winding down and it was unlikely there would be a criminal prosecution of Mr. Cohen.

Mr. Cohen indicated late last year that as the firm converted to a family office, an investment firm that is less regulated than a hedge fund but does not manage money for outside investors, he would seek a new name for the firm he founded in 1992 with $25 million. Last month, Mr. Cohen and Mr. Conheeney outlined a plan to streamline SAC’s operation and reduce the number of distinct portfolios it operates to manage mainly $9 billion of Mr. Cohen’s money.

Mr. Conheeney said in the letter that besides the flagship, the new firm would also operate a stock trading portfolio in New York under the name EverPoint Asset Management. In Asia, the firm will use both the Point72 and EverPoint names. Traders and analysts currently working for SAC in the United States at the firm’s Sigma and CR Intrinsic divisions will be reassigned to either Point72 or EverPoint.

The firm’s quantitative strategies trading portfolio will be called Cubist Systematic Strategies, a reference, the letter said, to Cubist art. Mr. Cohen is a well-known art collector, who owns a Jeff Koons “Balloon Dog” that sits on the lawn of his Connecticut mansion.

Mr. Cohen has also said he wants to hire a former federal prosecutor or securities regulator to monitor trading at his investment firm in response to the insider trading investigation.

It appears that Mr. Cohen settled upon the new name for his firm at least a month ago. Corporate filings in New York reveal the three new firms were registered on Feb. 4. But Mr. Cohen held off on disclosing the new names when he announced his plans for streamlining SAC’s operation on Feb. 25.

Mr. Conheeney, without directly mentioning the trading scandal, ended the letter on an optimistic note and said better days were ahead for the firm, which last year at its peak managed $14 billion.

“We have been through a great deal during the past few years,” he said. “Our new names, combined with the other changes we have announced, are intended to help us to move forward.”



A New Name for SAC Capital: Point72

The new name for the billionaire investor Steven A. Cohen’s family office is a signal that he is not about to move anytime soon from the headquarters of his hedge fund SAC Capital Advisors in Stamford, Conn.

In settling upon Point72 Asset Management as the name for the firm’s flagship operation, Mr. Cohen appeared to find inspiration in the address for SAC’s roughly 98,900 square-foot office at 72 Cummings Point Road. The new name, which the firm announced on Tuesday in a letter to employees, should end speculation that Mr. Cohen might seek to relocate to a less spacious building, if his new firm got much smaller than its current 850 employee work force.

“It reminds us of a sense of continuity: our headquarters has been at 72 Cummings Point Road for more than a decade, and we anticipate it will be our home for many years to come,” Tom Conheeney, SAC’s president, said in the letter. “Perhaps more important, the name emphasizes we point to a successful future.”

There has been a good deal of talk on Wall Street and among hedge fund managers about what Mr. Cohen would call the firm that will manage mostly his own money in the aftermath of SAC’s guilty plea in November to securities fraud charges and its agreement to pay a $1.2 billion penalty.

Some thought Mr. Cohen, 57, might opt to name the firm after some variation of Crown Lane, the name of the exclusive street in Greenwich, Conn., the location of his 35,000-square-foot home.

The new name will become official on April 7, just three days before Judge Laura Taylor Swain of Federal District Court in Lower Manhattan is scheduled to either approve or reject SAC’s guilty plea. Mr. Cohen is hoping the selection of the new name and Judge Swain’s acceptance of the firm’s plea will bring to a close an investigation into allegations of insider trading that has dogged SAC for nearly 10 years.

Last summer, federal prosecutors labeled SAC a breeding ground for illegal traders when it indicted the firm. Eight employees of SAC have either pleaded guilty to insider trading or been convicted at trial.

The most recent verdict came on Feb. 6, when a federal jury in New York convicted Mathew Martoma, a former SAC portfolio manager, of participating in the most lucrative insider trading scheme on record. The evidence during trial put an uncomfortable spotlight on Mr. Cohen, after a crucial government witness testified that an agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation told him that the primary target of the investigation was Mr. Cohen.

Federal prosecutors have not charged Mr. Cohen with any wrongdoing. But the Securities and Exchange Commission has a pending administrative action against him, accusing him of turning a blind eye to misconduct at his fund. Federal authorities continue to investigate SAC, but a person briefed on the matter said the inquiry was winding down and it was unlikely there would be a criminal prosecution of Mr. Cohen.

Mr. Cohen indicated late last year that as the firm converted to a family office, an investment firm that is less regulated than a hedge fund but does not manage money for outside investors, he would seek a new name for the firm he founded in 1992 with $25 million. Last month, Mr. Cohen and Mr. Conheeney outlined a plan to streamline SAC’s operation and reduce the number of distinct portfolios it operates to manage mainly $9 billion of Mr. Cohen’s money.

Mr. Conheeney said in the letter that besides the flagship, the new firm would also operate a stock trading portfolio in New York under the name EverPoint Asset Management. In Asia, the firm will use both the Point72 and EverPoint names. Traders and analysts currently working for SAC in the United States at the firm’s Sigma and CR Intrinsic divisions will be reassigned to either Point72 or EverPoint.

The firm’s quantitative strategies trading portfolio will be called Cubist Systematic Strategies, a reference, the letter said, to Cubist art. Mr. Cohen is a well-known art collector, who owns a Jeff Koons “Balloon Dog” that sits on the lawn of his Connecticut mansion.

Mr. Cohen has also said he wants to hire a former federal prosecutor or securities regulator to monitor trading at his investment firm in response to the insider trading investigation.

It appears that Mr. Cohen settled upon the new name for his firm at least a month ago. Corporate filings in New York reveal the three new firms were registered on Feb. 4. But Mr. Cohen held off on disclosing the new names when he announced his plans for streamlining SAC’s operation on Feb. 25.

Mr. Conheeney, without directly mentioning the trading scandal, ended the letter on an optimistic note and said better days were ahead for the firm, which last year at its peak managed $14 billion.

“We have been through a great deal during the past few years,” he said. “Our new names, combined with the other changes we have announced, are intended to help us to move forward.”



Morning Agenda: Icahn’s Fight Against eBay

Marc Andreessen, the entrepreneur turned technology investor, has recently been caught in the verbal cross hairs of the activist investor Carl C. Icahn, Andrew Ross Sorkin writes in the DealBook column. The war of words stems from Mr. Icahn’s campaign to pressure eBay, the online auction company, to spin off its electronic payment unit PayPal. Among other things, he has accused Mr. Andreessen, an eBay board member, of various conflicts of interest that affected eBay’s sale of Skype in 2009 for $2.75 billion to a group of investors that included Mr. Andreessen’s venture capital firm.

The investor group’s decision to turn around and sell Skype for $8.5 billion to Microsoft less than two years after it acquired the company has been the fuel for Mr. Icahn’s fire. He claims that eBay was pressured to sell Skype by Mr. Andreessen, who knew Microsoft was waiting to scoop up the asset at a much higher price. “Sadly, the debate over Mr. Andreessen’s role is obscuring a larger and more important debate: Should PayPal continue to be part of eBay, or would it be more successful separately?” Mr. Sorkin writes.

He adds: “Whatever the right answer about whether eBay and PayPal should remain together or be separated, there are valid arguments on both sides. Perhaps a breakup is inevitable over the long term. In the meantime, let’s keep the debates on the facts.”

PUERTO RICO GETS A BREAK WITH RATES  |  The sun may finally be shining on Puerto Rico. The island is expected to sell roughly $3 billion in bonds on Tuesday at interest rates that are considerably lower than many investors in the municipal market had expected, Michael Corkery and Mary Williams Walsh write in DealBook. The tax-exempt debt is expected to be sold with yields from 8.62 to 8.87 percent, according to preliminary pricing documents circulated in the bond market on Monday.

Investors say the lower yields are being driven by a number of factors, including a recent flow of investments in mutual funds that are large buyers of municipal bonds, Puerto Rico’s progress in closing its chronic budget gap, its improved financial disclosures and a general sense of relief that the commonwealth still has access to the debt market. But even as Puerto Rico prepares fresh funds, its fiscal agent, the Government Development Bank, has hired an affiliate of a well-known restructuring firm, raising concerns among some investors that the island is weighing a revamping of its existing debt load.

Mr. Corkery and Ms. Walsh write: “At the moment, plenty of investors appear to be willing to look past the specter of a revamping as well as Puerto Rico’s current liquidity issues. They are betting that the $3 billion in new debt â€" one of the commonwealth’s largest bond sales in recent memory â€" will buy Puerto Rico the time it needs to turn around an economy that has been in a painful recession since 2006.”

TOP BANANA  |  Chiquita Brands International is about to become the king of bananas. In an all-stock deal announced on Monday, Chiquita said it would pay about $526 million to acquire the Irish fruit company Fyffes, a move that would catapult Chiquita ahead of the Dole Food Company and make it the world’s largest banana company, David Gelles and Stephanie Strom write in DealBook. The combined company will be named ChiquitaFyffes and will have about $4.6 billion in annual revenue.

Chiquita shareholders will own about 51 percent of the new company, but ChiquitaFyffes will be based in Ireland. Because the deal involves an American company taking over a foreign target and changing its domicile, it represents the latest so-called corporate inversion, Mr. Gelles and Ms. Strom write. Though the companies said that there were few anticipated tax savings as a result of the deal, the decision to locate the combined company in Ireland was nevertheless made with an eye on potential long-term tax advantages, they add. The companies said they believe the deal would close by the end of 2014.

ON THE AGENDA  |  The January Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey report is released at 10 a.m. The wholesale trade report for January is out at 10 a.m. The Senate Banking Committee holds a hearing on capital regulations for insurers at 10 a.m. The United States Energy Information Administration releases its short-term energy outlook at noon. Biz Stone, the co-founder of Twitter, is on CNBC at 11 a.m. The activist investor William A. Ackman holds a conference call on Herbalife’s business in China at 2 p.m. European Union finance officials and central bankers gather in Brussels to discuss final rules for a new mechanism for winding down failing banks.

 

BIG BID PLANNED FOR GATES GLOBAL  |  In what would be one of the largest private equity buyouts of the year, the Blackstone Group and TPG Capital are said to be joining forces in a planned $5.5 billion bid for Gates Global, a maker of industrial and automotive parts, William Alden writes in DealBook. The deadline to bid for Gates Global is Wednesday, and no other bids are expected. The offer comes less than a week after Cerberus’s buyout of the grocery chain Safeway, which was worth more than $9 billion.

 

 

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Minerals Technologies Wins Bidding War for Amcol InternationalMinerals Technologies Wins Bidding War for Amcol International  |  Minerals Technologies agreed to pay about $1.7 billion, beating out Imerys of France, after a spirited back-and-forth for Amcol, a producer of specialty minerals and materials based in Illinois. DealBook »

In Annual Letter, G.E. Chief Extolls ‘Simplification’In Annual Letter, G.E. Chief Extols ‘Simplification’  |  General Electric, which has sought to streamline itself in the years since the financial crisis, is emphasizing a “culture of simplification,” its chief executive, Jeffrey R. Immelt, wrote in an annual letter to shareholders published on Monday. DealBook »

Celebrating Its Deal, Serena Software Takes a Cue From Ellen  |  Inspired by Ellen DeGeneres’s star-packed selfie at the Academy Awards, the managers of Serena Software took a picture of themselves along with executives from their new owner, the investment firm HGGC, and posted it to Twitter. TWITTER

SoftBank Still Keen to Merge Sprint and T-Mobile  |  SoftBank of Japan is still trying to buy T-Mobile US and merge it with SoftBank’s American wireless carrier Sprint, even though regulators in the United States appear set against the deal. “We have to give it a shot,” Masayoshi Son, the chief executive of SoftBank, said in an interview with the television show host Charlie Rose. NEW YORK TIMES

Priceline Buys Ad-Targeting Firm for $3 Million  |  Priceline has acquired the Israeli start-up Qlika, which helps marketers customize and target advertisements, for about $3 million in cash, ReCode writes. RECODE

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Morgan Stanley Chief Calls Bitcoin ‘Surreal’Morgan Stanley Chief Calls Bitcoin ‘Surreal’  |  James P. Gorman, the chief executive of Morgan Stanley, said in a television interview on Monday that he did not have a firm grasp of the virtual currency. DealBook »

‘Young Money’ Optioned for Television Show  |  Fox Television Studios is said to have purchased the rights to Kevin Roose’s new book, “Young Money,” about the hidden world of young Wall Street recruits after the financial crisis, Business Insider writes, citing an unidentified person familiar with the situation. BUSINESS INSIDER

R.B.C. Ruling Provides Lesson for Banks  |  A judge’s ruling last week against the Royal Bank of Canada over the lender’s advice in the 2011 buyout of Rural/Metro Corporation, an ambulance operator, offers a lesson to investment bankers on how not to conduct mergers and acquisitions, Bloomberg View writes. BLOOMBERG VIEW

Wells Fargo Reverses Ban on Peer-to-Peer Lending  |  Wells Fargo, the largest American bank by market value, said it had dropped a ban on its employees making loans with their own money on peer-to-peer platforms, The Financial Times reports. FINANCIAL TIMES

PRIVATE EQUITY »

Chobani Considering Sale of Minority Stake  |  The Greek yogurt maker Chobani is looking to sell a minority stake in a deal that could value the company at about $2.5 billion, Reuters writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. The company is speaking to consumer companies and private equity firms to assess their interest. REUTERS

Permira Explores New York Listing of Japanese Agricultural Chemicals Business  |  The London private equity firm Permira is discussing an initial public offering of Arysta LifeScience, a Japanese agricultural chemicals company, Reuters reports. The I.P.O. is expected to value Arysta at $4 billion including debt. REUTERS

Insight Venture Nears Deal for Proxy Advisory Firm  |  The private equity firm Insight Venture Partners is said to be closing in on a deal for the proxy advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services, The Wall Street Journal writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Warburg Pincus Looks to Sell Software Firm  |  The private equity firm Warburg Pincus is seeking a buyer for iParadigms, an education software maker, Reuters reports, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. The company is estimated to earn about $50 million before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization and could be valued at 15 times that amount. REUTERS

HEDGE FUNDS »

EBay Rejects Icahn’s Nominees for Its BoardEBay Rejects Icahn’s Nominees for Its Board  |  The company said that it had rejected Carl C. Icahn’s two nominees for its board and instead chose to renominate every director up for re-election this year. DealBook »

From Icahn, a Wall Street Billionaire’s Version of MonopolyFrom Icahn, a Wall Street Billionaire’s Version of Monopoly  |  Carl C. Icahn posted a photograph on Twitter showing an artist’s rendering of “Icahnopoly: The Activist Edition,” an imagined board game reworking Monopoly. In this version, Park Place becomes Herbalife, and there is no jail. DealBook »

Former Olympian’s Hedge Fund Has Worst Month in Years  |  The $1.5 billion hedge fund Balestra Capital Partners, which was founded by the former Olympic fencer Jim Melcher, lost 6 percent last month after placing bullish bets on Japanese stocks and against the yen, The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

FMC to Split Up by Spinning Off Its Minerals DivisionFMC to Split Up by Spinning Off Its Minerals Division  |  The move by the FMC Corporation, a chemical maker, is the latest by a company to try to create more value for its shareholders by spinning off nonessential divisions. DealBook »

Rival’s Split May Cast a Shadow on Dow ChemicalRival’s Split May Cast a Shadow on Dow Chemical  |  Andrew N. Liveris, the head of Dow Chemical, may find it harder to keep his company together now that the FCM Corporation, its smaller rival, is planning to break up, Kevin Allison writes in Reuters Breakingviews. Reuters Breakingviews »

Virtu Plans $100 Million I.P.O.  |  The trading firm Virtu Financial, which is backed by the private equity firm Silver Lake Partners, is planning to raise up to $100 million in an initial public offering, though the company said the I.P.O. price was only an estimate for calculating the registration fee with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Reuters writes. REUTERS

Restaurant Chain Zoe’s Kitchen Files I.P.O.  |  Zoe’s Kitchen, which offers Mediterranean-style food, is looking to raise up to $80.5 million in an initial public offering, Reuters writes. The company, based in Alabama, is backed by the private equity firm Brentwood Associates. REUTERS

RadiumOne Said to Be Preparing I.P.O.  |  The online advertising network RadiumOne is in the final stages of preparations for its initial public offering, Bloomberg Businessweek reports, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. BLOOMBERG BUSINESSWEEK

Box May Go Public Before Dropbox  |  Quartz is reporting that the digital storage company Box might go public before its competitor Dropbox. The initial public offerings of both companies have been highly anticipated in Silicon Valley and on Wall Street. QUARTZ

VENTURE CAPITAL »

OwnCloud Raises $6.3 Million  |  OwnCloud, a company that gives businesses control over data storage, has raised $6.3 million in Series A funding led by Devonshire Investors and General Catalyst Partners, The Wall Street Journal reports. The new funding brings the company’s total to $10.1 million. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Spritz Closes $3.5 Million Seed Funding Round  |  Spritz, a start-up that is developing speed-reading technology, is in the process of closing a $3.54 million seed funding round, TechCrunch reports. TECHCRUNCH

Bitcoin A.T.M.’s Are on the Way  |  There are at least three companies currently making A.T.M.’s for Bitcoin, leading some Bitcoin aficionados to predict that the machines will one day be ubiquitous, The Verge writes. THE VERGE

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Suit Over Inheritance in the Perelman Family Nears Its End in CourtSuit Over Inheritance in the Perelman Family Nears Its End in Court  |  James Cohen, the head of Hudson Media, is accused by Ronald O. Perelman’s daughter, Samantha, of manipulating his father to funnel hundreds of millions of dollars out of her inheritance. DealBook »

At SXSW Conference, Ross Ulbricht’s Mother Presses Her Son’s CaseAt SXSW Conference, a Mother Presses Her Son’s Case  |  Lyn Ulbricht hoped the crowd at SXSW would be receptive to her son’s cause. Ross Ulbricht was charged with operating Silk Road, the online drug bazaar where Bitcoin was accepted. DealBook »

The Challenge of Linking Dewey’s Leader to Possible Accounting ShenanigansThe Challenge of Linking Dewey’s Leader to Possible Accounting Shenanigans  |  Prosecutors may struggle to find enough evidence in emails to link Dewey & LeBoeuf’s leader to accusations that accounting tricks covered up a deteriorating financial position, Peter J. Henning writes in the White Collar Watch column. White Collar Watch »

Snowden Urges Tech Industry to Protect Customers  |  Edward J. Snowden discussed spying by the National Security Agency via videoconference at the South by Southwest conference, and told attendees that they were “the folks who can fix this,” the Bits blog writes. NEW YORK TIMES BITS

Russian Oligarchs Fear Economic Casualties if Ukraine Crisis Escalates  |  Business titans face the prospect of losing access to Western finance if the United States and Europe carry out threats of tougher sanctions against Moscow, The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

Bitcoin Exchange Mt. Gox Files for Bankruptcy in the U.S.  |  The Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox, which filed for bankruptcy in Japan last month, has filed for bankruptcy protection in the United States to stop customers from seeking cash it is holding in American bank accounts, The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL